The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio lawmakers push for vote on anti-vaccine mandate bill

- Laura A. Bischoff

Ohio legislativ­e leaders put the brakes on a controvers­ial anti-vaccinatio­n mandate bill just weeks ago. Now conservati­ves in the House are making moves to force a floor vote on the measure.

State Rep. Jennifer Gross, R-west Chester, is gathering lawmakers' signatures on a discharge petition to force an

immediate floor vote on House Bill 248.

She needs 50 signatures but so far the petition is only signed by Gross and state Rep. Nino Vitale, R-urbana.

It's the latest turn in pitched battle between health care and business interests that oppose the bill and those who oppose medical mandates and place a premium on individual rights.

Gross asked her fellow lawmakers to sign the petition after President Joe Biden announced last week that his administra­tion will direct employers with 100 or more employees to require their workforce to get vaccinated or face weekly testing for COVID-19.

"The people of Ohio are relying on our

Legislatur­e to put an end to the government overreach currently ensuing by the Biden Administra­tion," Gross wrote in a letter to House members. "...The people of Ohio demand this measure – it is our duty to act."

Absent a statewide mask mandate and vaccine mandates, cities, school districts and employers are requiring people to wear masks indoors in public places and in some cases ordering employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

House Bill 248 would block public agencies, schools, child care providers and others from requiring or asking someone get vaccinated against COVID-19 or any other infectious diseases. Schools and child care centers would be required to explicitly tell parents about available exemptions to childhood immunizati­on laws, including a catch-all that would allow them to skip shots for any reason.

Employers, including hospitals, would not be allowed to require workers to get vaccinated, participat­e in a vaccine passport system or disclose their immunizati­on status.

The bill would also repeal state law requiring college students to get immunized against hepatitis B and meningitis to live in on-campus housing.

Even if HB 248 gets a House floor vote, it would still have to win approval in the Ohio Senate. Gov. Mike Dewine has said he opposes the measure.

Dewine criticized Biden's sweeping vaccine mandate, saying it was a mistake.

Laura Bischoff is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons

across Ohio.

“The people of Ohio are relying on our Legislatur­e to put an end to the government overreach currently ensuing by the Biden Administra­tion . ... The people of Ohio demand this measure – it is our duty to act.” State Rep. Jennifer Gross R-west Chester

 ?? BROOKE LAVALLEY/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Supporters of House Bill 248, which would block employers from requiring vaccines, gathered outside in August.
BROOKE LAVALLEY/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Supporters of House Bill 248, which would block employers from requiring vaccines, gathered outside in August.

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