United Airlines to require full COVID-19 vaccinations for all new employees: It's the 'right thing to do,' CEO says



United Airlines announced that all new employees must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 starting this month, CBS News reported.

"As we welcome new employees to the company, it's important we instill in them United's strong commitment to safety," the airline stated in a memo to employees, CBS News added. "Effective for all job offers made after June 15, 2021, we will require any external candidates for U.S.-based jobs to attest that they have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by their start date."

What are the details?

All new United employees will be required to upload their vaccination cards into the airline's system within seven days of joining the company, the network reported.

Delta Air Lines mandated the same policy for new employees in April, CBS News noted, and called the vaccine shots "safe, effective and essential to the future of the airline and our world."

United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby in January hinted that his company likely would join others if they began requiring employee vaccinations and said that was the "right thing to do" for United and other corporations, the network said.

"We need some others to show leadership, particularly in the health care industry," Kirby said during an employee town hall, CBS News reported. "So, if others go along and are willing to start to mandate vaccines, you should probably expect United to be amongst the first wave of companies that do it."

Not everyone is on board

The network added, however, that other U.S. airlines said they would not require their workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

"We are strongly encouraging team members to get vaccinated and offering an incentive for those who do," an American Airlines spokesperson stated in an email, CBS News said. "But we do not plan to require the vaccine unless it's mandatory for entry into certain destinations."

Anything else?

Late last month, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said businesses can mandate that employees get vaccinated against COVID-19 to enter their workplaces and offer incentives for receiving the vaccine.

A recent poll of 1,339 employers indicated that 60% of them will require proof of vaccination from employees, ABC News said, but surprisingly left-wing social media powerhouse Facebook is not among those that will enact such a mandate.

Unvaccinated ticket buyers charged $1,000 to enter Florida punk rock show; vaccinated fans to pay only $18 — and Gov. DeSantis' office says it 'unfairly discriminates'



A Florida concert promotor insists he's not preventing unvaccinated fans from entering an upcoming punk rock show.

Those without the COVID-19 jab absolutely can enter VFW Post 39 in St. Petersburg to catch headliners Teenage Bottlerocket on June 26. All they have to do is pay $999.99.

As for fans who have been vaccinated, their tickets are $18.

"I'm not denying entry to anyone," promotor Paul Williams told the Washington Post. "I'm just offering a discount."

What are the details?

Of course, Williams' ticket prices fly in the face of Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' recent executive order saying businesses aren't allowed to make patrons prove they've been vaccinated against COVID-19.

DeSantis also signed into law a bill threatening violators with fines in the thousands of dollars, the Post reported.

In reaction to Williams' $1,000 per ticket for unvaccinated concertgoers, the governor's office told the paper it's discriminatory.

"Charging higher ticket prices for individuals who do not furnish proof of vaccination unfairly discriminates against people who have enumerated rights under Florida law," Christina Pushaw, press secretary for the DeSantis' office, told the Post in an email.

Angry responses

Williams told the paper his tactic seemed safe, as the new law doesn't go into effect until after the show — but that didn't stop angry responses to the $1,000 ticket price.

The Post said Williams received anti-vaccination Facebook messages and spam calls, and the paper made special mention of a "misspelled email that warned the band their next show could be their 'last' and said: 'You're fans are going to kill you.'"

"I didn't know that caring about my community would make me Hitler," Williams told the paper, adding that he's notified law enforcement about the threatening email — and that he's not bending under what's become nationwide attention: "We're still sticking to our guns."

Williams even admitted to ABC News that he wanted the concert "to be a vaccine drive to get the fence-sitters off the fence. I wanted to get the kids that want to go to shows to go out and get their shots."

More from the Post:

A few of the "discount" tickets were left as of Saturday afternoon, he said; headliner Teenage Bottlerocket's website listed the St. Petersburg show as having sold out. None of the "standard" price tickets had sold.

Williams said attendees must present photo ID and a coronavirus vaccination card the day of the concert to enter at the lower price, which was reported byCreative Loafing: Tampa Bay.

Punk rock fan Brittney Wigen wants to go to the show, but she told WFTS-TV she's had COVID too recently to be able to get vaccinated in time.

Teenage Bottlerocket singer-guitarist Ray Carlisle told the station there's another option for Wigen: "Perhaps put together a Go-Fund-Me and all the other weirdo anti-vaxxers can help support you going to Teenage Bottlerocket for a thousand dollars. That's always an option."

Miguel Chen, bassist for Teenage Bottlerocket, told the Post that the band initially didn't believe Williams actually was charging $1,000 for unvaccinated fans: "When we first heard it, we thought it was a joke."

But Chen noted to the paper that his group soon agreed that if Williams thought this was "the best way to safely throw a party in his town, then we backhim and we support it." Still, though, he told the paper, "I never in my life thought I'd be in a place where I'm getting threatened for trying to play music and spread joy."

Legal concerns

Legal experts told the Post that the ticket price disparity could be problematic.

Andrew Zelmanowitz, a Fort Lauderdale business lawyer, noted to the paper that the large price hike for unvaccinated ticket buyers "violates the spirit" of Florida's ban on requiring proof of immunization.

Eric Feldman — a University of Pennsylvania law school prof with expertise in health policy — told the Post that the $1,000 ticket price is "basically saying unless you show us proof of vaccine status, we're going to treat you really badly."

Here's Teenage Bottlerocket playing a 2019 show. Content warning: Language:

Teenage Bottlerocket - Skate or Die 6-29-19youtu.be