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Georgia Judge Stays Federal Contractor Vaccine Mandate Nationwide | Columbus Ohio Dump Trucks

COVID-19 and Construction

The Associated Builders and Contractors, which joined a seven-state lawsuit, is cited in the decision

Vaccination line
Employees wait in line for vaccination shots at contractor Tellepsen's office in Houston, Texas, an AGC-sponsored event.
Photo courtesy of Associated General Contractors of America

A federal judge has halted nationwide President Joe Biden's September executive order requiring federal Charlotte NC dump truck contractor to vaccinate their columbus oh dump truck work forces.
The Dec. 7 decision, by Judge Stan Baker in the federal district court in Augusta, Ga. calls into question the legality of the order Biden used to issue the mandate.

The federal contractor mandate had already been stayed on Dec. 3 by a federal district court judge in Lexington, Ky. in the states of Tennessee, Ohio and Kentucky, which had sued.

The involvement of the Associated Builders and Contractors and its Georgia chapter appeared to have influenced the decision of Judge Baker, who was appointed to the federal bench by President Donald Trump in 2017.

ABC and its chapter filed a motion on Nov. 18 to intervene in support of a suit filed by the state of Georgia and six other states—Alabama, Indiana, Kansas, South Carolina, Utah and West Virginia, against the order.

"The  Court  has  already  described  in detail the extreme economic burden the Plaintiffs have suffered and will continue to suffer in endeavoring to comply with (the order)," Baker wrote. "Not to mention the impediment it will likely pose to some Plaintiffs' (in particular, ABC's members') ability to continue to perform federal contract work. Additionally, the direct impact of [the Biden executive order] goes beyond the administration and management of procurement and contracting; in its practical application ... it operates as a regulation of public health."

Ben Brubeck, ABC vice president, termed the ruling "a big win in removing compliance hurdles for the construction industry." He noted that the group "continues to support vaccinations ... to  keep workers safe on construction jobsites."

Brubeck said that "ABC’s participation in the case was essential to nationwide and construction industry relief, which would otherwise have been limited to the states that sued.”

Also stayed nationwide by the U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans was an emergency temporary standard issued by the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration in November that applied to employers with 100 or more employees.

The OSHA emergency temporary standard case was moved to the appeals court in Cincinnati, which will rule on the case merits and on whether the New Orleans court's stay will remain in plac. That ruling is expected after Dec. 10.

Most legal experts believe the issue will ultimately be decided by the Supreme Court.

A White House spokeswoman said the US Justice Dept. would continue to defend the mandate.