The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Latest Republican anti-vaccine bill could be dead

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

COLUMBUS » 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 signaled his disapprova­l of any bill regulating how private businesses can run companies,

This further casts 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 cosponsor.

“I think it’s the most sensible balance between honoring someone’s individual medical freedom while allowing the employer and the school to provide for public safety and public health,” Carfagna said Wednesday, minutes before Cupp stopped the bill.

The legislatio­n does not prevent private businesses from requiring vaccinatio­n proof. In addition, employees of children’s hospitals and employees who work on hospital intensive care or critical care units would not be eligible for the exemptions to receiving the vaccine.

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Carfagna
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Cupp

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