A Navy shipbuilding company has ended its vaccine mandate after workers threatened to quit and the Navy confirmed it did not require the mandate.
Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII), the parent company of Newport News Shipbuilding, is the worldโs only manufacturer of the U.S. Navyโs nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. The company also serves as just one of two manufacturers of Virginia and Columbia Class submarines, employing more than 25,000 workers in Virginia.
Newport had previously announced plans to require all 25,000 of its workers to be fully vaccinated by Dec. 8. The deadline was later moved to Jan. 4, to allow additional time.
The deadline has now been โsuspended,โ with the requirement ended.
โWe have not wanted to lose a single employee to the virus, or to the effect of the mandate,โ President and CEO Mike Petters wrote in a letter (pdf) to employees on Wednesday.
โImportantly, with respect to Ingalls Shipbuilding and Newport News Shipbuilding, our customer has confirmed that our contracts do not include a requirement to implement the mandate. Technical Solutions employees are in a different situation and face varied requirements depending on the particular contract,โ he added.
The company continues to encourage employees to receive the COVID-19 vaccines, but no longer requires vaccination for employment.
Some employees told local outlet WTKR-News 3 they felt tricked, saying they became fully vaccinated due to the mandate that now no longer applies.
โThey made me get it and then lifted it,โ NII employee Deshawn Royal told the outlet. โI didnโt want to get it, but they said I had to get it or we were going to get fired. And then they lifted it. Yโall did us wrong.โ
Another HII employee, Rodney Apop, said, โThey went ahead and jumped, and they didnโt have the choice to do it.โ
He added, โAnd now when they take [the mandate] away, they wish they had known so they didnโt have to.โ
The move came just before USW Local 8888, the local shipbuildersโ union, released the results of its survey regarding the vaccine mandate.
The vote was 1,312 no to 684 yes regarding the acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.