Politics & Government
Georgia House Committee Votes To Keep COVID-19 Vaccine Proof Prohibition
Public Health Chairwoman Sharon Cooper, R-Marietta, broke a party-line tie to get the bill through to the House floor.
March 13, 2023
(The Center Square) — A bill that would permanently extend Georgia’s prohibition on local governments requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccination for services was approved by the House Public Health Committee on Monday.
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Public Health Chairwoman Sharon Cooper, R-Marietta, broke a party-line tie to get the bill through to the House floor.
Senate Bill 1 is sponsored by state Sen. Greg Dolezal, R-Alpharetta, and would remove the sunset provision from Gov. Brian Kemp’s executive order on proof of COVID vaccination and public services.
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If lawmakers had not acted, the prohibition would have sunset on June 30, the final day of the fiscal year.
State Rep. Todd Jones, R-Cumming, presented the bill to the committee. He said the data showed that making the prohibition permanent would not jeopardize public policy or health.
State Rep. Michelle Au, D-Johns Creek, said putting such a permanent restriction would be "tying the hands for future pandemic response and taking tools out of our toolbox."
The bill was originally passed out of the Senate on Feb. 7 by a 31-21 vote.
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