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Senate Republicans scale back proposed ban on employer vaccine requirements

COVID vaccines
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Senate Republicans have scaled back a proposed ban on employer vaccine requirements for COVID-19.

Companies would still have to honor medical or religious exemptions, but they wouldn’t just have to take your word for it.

The bill would instead follow standards laid out in federal civil rights law, which say companies have a right to review whether a claimed religious belief is sincere. And the Senate version deletes an all-purpose escape hatch which would allow any worker to refuse the vaccine without offering a reason.

Many of those who testified when the House passed the original version of the bill last month complained it didn’t go far enough. At a two-hour Senate committee hearing, several vaccine opponents say they backed the House version, but can’t support the revised bill.

They’re particularly angry about the use of the federal standard for granting religious exemptions, which Stand for Health Freedom executive director Leah Wilson calls “grossly inadequate.”

While anti-vaccine groups withdrew their support, the Indiana Chamber and local Chambers of Commerce for Indianapolis, Carmel, Fishers, South Bend and Evansville have withdrawn their opposition after senators scrapped a provision making businesses pay the tab for testing unvaccinated workers. And business groups say the more limited exemptions restore companies’ ability to manage their own workplaces.

Hospitals and nursing homes wouldn’t be affected by the proposed limits. A federal mandate requires those workers to get vaccinated, regardless of what the state does. The bill also allows mandates for pro sports facilities and entertainment venues. Senate Majority Leader Mark Messmer (R-Jasper) says those venues requested the change to avoid conflicts with touring performers whose contracts with stagehands include vaccine requirements.

The Senate Health Committee approved the revised bill on an 8-2 party-line vote. Indianapolis Democrat Jean Breaux calls the bill much improved, but says she’s still concerned it threatens to “delegitimize” a vaccine which has saved lives. Since the first full vaccinations last January, 84-percent of Indiana’s COVID-19 deaths have been unvaccinated.

The full Senate could vote on the bill next week, but House and Senate Republicans agree there will be further negotiations afterward on a final version.

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4 comments

Charles U Farley February 17, 2022 at 10:48 am

No employer should be able to force their employees to undergo a medical procedure, full stop. That’s the end of the discussion.

Reply
Earl Mullet February 17, 2022 at 6:02 pm

Maybe they can force all of their employees to take antidepressants since plenty of people have anxiety and commit suicide or how about force them to have lap band surgery since obesity is one of the greatest comorbidities? The point is that companies cannot coerce employees to do something against their will. Its immoral and it doesn’t surprise me that politicians from both parties side with the chamber of commerce(money) over working people. Time to employees to refuse and for the people to vote them out of office

Reply
Charles U Farley February 17, 2022 at 6:07 pm

It’s time to abolish the Chamber of Communists… Sorry, Commerce. I confuse the two all the time.

Reply
Jim February 17, 2022 at 7:48 pm

The Republican Senate…..where is it? We have a bunch of “we can do anything we want” rhinos in Indianapolis. Time to start taking names and clean house.

Reply

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