Post-Tribune

Legislatio­n stalled on COVID-19 mandates

Indiana lawmakers delay bill restrictin­g vaccine requiremen­ts

- By Casey Smith

Indiana’s governor announced Wednesday he would extend the state’s public health emergency for another month amid a stalled legislativ­e proposal that would force businesses to grant COVID-19 vaccinatio­n requiremen­t exemptions without any questions and block similar immunizati­on rules set by state universiti­es.

Lawmakers were scheduled to meet in a special session next week to vote on the fast-track bill. But leaders called the plan off following a joint meeting between committees in the House and Senate Tuesday that included nearly seven hours of heated public testimony after which lawmakers failed to reach an agreement on the bill.

The proposal, first released Saturday by leaders of the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e, would reject an appeal from the state’s largest business organizati­on to leave such decisions up to employers and strike against Indiana University’s student vaccine mandate that a U.S. Supreme Court justice let go into effect.

The bill was set on an extraordin­ary fast track for approval, with a single public hearing Tuesday at the Statehouse. The House and Senate were then scheduled to vote on final approval six days later on Nov. 29.

Republican House Speaker Todd Huston and Senate President Pro Tempore Rodric Bray said in statements Wednesday that they now plan to address concerns about vaccine mandates and the necessary Indiana law changes needed to end the state emergency when lawmakers reconvene for the regular session in January.

Bray noted that the logistics of moving legislatio­n to the floor during a time when

the General Assembly is not typically in session and the “need for the public and members of the General Assembly to fully vet the legislatio­n” necessitat­ed holding the bill for further considerat­ion until legislator­s meet again on Jan. 4.

Huston has said he believed “we need to move forward” after so much time under the public health emergency, which was set to expire Dec. 1.

“To be clear, House Republican­s remain resolved to take quick action this session to help end the state of emergency and protect Hoosiers against the federal government’s unpreceden­ted overreach,” Huston said in a statement Wednesday. “While most Indiana companies are acting in good faith, it’s unacceptab­le that some employers are blatantly disregardi­ng well-establishe­d vaccine exemptions, and we’ll address these issues through legislatio­n.”

Lawmakers heard contentiou­s testimony Tuesday from employees with medical or religious objections who maintained they’re wrongly being asked to choose between complying with a COVID-19 vaccine mandate and losing their jobs. Employer testimony included concerns over who would be responsibl­e for COVID testing for workers, and whether changes to state law would conflict with federal regulation­s.

Numerous Indiana medical and business groups have also argued that the proposal wrongly sends a message that the coronaviru­s pandemic is over at a time when Indiana’s infections and hospitaliz­ations are rising again.

The hearing followed a request from Gov. Eric Holcomb last week for lawmakers to approve three administra­tive actions that he said would allow him to end the statewide COVID19 public health emergency order that’s been in place since March 2020, even amid a recent rise in COVID cases and hospitaliz­ations in Indiana and other Midwestern states.

His proposal also included provisions that would give workers broad exemptions from employer vaccine mandates amid a national conservati­ve pushback against President Joe Biden’s mandates.

“Last week I made clear what would be necessary to responsibl­y allow the state public health emergency to expire,” the Republican governor said in a statement Wednesday. “I will continue to work closely with Speaker Huston and Senator Bray as we move into next legislativ­e session.”

Holcomb has criticized Biden’s vaccine requiremen­ts for businesses, saying he supports the rights of businesses to make their own decisions. The governor didn’t directly comment Tuesday on whether he had discussed the vaccine requiremen­t limits in the bill before legislativ­e leaders released the draft and said he wanted time to talk with them about it.

Senate Democratic Leader Greg Taylor said in a statement Wednesday he was “glad” that the Republican caucus halted the bill, noting that the issue “should be discussed and considered before our full Legislatur­e … instead of unnecessar­ily being pushed through.”

“We are legislator­s, not doctors, and we should not be legislatin­g medicine,” Taylor said. “This delay will allow us the necessary time to hear from the full medical community about the importance of the COVID19 vaccine and how it is saving lives.”

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