1. Home
  2. |Insights
  3. |Georgia District Court Addresses Scope of Nationwide Injunction of Federal Contractor Vaccine Mandate

Georgia District Court Addresses Scope of Nationwide Injunction of Federal Contractor Vaccine Mandate

Client Alert | 1 min read | 01.28.22

On January 21, 2022, the District Court for the Southern District of Georgia issued an Order in Georgia v. Biden, No. 2:21-cv-163 (S.D. Ga. Jan. 21, 2022), which responded, in part, to the Government’s requests for clarification regarding the scope of the court’s nationwide injunction of the federal contractor vaccine mandate promulgated under Executive Order 14042. The Government sought clarification of two questions: (1) Whether the injunction “prohibit[s] private federal contractors from mutually agreeing with Defendants to include COVID-19 safety clauses in their federal contracts, thus allowing those federal contractors to voluntarily comply with the Task Force guidelines, including requiring their employees to be vaccinated”; and (2) Whether the Government could continue enforcing compliance with the other requirements associated with the mandate, including masking, social-distancing, and the requirement that contractors must designate employees to serve as coordinators who manage contractor compliance efforts. 

The court declined to “wade into the murky waters presented by Defendant’s first inquiry, which is more akin to a request for an advisory opinion.” In response to the second question, the court declined to provide clarification, again, but pointed out that the injunction “did not use” language referencing the enforcement of other requirements. 

Given that the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force promulgates the COVID-safety requirements, “covered contractors” whose contracts have already incorporated one of the compliance-mandating clauses (e.g., FAR 52.223-99, DFARS 252.223-7999) should closely monitor the Task Force website for any updates to its enforcement policy or the COVID-safety requirements. The Task Force’s latest announcement regarding enforcement provided that “[t]he Government will take no action to enforce the clause implementing requirements of Executive Order 14042, absent further written notice from the agency, where the place of performance identified in the contract is in a U.S. state or outlying area subject to a court order prohibiting the application of requirements pursuant to the Executive Order.” As of the date of this publication, the Task Force website continued to list all 50 States, the District of Columbia, and all outlying territories as excluded from enforcement.

Insights

Client Alert | 4 min read | 06.25.26

Twin Executive Orders Seek to Spur Quantum Leap in Technology and Cybersecurity

On June 22, 2026, President Trump signed two executive orders, “Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks” (Quantum Security EO) and “Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation” (Quantum Innovation EO), marking the most significant federal action on quantum technology since the Quantum Computing Cybersecurity Preparedness Act of 2022, which directed agencies to harden their information systems against quantum-enabled hacking. The orders seek to speed the development of quantum computers, which are advanced processors that can calculate multiple possibilities simultaneously and thus solve problems exponentially faster than traditional computers. At the same time, the orders look to protect against the danger that quantum technology can “break” traditional encryption by easily decoding it. Of particular note for government contractors, the Quantum Security EO directs agencies to update federal acquisition regulations to require contractors by 2031 to adopt information processing standards that resist quantum-enabled codebreaking....