Within his first few days in office, President Biden issued a wave of executive orders aimed at protecting workers amid the pandemic. According to the White House, the core policy objective underlying each order is implementing evidence-based measures to support the workforce and protect those hit hardest by the pandemic, including communities of color and working-class Americans, while promoting an inclusive and diverse workplace. These orders may have significant implications for your workplace. Here is what you need to know.

  1. Executive Order on Protecting Worker Health and Safety

Employers covered by OSHA (i.e. most private employers and federal government employers) may be required to implement additional safety precautions related to COVID-19.

By February 4, 2021, the U.S. Department of Labor must:

a. issue revised guidelines on workplace safety during the COVID-19 pandemic;

b. consider whether mandatory emergency measures are necessary, such as mask-wearing in the workplace and if so, issue them by March 15, 2021;

c. review the COVID-19 enforcement efforts of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and identify any short-, medium-, and long-term changes to better protect workers and ensure equity in enforcement;

d. launch a national program through OSHA to focus on enforcement of the most serious violations that put the largest number of workers at serious risk or are contrary to anti-retaliation principles; and

e. create a multilingual outreach campaign to inform workers and their representatives (including labor unions) of their rights, with a focus on communities hit hardest by the pandemic.

For public sector workers, the Order instructs various department heads to coordinate with states and labor unions to ensure that their occupational safety and health plans approved under section 18 of OSHA are adequately protecting workers and to work with states that do not have such plans to bolster worker protections against COVID-19.

Finally, the Order directs the Department of Labor to work with department heads to ensure that other categories of workers, including mine workers and others not covered by OSHA, explore measures to protect workers, including implementation of temporary emergency measures.

The Order makes clear, however, that it is not creating a right or benefit that could be enforced against the United States government, or its departments or agencies.

Employers in Connecticut have already had to comply with the Sector Rules put in place to operate during this pandemic through Governor Lamont’s own Executive Orders.  Some other states have enacted similar rules, including New York.  Thus, employers will need to ensure that they are complying with both federal and state rules.

  1. Executive Order on Economic Relief Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic

President Biden asked the U.S. Department of Labor to consider clarifying that workers may refuse employment that will jeopardize their health or the health of someone else in their household, and if they do so, they will still qualify for unemployment insurance. It is not yet clear how this clarification will impact employers in Connecticut; for example, the CT Department of Labor has issued guidance suggesting that employees who are at high-risk for severe illness may turn down work in certain situations and still be eligible for unemployment insurance.

  1. Executive Order on Protecting the Federal Workforce and Requiring Mask-Wearing

Federal Employers: On-duty or on-site federal employees, on-site federal contractors, and all persons in federal buildings or on federal lands must comply with CDC guidelines with respect to wearing masks, maintaining physical distance, and other public health measures.  Heads of agencies may make categorical or case-by-case exceptions as required by law (to accommodate a disability, for example), but must require alternative safeguards, such as additional physical distancing. All exceptions must be documented in writing. Heads of agencies should provide masks to federal employees where possible. The Department of Health and Human Services shall also develop a COVID-19 testing plan for the federal workforce.

Masking Campaign: All Other Employers: The Department of Health and Human Services shall engage state and local leaders to encourage mask-wearing across the country and create incentives for mask-wearing.

Safer Federal Workforce Task Force: The Order creates a new task force to provide guidance on testing, contact tracing, physical distance and occupancy standards, air filtration, equipment, disinfecting and cleaning, telework, vaccine distribution and administration, and other infrastructure needed to combat COVID-19.

Note that the Order does not create a right or benefit that could be enforced against the United States government, or its departments or agencies.

  1. Executive Order on Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government

President Biden issued this Order targeting “entrenched disparities in our laws and public policies” through a “comprehensive approach to advancing equity for all.” The Order aims to improve opportunities for historically underserved communities. Notably, the Order defines equity as “the consistent and systematic fair, just, and impartial treatment of all individuals, including individuals who belong to underserved communities, such as Black, Latino, Indigenous and Native American persons, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and other persons of color; people identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ); people with disabilities; religious minorities; persons who live in rural areas; and persons otherwise affected by persistent poverty or inequality.”

Recognizing that such equity “requires a systematic approach to embedding fairness in decision-making processes,” the Order requires all federal agencies to review internal equity and to deliver an action plan within 200 days, addressing unequal barriers to opportunity found within each agency’s policies and programs. The White House Domestic Policy Council (DPC) is tasked with coordinating efforts to implement equity policies across the Federal Government, and the Director of OMB is charged with studying and determining the best methods for assessing equity and delivering a report within six months identifying best practices.

This Order also revokes former President Trump’s Order limiting the implementation of diversity and inclusion training for federal government employees and contractors.

  1. Executive Order on Preventing and Combatting Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation

President Biden expanded federal nondiscrimination protections based on sexual orientation and gender identity. The Order implements the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in the consolidated cases Bostock v. Clayton County, Altitude Express v. Zarda and R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes v. EEOC, and ensures that the Federal government interprets Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as prohibiting workplace discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.

The Order also builds on the Supreme Court’s decision, directing federal agencies to interpret all federal anti-discrimination statutes prohibiting sex discrimination, such as Title IX, to protect against discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression. The new administration furthered this policy of protecting individuals’ gender identity on Monday, signing an additional Executive Order repealing former President Trump’s ban on transgender individuals serving openly in the military.

  1. Executive Order on Protecting the Federal Workforce

President Biden restored federal employees’ collective bargaining power and protections through an Order rescinding a series of his predecessor’s executive orders that had limited the collective bargaining power of federal unions and made it easier to terminate the employment of federal employees.

Specifically, the Order dismantles the prior creation of “Schedule F” employees, which intended to remove civil protections by re-classifying federal employees working in policy-focused roles into job classifications that would make them easier to fire and replace at will. The Order also directs agencies to “bargain over permissible, non-mandatory subjects of bargaining when contracts are up for negotiation,” and requires the Office of Personnel Management to provide a report to the President with recommendations “to promote a $15/hour minimum wage for federal employees.”

We anticipate that President Biden may issue additional Executive Orders in the coming days and weeks that will affect employees’ rights in the workplace; stay tuned.

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Photo of Keegan Drenosky Keegan Drenosky

Keegan Drenosky practices in the area of labor and employment law and business litigation. She has represented employers in cases involving claims of discrimination and retaliation before the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and state and federal…

Keegan Drenosky practices in the area of labor and employment law and business litigation. She has represented employers in cases involving claims of discrimination and retaliation before the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and state and federal Court.

Photo of Sarah A. Westby Sarah A. Westby

Sarah is the Chair of Shipman’s Cannabis Industry Team and a Partner in our Employment and Labor Practice Group. She advises clients on formation and management of a cannabis business, interpretation of state and federal cannabis laws and regulations, social equity qualifications and…

Sarah is the Chair of Shipman’s Cannabis Industry Team and a Partner in our Employment and Labor Practice Group. She advises clients on formation and management of a cannabis business, interpretation of state and federal cannabis laws and regulations, social equity qualifications and partnerships, business-related disputes, employment matters and contracts. Sarah also counsels clients on a wide variety of employment matters, including discrimination, medical leave, sexual harassment, compensation, termination, severance, and workplace safety.  She has significant experience litigating cases in state and federal court and before administrative agencies.  Sarah also serves as the Vice Chair of the Board of Directors for Simply Smiles, Inc., a not-for-profit organization that builds villages of foster homes for Native children in the United States and Mexico.

Photo of Daniel Schwartz Daniel Schwartz

Dan represents employers in various employment law matters such as employment discrimination, restrictive covenants, human resources, retaliation and whistle blowing, and wage and hour issues. He has extensive trial and litigation experience in both federal and state courts in a variety of areas…

Dan represents employers in various employment law matters such as employment discrimination, restrictive covenants, human resources, retaliation and whistle blowing, and wage and hour issues. He has extensive trial and litigation experience in both federal and state courts in a variety of areas, including commercial litigation and trade secret enforcement. Dan is the author of the independent Connecticut Employment Law Blog. The blog discusses new and noteworthy events in labor and employment law on a daily basis.