Pennsylvania GOP Senate votes to bar school children from COVID-19 requirement
The GOP-controlled Pennsylvania state Senate approved legislation to would prevent a COVID-19 vaccine requirement in order for children to attend school, though no such mandate is in effect, The Associated Press reported.
The bill was passed on a 28-21 vote within party lines. It will next go to Pennsylvania’s House of Representatives.
But the AP notes it will likely face a veto by Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (D) who said he opposes the bill and does not have plans to implement such a mandate.
“The administration has no plans to mandate vaccines for K-12 schools so this is nothing more than a waste of time and taxpayer money, and is a distraction from the real issues Pennsylvanians are facing that Republicans should be addressing,” Wolf’s office said in a statement.
One of the bill’s sponsors, Sen. Michele Brooks (R) argued that other vaccines required by schools weren’t approved under the FDA’s “emergency use authorization,” in which COVID-19 vaccines are.
State Sen. Doug Mastriano (R) highlighted the death toll of school-aged children from the virus being 14 out of an estimated 1.7 million, comparing COVID-19 to seasonal flu, bird flu, and swine flu.
Neither the state nor the school district in Pennsylvania requires a COVID-19 vaccination to attend school, AP noted.
The only vaccine available to school-aged children is the Pfizer shot. Booster shots of the vaccine for Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson recently became available for all adults in the U.S. just before the Thanksgiving holiday.
Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Regular the hill posts