GM requires U.S. salaried workers to disclose their vaccination status

General Motors Co. has required its U.S. salaried employees to attest to their COVID-19 vaccination status, the Detroit automaker confirmed Thursday.

The No. 1 U.S. automaker said it notified some 40,000 employees Aug. 12 that they would be required to report their vaccination status to the company via a “confidential online reporting tool” by this past Tuesday. Employees who confirmed that they have been vaccinated were asked to submit a photograph of their vaccination card as proof.

A copy of an email General Motors reportedly sent to staffers on disclosing their vaccine status, posted to a UAW member Facebook group.

In a letter, the automaker assured employees that “only GM Medical staff and authorized personnel” would have access to the data and that the information would be “handled confidentially.” 

“Reporting your vaccination status to GM Medical helps the company assess the overall immunity level of our employee population and determine appropriate measures to support employee safety,” Dr. Jeffery Hess, GM’s corporate medical director, said in the letter, according to a copy seen by The Detroit News. “The level of immunity is an important factor in determining when GM may need to increase or be able to relax or rescind certain COVID-19 safety protocols.”

In a statement, GM spokesperson Maria Raynal echoed this: “In addition to helping assess the overall immunity of our employee population, the information will also be used to verify compliance with COVID-19 safety protocols, such as mask wearing, and influence future public health decisions the company may need to make to continue to protect our employees and the business.”

Raynal declined to comment on what would happen to employees who opted not to report their vaccination status. And asked about the vaccination survey’s results, she said GM is “still in the process of reviewing the data” and does “not plan to provide this information at this time.”

GM’s survey, news of which was first reported by The Wall Street Journal, comes as COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths surge in many parts of the U.S., which experts attribute to the spread of the delta variant and lagging vaccination rates. In Michigan, new infection numbers have been trending upward for a month; the state added a total of 4,326 new cases and 38 deaths from the virus on Tuesday and Wednesday.