The Evening Leader

Latest Ohio Republican anti-vaccine bill could be dead

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COLUMBUS (AP) — A House GOP bill limiting businesses’ ability to require the coronaviru­s vaccine as a condition of employment hit another roadblock Wednesday, with indication­s the measure may be unlikely to pass in its current form.

Under the legislatio­n, employees who could show proof of COVID-19 antibodies, proof they run the risk of a negative medical reaction, or those who don’t want the vaccine for reasons of conscience, including religious conviction­s, would be exempt from employer mandates.

Though the bill is far more lenient than a previous measure that would have banned mandates for all vaccines — including for ailments like the flu — all major business and health groups opposed the legislatio­n.

And while a plan was in place to rush the new version onto the House floor for a full vote Wednesday, that evaporated after Speaker Bob Cupp said there was still no agreement among majority Republican­s on approving the measure.

“Just as there are widely differing views among Ohioans on this issue, it’s certainly not a surprise that there are varying perspectiv­es among their legislativ­e representa­tives as well,” Cupp, a Lima Republican, said in a statement. It was the second time in two weeks Cupp halted action on the bill.

Senate President Matt Huffman, a Lima Republican, has already signaled his disapprova­l of any bill regulating how private businesses can run their companies, further casting doubt on the legislatio­n’s future.

The bill is one of several anti-mandate measures being considered by legislatur­es nationwide. GOP Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday issued an executive order to prohibit any entity, including private business, from enforcing a COVID-19 vaccine mandate on workers.

The Ohio legislatio­n’s exemptions would also be available for employees and students at Ohio’s public and private schools, colleges and universiti­es. Government­s would be prevented from requiring proof of vaccinatio­n to enter locally or state-owned public facilities, which would include publicly funded sports stadiums.

A change proposed to the bill Wednesday would end or “sunset” those exemptions by Sept. 30, 2025, said Rep. Rick Carfagna, a Delaware Republican and bill co-sponsor.

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