A Colorado county health department has backed away, for now, from a plan to create what has been described as a de-facto vaccine passport system.
It asks businesses, churches, and other venues, to post a sign on the door stating proof of vaccination is required of all individuals seeking to enter the premises.
Health department spokesperson Kori Wilford said September was the third deadliest month of the pandemic for Larimer County with 24 deaths.
The county’s highest fatality level was 77 in December, 2020, followed by 50 in January, 2021. Figures to date for October, 2021, are sitting on 24.
Reluctance to take the shot and pushback over mask mandates have made news for months in Larimer County, where 35 percent of its 360,000 people have not been vaccinated.
The group, which strongly opposes vaccine mandates, credited the pause to the flood of emails and other contacts received by the health department from people opposing the program.
The posting urges citizens to “be kind and polite,” to health board members, while keeping the pressure on until the program is “cancelled and taken completely off the table.”
Vicki Sutter, founder of the pro-liberty Christian citizens’ group Winsome Ministries, said the proposals were “a vaccine passport plan going by another name.”
“I believe the health department intends to use the stringent mask mandate as leverage to push more people to be vaccinated. It’s more about control than public health.”
Wilford told The Epoch Times that under the plan, if a participating business reaches a 95 percent vaccination rate among its employees, and all of their customers who can show proof of vaccination, do not have to wear a mask while indoors in that venue.
Sutter views this as incentivizing businesses to ban unvaccinated customers, and as an attempt to “perpetuate a state of emergency” mentality.
“It will create division and mutual resentment. It will pit one group against the other. We all need to put faith over fear.
“Posters banning the unvaccinated are already being seen in some businesses. We are encouraging people to only shop at freedom-loving stores,” she said.
Wilford acknowledged that some businesses and venues have already been asking customers for proof of vaccination upon entering.
“They are doing so on their own. I emphasize, the program is not being implemented. We are not ordering them to do it.
“We heard the public’s concern. That VVFE portion was removed from the Oct. 20 Public Health Order that put the new county-wide, universal, mask mandate in place.
“We felt the plan would give businesses that wanted to do a vaccination requirement an opportunity to be exempt from it.”
Wilford stated that the area’s Intensive Care Units (ICUs) were at 119 percent capacity, resulting in the doubling-up of people in rooms, and the transferring of patients to other hospitals.
“This is not just affecting COVID patients, but also people needing critical care for other reasons. They are being sent to distant hospitals.”
Wilford said half of the ICU patients were there because of the virus, and that the burden on Larimer hospitals was being driven by treatment of the unvaccinated.
“We certainly did not want to do an order mandating universal mask wearing, but every parameter has heated up in the last few weeks.
“The sole reason we did what we did is to relieve the overload of our hospitals,” said Wilford.
“We are not shooting for a 100 percent vaccination rate, but 80 percent would go a long way to slow down the pandemic.”