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Don't want to get vaccinated? Some Florida lawmakers are on your side

Capitol building at night with glowing lights of city.
Erich Martin
/
used with permission
Lawmakers are meeting at the Capitol this week for a special session focused on coronavirus vaccine and mask mandates

Florida Republican leaders say a person shouldn’t lose their job just because they don’t want to get a vaccine. Lawmakers are meeting this week in a special session to push back on coronavirus-related mandates.

Sen. Danny Burgess (R-Zephyrhills) is carrying a bill that creates state rules against employers firing workers who refuse to get vaccinated. Under the measure, employers must first offer a testing alternative and must honor certain exemptions including medical exemptions, religious exemptions, and exemptions for people who have previously been infected by COVID-19.

Burgess says while he has been vaccinated and thinks getting vaccinated makes sense, he also says he understands why some people might make a choice to not get vaccinated.

"We need to understand people's doubts, people's concerns and feelings." Burgess says.

Burgess presented his bill Monday to the Senate Judiciary Committee. The measure faced pushback from Democratic lawmakers who say there’s not enough clarity on how a person would qualify for an exemption. That’s an issue Sen. Audrey Gibson (D-Jacksonville) raised.

“As Senators and as a full legislature we’re depending on, apparently, somebody to make some kind of rules as they go along using a bill that we have not given much direction in. I think that robs us as legislators of what our duty should be," Gibson says.

Gibson says the decision is best left to communities where she says local governments are best equipped to know and respond to the needs of their residents.

The Senate committee also heard a bill Monday that would keep the state surgeon general from requiring people to get vaccinated.

Sen. Aaron Bean (R-Jacksonville) is sponsoring the measure in his chamber. He says the surgeon general has plenty of other tools for protecting people during a public health emergency—like requiring someone exposed to a dangerous disease to quarantine.

“To quarantine somebody is to suspect that they’ve been exposed. So if you’ve been exposed to a very infectious disease, I think it makes sense for the surgeon general to quarantine somebody. But to proactively inject a vaccine into you proactively without you having any symptoms or going forward, then that’s something different," Bean says.

Another measure that's part of the special session discussion this week would create a pathway for removing Florida from regulation under the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration

Follow @Regan_McCarthy

Regan McCarthy covers healthcare and government in Tallahassee, Florida. She is the Assistant News Director for WFSU Public Media.

Phone: (850) 645-6090 | rmccarthy@fsu.edu

Find complete bio, contact info, and more stories here.