State Senate Committee advances bill prohibiting vaccine passports in Pennsylvania

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HARRISBURG (Newsradio 100.1 FM and AM 1020 KDKA) – The Pennsylvania Senate Health and Human Services Committee advanced a measure that would ban vaccine passports in Pennsylvania.

The legislation would ban state, as well as local governmental entities, and school districts from requiring vaccine passports, a move that comes as other states implement vaccine passports.

The sponsors of the legislation are Senators Kristin Phillips-Hill (R-28), Judy Ward (R-30) and Michele Brooks(R-50), who serves as the committee’s chair.

The Senators highlight that the COVID-19 vaccines that are currently being administered in the United States have only been approved under Emergency Use Authorization and not full approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

“Getting the COVID-19 vaccine should be a personal choice, not a government mandate,” Senator Brookssaid. “This legislation aims to protect private medical information and the individual freedoms of Pennsylvanians.”

Under federal law, an individual must be given the option to accept or refuse administration of the vaccine.

“We want those who want to receive the vaccine to have every opportunity to do so. We have seen shifting guidance from day one and while the administration shares our sentiment in not requiring vaccine passports, this legislation will give every Pennsylvanian the reassurance that their state government will not overstep its bounds,” Senator Phillips-Hill  said. “In light of the state’s failure to safeguard critical healthcare information through its third-party vendor tasked with contact tracing, this legislation will ensure the state cannot create new programs that could capture personal health care information.”

This move will protect Pennsylvanians from seeing something implemented like what New York is doing. The state paid IBM $2.5 million to create state-issued vaccine passports called an Excelsior Pass. Other states are requiring proof of vaccination to attend gatherings.

“Whether due to a medical issues or personal choice, some people have very valid reasons for why they are not receiving a COVID-19 vaccination,” Ward said. “People have been through enough intrusion into their personal health status during this pandemic. By memorializing this in legislation, we can ensure that Pennsylvanians are not facing discrimination based up on their vaccine status - no matter what the Governor or Department of Health says now or in the future.”

The legislation  now moves to the full Senate for its consideration.