01/26/2022 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/26/2022 19:32
CITY HEALTH OFFICER ORDER TO REQUIRE CERTAIN WORKERS TO STAY UP TO DATE WITH BOOSTERS
By Feb. 7, select businesses must have workers boosted, when eligible, and also require full vaccination of patrons at least 5-years-old
Berkeley, California (Wednesday, January 26, 2022) - A City of Berkeley Health Officer Order issued Wednesday will require employees of certain businesses to stay up to date on vaccination by getting boosters when eligible while also lowering the age of patrons required to have full vaccination to 5 years old.
The requirement to verify vaccination statuses of both employees and patrons focuses on indoor environments where airborne droplets or particles containing the virus spread easily because people:
The businesses only required to verify employees' "up to date" vaccination have greater risks of exposure to an unvaccinated or immune compromised population, such as a pharmacy, dentist's office, or childcare program.
A person is up to date on vaccination if:
These highly effective vaccines maintain their power when people stay up to date. Each person vaccinated is less likely to get infected or spread the virus and is also greatly protected against sickness, hospitalization, and death.
"Staying up to date on vaccination lowers each person's risk of infection and severe illness while also increasing our entire community's safety," said City of Berkeley Health Officer Dr. Lisa B. Hernandez, who issued the order.
These requirements add a critical layer of safety in places of higher risk, which are even more risky given the quickly spreading, highly infectious Omicron Variant. Face coverings are already required indoors in public settings throughout the Bay Area. These local requirements follow state requirements for employees to stay up to date in a variety of environments, including health care, correctional facilities, and adult care.
By Feb. 7, certain businesses required to check full vaccination for those 5 and up
Starting Feb. 7, businesses, non-profits and other organizations engaged in the following activities must require proof of full vaccination and a photo ID before a patron may enter any indoor area:
These venues must check all patrons who are at least 5-years-old to show proof of "full vaccination," which is 14 days after the Johnson & Johnson (Janssen) vaccine or 14 days after the second shot of the two-dose Moderna or Pfizer vaccines.
Those whose age made them recently eligible for vaccination must be fully vaccinated by Mar. 14 or within 60 days of becoming eligible.
Venues must check vaccine verification with a photo ID. For a minor's ID, venues should try their best to verify vaccination against a photo ID, such as one from a school, or otherwise use a parent or guardian's verbal confirmation.
Large indoor events
From Jan. 27 to Mar. 14, operators of indoor, 500-person or more events that sold tickets before Jan. 27 must require all patrons ages 5-11 to show proof of vaccination or negative PCR in the past two days hours or negative antigen test results received in the previous days.
Starting Mar. 14, these venues must solely require proof of vaccination from all ticket holders, including those purchased before Jan. 27.
See the full Health Order for details and exceptions.
By Feb. 7, sites where employees must be boosted, when eligible
Starting Feb. 7, all employees at Berkeley venues must be "up to date" on vaccination:
This must include all employees, contractors, and volunteers as well as those custodians, maintenance and other workers who enter those businesses, including after hours.
Those workers who assert a sincerely held religious belief must provide a signed letter under penalty of perjury. Those employees who assert a medical condition must provide a letter signed by a licensed medical provider. In either case, the person would also have to provide negative test results on a weekly basis.
What you can use to verify vaccination status
There are different ways to prove vaccination:
Use all tools to fight the pandemic
While these requirements focus on certain businesses due to the risk of spread, these and other tools can voluntarily be taken on by any business or organization. The safer a workplace becomes, the more likely they are to avoid an outbreak and stay open.
Vaccinations remain easy to find throughout the region. Reach out to your healthcare provider or visit myturn.ca.gov, which lists appointments open to everyone - including other providers.
"We continue to move forward through the pandemic by adapting and improving upon the skills we have already learned," said Dr. Hernandez, the City Health Officer. "Easy, safe and effective booster shots continue the incredible power of vaccines to lessen severe illness and death. These additional doses have an even greater importance in environments of greater risk."
Links:
###
Keep up with City of Berkeley news via our News page, email or Follow @CityofBerkeley.