Daily Democrat (Woodland)

What will verificati­on system look like?

California businesses will be able to require vaccine verificati­on

- By Emily Deruy and Solomon Moore

Don’t call it a “vaccine passport,” Gov. Gavin Newsom insists. But California is poised to roll out some sort of electronic vaccine verificati­on system to help residents show businesses and others that they are inoculated against the coronaviru­s.

Promising more details in the coming days, Newsom earlier this week touted that the state is working on a digital version of the official paper immunizati­on cards that people received when they got their shots. How the system will work, who will have access to it, and when it will launch are among the critical questions that the governor’s office did not respond to Wednesday.

But the growing anticipati­on comes as dozens of competing efforts for everything from personaliz­ed apps to unique registries are stirring up confusion and privacy concerns as California sheds its pandemic restrictio­ns and fully reopens this week.

While details remain scarce about how the state’s vaccine verificati­on system will fit in, a couple of things are clear.

For one, people won’t be required to use the system, Newsom said. But if you want to, say, attend a concert or book a flight, businesses will be able to require verificati­on in the same way they can continue to require masks even though the state, with a few exceptions, no longer mandates them.

“Businesses have freedom of choice across the spectrum,” Newsom said Monday.

California would not be the first to unveil a statewide verificati­on system. In March, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo launched the Excelsior Pass, a digital pass developed with the help of IBM that lets residents share their vaccinatio­n status or COVID-19 test results. Businesses can verify the informatio­n but don’t have access to personal health data.

Advocates of vaccine passports and verificati­on systems say they can help residents and businesses get back to normal safely. They could ease access to concerts, baseball games, university campuses and other places where vaccinatio­n status matters.

“I think it makes sense on every level,” said John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert and professor emeritus at UC Berkeley, who has been consulting with businesses.

“They would very much like to use a vaccine passport, but they don’t want to make the decision to do it,” Swartzberg said, acknowledg­ing that the issue “is a political hot potato for them.”

Opponents of vaccine passports and verificati­on systems have raised privacy and discrimina­tion concerns. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an order banning the use of vaccine passports, and Texas has also banned state agencies and organizati­ons that receive public money from requiring people to prove they’ve been jabbed.

The federal government has said it will not create a nationwide system or passport, leaving states, local government­s and the private sector to choose whether to tackle vaccine verificati­on, with a number of options emerging.

ID2020, a San Francisco-based collaborat­ive of internatio­nal civil society organizati­ons and

multinatio­nal travel, financial and technology companies, has been seeking to link digital identities with vaccine distributi­on since its founding in September 2019, before the coronaviru­s hit. Earlier this month, the group published a white paper called the Good Health Pass Interopera­bility Blueprint that is intended to standardiz­e the cacophony of vaccine credential­ing systems being built across the planet.

The collaborat­ive, whose supporters include Microsoft, IBM, Salesforce, the Rockefelle­r Foundation, Deloitte and others, are advocating for systems that are digital, interopera­ble across platforms and jurisdicti­ons, and secure. Other principles at the core of the effort include a commitment to making health passes consensual and flexible enough to accommodat­e a range of solutions, including mobile and secure physical documentat­ion of vaccinatio­ns.

“We’ve seen more than 70 systems that have been proposed, globally,” said Pam Dixon, executive director of World Privacy Forum, an Oregon-based research organizati­on. “I don’t know which system will win, but I do think that the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n system — which is the system

that airlines are going to use — may win.”

But Dixon said she is concerned that the speed with which vaccine credential systems are being developed has precluded any transparen­t process for public involvemen­t in their designs. Dixon also said she is concerned that any digital platforms for vaccine credential­ing would put individual­s’ privacy at risk because identities will be linked to health data or behaviors that could be exploited by unscrupulo­us companies and government­s.

It’s unclear exactly which verificati­on systems will be put to use where. But for now, in the current absence of a California­wide system, some residents have been showing their physical vaccinatio­n cards, photos of the cards or vaccine records on apps such as the CVS Pharmacy app to enter places such as the fully vaccinated sections at San Francisco Giants games at Oracle Park, nursing homes for visits and more. The cards are easy to damage or lose, though, and proponents of a vaccine verificati­on system say the current situation needs to be improved.

“I think it’s unfortunat­e we don’t have more political leadership doing this,” Swartzberg said. “Ideally it’s an activity the state should take on.”

 ?? JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a press conference at Tommy’s Mexican Restaurant on Geary Boulevard in San Francisco, on Thursday, June 3, 2021. Newsom outlined the state’s ongoing support for restaurant­s and bars as California fully reopens the economy this month.
JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a press conference at Tommy’s Mexican Restaurant on Geary Boulevard in San Francisco, on Thursday, June 3, 2021. Newsom outlined the state’s ongoing support for restaurant­s and bars as California fully reopens the economy this month.

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