Ohio lawmakers approved a bill that would ban public schools and universities from requiring students and staff to receive any COVID-19 vaccine that hasnโt received full approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
House Bill 244, approved on Monday, would also prohibit the institutions from discriminating against an individual who has not received a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus.
Such forms of discrimination would include requiring a person to participate in activities that are different from what a vaccinated person would be required to participate in, according to the bill text (pdf).
It passed along party lines in the Ohio Senate, 24-8, and the Ohio House, 61-34.
None of the vaccines currently being administered in the United States have been fully approved by the FDA to-date. All three are being used under emergency authorization, and itโs unclear when regulators will make a decision. Two of the vaccines authorized for emergency use in the United States require two doses.
โThe simple fact is that decision needs to be decided by their parents and by their family,โ said state Senate President Matt Huffman, a Republican, arguing that young adults arenโt as severely impacted by the virus as others.
State Sen. Andrew Brenner, a Republican, argued that college students should be able to independently make the decision.
โThis is about personal rights,โ he said, reported WKSU. โBut itโs also about making sure our students are protected and that parents are making the decisions and college students are making the decisions about their own personal rights.โ
The legislation now heads to Gov. Mike DeWineโs desk. According to NBC4, DeWine has declined to comment on whether he would veto or sign the bill.
โThis is a happy day today, so weโre not going to talk about unhappy things or anything else,โ the Republican governor said at a separate bill signing.