Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Adeshola Ore

Victoria pressed to scrap two-jab Covid vaccine mandate amid worker shortage

A health worker with a patient before administering a Covid vaccine booster in Melbourne in March
A health worker with a patient before administering a Covid vaccine booster in Melbourne in March. The Victorian government is under growing pressure to drop its double-dose mandate for workers. Photograph: Diego Fedele/AAP

The Victorian government is facing pressure from epidemiologists and industry groups to scrap its two-vaccine mandate, despite an expert suggesting Australia is on track to have more than 15,000 Covid deaths this year.

Epidemiologists Catherine Bennett and Nancy Baxter told a Victorian parliamentary inquiry on Thursday that the two-dose vaccine mandate for most industries was no longer necessary.

While some industry groups have called for the two-dose mandate to be abolished to help ease the skilled workers shortage, the Victorian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) said the decision was up to health officials.

Belinda Clarke, chief executive of the Restaurant and Catering Association, said “now is the time to move on” from the double-dose vaccine mandate requirement.

“Other states have already taken this step with no demonstrable downsides,” she told Guardian Australia.

“The industry is already experiencing a staffing shortage and now that we know what we know about Covid-19 and how to deal with it, you would think that the government would take expert advice and scale back these restrictions.”

The VCCI chief executive, Paul Guerra, said vaccine mandates had helped boost the state’s immunisation rate and were a decision for health officials.

Guerra said he anticipated the state’s pandemic declaration – due to expire next month – would be lifted. This would mean Covid restrictions including vaccine mandates would be scrapped.

“The challenge is now to address ongoing issues around worker and skills shortages and the rising costs on business, which have been exacerbated by global economic factors,” he said.

Victoria’s widespread double-dose mandates for workers were introduced last year as the state emerged from lockdowns. Critical frontline workers such as teachers, healthcare and aged care staff and food processing employees require three doses.

The premier, Daniel Andrews, this week said he would liaise with the federal government about fourth doses for healthcare workers in hospitals in a bid to maintain immunity, despite no current plans for this to be mandated.

Baxter, the head of the University of Melbourne’s school of population and global health, told an inquiry into the state’s pandemic orders on Thursday that she was unsure why Victoria’s two-jab policy remained for industries not involving vulnerable people.

Bennett, the chair in epidemiology at Deakin University, said the situation had fundamentally changed since two-dose worker vaccine mandates were considered justified and necessary.

“It did make a difference in terms of our population-level response and our control, but I don’t think there was ever going to be an argument – even before Omicron – for keeping the two-dose mandates in place,” Bennett told the inquiry.

On Friday Fleur Brown, the chief industry affairs officer at the Australian Retailers Association, said a “small cohort” of workers in the industry had remained locked out due to vaccine mandates.

“This is adding to the staffing challenge in the face of acute skill and labour shortages,” she said.

“Most retailers would welcome a change to allow those workers back in. What we need is national alignment to provide consistency and certainty around workforce protocols.”

Tim Piper, the Victorian head of employer association Australian Industry Group, said the government should reconsider the third-jab mandate for the food processing sector, saying it was “not something that could be run any longer”.

“It’s causing significant complications for companies because there are people who are not getting a third jab and are going elsewhere to get a job,” he said.

“That’s not what the government needs, it’s not what the public wants and we need to make sure of the supply chain.”

A Victorian government spokesperson said vaccination had played an important role in reducing Covid transmission in the workplace and shielding the health system.

“Any decision to change current pandemic orders would be made by the minister for health after considering the chief health officer’s advice and other relevant factors.”

Almost 95% of Victorians aged over 12 have received two doses of a Covid vaccine.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.