Assembly Bill 2098: Assemblyman Evan Low (D-Campbell)
Low introduced the bill on Feb. 15 to deter licensed physicians and surgeons who spread COVID-19 misinformation. Under this law, any care provider caught promoting disinformation will be subject to disciplinary actions by the Medical Board of California or the Osteopathic Medical Board of California.Some commenters immediately responded to Low on Twitter asking for further clarification, saying that the proposed legislation doesn’t have a clear definition of “misinformation” and can lead to the state’s health agency interfering with doctors’ judgment in medical practices.
“Who defines what constitutes misinformation?” a commenter wrote. “Would doctors not be allowed to form their own opinions from reviewing studies, data, and evidence?”
Senate Bill 1018: Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento)
Pan introduced the bill on Feb. 15 to require online platforms, such as social media, to publicly report how their algorithms rank and promote information and to share their generated data for “legitimate research purposes,” which could “combat the spread of dangerous COVID-19 misinformation and protect public health,” according to a Feb. 15 press release.“Transparency will allow the public to make informed decisions, and lawmakers and researchers need this necessary information so we can hold online platforms accountable and also set standards,” Pan said.
Pan also authored on Jan. 24 a law (Senate Bill 871) to require all K–12 students in the state to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, which opponents said would remove parents from the “equation” of the lives of their children.
Assembly Bill 1993: Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland)
Wicks introduced Assembly Bill 1993 on Feb. 11 to mandate all businesses in California to require all employees and independent contractors to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.Sen. Scott Wiener, co-author of the bill, applauded the legislation as an effort to return to “normalcy.”
Assemblyman Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) said the pending legislation “would make all California employers force their workers.”
Assembly Bill 1797: Assemblywoman Akilah Weber (D-San Diego)
Weber introduced on Feb. 7 a bill that would give school districts the right to access the state’s immunization registry to see who is vaccinated against COVID-19. Currently, schools already have access to vaccination records for diseases such as measles or mumps, but not COVID-19.Weber’s bill came as San Diego Unified School District is appealing a lawsuit against its vaccine mandate.
The lawsuit, filed in October 2021 by parent advocacy group Let Them Choose, argued that only the state, and not the school board, has the power to require a vaccine for on-campus learning and said that the district doesn’t allow for personal belief exemptions as required by state law.
San Diego Superior Court Judge John Meyer tentatively ruled in the group’s favor on Dec. 20, 2021, and the school district appealed the decision the very next day for the case to be reviewed by an appellate court.
The bill proposed by Weber “is just kind of another example of the state really getting ahead of themselves and being too sure of themselves and overreaching,” Sharon McKeeman of Let Them Choose told CBS8.
These bills are likely to be heard within the upcoming months.