Union Pacific unions countersue railroad over COVID-19 vaccine mandate

Reuters

Published Oct 19, 2021 02:16PM ET

Updated Oct 19, 2021 04:32PM ET

By David Shepardson and Tom Hals

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Three unions representing workers at Union Pacific Corp (NYSE:UNP) filed lawsuits against the U.S. railroad operator's move to make vaccines mandatory for its 31,000 employees under a deadline imposed by the Biden administration for federal contractors.

Union Pacific said on Monday it filed suit against the unions on Friday, saying the action was necessary to prevent any disruption of its rail network "and to avoid any impact on America’s supply chain, as it continues to recover from the pandemic."

Union Pacific asked a judge to "have any dispute over the mandate resolved through the various dispute resolution procedures outlined in the Railway Labor Act."

The lawsuits were filed in U.S. District Court in Northern Illinois.

The union lawsuits said workers who were vaccinated would be paid a $300 incentive and that Union Pacific did not engage union officers or attempt to engage in any bargaining over the matter before imposing the mandate.