in any event, there can be no doubt that addressing infection problems in medicare and medicaid facilities is what he does. this is a mandate that goes into effect for health care workers who work at facilities that receive federal funding through medicaid and medicare, and that is why the supreme court is giving this a green light saying it s different than that other mandate, saying the other mandate, osha doesn t have the broad power as an agency to put this into effect. guys, a little bit of a split verdict, if you will, for the biden administration, but definitely a much bigger loss because they wanted this mandate with employers to go into effect of 80,000 workers. joan biskupic, 6-3 on both of these. where do you see the justice landed on this?
after infectious diseases like this. but we certainly haven t had a pandemic like this. that s why it seems so unprecedented. but for the second case that we heard and that s the vaccine requirement for workers at medicare and medicaid facilities, ones funded by the federal government, in that situation, the chief suggested because the government can attach conditions to its funding, that this that one might pass muster. in fact, he also mentioned that would be a closer fit as far as he was concerned for health care workers having to get vaccinated. and the biden administration is planning to implement the first policy requiring businesses with 100 or more workers to either mandate vaccines or weekly testing. this coming monday but given what transpired today, is that really going to happen? i don t think so, jake, having listened to the argument