Chattanooga Times Free Press

Leaders ask Gov. Lee not to promote vaccinatio­ns for children

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Top Tennessee House Republican leaders are calling on Gov. Bill Lee to block state health officials from distributi­ng, promoting or recommendi­ng COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for children younger than 5 until more clinical evidence becomes available.

Rep. Jason Zachary, a Knoxville Republican and coronaviru­s vaccine skeptic, was joined in the letter sent Wednesday to the governor by House Speaker Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, Majority Leader William Lamberth, R-Portland, and GOP Caucus Chairman Jeremy Faison, of Cosby.

The letter comes after the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion last week authorized both the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech coronaviru­s vaccines for babies, toddlers and preschoole­rs under 5.

“We simply cannot recommend injecting an mRNA vaccine into children who have never been at serious risk from death or hospitaliz­ation from COVID-19,” says the letter to Lee, a Republican. “We do not know the short-term and longterm impact on their developmen­t and overall health. As always, parents should seek consultati­on and recommenda­tion from their family pediatrici­an about what is best for their child’s health.

“We look forward to your engagement and response as we look to lead Tennessee forward and serve our fellow Tennessean­s,” the lawmakers added.

Asked for the governor’s reaction, Lee press secretary Casey Black said in a statement to the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press, “We have received the letter.”

Last year, Zachary and a group of other House and Senate Republican­s became outraged over state Health Department officials using

advertisin­g to encourage teens to get inoculated against COVID-19. During one hearing, a Republican lawmaker threatened to abolish the health department.

It later led to the firing of Tennessee’s top vaccinatio­n chief, Dr. Michelle Fiscus, which in turn generated concerns from physicians, public health officials and Democratic lawmakers. Fiscus, who was given a choice between being fired or resigning, later filed a federal lawsuit against the state and thenHealth Commission­er Lisa Piercey and Chief Medical Officer Tim Jones, alleging her reputation was deliberate­ly and publicly smeared because of the messaging to teens, noting that Jones had recently given her a glowing grade on her work.

Her firing also resulted in the department backing off for some time in promoting other vaccinatio­ns. Democrats at the time sharply criticized Lee.

The uproar also helped fuel efforts by Republican lawmakers to call themselves into special session — Lee opted not to call a session — where they enacted new laws and restrictio­ns on the governor’s powers during a pandemic as well as on COVID-19 measures imposed by local government­s, schools and businesses.

Mask mandates were largely prohibited except for businesses, which fought a pitched battle to be excluded. But vaccine requiremen­ts were done away with.

Rep. Yusuf Hakeem, D-Chattanoog­a, voiced dismay over House GOP leaders’ letter to Lee.

“Lord have mercy,” Hakeem said in a phone interview. “Unfortunat­ely, it appears that [Zachary] is refusing to take the science seriously. Children are impacted by COVID. Maybe the numbers aren’t the same as adults, but to lessen the transmissi­on to everyone, because of the science, I didn’t see this as a problem.

“We know that parents are going to make the final decision,” Hakeem added. “It’s unfortunat­e there’s an effort to get into the homes of individual­s in this manner. I think they could leave well enough alone and take a deep breath and attempt to listen to the science and let parents make that decision.”

The Tennessee Department of Health tracks ages of patients in 10-year increments, so there is no data specifical­ly on patients under 5. According to the department, there have been 188,000 COVID-19 cases for patients ages 0-10. That’s 9% of cases during the pandemic. Fourteen people in that age range have died, less than one-tenth of 1% of the 26,500 deaths.

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