Legislator
State Representative
Carolyn Eslick
(R) - Washington
Washington House District 39
In Office
contact info
Capitol Office
John L. O'Brien Building
P.O. Box 40600
Olympia, WA 98504-0600
P.O. Box 40600
Olympia, WA 98504-0600
Phone: 360-786-7816
Phone 2: 800-562-6000
Vote Record By Category
| Category | Vote Index | Total Score |
|---|---|---|
| Vaccines | 82 |
81
|
| Parental Rights | 88 |
48
|
| Emergency Powers | 100 |
40
|
| Other | 69 |
20
|
| Quarantine | 0 |
15
|
| All Bills | 78 |
168
|
Rated Bill Votes
| Bill | Bill Name | Motion | Vote Date | Rating | Vote | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HB1045 | Creating the evergreen basic income pilot program. | House Committee on Human Services, Youth, & Early Learning: 1st substitute bill be substituted, do pass | 01/24/2023 | -5 | Nay |
Establishes a two-year pilot universal basic income program that is estimated by the state to cost a minimum of $396 million, not including the costs to reimburse the recipients for benefits lost due to receiving the income. 7,500 recipients will receive a monthly amount equal to the fair market rent of their county of residence, based on self-attestation. An evaluation of the program, with recommendations for an ongoing basic income program, are to be made to the legislature in 2027.
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| HB1052 | Clarifying a hate crime offense. | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 04/18/2025 | -3 | Nay |
Engrossed version. Adds "in whole or in substantial part" to the definition of hate crime, referring to the perpetrator's perception of the victim's race, color, religion, sexual orientation, gender expression, or disability, etc. when the accused assaults, damages property, or threatens to do so. This will result in the lowering of the threshold for a guilty verdict and subjecting the accused's life history (statements, social media posts, etc.) to scrutiny and potential distortion.
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| HB1152 | Supporting measures to create comprehensive public health districts. | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 04/15/2021 | -3 | Nay |
Filed at request of governor. Ends local public health districts in order to regionalize and centralize them (by 1.1.23) in response to "inequities and shortcomings made apparent in CV pandemic." Companion to SB5173.
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| HB1225 | Concerning school-based health centers. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/26/2021 | -5 | Nay |
Establishes school-based health centers under DOH, with funding, monitoring, partnering with NGOs.
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| HB1251 | Concerning water systems' notice to customers of public health considerations. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/09/2023 | -3 | Yea |
Requires public water systems that intend to discontinue fluoridation notify DOH and receive DOH's info re public health impacts of fluoride, as well as provide this info to its customers 90 days before a vote regarding the discontinuation. Companion to SB5215.
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| HB1296 | Eroding I-2081 | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 04/24/2025 | -3 | Nay |
The bill was amended several times. It strips many of the parental rights enacted via I-2081.
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| HB1392 | Expanding SBHCs | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 04/19/2025 | -3 | Nay |
Monies collected under this new WA State Health Care Authority program (funds will come in the form of assessments on health insurance companies) may also be used "to pay for administrative and service-related costs to expand [M]edicaid access in schools by maximizing [M]edicaid funding opportunities to support the school-based health services program, school-based health clinics ["SBHCs"], and on-site behavioral health services." We do not support the expansion of SBHCs because they interfere
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| HB1452 | Establishing a state medical reserve corps. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 03/01/2023 | -5 | Yea |
Establishes a medical reserve corps controlled solely by Secretary of Health (SOH). Corps members can be individuals or any sort of entity, government or private. Licensed practitioner members provide either human health or veterinary services, the latter of which include monitoring and treating animals for “diseases that have spread or demonstrate the potential to spread to humans.” SOH chooses compensation amounts for members. Licensed members are immune from liability for civil damages.
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| HB1531 | Preserving the ability of public officials to address communicable diseases. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 03/08/2025 | -3 | Absent |
Requires state and local health officials to implement and promote "evidence-based, appropriate measures to control the spread of communicable diseases, including vaccines." Forbids the state and its political subdivisions from enacting statutes, ordinances, rules, or policies that prohibit the implementation and promotion of such measures. Removes local control of this portion of public health policy, ensuring that all officials across the state simply rubber-stamp CDC "recommendations."
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| HB1590 | Concerning enrollment stabilization funding to address enrollment declines due to the COVID-19 pandemic. | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 03/08/2022 | -3 | Nay |
Would amend statute to replenish funding to schools that was lost due to enrollment declines. The negative financial ramifications to schools due to student withdrawals will be ameliorated by the taxpayers. Companion to SB5563.
|
| HB1634 | Providing school districts and public schools with assistance to coordinate comprehensive behavioral health supports for students. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/17/2026 | -3 | Yea |
Implements a network of public + private orgs to coordinate mental health supports for K-12 students--training, assessments, more programs/policies, partnering with outside agencies/CBOs. While we recognize the need for some students to access mental health care, we are concerned that this bill expands the existing access to K-12 kids via school-based clinics for services provided by outside groups and that may not align with parents' values.
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| HB1638 | Promoting immunity against vaccine preventable diseases. | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 04/23/2019 | -5 | Nay |
Removed personal exemption for MMR vaccine.
|
| HB1684 | Concerning public health and fluoridation of drinking water. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/12/2022 | -3 | Nay |
DOH must develop standards to facilitate inclusion of fluoride and provide financial assistance, including from private partnerships, when a water system is started/upgraded. When systems consider discontinuing their fluoridation, they must notify customers and include promotional language provided by DOH at least 90 days prior to its vote. Requires DOH to report to a legislative committee an "oral health equity assessment and recommendations to increase access to community water fluoridation."
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| HB1739 | Modernizing hospital policies related to pathogens of epidemiological concern. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/09/2022 | -3 | Yea |
Would expand hospitals' responsibility to address not only MRSA but any pathogen "of epidemiological concern" with policies that may include mandatory testing, isolation of patients, mitigation of visitor and health care workers' susceptibility to contract and transmit these pathogens, and reporting to DOH. This could jeopardize patient rights, visitation rights, and patient privacy. It would create unnecessary and unfunded additional policy, oversight and regulatory burdens.
|
| HB1893 | Allowing emergency medical technicians to provide medical evaluation, testing, and vaccines outside of an emergency in response to a public health agency request. | House Final Passage as Amended by the Senate | 03/07/2022 | -3 | Yea |
Increases public health's reach by adding to EMT job description the provision of NON-emergency medical evaluation, testing, and vaccines in response to a public health agency request to control and prevent the spread of communicable diseases. Companion to SB5754.
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| HB2242 | State-controlled vaccine policy with no rulemaking or accountability | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/11/2026 | -3 | Nay |
Codifies DOH authority to issue vaccine guidance without rulemaking, based on ACIP or any org it deems “science-based.” Redefines vaccines in WA’s purchase program to bypass ACIP. Emergency clause blocks referendum. Shifts power to the state, reduces transparency and accountability.
|
| SB5052 | Concerning the creation of health equity zones. | House Final Passage as Amended by the House | 04/07/2021 | -3 | Nay |
Would create “health equity zones” in geographical areas with health disparities, inviting partnerships between providers, public health, other agencies, and nonprofits to create and manage projects and apply for resources. Would require annual reporting from DOH to the legislature.
|
| SB5130 | Concerning assisted outpatient treatment. | House Final Passage as Amended by the House | 04/12/2023 | -3 | Nay |
Lowers qualifications of declarant in support of a petition for a court to find that a person must involuntarily undergo a mental eval, including up to 24 hour detainment. Lowers burden of proof required for court order. Discusses orders "to receive" involuntary treatment, removing the inflammatory term "commitment." Increases the severity of consequences for a minor with deteriorating functioning or one who doesn't comply with court-imposed "less restrictive alternative treatments" for behavior
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| SB5181 | Eroding I-2081 | House Motion to Place Measure on Final Passage as Amended by the House | 04/14/2025 | -3 | Nay |
Dismantles many provisions of I-2081. Ends requirement for prior notice to parents when students are offered or receive medical services, including those that the school arranges and may require follow-up care. Rather than immediate notice, allows schools up to 72 hours to give parents notice of removal of their child from campus. Removes rights of parents to review their child's mental health and medical records at school.
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| SB5395 | Concerning comprehensive sexual health education. | House Final Passage as Amended by the House | 03/04/2020 | -5 | Nay |
This bill has mandated CSE in all of Washington, removing this decision from local districts, and expanding the curriculum to include controversial teachings above and beyond those that were already required.
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| SB5399 | Concerning the creation of a universal health care commission. | House Final Passage as Amended by the House | 04/07/2021 | -3 | Nay |
Establishes a universal health care commission to develop a plan to create a statewide universal health care system by 2026 so that "all residents of the state have comprehensive, equitable, and affordable health care coverage under a publicly financed and privately and publicly delivered health care system." Oppose because we have witnessed the dangers of public-private partnerships with the medical and drug industry that have not served the health interests of the public.
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| SB5599 | Supporting youth and young adults seeking protected health care services. | House Final Passage as Amended by the House | 04/12/2023 | -3 | Nay |
A person who is sheltering a runaway or homeless youth is exempt from the requirement of reporting it to law enforcement and the parents in the event the child is seeking or receiving "gender-affirming" or "reproductive" care, including abortion, as defined in SB5489.
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| SB5632 | Minor gender surgery/abortion tourist bill | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 04/12/2025 | -3 | Absent |
This bill may result in minors from other states coming to Washington and obtaining abortion/gender "treatment" without their parents' knowledge or consent.
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| SB5883 | Concerning an unaccompanied homeless youth's ability to provide informed consent for that minor patient's own health care, including nonemergency, outpatient, and primary care services, including physical examinations, vision examinations and eyeglasses, dental examinations, hearing examinations and hearing aids, immunizations, treatments for illnesses and conditions, and routine follow-up care customarily provided by a health care provider in an outpatient setting, excluding elective surgeries. | House Final Passage as Amended by the House | 03/03/2022 | -3 | Nay |
A youth of any age who is homeless and "not in the physical custody of a parent or guardian" can consent to nonemergency outpatient primary care services, including vaccination. Excludes elective surgeries. The health care worker, who is not required to obtain documentation of the child's status, is shielded from civil liability and administrative sanctions for providing services.
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| SB5982 | Allows monoclonal antibodies to be called and funded like "vaccines" | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/22/2024 | -3 | Nay |
Redefined "vaccine" to omit that it is "a preparation of killed or attenuated living microorganisms, or fraction thereof, that upon administration stimulates immunity that protects against diseases" and instead simply calls it an "immunization." Now allows WA Vaccine Assn to participate in funding all WA newborns <8 months in "their first RSV season" to be given the brand-new Beyfortis (nirsevimab) a monoclonal antibody (MA)--not a vaccine--injection for RSV, as well as all future pediatric MAs.
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| SB6095 | Establishing clear authority for the secretary of health to issue standing orders. | House 3rd Reading & Final Passage | 02/27/2024 | -3 | Nay |
Gives Secretary of Health (SOH) authority to issue a prescriptive "standing order" for "tools" to control disease AND to control ANY threat to public health. This includes products to diagnose, cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent disease. The bill exempts SOH from all civil/criminal damage claims that arise from this law. DOH may acquire and deliver the subject products. Standing orders can compromise informed consent because providers use a presumptive approach with their patients.
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| SCR8402 | Extending certain gubernatorial orders issued in response to the COVID-19 state of emergency. | House Final Passage | 01/15/2021 | -5 | Nay |
Already adopted on January 18: serves to extend current gubernatorial emergency declaration indefinitely, given its reliance upon definition of "until order is restored" that is not already considered to have been met.
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Rated Sponored Bills
| Bill | Bill Name | Rating | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| HB1004 | Concerning legislative oversight of emergency health orders. | 3 |
Would require emergency orders by SOH and local health officers to be narrowly tailored and limited to 30 days absent concurrent legislative resolution (or, if not in session, by legislative leaders). Does not set forth a limit on any extension.
|
| HB1006 | Protecting the right of every Washington resident to decline an immunization or vaccination based on religion or conscience. | 5 |
Restores the philosophical exemption from MMR and would ensure philosophical/religious exemption under governor's emergency declaration.
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| HB1017 | Concerning legislative oversight of emergency orders. | 3 |
Requires SOH, local health officer, mayoral, city council, city manager, and county authority emergency orders (issued secondary to gubernatorial emergency powers) to be narrowly tailored and would allow legislative leaders to limit such orders to 30 days upon petition.
|
| HB1019 | Concerning vaccination and antibody titer test notification. | 5 |
Would have required notification to patient/parent if a vaccine is not required, and of option for exemption and/or titer. Companion to SB5365.
|
| HB1020 | Concerning the emergency powers of the governor. | 5 |
Limits gubernatorial emergency orders to 30 days absent legislature resolution (or, if not in session, by unanimous agreement of the four legislative leaders). Would reduce violation of emergency order from gross misdemeanor to misdemeanor.
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| HB1029 | Concerning orders and rules during a state of emergency. | 5 |
Would set limits and increase requirements for governor and secretary of health emergency declarations.
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| HB1038 | Prohibiting puberty blocking medications, cross-sex hormones, and gender transition surgeries for minors. | 3 |
Given that Washington law currently permits and assists children in undergoing medical procedures without parental consent, we support this bill as a matter of parental rights because it will reduce the State's ability to contravene and undermine parents’ wishes.
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| HB1065 | Concerning epidemic or pandemic vaccines. | 5 |
Would prohibit any requirement for an epidemic or pandemic vaccine, including COVID-19, unless several conditions are met, including long-term studies of many adverse effects, a minimum of three years of study, inert placebo control group (or placebo using another vaccine that was tested against an inert placebo), proof that the risk of the vaccine is less than that of the targeted infection, an absence of treatments available for the infection.
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| HB1275 | Establishing a database to monitor the adverse effects of vaccinations. | 5 |
Would have established a state system similar to VAERS
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| HB1276 | Preventing human and environmental exposure to mercury. | 5 |
Would have required the procurement and sale/administration of products to minimize mercury, set limits on vaccine mercury levels, prevented employer requirements for such vaccines, and required mercury notices.
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| HB1305 | Concerning the right to refuse vaccines and health-related measures. | 5 |
Codifies that all Washingtonians may refuse "emergency" vaccines, testing, masks, tracking, and more. No mandated isolation or quarantine. Full rights to those who are quarantined--treatment choices, minors may not be removed from parents. Notification of rights.
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| HB1442 | Concerning epidemic and pandemic preparedness. | 5 |
Relieves business owners of duties to ensure public will not be exposed to airborne pathogens. Requires state-level determination of the definitions of epidemic, pandemic, and the qualifications for recording deaths as due to the outbreak illness. Requires inclusion of MDs and NDs in preparation and implementing of responses, with reporting to medical community and the public on nutrient and drug preventative and treatment protocols. Eliminates mass vaccination campaigns as a requirement to an e
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| HB1535 | Increasing legislative involvement in gubernatorial proclamations relating to a state of emergency. | 3 |
Limits gubernatorial emergency powers and expands legislature authority following a gubernatorial emergency declaration.
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| HB1570 | Prohibiting the government from requiring proof of vaccination to access public places. | 3 |
Government may not require proof of CV-19 (or variant) vaccine in order to be permitted access to a "[p]ublic place . . . any site accessible to the general public for business, entertainment, or another lawful purpose. A "public place" includes, but is not limited to, the front, immediate area, or parking lot of any store, shop, restaurant. Ambiguous as to whether businesses themselves can require proof.
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| HB1580 | Ensuring that equitable COVID-19 vaccine dose allocation is considered before a county may be reverted to a more restrictive phase under the healthy Washington: Roadmap to recovery plan. | 3 |
“A county that has not received an equitable share of COVID-19 vaccine doses in proportion to the state's allocation may not be reverted to a more restrictive phase.”
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| HB1601 | Providing parental rights. | 5 |
Would remove minor consent laws by requiring parental consent for medical procedures for minors, with criminal penalties and "unprofessional conduct" licensing ramifications for noncompliant medical practitioners. Confirms parents' right to direct the upbringing, education, health care, and mental health of their children. Requires parental consent for biometric and DNA data gathering for minors. Improves access to ed and extracurricular materials. Simplifies opting out.
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| HB1634 | Providing school districts and public schools with assistance to coordinate comprehensive behavioral health supports for students. | -3 |
Implements a network of public + private orgs to coordinate mental health supports for K-12 students--training, assessments, more programs/policies, partnering with outside agencies/CBOs. While we recognize the need for some students to access mental health care, we are concerned that this bill expands the existing access to K-12 kids via school-based clinics for services provided by outside groups and that may not align with parents' values.
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| HB1663 | Enhancing youth mental health and well-being through advanced training and expansion of the workforce in schools. | -3 |
Expands in-school social workers' numbers and roles and numbers and provides funding to help schools to bring them in from local mental health agencies. Given other laws and pending legislation that exclude parents from accessing their children's mental health records and from notification of counseling received, we are concerned about what might transpire if more social workers enter the schools.
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| HB1720 | Protecting the right of every Washington resident to decline an immunization or vaccination for COVID-19. | 5 |
State agencies, schools, employers and places of public accommodation/assemblage may not require Covid shots.
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| HB1772 | Increasing legislative involvement in gubernatorial proclamations relating to a state of emergency. | 3 |
Provides several forms of legislative intervention to terminate gubernatorial declarations of emergency. Limits state of emergency to 60 days unless legislature extends it (maximum of 60 days per extension). Gubernatorial emergency restrictions may be terminated by the legislature. Requires gubernatorial emergency orders to be set forth in a standardized form. Reduces penalty for emergency order violation from gross misdemeanor to civil infraction with maximum fine of $1,000.
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| HB1788 | Concerning greater consistency in the provision of health care services for minors under the age of 17. | 5 |
Codifies that a minor under age 17 may not provide informed consent for medical procedures. Specifically raises age of consent to STD treatment, admission to inpatient mental health and substance abuse services from 13 or 14 or “adolescent” to 17. In the absence of parental consent, the parent is not financially responsible for an abortion provided to a child under age 17. Generally, state funds may not be used for abortion provided to a child under age 17 without parental consent.
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| HB1827 | Preventing vaccination status discrimination. | 5 |
Makes vaccination/immunity status a protected class under civil rights law and Human Rights Commission, with the possible exception of vaccines on the Washington “school schedule.” EUA vaccines may not be required for daycare or K-12 students. Codifies and simplifies opting out of the state "immunization" registry.
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| HB1963 | Improving safety and preservation by allowing the Washington state department of transportation to either hire or rehire maintenance and preservation employees that have acquired immunities to COVID-19. | 2 |
New and former DOT maintenance workers may be hired with proof of acquired immunity to Covid. Fortunately, this circumvents vaccination requirements, but it still conditions employment upon private health information, which perpetuates the invasion of Covid status where it does not belong. While we support it for now, our goal is to eradicate any workplace requirements at all regarding illness, other than common sense “stay home when symptomatic”.
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| HB1976 | Concerning vaccine safety. | 5 |
Would have required thorough testing of vaccines and disclosure.
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| HB2030 | Prohibiting the use of involuntary quarantine and isolation. | 5 |
Ends health officers' authority to order or seek an order to involuntarily quarantine/isolate (Q&I) people (including in the TB statute) and removes the criminal penalty for those who leave Q&I.
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| HB2041 | Concerning greater consistency in the provision of health care services for minors under the age of 16. | 5 |
Raises minor consent age from 13 or 14 to 16 for mental health inpatient treatment and STI diagnosis/treatment, respectively; prohibits parental financial responsibility for these and generally for parental-non-consented abortion for girls under 16. State funds may not be used on abortions for children under age 16 unless her life is in danger. Minors under 16 may not provide informed consent for any other healthcare procedures, and the Mature Minor Doctrine is abolished.
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| HB2042 | Establishing the K-12 education scholarship program. | 3 |
Establishes scholarships to allow parents a school choice for their children. Can cover private school and home school expenses. A new committee (members to have specific characteristics) will process applications. Establishes a K-12 program of 130,000 scholarships of $7,000, 25% for special populations (homeless, foster, low-income, special education) and 75% geographically distributed to all other students across the state. OSPI may not expand its regulation in light of this bill.
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| HB2065 | Authorizing health care providers to use their professional judgment and known remedies in treating and preventing COVID-19. | 5 |
Allows doctors, ARNPs, PAs to utilize IVM, HCQ, nutrients, budesonide, MA, and other remedies, regardless of FDA approval status, to prevent/treat CV-19 and similar condition--without disciplinary action.
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| HB2626 | Providing a limited informed consent exemption to state vaccination requirements. | 5 |
Would have made a vaccine exemption automatic unless the product was first thoroughly tested for safety and efficacy by the FDA and the results disclosed.
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| HJM4010 | Requesting that Congress allow design defect claims against vaccine manufacturers by individuals who have experienced adverse side effects caused by vaccines. | 5 |
Requested that Congress allow design defect claims against vaccine manufacturers for adverse side effects caused by vaccines.
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