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Counting of Ballots Begins in Amazon Union Vote: Reside Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Charity Rachelle for The New York Times

The counting of votes that will determine whether to a union can form at an Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Ala., begins Tuesday. But the results of the union election, one of the most consequential in recent memory, may not be known until later this week or early next week because the vote can often involve a painstaking process that will be closely scrutinized by representatives from the union and Amazon.

The ballots, which were mailed out to workers in early February, must be signed and had to be received by the National Labor Relations Board at its Birmingham office by the end of Monday.

First, a staff member at the labor board will read the names of the workers, without opening an inner envelope with the actual ballot. Representatives from the union and Amazon will be on a private video conference. As each name is read, they will check the workers’ names against a staff list, and if either side contests whether that worker was eligible to vote, that ballot will be set aside. A representative from each side is also expected to be there in person to observe the process.

After the two sides have had the opportunity to make their objections about eligibility, the N.L.R.B. will begin counting the uncontested ballots. After every 100 votes, the labor board will count those ballots again until all the votes are counted. This portion will be open to reporters on a video conference line.

A finding of more contested ballots than uncontested is likely to set off legal arguments by the Retail Warehouse and Department Store union, which has led the organizing drive, and Amazon over the eligibility of each contested ballot. Each side has about a week to make its case before N.L.R.B. certifies the vote.

Either side can contest whether the vote was conducted fairly. The union, for instance, could argue that the company took steps to improperly sway the vote, by potentially making workers fearful of reprisal if they supported organizing.

If the union prevails, workers fear that the company may shut down the warehouse. Amazon has backed away from locations that brought it headaches before.

But the company has committed more than $360 million in leases and equipment for the Bessemer warehouse, and shutting down the vote of a large Black work force could publicly backfire, said Marc Wulfraat, a logistics consultant who closely tracks the company.

A worker inspecting disposable gloves at a Top Glove factory near Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in August.Credit…Mohd Rasfan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

United States Customs and Border Protection has ordered port officials to seize disposable gloves made by the world’s largest rubber glove maker, a Malaysian company that the agency says uses forced labor in its factories.

Customs and Border Protection said in a statement on Monday that it had “sufficient information to believe” that the company, Top Glove, “uses forced labor in the production of disposable gloves.”

Last July, the agency issued an import ban on products from two Top Glove subsidiaries because they were suspected of using forced labor. On Monday, it said it had determined that rubber gloves produced by the company with forced, convict or indentured labor “are being, or are likely to be, imported into the United States.”

Based on that determination, the agency said in a notice, it had authorized U.S. port directors to seize the gloves and start forfeiture proceedings unless importers can produce evidence showing that the gloves were not produced with prohibited labor.

The notice was the result of a monthslong investigation “aimed at preventing goods made by modern slavery from entering U.S. commerce,” Troy Miller, the acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, said in a statement.

The agency, he said, “will not tolerate foreign companies’ exploitation of vulnerable workers to sell cheap, unethically made goods to American consumers.” He added that the agency had “taken steps to ensure” that the enforcement action would not significantly affect total imports of disposable gloves into the United States.

After the import ban on Top Glove subsidiaries last summer, officials at the company said they were upgrading their worker dormitories and paying restitution to affected workers.

The company said in a statement on Tuesday that it was in touch with the U.S. agency and hoped to “resolve any ongoing areas of concern immediately.”

Top Glove also said it had engaged a independent labor consultancy from Britain since last July. That consultancy, Impactt Limited, said in a statement this month that its latest investigations had not turned up any “systemic forced labor” among the company’s direct employees.

But Andy Hall, a labor rights campaigner based in Nepal, said on Tuesday that Top Glove “remains an unethical company whose factories and supply chain continue to utilize forced labor,” and one that prioritizes profits and production efficiency over its workers’ basic rights.

Mr. Hall said he welcomed the Customs and Border Protection notice, and that the next step would be holding the company’s owners and investors to account.

Top Glove controls roughly a quarter of the global rubber glove market and has 21,000 employees. Many of them come from some of Asia’s poorest countries — including Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal — and live and work in crowded conditions.

The company has enjoyed record profits during the pandemic, even though thousands of its low-paid workers in Malaysia suffered from a large coronavirus outbreak last year.

Giannis Antetokounmpo of the Milwaukee Bucks goes up for a shot against Ben Simmons and Danny Green of the Philadelphia 76ers. Sports fans can buy, sell and collect digital “moments” on N.B.A. Top Shot.Credit…Matt Slocum/Associated Press

Dapper Labs, the blockchain company that has pushed digital collectibles known as NFTs, for nonfungible tokens, said on Tuesday that it had raised $305 million in new funding.

The company, which has a partnership with the National Basketball Association, created an online marketplace called N.B.A. Top Shot in October where sports fans can buy, sell and collect digital “moments” — essentially, video clips of basketball players. But unlike most basketball highlights that can be found on YouTube or ESPN, these moments are on a blockchain, a digital ledger that records cryptocurrency transactions, which makes it possible for fans to buy, collect and exchange them like trading cards.

Top Shot has exploded in popularity, part of a larger frenzy for cryptocurrencies and NFTs that has driven up the value of Bitcoin and led to head-turning bids for digital artwork. There have been more than three million Top Shot transactions, Dapper Labs said, generating $500 million in sales. The company makes money through the sale of the digital moments and also collects a cut whenever a moment is resold.

The new funding values Dapper Labs, which is based in Vancouver, British Columbia, at $2.6 billion. It is the biggest financing for the company, which had previously raised $52.5 million.

Investors in the new funding include the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, the hedge fund Coatue Management and former and current N.B.A. stars including Michael Jordan, Kevin Durant, Kyle Lowry and Klay Thompson, as well as celebrities like Will Smith and Ashton Kutcher.

Roham Gharegozlou, the Dapper Labs founder and chief executive — who also created the 2017 blockchain game CryptoKitties — said Top Shot had “catalyzed” the excitement surrounding NFTs.

“I think N.B.A. Top Shot is proving that these platforms are ready for prime time,” he said.

Mr. Gharegozlou said the new funding would go toward partnerships with other sports leagues like the Ultimate Fighting Championship, the mixed martial arts organization. He said the company would also hire more employees and fund NFT ventures made by other start-ups.

The Obama administration had said that a design “concept” featuring Harriet Tubman on the face of the $20 bill would be unveiled by 2020.Credit…Harvey B. Lindsley/Library of Congress, via Associated Press

On the first day of the Biden presidency, Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, said that the Treasury Department was “taking steps to resume efforts” to put the abolitionist Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill. “It’s important that our money reflects the history and diversity of our country,” Ms. Psaki said.

But it will probably be years before we see the Underground Railroad conductor gracing U.S. currency, the DealBook newsletter reports.

The reason? The deadline for printing a new version of the $20 bill is 2030. It was set by an anti-counterfeiting committee in 2013, two years before Tubman won a campaign to replace President Andrew Jackson on the bill.

“The primary reason currency is redesigned is for security against counterfeiting,” Lydia Washington, a representative for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, told DealBook. “The redesign timeline is driven by security feature development.”

The Obama administration said that a design “concept” would be unveiled by 2020, to coincide with the centennial of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote. Extensive redesign work was reportedly done, but in 2019, President Donald J. Trump’s Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, said the project would be delayed until at least 2026. (Insiders said they had always doubted that the 2020 deadline could be met).

It turns out that the complex design and testing process for currency cannot be hurried. “No final images have been selected,” Ms. Washington said. The Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment.

The container ship Ever Given was refloated on Monday, unblocking the Suez Canal. Oil prices fell as ship traffic on the waterway resumed.Credit…Mahmoud Khaled/Getty Images

  • Wall Street opened lower on Tuesday, as bond yields jumped higher.

  • The S&P 500 was down 0.3 percent in morning trading, and the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite declined 0.7 percent.

  • In bond markets, attention was returning to the pace of the economic recovery in the United States as more details of President Biden’s clean energy and infrastructure spending plans emerged, including a huge expansion of offshore wind energy along the East Coast. A $3 trillion economic package is in the works, on the heels of the $1.9 trillion economic recovery bill.

  • Bond prices dropped, sending yields on 10-year bonds sharply higher. The yield on U.S. Treasury notes rose 5 basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 1.76 percent, the highest since January 2020. Faster economic growth is likely to lead to higher prices, which reduces the appeal of bonds.

  • Most European stock indexes rose, with the Stoxx Europe 600 up 0.5 percent. Data published on Tuesday showed an increase in inflation in Spain and Germany, while an index of economic confidence for the eurozone in March was at its highest level since before the pandemic.

  • Oil prices fell. Futures of West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. crude benchmark, fell 1.5 percent to $60.61 a barrel. With the Suez Canal now unblocked, focus shifted to the meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies beginning Thursday to decide on production quotas for May. In early March, OPEC decided to keep the tighter quotas the same for April.

  • “Much as the Suez Canal is seeing traffic return progressively to normal, it seems that bond markets are returning to pricing the economic recovery,” analysts at ING wrote, referring to the rise in bond yields. They also warned that traders and investors settling positions for the end of the first quarter would affect market prices this week.

  • Shares in the Swiss bank Credit Suisse and the Japanese bank Nomura extended their deep declines slightly from Monday, when the banks said they faced losses as they tried to exit positions tied to an American hedge fund, Archegos.

  • The British pound rose 0.2 percent against the euro to the strongest level in 13 months as England’s lockdown restrictions were eased slightly on Monday.

A mobile touch screen doubles as a digital whiteboard while a cellphone on a tripod makes a recording that can be used later in a presentation.Credit…John Muggenborg for The New York Times

As company heads are once again planning for a return to the office, it is not only safety measures but also the new work arrangements that are driving discussions about the post-pandemic workplace. More than 80 percent of companies are embracing a hybrid model whereby employees will be in the office three days a week, according to a new survey by KayoCloud, a real estate technology platform.

Workplaces are being reimagined for activities benefiting from face-to-face interaction, including collaboration on projects, Jane Margolies reports for The New York Times.

Common areas will be increased and equipped with furniture that can be moved as needs change. Steelcase and Knoll, suppliers of office furniture, report strong interest in mobile tables, carts and partitions.

As the amount of space devoted to gathering expands, the fate of one’s own personal turf at the office — a desk decorated with family photos, a couple of file cabinets — hangs in the balance. In some cases, personal desks are being replaced with “hoteling” workstations, also called hot desks, which can be used by whoever needs a place to touch down for a day.

Conference rooms, too, are getting a reboot. Companies are puzzling over how to give remote workers the same ability to participate as those who are physically present. There are even early discussions about using artificial intelligence to conjure up holographic representations of employees who are off-site but could still take a seat at the table. And digital whiteboards are likely to become more popular, so workers at home can see what’s being written in real time.

Kroger requires employees and customers to wear masks.Credit…Eze Amos for The New York Times

Retail and fast-food workers feel newly vulnerable in states like Mississippi and Texas, where governments have removed mask mandates before a majority of people have been vaccinated and while troubling new variants of the coronavirus are appearing.

It feels like a return to the early days of the pandemic, when businesses said customers must wear masks but there was no legal requirement and numerous shoppers simply refused, Sapna Maheshwari reports for The New York Times. Many workers say that their stores do not enforce the requirement, and that if they do approach customers, they risk verbal or physical altercations.

For many people who work in retail, especially grocery stores and big-box chains, the repeals of the mask mandates are another example of how little protection and appreciation they have received during the pandemic. They were praised as essential workers, but that rarely translated into extra pay on top of their low wages. Grocery employees were not initially given priority for vaccinations in most states, even as health experts cautioned the public to limit time in grocery stores because of the risk posed by new coronavirus variants. (Texas opened availability to everyone 16 and older on Monday.)

The differing state and business mandates have some workers worried about more confrontations. Refusing service to people without masks, or asking them to leave, has led to incidents in the past year like a cashier’s being punched in the face, a Target employee getting his arm broken and the fatal shooting of a Family Dollar security guard.

Emily Francois, a sales associate at a Walmart in Port Arthur, Texas, said that customers had been ignoring signs to wear masks and that Walmart had not been enforcing the policy.

“I see customers coming in without a mask and they’re coughing, sneezing, they’re not covering their mouths,” said Ms. Francois, who has worked at Walmart for 14 years and is a member of United for Respect, an advocacy group. “Customers coming in the store without masks make us feel like we aren’t worthy, we aren’t safe.”

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Health

Pfizer Begins Testing Its Vaccine in Younger Kids

Pfizer has started testing its Covid-19 vaccine in children under the age of 12. This is an important step in reducing the pandemic. The first participants in the study, a pair of 9-year-old twin girls, were vaccinated on Wednesday at Duke University in North Carolina.

Results of the study are expected in the second half of the year, and the company hopes to vaccinate younger children early next year, said Sharon Castillo, a spokeswoman for the drug company.

Moderna is also starting testing its vaccine in children aged six months to 12 years. Both companies have tested their vaccines in children 12 years and older and expect these results in the next few weeks.

AstraZeneca began testing its vaccine in children six months and older last month. Johnson & Johnson has announced plans to extend the vaccine trials to young children after assessing performance in older children.

Immunizing children will help schools reopen and end the pandemic, said Dr. Emily Erbelding, an infectious disease doctor at the National Institutes of Health who oversees the testing of Covid-19 vaccines in specific populations.

An estimated 80 percent of the population may need to be vaccinated for the United States to achieve herd immunity, the threshold above which the coronavirus can no longer infect people. Some adults may refuse to be vaccinated, while others may not produce a robust immune response.

Children under the age of 18 make up about 23 percent of the US population. Even if the vast majority of adults choose vaccines, “herd immunity may be difficult to achieve without vaccinating children,” said Dr. Erbelding.

Pfizer originally announced that it would wait for data from older children before starting trials of its vaccine in children under the age of 12. “We were encouraged, however, by the data from the group of 12-15 year olds,” said Ms. Castillo, who did not elaborate on results so far.

Scientists will test three doses of the Pfizer vaccine – 10, 20, and 30 micrograms – in 144 children. Each dose is assessed first in children aged 5 to 11 years, then in children aged 2 to 4 years, and finally in the youngest group aged six months to 2 years.

After determining the most effective dose, the company will test the vaccine on 4,500 children. Approximately two-thirds of the participants are randomly selected to receive two doses 21 days apart. The remainder received two placebo injections of saline solution. The researchers will study the children’s immune response in blood drawn seven days after the second dose.

Updated

March 25, 2021, 2:39 p.m. ET

“It sounds like a good plan, and it’s exciting to see another Covid-19 vaccine drive studies in children,” said Dr. Kristin Oliver, pediatrician and vaccine expert at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.

Dr. Oliver said that about half of the parents she sees in the office eagerly await vaccines and even volunteer their children for clinical trials, while the rest are skeptical because comparatively few children get seriously ill with coronavirus infection .

Both parent groups will benefit from knowing exactly how safe and effective the vaccines are in children, she said.

Children make up 13 percent of all reported cases in the United States. More than 3.3 million children tested positive for the virus, at least 13,000 were hospitalized and at least 260 died, noted Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, who represents the American Academy of Pediatrics on the Federal Advisory Board on Immunization Practices.

The figures do not fully capture the damage to the health of children. “We don’t know how a Covid infection will affect the long term,” said Dr. Maldonado.

Other vaccines have helped fight many terrible teething problems that can cause long-term complications. She added, “For some of us who have seen this, we don’t want to go back to that time.”

Children are often more responsive to vaccines than adults, and infants and young children in particular can have a high fever. All side effects are likely to appear soon after the shot, within the first week, and certainly within the first few weeks, experts have said.

Some vaccines are only tested on animals before being studied in children and must be carefully monitored for side effects.

“But that’s a little different because we’ve already had tens of millions of people with these vaccines,” said Dr. Maldonado. “So there is more confidence to give this vaccine to children.”

Some experts suggested that the Food and Drug Administration may need up to six months of safety data from studies in children before the Covid-19 vaccines are approved. However, a spokeswoman said the agency did not expect safety data to support approval of the vaccines for six months.

The Pfizer BioNTech vaccine is approved for children ages 16-18, and approval for that age group was based on just two months of safety data, she said.

Parents will want to know how the companies and the FDA plan to monitor and disclose the side effects of the vaccines and how long they will pursue study participants after the vaccines are approved, said Dr. Oliver.

“I think everyone has learned that,” she said. “The more transparent you can be, the better.”

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Pfizer begins trial on infants and younger youngsters

A healthcare worker prepares a vaccination for Pfizer coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Los Angeles, California on January 7, 2021.

Lucy Nicholson | Reuters

Pfizer announced that it has started a clinical trial testing the Covid-19 vaccine in healthy children aged 6 months to 11 years. This is a critical step in gaining regulatory approval to vaccinate young children and fight the pandemic.

The first participants in the study have already made their recordings, which were developed in collaboration with the German drug manufacturer BioNTech, New York-based Pfizer announced on Thursday. In the first phase, 144 children are to be enrolled.

In the first phase of the study, the company will determine the preferred dosage level for three age groups – between 6 months and 2 years, 2 and 5 years, and between 5 and 11 years. The children will first receive a dose of 10 micrograms of the vaccine before gradually moving on to higher doses, Pfizer said. Participants also have the option of ingesting 3 micrograms doses. The adult Covid vaccine requires two shots that contain 30 micrograms per dose.

Researchers will then evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the selected dose levels in the next phase of the study, with participants being randomly selected to receive the vaccine or a placebo, the company said. After a six-month follow-up visit, children who received a placebo will have the option to receive the vaccine.

“Pfizer has extensive experience developing clinical trials of vaccines in children and infants and is committed to improving the health and well-being of children through well-designed clinical trials,” the company said in a statement.

Pfizer’s vaccine has already been approved for use in the United States by Americans 16 and older. Clinical studies testing the vaccine in children whose immune systems may react differently than adults are still to be completed.

Vaccinating children is critical to ending the pandemic, say public health officials and infectious disease experts. The US is unlikely to achieve herd immunity – or if enough people in a given community have antibodies to a given disease – before children can be vaccinated. According to the government, children make up around 20% of the US population.

In late January, Pfizer announced that it had fully registered the Covid-19 vaccine study for children ages 12-15. The company announced Thursday that the data in this cohort was “encouraged” and hopes to provide more details about the study. soon.”

Moderna, which also has a US-approved vaccine, announced on March 16 that it has started testing its shot in children under the age of 12. Moderna started a study in December testing children aged 12 to 17 years.

Johnson & Johnson plans to test its single-shot vaccine in infants and even newborns after it was first tested in older children, according to the New York Times.

The Chief Medical Officer of the White House, Dr. Anthony Fauci, speaking to a House committee earlier this month, said the U.S. could vaccinate older children against Covid-19 starting this fall, while elementary school-age children may get their shots early next year.

Pfizer’s announcement comes two days after the start of an early-stage clinical trial of an experimental oral antiviral drug that could be used at the first sign of Covid infection.

Health experts say the world will still need a slew of drugs and vaccines to end the pandemic that has infected more than 30 million Americans and killed at least 545,282 people in just over a year, according to Johns Hopkins University.

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Pfizer begins early stage scientific trial testing oral antiviral drug

Pfizer said Tuesday it had started an early clinical trial of an experimental oral antiviral drug for Covid-19.

The New York-based company announced that the Phase 1 study of the drug PF-07321332 will be conducted in the United States. The drug belongs to a class of drugs called protease inhibitors, and it works by blocking an enzyme that the virus needs to replicate in human cells.

Protease inhibitors are used to treat other viral pathogens such as HIV and hepatitis C.

“Fighting the COVID-19 pandemic requires both preventive vaccination and targeted treatment of those who become infected with the virus,” Pfizer’s chief scientist Mikael Dolsten said in a press release. “Given the way SARS-CoV-2 is mutating and the ongoing global impact of COVID-19, it is likely that access to therapeutic options will be critical both now and after the pandemic.”

The study comes as Pfizer is also working on an intravenously administered protease inhibitor known as PF-07304814. This drug is currently in a Phase 1b clinical trial in patients hospitalized with Covid-19.

A person walks past the Pfizer building in New York City on March 2, 2021.

Carlo Allegri | Reuters

Pfizer already has an approved vaccine in the US with German drug maker BioNTech, but health experts say the world will need a slew of drugs and vaccines to end the pandemic that is infecting more than 29.8 million Americans and is coming soon Has killed at least 542,991 people over a year, according to the Johns Hopkins University.

Preclinical studies have shown that the oral drug, the first orally ingested protease inhibitor for Covid-19 to be studied in clinical trials, has “strong” antiviral activity against the virus.

Because the drug is taken orally, it can be used outside of hospitals for people newly infected with the virus. The researchers hope the drugs will prevent the disease from getting worse and keep people out of the hospital.

Pfizer said it will provide more details on the drug at the Spring American Chemical Society meeting on April 6.

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Moderna Begins Testing Its Covid Vaccine in Infants and Younger Kids.

The pharmaceutical company Moderna has started a study testing its Covid vaccine in children under the age of 12, including babies as young as six months, the company said Tuesday.

The study is expected to enroll 6,750 healthy children in the United States and Canada.

“There is a great demand for information about vaccination in children and how it works,” said Dr. David Wohl, the medical director of the University of North Carolina Vaccination Clinic, who is not involved in the study.

In a separate study, Moderna is testing its vaccine on 3,000 children aged 12 to 17 years.

Many parents want protection for their children, and vaccinating children should help create the herd immunity that is believed to be critical to ending the pandemic. The American Academy of Pediatrics has called for vaccine studies to be expanded to include children.

Every child in Moderna’s study receives two recordings 28 days apart. The study will consist of two parts. In the first case, children aged 2 to under 12 can receive two doses of 50 or 100 micrograms each. People under the age of 2 may receive two exposures of 25, 50, or 100 micrograms.

In each group, the first children to be vaccinated are given the lowest doses and monitored for reactions before later participants are given higher doses.

The researchers then conduct an interim analysis to determine which dose is the safest and most effective for each age group.

Children in the second part of the study receive the doses or placebo shots selected by the analysis, which consist of salt water.

The children will be followed for a year to look for side effects and measure antibody levels, which will allow researchers to determine if the vaccine is effective. Antibody levels will be the main indicator, but researchers will also look for coronavirus infections with or without symptoms.

Dr. Wohl said the study was well designed and likely efficient, but asked why the children should only be observed for one year when adults in Moderna’s study were observed for two years. He also said he was a bit surprised that the vaccine was being tested in children so young so soon.

“Should we first learn what happens to the older children before we go to the really young children?” Asked Dr. Well. Most young children don’t get very sick from Covid, although some develop severe inflammatory syndrome that can be life-threatening.

Johnson & Johnson has also announced that it will test its coronavirus vaccine in babies and toddlers after first testing it in older children.

Pfizer-BioNTech is testing its vaccine in children ages 12-15 and plans to switch to younger groups. The product is already approved for use in the USA from the age of 16.

Last month, AstraZeneca began testing its vaccine in the UK in children 6 years and older.

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Tyson Meals begins vaccinating staff, however struggles to search out doses

When looking for access to Covid vaccines, large employers like Tyson Foods are no better off than many individual Americans. Tight supplies usually keep them waiting.

The meat processing company received its largest vaccine allocation this week and is vaccinating workers at its plants in Missouri, Illinois and Virginia. But there are only 1,000 cans in the three states.

Executives say they have received 25 to 50 doses at a time so far this month to vaccinate their occupational health workers and workers over 65

“We are not turning down opportunities to obtain vaccines for our team members,” said Tom Brower, senior vice president of health and safety, Tyson.

However, the options were limited. With 120,000 workers in two dozen states, the company has not been able to get anywhere near enough supplies to keep vaccination clinics on a large scale.

“We’re coming into these jurisdictions and asking for 1,000 or 1,500 doses,” said Dr. Daniel Castillo, chief medical officer of Matrix Medical Network, Tyson’s professional health care provider, who conducted on-site testing of the meat packer.

Even in states that are now providing access to vaccines for key workers, the uncertainty of vaccine supplies is hanging over large employers. The local health authorities cannot give them a schedule of when to get access.

“They don’t know how much they actually have to allocate to us sometimes. That’s part of the challenge of really not having that line of sight,” Castillo said.

Tyson and rival meat packers JBS and Smithfield Foods came under fire at their facilities at the start of the pandemic due to widespread Covid outbreaks. At Tyson’s pork processing plant in Iowa, managers were laid off after a probe found they had bet how many workers would get sick. Congress has launched an investigation into security vulnerabilities in meat packers. Tyson and the other companies are working with the probe.

According to the Food & Environment Reporting Network monitoring group, more than 12,500 Tyson employees have been infected with the coronavirus since the pandemic began. Tyson won’t confirm the numbers, but says the Covid-19 protocols he has been running have kept workers safe.

The company has worked with Matrix Medical on tests to contain potential outbreaks and put in place safety measures such as plastic partitions to reduce potential exposure on production lines. Last year they also expanded the on-site health clinics and launched a pilot program to provide no-copay basic care services as part of a longer-term initiative to improve the general health of workers.

While a number of companies are offering cash rewards to motivate workers to get the vaccine, Tyson has chosen to persuade its mostly Latin American and African American meat packers through an awareness campaign against the hesitation of the vaccine.

“We didn’t want to take the approach of contracting the vaccine. We really want to help team members make informed decisions about their own health care and safety,” said Brower.

It’s not the only big employer standing empty of competition to track down the vaccine doses. Amazon, Walmart, and others are calling on federal and state officials to provide access to on-site vaccinations and even contact vaccine manufacturers to secure supplies, which has had little success so far.

“If every road leads to the same place, which is a rare vaccine, it’ll be a challenge no matter which road,” Castillo said.

Companies don’t want to be seen as an attempt to cross the line – they argue that they can unburden the system for individuals by vaccinating their large employee populations. In the meantime, Tyson is giving employees four hours of paid time off to get a vaccine elsewhere if they can get an appointment.

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The Biden Period Begins – The New York Instances

Joe Biden wird heute gegen Mittag Eastern in Washington als Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten vereidigt. Hier ist der vollständige Veranstaltungsplan.

Diese Einweihung wird nicht wie die anderen sein, mit einer spärlichen Menge, die wegen der Pandemie an der Vereidigungszeremonie teilnimmt. Präsident Trump wird auch nicht dabei sein, da er und viele seiner Anhänger weiterhin falsche Behauptungen über die Wahl anpreisen. Es gibt eine starke Sicherheitspräsenz, um zu vermeiden, dass die tödliche Gewalt eines Pro-Trump-Mobs vor zwei Wochen im Capitol wiederholt wird.

  • “Die amerikanische Demokratie wird belagert”, schreibt David Leonhardt in unserem Schwester-Newsletter The Morning und vergleicht das heutige spartanische Verfahren mit den Einweihungen während des Krieges in den Jahren 1861, 1865 und 1945.

An Mr. Trumps letztem vollen Tag im Amt, Er gab 143 Begnadigungen und Kommutierungen heraus, “eine letzte Auspeitschung von Mr. Trump gegen ein Strafjustizsystem, das er als unfair angesehen hatte, um ihn und seine Verbündeten zu verfolgen”, schreibt The Times. Zu den bemerkenswerten Geschäftszahlen, denen Gnade gewährt wurde – hier ist die vollständige Liste – gehören Elliott Broidy, ein Finanzier und Top-Trump-Spendensammler, der sich schuldig bekannte, bei Aktivitäten, an denen der flüchtige malaysische Finanzier Jho Low beteiligt war, gegen ausländische Lobbygesetze verstoßen zu haben; Ken Kurson, der ehemalige New York Observer-Redakteur und Verbündete von Jared Kushner, der wegen Cyberstalking angeklagt war; der ehemalige Google-Manager Anthony Levandowski, der sich schuldig bekannte, Unternehmensgeheimnisse gestohlen zu haben; William Walters, der Sportwetter, der wegen Insiderhandels in einem Fall verurteilt wurde, der Carl Icahn und Phil Mickelson verwickelte; Sholam Weiss, der wegen Versicherungsbetrugs zu mehr als 800 Jahren Gefängnis verurteilt wurde; und Bob Zangrillo, ein Finanzier, der im Varsity Blues College-Zulassungsskandal angeklagt war. (Viele der Begnadigungen scheinen mit der Lobbyarbeit einflussreicher Persönlichkeiten verbunden zu sein: Die Petition von Herrn Levandowski wurde beispielsweise von Peter Thiel, dem Mitbegründer von Oculus VR, Palmer Luckey, und dem ehemaligen Hollywood-Manager Michael Ovitz unterstützt.)

Am ersten Tag von Herrn Biden Er plant, Gesetze vorzuschlagen, um viele der Einwanderungspolitiken von Herrn Trump umzukehren, einschließlich der Möglichkeit für Einwanderer ohne Papiere, Bürger zu werden. Herr Biden plant auch die Erteilung einer Reihe von Durchführungsverordnungen, einschließlich der Verlängerung eines Moratoriums für Zwangsvollstreckungen für staatlich garantierte Hypotheken und des Widerrufs einer Anordnung, die das Diversity-Training für Bundesbehörden und Auftragnehmer einschränkte. Er könnte Progressive mit dem Befehl enttäuschen, eine Pause bei den Studentendarlehenszahlungen des Bundes bis September zu verlängern, anstatt große Schulden zu stornieren, wie einige gehofft haben.

  • Das Weiße Haus von Herrn Biden wird strengere Coronavirus-Tests, soziale Distanzierung und das Tragen von Masken vorschreiben. Axios berichtet, dass viele seiner Mitarbeiter die Amtszeit von zu Hause aus beginnen werden.

In Fotos und Überschriften: Folgen Sie in dieser illustrierten Zeitleiste dem Weg von Herrn Biden zur Präsidentschaft und besuchen Sie die größten Anzeigen auf der Titelseite von Herrn Trumps Amtszeit.

Jack Ma taucht wieder auf. Der Mitbegründer von Alibaba sprach heute auf einer Veranstaltung zu Ehren der Lehrer in Chinas Dorfschulen, seinem ersten öffentlichen Auftritt seit drei Monaten. Er hat sich zurückgehalten, seit die chinesischen Regulierungsbehörden begonnen haben, gegen sein Geschäftsimperium vorzugehen.

Die Zahl der Todesopfer bei Covid-19 in den USA beträgt 400.000. Das Land erreichte gestern den grimmigen Rekord, nachdem die täglichen Todesfälle in den letzten Wochen 3.000 überschritten hatten.

Trumps abtretender Kartellchef fordert strengere Beschränkungen für Fusionen. Makan Delrahim sagte, dass die Kartellabteilung des Justizministeriums Gesetze ausgearbeitet habe, die es dominanten Unternehmen erschweren würden, kleinere Rivalen zu kaufen, ähnlich einer Maßnahme der Hausdemokraten.

Die Bundesanwaltschaft beendet eine Insider-Untersuchung gegen Senator Richard Burr. Das Justizministerium wird keine strafrechtlichen Anklagen gegen den Republikaner aus North Carolina wegen Handelsgeschäften nach Briefings nur durch Senatoren verfolgen. Herr Burr behauptete, er habe angemessen gehandelt, sei jedoch als Vorsitzender des Geheimdienstausschusses des Senats zurückgetreten.

Parler versucht mit Hilfe einer russischen Firma zurückzukehren. Das bei Konservativen beliebte soziale Netzwerk, das offline ging, nachdem Amazon nach dem Aufstand im Capitol die Computerdienste eingestellt hatte, gab an, mit einer russischen Internetfirma zusammengearbeitet zu haben und hoffte, bis Ende des Monats zurückkehren zu können.

Die Kandidatin der Biden-Regierung für das Finanzministerium beantwortete gestern bei ihrer dreistündigen Anhörung zur Bestätigung viele Fragen. Hier sind ihre Gedanken zu einigen der Themen, die DealBook verfolgt hat:

  • Kryptowährungen sind ein besonderes Anliegen. “ Frau Yellen sagte. „Ich denke, viele werden – zumindest im Sinne von Transaktionen – hauptsächlich für illegale Finanzierungen verwendet. Und ich denke, wir müssen wirklich untersuchen, wie wir ihre Verwendung einschränken können. “

  • Treasury “muss laserfokussiert bleiben” auf Chinasagte sie und zitierte “viele Werkzeuge”, die der Abteilung zur Verfügung standen. Dazu gehören “Sanktionen und Durchsetzungsmaßnahmen, die dazu dienen können, finanzielle und Unterstützungsnetzwerke derer abzubauen, die uns Schaden zufügen wollen”.

  • “Nichts ist für die Zukunft des Wohnens wichtiger als das, was wir mit Fannie und Freddie machen.” Frau Yellen sagte. Sie hat sich nicht zu dem Plan der Trump-Regierung verpflichtet, die Kreditgeber zu privatisieren, sondern sagte: “Ich muss sorgfältig prüfen, was umgesetzt wurde, und letztendlich müssen wir eine Lösung finden, die von beiden Parteien unterstützt wird.”

– David Solomon, der CEO von Goldman Sachs, ist besorgt über den Blankoscheck-Boom

Aktualisiert

Jan. 20, 2021, 6:41 ET

Der Business Roundtable hielt gestern ein Briefing für Reporter ab, in dem seine Prioritäten für die Biden-Administration dargelegt wurden. Der CEO von Walmart, Doug McMillon, Vorsitzender der mächtigen Unternehmenslobbygruppe, sagte, das Weiße Haus sollte in zwei wichtigen Fragen handeln:

  • Machen Sie klarere Richtlinien für die Verteilung von Impfstoffen. “Wir haben mehr Kapazität, um Nadeln in die Arme zu stecken, als derzeit verwendet wird”, sagte McMillon über Walmart, zu dessen Zusammenarbeit mit den Gesundheitsbehörden die Nutzung seiner Verkaufsstellen für Impfstellen gehört. Er sagte, inkonsistente staatliche Regeln hätten die Dinge verlangsamt; Er hat Kontakt zu Biden-Beamten aufgenommen, um sicherzustellen, dass alle über 65-Jährigen landesweit geimpft werden können.

  • Erhöhen Sie den Mindestlohn vorsichtig. “Ein durchdachter Plan, der den föderalen Mindestlohn unter Berücksichtigung geografischer Unterschiede und kleiner Unternehmen erhöht, sollte unserer Meinung nach umgesetzt werden”, sagte McMillon und befürwortete den Vorschlag von Herrn Biden, den föderalen Mindestlohn auf 15 USD pro Stunde anzuheben, nicht ganz. aber auch nicht ablehnen. Der größte Einzelhändler des Landes hat im vergangenen Jahr die Einstiegslöhne für rund 11 Prozent seiner Belegschaft angehoben.

Steve Schwarzman, Blackstones Mitbegründer und Geschäftsführer, war einer der weltbesten Abgesandten von Präsident Trump und blieb trotz Kontroversen und gelegentlicher Probleme bei ihm. Kate Kelly von der Times wirft einen Blick darauf, was Herr Schwarzman aus den Krawatten gewonnen hat.

Durch die Nähe blieb Herr Schwarzman Zugang zu Geschäftsmöglichkeiten: Während der Trump-Regierung sicherte sich Blackstone eine Zusage von Saudi-Arabien in Höhe von 20 Milliarden US-Dollar für einen neuen Infrastrukturfonds, und Herr Schwarzman half bei der Aushandlung eines Handelsabkommens mit China, das Finanzunternehmen einen besseren Zugang zu chinesischen Märkten versprach.

Herr Schwarzman sah seinen Rat als öffentlichen Dienst und als einen Weg, sein Erbe zu polieren. nach Angaben von Freunden und Kollegen. Der Blackstone-Chef half “einem Verrückten bei der Beaufsichtigung durch Erwachsene”, sagte Marc Levine, der frühere Vorsitzende des Illinois State Investment Board, gegenüber Kate.

Die Vorteile können sich jedoch als flüchtig erweisen. Die Saudis haben bisher nur 7 Milliarden US-Dollar in den Fonds investiert, und die Pandemie hat die Handelsgespräche mit Peking unterbrochen. Das vielleicht größte Problem für Blackstone ist die potenzielle Unzufriedenheit der Anleger mit den politischen Aktivitäten von Herrn Schwarzman. Nachdem Kommentare zu den Wahlergebnissen in einer privaten Telefonkonferenz durchgesickert waren, beschwerte sich mindestens eine Pensionskasse, die bei Blackstone investiert, über die Bemerkungen, berichtet Kate.

Die Netflix-Aktien fliegen im Premarket-Handel, nachdem gestern nach dem gestrigen Handelsschluss die Stoßfängergewinne veröffentlicht wurden. So zerlegt Ed Lee von The Times es für DealBook:

Viele von uns haben sich jahrelang gefragt, ob Netflix ein echtes Geschäft oder nur ein verschuldetes Kartenhaus ist. Seit 2011 hatte das Unternehmen 16 Milliarden US-Dollar geliehen, um seinen Inhalt zu füllen und das Unternehmen am Leben zu erhalten. Obwohl Netflix mehr Geld ausgab als es in Anspruch nahm, belohnten es die Anleger jedes Mal, wenn Netflix seine Abonnenten erhöhte.

Aber Netflix hat einen finanziellen Meilenstein erreicht, der diese Erzählung ändert. Es kündigte an, dass es sich endlich zu einem selbstfinanzierenden Unternehmen entwickeln werde, und rechnet in diesem Jahr mit einem „nachhaltigen“ positiven Cashflow.

Das ist positiv, bedeutet aber auch, dass Netflix nun an prosaischen Maßnahmen wie dem Free Cashflow gemessen wird. Dies kann hilfreich sein, da die wachsende Anzahl von Wettbewerbern die Anzahl der Abonnenten erschwert. Es ist so einfach, Streaming-Dienste abzubrechen und neu zu starten, dass Kunden zu erfahrenen Switchern geworden sind.

Kredit, wo er fällig ist: Netflix ‘teures Glücksspiel hat sich ausgezahlt, und das Unternehmen wird wahrscheinlich auch in den kommenden Jahren der größte Streamer bleiben. Es setzte auch einen gewaltigen Meilenstein: Netflix wurde erst zu einem positiven Free Cashflow-Geschäft, als es 200 Millionen Abonnenten überstieg.

Angebote

  • MGM Entertainment gab sein Übernahmeangebot von 11 Milliarden US-Dollar für das Wettunternehmen Entain auf, nachdem sein Angebot abgelehnt worden war. (FT)

  • In den Nachrichten zum Sammeln von Spenden für Elektrofahrzeuge: Rivian sammelte 2,65 Milliarden US-Dollar von Investoren wie T. Rowe Price und Amazon’s Climate Fund, während die Cruise Division von GM 2 Milliarden US-Dollar von Microsoft, Honda und anderen sammelte. (NYT, Axios)

  • Der Vorsitzende von Intel, Omar Ishrak, und Joshua Fink, der Sohn von Larry Fink von BlackRock, haben einen auf Gesundheitstechnologie ausgerichteten SPAC ins Leben gerufen, der bis zu 750 Millionen US-Dollar sammeln soll. Medtronic ist ein Investor, ein seltener Corporate Player im SPAC-Geschäft. (Gesundheit berechnen)

Politik und Politik

  • Einzelhändler wie Bed Bath & Beyond haben Produkte von MyPillow fallen gelassen, nachdem der CEO des Unternehmens weiterhin unbegründete Theorien über Wahlbetrug vorangetrieben hat. (NYT)

  • Gouverneur Andrew Cuomo aus New York enthüllte ein Budget für den schlimmsten Fall, einschließlich einer vorübergehenden Vermögenssteuer und starker Kürzungen bei der Schulfinanzierung und bei Medicaid, falls der Staat keine staatliche Unterstützung erhält. (NYT)

Technik

  • “Wie Volkswagens 50-Milliarden-Dollar-Plan, Tesla kurzgeschlossen zu schlagen” (WSJ)

  • Der koreanische Elektronikkonzern LG erwog, den Smartphone-Markt zu verlassen. (The Verge)

Das Beste vom Rest

  • Die London Metal Exchange plant, ihren 144 Jahre alten physischen Handelsraum, den so genannten Ring, endgültig zu schließen. (Bloomberg)

  • Präsident Trump könnte aus Hollywoods größter Gewerkschaft, SAG-AFTRA, ausgeschlossen werden. (LA Times)

  • Wie ein Mann es geschafft hat, drei Monate lang unentdeckt auf dem Flughafen O’Hare in Chicago zu leben. (NYT)

Wir freuen uns über Ihr Feedback! Bitte senden Sie Ihre Gedanken und Vorschläge per E-Mail an dealbook@nytimes.com.

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Business

Dr. Fauci, Azar obtain Moderna’s Covid vaccine as rollout begins

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The director of the National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, US Secretary of Health Alex Azar and other senior health officials are expected to receive the Covid-19 vaccine from Moderna on Tuesday morning.

The director of the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Francis Collins, is also said to be shot. According to the NIH, six health care workers at the NIH Clinical Center will also receive the Moderna vaccine, which the Food and Drug Administration approved for emergency use last week.

It is the agency’s first delivery of 100 doses, NIH said, and additional NIH Clinical Center health care workers will receive the vaccine after the public event. The agency expects to get a larger shipment from the state of Maryland next week for more frontline healthcare workers.

The event comes after a series of public vaccination ceremonies were held as the first doses of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were distributed across the country. Senior US officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, US Surgeon General Jerome Adams, and President-elect Joe Biden, have received their vaccines at television events.

Fauci has long said that he will take the vaccine publicly as soon as it becomes available to encourage Americans to get the vaccine.

Read CNBC’s live updates for the latest news on the Covid-19 outbreak.

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Health

Trump well being officers talk about Pfizer Covid vaccine as U.S. begins administering pictures

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Health and Human Services officials and the Pentagon are holding a joint conference Monday on the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed ​​Covid-19 vaccination program as Americans receive some of the first few shots.

The first doses of a Pfizer vaccine with BioNTech were shipped to the US over the weekend. Trucks carrying boxes of vaccine doses left Pfizer’s Kalamazoo, Michigan manufacturing facility on Sunday and should arrive on Monday, according to Pfizer.

New York’s Northwell Health administered the state’s first dose of vaccine just before 9:30 a.m. ET. Sandra Lindsay, a The critical care nurse at the Long Island Jewish Medical Center received the first shot, which earned the audience applause.

Read CNBC’s live updates for the latest news on the Covid-19 outbreak.