Health

Vaccination rates rise at Washington agencies ahead of deadline

By AP staff (AP)
OLYMPIA, Wash. Oct. 9, 2021 4:48 p.m.

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) — COVID-19 vaccination rates at state agencies in Washington have climbed in recent weeks, ahead of a deadline for workers to be fully vaccinated or lose their jobs.

Under Gov. Jay Inslee's August order — considered one of the strictest in the nation — state and school workers and hundreds of thousands of health care employees are required to get their shots or lose their jobs on Oct. 18, unless they have received both a medical or religious exemption and a work accommodation. In order to be fully vaccinated by Oct. 18, workers would have had to get their final shot by Oct. 4.

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The mandate spurred union reaction and lawsuits, along with more workers getting vaccinated. Labor deals and actions by the administration have effectively extended the deadline for many state workers.

A person holds a container of syringes filled with vaccines.

Syringes filled with Pfizer vaccines are brought to vaccinators at a COVID-19 vaccination clinic at PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center Thursday, June 3, 2021, in Bellingham, Washington. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Elaine Thompson / AP

The Seattle Times reported that as of noon Thursday, the Department of Corrections, which had previously lagged behind many other agencies in percentage of vaccinated workers, has verified that 89% of its workers have received their COVID-19 shots.

DOC isn’t the only large Washington agency to see its vaccination rates rise as part of the mandate. As of Thursday, the Department of Social and Health Services — the largest state agency — had verified 91% of its workers as vaccinated.

At the Department of Children, Youth and Families, that number stood at nearly 87%, and at the Washington State Patrol, 93% of its workers have been vaccinated.

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