The House Judiciary Committee took a bill to eliminate vaccine requirements for public virtual schools and expanded that the state vaccine requirements for private and parocial schools in West Virginia also abolished the state vaccine requirements.
Brandon steel
“It will allow private and parocial schools to make a determination whether they are going to adopt a vaccination schedule such as one and tight, one less tight or no at all,” Delegate Brandon Steel, R-Reg, who proposed earlier amendments.
Most of the members of the committee voted for change during the Tuesday evening meeting and then for the progress of the bill, which also served as a venting session about the effectiveness of vaccines.
So far, the West Virginia Department of Education claims that the most effective school-entry vaccine in the country is one of the lawsable laws to be stopped: “Vaccination laws have proved to improve attendance rates for students and employees, while children are healthy, safe and ready to learn.”
For the first time, students from West Virginia, who enter the school, should show evidence of vaccination against diphtheria, pertusis, tetanus, polio, measles, kanthamala, rubella, varichela, and hepatitis B unless proper exemption is given unless properly.
The House Bill was first introduced as 5105, there was only one operative line to change that section of the state law: “Any child would be given exemption from the requirements of this article in publicly, virtual schools.”
Amendment by steel will now open up to private schools. The next stop of the bill is the entire house of representatives.
Sean fluharti
Delegate Sean Fluharyti, D-Ohio, suggested that around 15,000 students are enrolled in private schools in West Virginia. “Those 15,000 will no longer be mandatory to provide evidence of being immunized to participate in private or parocial schools,” Fluharti said, who voted against the amendment and bill.
“Therefore, probably none of the schools may need it or all schools may need it, but the state will not be doing so.”
Tod Kirby
Delegate Todd Kirby, R-Railley, spoke in favor of the extended bill, “so that we could choose parents whether their children should be injected 40 times before reaching their 18th birthday.”
Kirby, who was running for the Circuit Judge, said that during the Kovid -19 epidemic, experts and doctors were allowed to override the constitutional rights of our parents and our children in this state.
“Every time they lied to us, they used to come out with a big lie to cover the last lie. He kept our children out of school for a better part of one year. And the governor of the state ended to provide great damage to our children, especially young men, especially young men, by providing encouragement to all our children to vaccinate with a medical equipment, or whatever you want to call it. ,
Chris print
Delegate Chris Pret, R-Kanwa, described West Virginia “When it comes to medical freedom, at the bottom.”
Pripes said, “The more we can move towards freedom – freedom for parents, freedom for them, freedom for them, which they see the best for their children, I think it’s a good thing – I think it’s a good thing,” Print said, which is running for the state Senate.
The mark tightened
Delegate Mark Zetzalo, R-Hencock, voted against the bill.
“To see what happened to polio and to see what happened to Gums, Khasra, and many of these people, this country has been abolished in this country by these vaccines,” Zetzalo said.
Ivan Hansen
Delegate Ivan Hansen, D-Monongalia, argued that “people who study it, clearly come to the conclusion that vaccines do a public good service. Profit removes the benefits. This data tells us.”
Steel concluded the debate before the last committee’s vote on the bill by targeting phrases such as “trusting science” and “those who indicate data”. He also referred to safety against cases by vaccine growers.
“A scientific argument about this is about meritless because those who are arguing with science, they have complete immunity to lie or information about it,” Steel said. “You cannot even sue these people. They are creating vaccines that are providing you the data that is telling you that it is safe. ,
He continued to say that he did not see the outbreaks of measles or kanthamala in states with relaxed vaccine rules.
“Show me all the dead children in Virginia, Kentki, Pennsylvania, Maryland, which is around us. Are they falling from measles? Steel asked. “Did they stop running the Brady Bunch episode, where everyone got measles in a joke?”