Ford asks union and salaried employees to submit vaccination status

Business

Ford CEO Jim Farley at the company’s new Rouge Electric Vehicle Center on May 18, 2021 ahead of remarks from President Joe Biden.
Michael Wayland / CNBC

DETROIT – Ford Motor is asking its hourly and salaried employees in the U.S. to submit their Covid-19 vaccination status by next Friday, as the automaker prepares to comply with mandatory testing or vaccination plans announced earlier this month by President Joe Biden.

The submission process is required for salaried employees, but voluntary for the automaker’s employees represented by the United Auto Workers union. It’s also mandatory for agency or other Ford contractors, the company confirmed to CNBC.

“This will aid our efforts to comply with federal COVID-19 vaccination requirements and, assess the overall vaccination level of our employee population in order to determine appropriate measures to support employee safety,” Ford spokeswoman Monique Brentley said in an emailed statement.

UAW spokesman Brian Rothenberg confirmed the submission process is voluntary for its union members.

The information will aid Ford’s “efforts to comply with legal requirements, and help the company determine appropriate measures to support employee safety,” according to an online submission form for employees.

Ford CEO Jim Farley said the company thinks vaccinations are “mission critical” for the safety of its workers. Farley said the company’s entire leadership team and medical staff are vaccinated.

“We’re really excited about the mandate,” Farley said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “We’ll work with our union partners, it requires collective bargaining in some cases … We’ll work through this.”

Farley said he has spoken with new UAW President Ray Curry about the company’s plans.

Before Biden announced the vaccination requirements, Curry said the organization didn’t plan to impose Covid-19 vaccines on its 400,000 members. He said any company that wants to mandate vaccinations would need to do so through collective bargaining. Biden rolled out a plan Sept. 9 mandating employee vaccines for government contractors and requiring vaccines or testing for companies with 100 or more employees.

In a letter Monday to members obtained by CNBC, Curry said the union is waiting for guidelines from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration about the new rules. He said the guidance “will likely apply to many, if not most of the private employers” with UAW-represented employees.

Ford’s request follows General Motors, which began last month requiring all U.S. salaried employees to report their Covid-19 vaccination status.

Automakers such as GM and Ford have not required workers to get vaccinated, but they have implemented safety protocols and procedures at facilities across the globe.