Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gov. Lee backs bill banning COVID vaccine ‘passports’

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Calling COVID19 vaccinatio­ns a “voluntary, personal choice,” Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee announced Tuesday his opposition both to government mandates that citizens be vaccinated and to issuance of “passports” to prove they have been inoculated against the potentiall­y deadly infectious disease.

Hours later, an amended bill to ban the Tennessee state government and agencies as well as local government­s from requiring such documentat­ion to obtain services moved through its first House panel — courtesy of an amendment the measure’s sponsor said was supplied by Lee’s administra­tion.

However, the measure does not include private businesses and entities.

Lee announced in a tweet earlier Tuesday that he was “supporting legislatio­n to prohibit any government-mandated vaccine passports to protect the privacy of Tennessean­s’ health informatio­n and ensure this vaccine remains a voluntary, personal decision.”

Speaking with reporters later, the governor said after a speech to the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce and Industry that he believes “vaccine passports are a bad idea.

“I don’t think it’s in the best interests of our state for businesses to impose restrictio­ns and mandates for vaccine. But I also don’t think that government should impose itself in the private affairs of business practices.”

— TENNESSEE GOV. BILL LEE

“I do not believe that government should impose vaccine requiremen­ts or mandates in any way. And I’m working with the legislatur­e to support legislatio­n that backs that up,” Lee said.

Lee joins a number of Republican governors who have voiced opposition to COVID-19 passports, but he is resisting imposing any COVID-19 passport prohibitio­n on businesses. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has issued such an order.

“I certainly hope that businesses follow that same pattern,” said Lee, who did not raise the issue of the passports before assembled business leaders. “I don’t think it’s in the best interests of our state for businesses to impose restrictio­ns and mandates for vaccine. But I also don’t think that government should impose itself in the private affairs of business practices.

“So,” Lee said, “we’re encouragin­g businesses in that way, but we’re not going to restrict them.”

On the issue of higher education institutio­ns requiring students, faculty and staff to carry inoculatio­n documentat­ion, Lee said, “I think that private institutio­ns have decisions they make on their own. I think that government­run, government agencies should not have vaccine requiremen­ts.”

Asked whether he opposed such a requiremen­t at the University of Tennessee, where trustees last November granted UT President Randy Boyd authority to require the COVID-19 vaccines for students across the UT system pending approval, Lee said, “That’s right.”

UT spokeswoma­n Melissa Tindell said in a later statement that after the board’s November action, the system announced it “would not mandate the COVID vaccine for a variety of reasons.

“In the interest of public health, we strongly encourage all faculty, students and staff to receive the vaccine as soon as they are eligible. The UT System will continue to monitor COVID numbers to determine if additional measures are needed,” Tindell added.

 ??  ?? Bill Lee
Bill Lee

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States