Community Corner

Lawmakers Send Bill To Governor To Kneecap Health Department Authority

The Ohio Legislature spurned the medical community and aligned itself with anti-vaccine groups Thursday, sending to Gov. Mike DeWine leg ...

Photo courtesy of University Hospitals.
Photo courtesy of University Hospitals. (Ohio Capital Journal)

By
Jake Zuckerman
-

The Ohio Legislature spurned the medical community and aligned itself with anti-vaccine groups Thursday, sending to Gov. Mike DeWine legislation that scuttles the state health department’s quarantine powers.

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In a party line vote, House Republicans passed Senate Bill 311, which prohibits the Ohio Department of Health from issuing statewide and regional quarantine or isolation orders to people who haven’t been infected or exposed to disease. The Senate passed the bill in September.

It would also allow lawmakers to pass a resolution to rescind ODH orders like the statewide mask mandate.

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The passage comes as the pandemic reaches new heights in Ohio. There are more than 3,700 Ohioans in the hospital with COVID-19 as of Wednesday, triple what it was just one month prior. New infections are surging at breakneck pace, and the death toll is likely to hit 6,000 this week.

In a hastily arranged committee hearing Thursday morning, ODH Chief Medical Officer Bruce Vanderhoff urged lawmakers to vote down SB 311.

“The legislation takes away public health’s ability to be nimble in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic and will limit the ability of public health officials to respond to future infectious disease outbreaks and potential acts of bioterrorism,” he said.

The Ohio Hospital Association, Ohio State Medical Association, the state chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Ohio Children’s Hospital Association, jointly wrote a letter urging against passage.

“While we are currently experiencing unprecedented increases in COVID-19 cases and new daily records of hospitalizations and ICU stays, we would urge the Ohio Legislature rethink passing this legislation as this time,” the hospitals wrote. “A proposal like SB 311 will not help Ohio stem the rising COVID-19 case numbers, hospitalizations, ICU admissions, and deaths occurring as a result of this pandemic.”

The passage likely sets up a showdown with between the General Assembly and DeWine, who threatened to veto the legislation.

“This bill would make Ohio slow to respond to a crisis, it would take tools away from this governor or future governor, it would put the lives of Ohioans in jeopardy,” DeWine, also a Republican, said to reporters.

“This bill is a disaster.”

The legislation passed the Senate with a veto-proof 20-13 vote. It passed the House with a 58-30 vote. Several Republicans were absent from the vote and could potentially give the House Republican caucus a veto-proof majority in that chamber as well.

Current state law gives the ODH director “ultimate authority” in matters of quarantine and isolation. It also allows the department to issue orders “for preventing the spread of contagious disease.”

The legislation doesn’t automatically repeal any coronavirus-related public health orders. However, it holds the door open for lawmakers to strike down orders as they see fit.

House Republicans said the legislation is less about health policy than separation of powers. They took issue with the health department passing ordinances like a stay-at-home order in March or a mask mandate in July without any legislative oversight.

“It’s the constitutional issue that bothers us more than the health issue,” said Rep. Jason Stephens, R-Kitts Hill.

Rep. Reggie Stoltzfus, R-Minerva, said this bill is about ignoring the experts and trusting Ohioans — not the government — to make sound decisions.

“This bill is about checks and balances,” he said.

Rep. Craig Riedel, R-Defiance, said lawmakers “want to be a teammate” but first, DeWine needs to “share the ball.”

Democrats, who have found themselves in an unusual lockstep with DeWine, said this isn’t the time for a power struggle.

“Now is not the time to argue who gets to make these decisions,” said Democratic Rep. Beth Liston, who is also a physician.

In fielding proponent testimony on the legislation, troves of Ohioans affiliated with two anti-vaccine groups in the state lined up to speak in support of the legislation.

Michelle Cotterman, president of Health Freedom Ohio, an anti-vaccine (members prefer the term “medical freedom”) group, said COVID-19 orders caused increases in drug abuse and suicide far worse than the pandemic itself.

“We are also concerned with the practice of solely relying on individuals trained in pharmaceutical-based health care and medical trade organizations when shaping public health policy,” Cotterman said.

The specific effects of the legislation are unclear.

Micah Berman, a public health law professor at Ohio State University, said the legislation doesn’t define “quarantine” or “isolation” and that it’s unclear whether a stay-at-home order counts as a quarantine.

“It strikes me as bad lawyering and bad legislative drafting,” he said. “I don’t know how a court could possibly make sense of what this bill says.”

The issue arose during committee Thursday morning. An attorney with the nonpartisan Legislative Service Commission emailed lawmakers during the hearing to say she “cannot opine as to whether a court would consider the April Stay Home orders as an isolation or quarantine.”

Also, the legislation would prevent ODH from quarantine those who have not been exposed to a disease. But more than 7,000 Ohioans are testing positive on average for COVID-19 per day on average, a figure that’s rising. Contact tracers are backlogged tracking exposures, muddying the picture of who has or has not been exposed.

Elsewhere in the Capitol on Thursday, the new coronavirus once again pierced the Statehouse bubble.

House Civil Justice Committee Chairman Stephen Hambley, R-Brunswick, told members that within an hour of the hearing starting, a staffer had tested positive for COVID-19.

“I’m asking all members and staff to please take the abundance of common caution,” he said. “Masks, distance, sanitation and so forth.”

House Republicans went on to vote down an attempt from Democrats to require members and staff to wear masks in the chamber. Many (not all) House Republicans still refuse to wear mask, despite a scientific consensus that they reduce the risk of the wearer spreading the virus if he or she does not have symptoms.

The CDC also recently updated its mask guidance to reflect new evidence suggesting they protect the wearer from contracting COVID-19.

Susan Tebben and Tyler Buchanan contributed to this report.

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This story was originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. For more stories from the Ohio Capital Journal, visit OhioCapitalJournal.com.

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