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Ohio legislative leaders hit the brakes on anti-vaccination bill

Protesters gather across from the Hamilton County Public Health building in the Corryville neighborhood of Cincinnati, displaying anti-vaccine signs to passing cars on William Howard Taft Road on Monday, Aug. 9, 2021.

A contentious anti-vaccination bill will get another hearing Tuesday in the Ohio House Health Committee but legislative leaders have already said they’re pumping the brakes on it for now. 

In a statement issued Monday, House Speaker Bob Cupp, R-Lima, said: “This legislation is important to many members of this caucus. Due to the high interest in the bill, we have directed (House Health Committee) Chairman (Scott) Lipps to have one hearing, which will take place on Tuesday, August 24, with no amendments or votes. We will then pause hearings on HB 248 while we work with the chairman, the bill’s sponsor, and all interested parties on this important issue.”

House Bill 248 has triggered enormous controversy in Ohio. Witnesses favoring medical choices and less government oversight, as well as those prone to believing conspiracy theories, have pushed for its adoption. In June Dr. Sherri Tenpenny testified that the COVID-19 vaccine may magnetize people and have some sort of interface with 5G cellphone towers.

False testimony from Sherri Tenpenny, an osteopathic doctor from suburban Cleveland, before the Ohio House Health Committee on June 8 went viral. Dr. Tenpenny made false claims about the vaccines against COVID-19.

More:Hundreds protest Summa Health’s vaccine mandate in front of hospital, report says

Anti-vaccination protests have erupted across Ohio, where they’ve blasted businesses for requiring mask and or vaccines and called for passage of House Bill 248.

Protests have been held in Columbus, Akron, Mansfield, Cincinnati and elsewhere, including outside of Ohio hospitals in recent weeks, including Summa Health in Akron, Kettering Medical Center near Dayton, and Ohio State Wexner Medical Center and Grant Medical Center in Columbus.

Businesses, hospitals, public health experts and others have weighed in against the bill.

More:‘Everyday citizens were shocked:’ Controversial testimony ‘wounded’ Ohio anti-vaccination bill

The Ohio Chamber of Commerce issued stern warnings to lawmakers to drop HB248 and butt out of telling businesses how to operate. In a recent interview, CEO Steve Stivers said he doesn’t expect most businesses to require vaccines but contends the bill is a slippery slope that could lead to more government regulation.

“The anti-business Republicans tend to be more populist generally, but this one is a very, very dangerous bill that I think moves us toward the government controlling the means of production,” he said. “Every Republican and Democrat should think about whether they want to be part of that.”

The former GOP congressman also blasted lawmakers for introducing the measure as businesses are poised to lose temporary protections against lawsuits related to COVID-19.

“You can’t take away their liability protections and also stop them from managing the risk,” Stivers said.

In prepared testimony for this week, Pat Tiberi of the Ohio Business Roundtable called the bill a danger to public health and an government overreach into business operations.

“Put simply, it strips the business owners of their rights,” said Tiberi, a Republican who served 18 years in the U.S. House and eight years in the Ohio House.

The original version of the bill 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.

More:No mandates for Ohio public schools, but some private colleges require COVID vaccinations

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

Vaccines and other advancements in public health are credited with extending life expectancy over the past century. Vaccines provide protection against infectious diseases, preventing illness, disability and deaths.

Advocates for House Bill 248 say they don’t oppose vaccines but are against government- and employer-mandated vaccines.

This story will be updated.

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 affiliated news organizations across Ohio.

*** This article has been archived for your research. The original version from The Columbus Dispatch can be found here ***