Can Businesses Weather Another Covid Outbreak?

The omicron variant is delaying return-to-office plans, but employers say they can endure the latest surge.

Nearly nine in ten business executives believe their organization can endure an outbreak of the omicron variant of Covid-19.

Eighty-six percent of executives polled by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) in December agreed that existing policies and procedures aimed at stopping the spread of Covid-19 in the workplace give them confidence. However, 67 percent said they are very or extremely concerned about their organization’s ability to keep employees and customers safe from omicron.

In recent days, Jefferies, Goldman Sachs, Chevron, and many more employers have delayed or changed their January return-to-office plans. Starbucks, Delta Air Lines, and BlackRock have amended their Covid safety protocols, responding to shifting guidance from public health authorities.

Starbucks, for example, announced that it will reduce the number of days that vaccinated, asymptomatic workers who test positive must isolate—from 10 days to five—following the latest guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The company also said U.S. workers will have to be fully vaccinated by February 9 or submit to weekly testing, in compliance with a Biden administration vaccine rule for large employers. A spokesperson for Starbucks said the company is giving store and district managers some leeway to decide when specific locations need to make adjustments, such opening for drive-thru orders only.

Among the other key findings from the survey:

“Clearly, this variant is causing significant disruptions across the economy, and business leaders must continue taking steps to protect employees and their families and retain talent,” says Johnny C. Taylor Jr., SHRM president and CEO. “Despite the anxiety, there is good news. Employers are confident the hard work of the last few years—all the planning and safety protocols—will help get them through the twists and turns of the pandemic.”

From: BenefitsPro