Bill would let lawmakers control vaccination rules

LANSING, Mich. (WOOD) — The story of a Michigan mom who went to jail for five days because she refused a judge’s order to vaccinate her child stirred up debate over government-imposed vaccinations.

Who decides what vaccinations a child will get and when? A West  Michigan lawmaker has introduced a bill that could leave that decision  with the legislature.

“Vaccines is a very hot button issue. It’s very personal with  people,” state Rep. Steven Johnson, a freshman Republican from Wayland,  said.

The idea of government-mandated vaccinations stirs up deep emotions  for both those who swear by the effectiveness of herd immunity and those  who think they should decide for their children for a variety of  reasons.

What Johnson is proposing wouldn’t necessarily change the current process.

“Our bill, it doesn’t get rid of any of those. It doesn’t, it really  doesn’t touch any of the existing structure,” he said. “But what it says  is going forward unelected bureaucrats at (the Michigan Department of  Health and Human Services), they can no longer make these laws.”

Johnson argues that since the decisions made by DHHS have the impact a  law, those decisions should be made by elected officials directly  accountable to voters.

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