Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill would allow parents religious exemptions in getting children vaccine

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

A Tennessee lawmaker has filed a bill that would give parents a greater right to refuse vaccines for their children during a pandemic based on religious objections or “by right of conscience.”

Current Tennessee law gives parents the legal right to refuse vaccinatio­ns for their children in order to enroll them in school in most instances — but only “in the absence of an epidemic or immediate threat thereof.”

The bill introduced by Rep. Jay Reedy, R- Erin, would remove longstandi­ng references to an epidemic, allowing parents to assert the right to not obtain school- required immunizati­ons before sending their children to school during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Current law allows parents to refuse immunizati­ons in most circumstan­ces, but includes this out: “except where the medical examinatio­n, immunizati­on is necessary for the protection of the health and safety of others.”

Reedy ’ s measure would delete that portion of the law, too.

The bill represents what could prove to be a new front in the politicize­d fight against the COVID- 19 virus, which has brought record numbers of infections and deaths to Tennessee in just the past week. While debates over masks and mask requiremen­ts and, in some cases, even the damage wrought by the disease have raged since it f irst arrived in the United States in early 2020, epidemiolo­gists have pinned many of their initial hopes on containing the disease to widespread vaccinatio­ns.

Under Reedy’s proposed measure, both state and local efforts to enforce immunizati­on requiremen­ts for schoolchil­dren would be limited once a vaccine to COVID19 becomes available.

The bill’s language, which is in initial stages and may be altered before the legislatur­e reconvenes in January, states “a state agency or department shall not promulgate or enforce any rule, and a political subdivisio­n of this state shall not promulgate, adopt, or enforce any ordinance or resolution that requires medical examinatio­n, immunizati­on or treatment for those who object to the medical examinatio­n, immunizati­on, or treatment on religious grounds or by right of conscience.”

The bill’s introducti­on comes ahead of a promising rollout of a pair of COVID-19 vaccines that state health department director Dr. Lisa Piercey said earlier this week could be available in Tennessee as early as Dec. 1 for at- risk population­s and health care providers, and as soon as this spring for everyone else.

Reedy did not respond to a message left with his legislativ­e office.

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Jay Reedy

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