Lawmakers Discuss Vaccination Laws

West Virginia allows for medical exemptions to vaccines but does not allow for exemptions based on religious or philosophical beliefs. Some lawmakers would like to see those laws change.

West Virginia lawmakers discussed medical exemptions with vaccine experts during a meeting of the West Virginia Legislature’s Joint Committee on Children and Families.

West Virginia allows for medical exemptions to vaccines but does not allow for exemptions based on religious or philosophical beliefs.

According to Shannon Kolman, senior policy specialist in the National Conference of State Legislatures’ Health Program, vaccinations are required when a child is enrolled in a public school.

“Some states specifically spell out which vaccines are required in statutes, and other states refer to an administrative body such as the Department of Health or the Department of Education to adopt rules regarding which vaccines will be required,” Kolman said. “Some examples are states like West Virginia, also including Kentucky, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania, expressively list the vaccines that are required for school in statute.”

However, a parent or guardian is able to apply for a medical exemption to vaccination through a physician.

“All states have immunization laws for school entry that grant exemptions to children for medical reasons,” Kolman said. “So if the vaccine is medically contraindicated, every state allows a child to have an exemption for medical reasons.”

Some lawmakers would like to see vaccination laws changed in the state. Sen. Michael Azinger, R-Wood, spoke against vaccine laws during the meeting.

“We live in America, and if a parent says they don’t want their kid to have a vaccine, they have a constitutional right to do that,” Azinger said. “And here we sit one of these little clumps of states that say that you can’t have a religious exemption. Lord have mercy. Our country was founded on religion, right? The First Amendment, and here we have this, this doctor who’s a very intelligent guy, and I appreciate him coming. But how in God’s name, do you think ‘Doc’ and these folks that DHHR, have the right to tell the parents that they have to vaccinate their children?”

Dr. Joseph Evans, former chief medical officer of Marshall Health and former chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Marshall University, said the World Health Organization has identified vaccine hesitancy as one of the top 10 threats to global health.

“Thanks to our vaccine laws, our state is among the best and safest from vaccine-preventable illness,” Evans said. “We are a model for other states trying to decrease vaccine-preventable diseases. And therefore I think we need to keep our vaccine laws. If it’s not broke, don’t fix it.”

Sen. Patricia Rucker, R-Jefferson, questioned Evans on the efficacy of vaccines.

“So you do make it sound that having this vaccination just provides a protection,” Rucker said. “Have you not ever heard of people getting an illness even though they were vaccinated against it and actually some getting the illness from the vaccine?”

Evans responded, “Well, you don’t get the illness from the vaccine.”

Rucker replied: “That has happened. That has been documented that some folks can trace back their illness to the vaccine.”

Rucker did not cite her source, but the Centers For Disease Control (CDC) studies the adverse effects of vaccines.

Shannon McBee, state epidemiologist, explained the process of compulsory school immunization law exemption to members of the committee.

“West Virginia is considered to have an exemplary immunization model with no recorded outbreaks of measles,” McBee said. “The most common requests that are approved by the Bureau for Public Health are for children who have immunosuppressive medications or have a documented severe reaction to a vaccine or a recipient of an organ transplant.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

More Than A Dozen Lawmakers Joined Crowds On Day Of Capitol Riot

A second Republican lawmaker from West Virginia who marched to the U.S. Capitol to support overturning Democrat Joe Biden’s presidential win said in a radio interview Monday that he hopes President Donald Trump “calls us back.”

State Sen. Mike Azinger told the broadcast outlet that the crowds loyal to Trump were “inspiring and patriotic.”

“I think the president laid out the point of the mission,” he added, speaking to West Virginia Metro News. “It was to pressure the Republican congressmen to challenge the electoral votes.”

Azinger was among more than a dozen lawmakers from at least nine states that joined crowds that descended on Washington last Wednesday to back the baseless claim that the election was stolen. Only one lawmaker was known to have gotten inside the Capitol and since was charged with a crime and resigned. Others have said they participated peacefully.

It was unclear how far Azinger had proceeded in the march to the Capitol grounds that day. Yet he called the scene at the Capitol “peaceful” and described seeing flag-waving crowds and people seated on the Capitol steps, far beyond the original security perimeter that was quickly overrun by rioters.

“Our president called us to D.C.,” said Azinger, who did not return an email seeking comment. “I hope he calls us back.”

The FBI is warning of the threat of armed protests at all 50 state capitals and in Washington in the days leading up to President-elect Joe Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration, prompting heightened security.

“I hope and pray that West Virginians have good judgement in what they do,” Republican West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said about the potential for violence at protests outside his own statehouse. “I’m sure there will be (a) heightened alert.”

In northern Virginia, two Loudoun County officials called Monday for Republican state Del. Dave LaRock to resign for joining the crowds last Wednesday in Washington. LaRock last week said the demonstrators were peaceful save for “a small element who likely infiltrated this patriotic group for the purpose of inciting violence.”

He and two other Virginia Republican lawmakers had sent a letter last Tuesday to Vice President Mike Pence asking him to nullify the presidential election results in Virginia, a state Biden won by 10 percentage points.

Elsewhere, incoming Republican Colorado state Rep. Ron Hanks told a local radio station last week that he arrived for Trump’s rally at the Ellipse outside the White House early that Wednesday morning of the violence. The president used the occasion to urge supporters to “fight like hell.”

Hanks said he marched with supporters to the U.S. Capitol afterward. “I was a little surprised to see people already on the scaffolding, with the Trump flag, and so forth,” he told Heart of the Rockies Radio.

“From the standpoint of the violence, two of us went around to the back of building, which is where the next meeting was supposed to form up,” he said, “and by that time people had already entered the building.”

Azinger blamed far-left elements on social media for distorting what was “a quintessentially American” display of the First Amendment on Jan. 6. The Associated Press has reported that more than 120 people either facing criminal charges or who were identified at the riots are fervent Trump fans, not left-wing activists.

“I’ve got people on Facebook, sending a picture of me with my boys outside the Capitol. They’re sending it to the FBI to try to get me put in handcuffs,” Azinger said, without elaborating.

West Virginia state Del. Derrick Evans resigned last Saturday, a day after federal prosecutors charged him with entering the U.S. Capitol. He had livestreamed himself with a mob of Trump supporters. His resignation letter said he took full responsibility for his actions and that he regretted “any hurt, pain or embarrassment I may have caused.”

If convicted, he faces up to a year and a half in federal prison for two misdemeanor charges of entering a restricted area and disorderly conduct.

West Virginia GOP Chairwoman Endorses Anti-LGBTQ Op-Ed

The leader of West Virginia’s Republican party is applauding a state senator’s call for intolerance against members of the LGBTQ community.

Republican state Sen. Mike Azinger wrote an opinion article Sunday titled “The Shame of LGBTQ Pride” in The Parkersburg News and Sentinel after the paper covered a gay pride picnic. State GOP chairwoman Melody Potter then wrote on Facebook that Azinger’s article was “right on.”

Azinger wrote that “sexual deviancy is going mainstream” and he says the solution “is not political correctness and tolerance.”

Azinger did not return a voicemail and an email. Potter did not return a call to her office.

Andrew Schneider is the executive director of the advocacy group Fairness West Virginia. He says Potter and Azinger are forgetting their scripture when it comes to loving others.

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