By Terri Langford, The Texas Tribune
A bill that would make it easier for parents to exempt their children from school-required vaccinations tentatively passed the Texas House, 85-57, late Tuesday.
If House Bill 1586 by state Rep. Lacey Hull, R-Houston, becomes law, the state’s current exemption form could be downloaded from the internet, bypassing the need to contact the Texas Department of State Health Services directly and having a form mailed to an applicant’s home address.
“This bill promotes government efficiency, saves taxpayer dollars and helps parents enroll their children each school year on time so they can access their fundamental right to an education,” Hull told fellow lawmakers.
She insisted the bill was merely about making a form more accessible to parents.
Democrats countered that the bill, saying it would further erode vaccination rates in schools, which have been falling since exemptions to childhood vaccine schedules have been made easier.
“Representative Hull, I know that you're aware that Texas is currently in the midst of an explosive measles outbreak, and with more than 700 cases, 90 hospitalizations, many of them in ICU, two deaths,” said state Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin. "Does this bill do anything to protect or stop the deadly measles outbreak?"
“This bill is about where a form is printed,” Hull responded, a refrain she would repeat when challenged on the bill’s impact.
Multiple Democrats attempted to amend the bill from the floor, including proposing provisions that would educate exemption requestors on the impact of not vaccinating. They all failed.
The bill does not change the requirement that the parents must have the form notarized before turning it in to the school for the child to be enrolled.
Vaccination rates have dropped in recent years, particularly after the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused the public to lose trust in pharmaceutical companies and oversight agencies that repeatedly stated the COVID vaccine was safe and effective.
Those claims have proven to be false.
The alarming rise in childhood autism, which corresponds with the increase in required childhood vaccines, has also caused speculation that vaccines could be causing autism, which has been supported by U.S. Public Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Since 2018, the requests to the Texas state health agency for an exemption form have doubled from 45,900 to more than 93,000 in 2024. All requests for exemptions are granted.
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