INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Senate has endorsed a bill allowing administrative steps sought by Gov. Eric Holcomb that could result in the nearly two-year-old statewide COVID-19 public health emergency declaration ending later this week.
Senators voted 32-18 on Tuesday in favor of the proposal that doesn't include provisions pushed by Republican House members that would force businesses to give requested religious exemptions from COVID-19 vaccine requirements "without further inquiry."
Holcomb and Senate GOP leaders have sided with major business groups opposing the broad limitations backed by House members as wrongly interfering in business decisions.
The Senate version would require businesses to grant medical vaccine exemptions to workers along with religious exemptions as required by federal law and mandate that employers accept as a vaccine exemption a worker's medical test results showing some level of "natural immunity" through a previous infection. Employees could be required to undergo COVID-19 tests up to twice a week.
The actions sought by Holcomb would allow the state to keep receiving enhanced federal funding for Medicaid and food assistance programs.
The House and Senate must still agree on a single version of the proposal before it could go to Holcomb for his consideration.
Republican House Speaker Todd Huston, however, said last week that "you can count on it" when asked whether lawmakers would approve a bill addressing the emergency declaration before the current order's Friday expiration.
-
Bicyclist dead following crash involving motorcycle on Indy's southeast side
A bicyclist is dead after a crash involving a motorcycle on the southeast side of Indianapolis Thursday evening.Senate Republicans unveil state budget which doesn't include universal vouchers
State Senator Ryan Mishler, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, expressed his concern about the state's ability to fund universal vouchers.IPS robotics team makes history heading to the world championship tournament
Problem-solving, creativity, ingenuity — It all adds up to one very innovative IPS robotics team that has nearly 30 students who punched their ticket to the world championship in Dallas, Texas.Noblesville history group hopes to restore school bell hidden away for 50 years
The Noblesville Preservation Alliance wants to save the bell of a long-demolished school, but the restoration project could become costly.