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http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/1/2/152159.shtml
Model State Bioterror Law Stirs Controversy
Dave Eberhart,
NewsMax.com
Thursday, Jan. 3,
2002
The Model State Emergency
Health Powers Act (MEHPA)
has come under fire for giving governors and state health officials broad power
to involuntarily quarantine and vaccinate citizens, as well as authority
"to control, restrict and regulate ... food, fuel, clothing and other
commodities, alcoholic beverages, firearms, explosives, and combustibles
.
Lawrence Gostin, a law professor at
Georgetown University and professor of public health at Johns Hopkins
University, wrote the draft bill, a blueprint for future state legislation,
with grant money from the National Institutes of Health.
Although no state has yet enacted
legislation based on the model, the American Legislative Exchange Council
(ALEC), a bipartisan group of state legislators, has warned the plan would
intrude on Americans' civil liberties.
Meanwhile, Citizens Council on Health Care
(CCHC), a Minnesota-based health lobby, is concerned that the proposal would
provide intrusive authority for purposes far beyond bioterrorism.
But Gostin recently defended his draft bill.
"The idea that we need it is very clear, he maintained, adding that when
the next bioterror shoe drops, the states would be unprepared to counter the
threat "without being able to plan, to conduct surveillance, to treat, to
test, to vaccinate people, or if necessary, even to confiscate pharmaceuticals
or vaccines.
Government Does Not Have Enough Power?
"Some states have far too few powers,
Gostin explained. "Anybody who thinks we can fight a 21st century battle
against bioterrorism with early 20th century legislation really just doesnt
understand the sorry state of public health law in America.
But critics of the draft law such as CCHC
and ALEC find fault with what they describe as its overbroad language. Jennifer
King, a legislative expert with ALEC, pointed to the following language as
troublesome:
· The term "property is not limited to just land and
buildings on that land, but it also includes food, alcohol and even firearms,
she said.
· A "public health emergency can be
declared not only for bioterrorism attacks, but also for epidemics, pandemic
disease or natural disasters.
· The terms "epidemic disease,
"pandemic disease and "natural disaster are not defined, leaving
public health officials ample room for their own interpretation.
· There are no limits on the number or types
of tests that can be performed on individuals, or on the bodily specimens that
can be collected. DNA and genetic testing are not excluded.
'Due Process'
Gostin counters by insisting: "The
prime responsibility of government should include a very careful attention to
the health, safety and security of the population
. [I] have bent over
backwards in writing the law to make sure that there was very careful attention
to due process and checks and balances.
But Gostins assertions have not mollified
the critics, such as CCHC, which insists that due process could be trampled in
the following examples:
· Although due process is allowed, the act
permits state officials to identify and train personnel to serve as
"emergency judges to deal with citizen appeals of forced quarantine and
isolation. Such training may be biased, said a spokesman for CCHC.
· Citizens are required to submit to medical
examinations, vaccinations and quarantine against their will if a public health
emergency is declared.
· Public health officials are given authority
to "collect specimens and perform tests on any person even if they are
healthy with no history of exposure to disease.
· Health care professionals who refuse to
provide forced medical examinations or vaccinations can be charged with a
misdemeanor.
· Citizens who refuse to comply can be
detained and charged with a misdemeanor.
· Police officers will be placed under the
authority of health department officials.
But Gostin is quick to say: "This is
not anything to do with military tribunals or anything like that theres a
lot of due process. So, for those who say that theres not enough civil
liberties in it, I think the only thing I could say is that for most of the
provisions, the civil liberties protections are far greater than that which
exists under current law.
Some states, including Minnesota, are
already considering enactment in 2002. The Illinois state legislature recently
rejected a proposed bill modeled after Gostins MEHPA.
Gostin forecasted that his model legislation
would be considered in "virtually every state when the new state
legislative sessions begins this month.
He said his model was designed to be adapted
by the states as needed, to update their statutes. The proposal is not intended
to be one-size-fits-all, he added.
Read more on this subject in related Hot
Topics:
Bioterrorism
Homeland/Civil
Defense
Privacy
War on Terrorism
A product that might interest you:
"Living
Terrors: Surviving the Coming Bioterrorist Catastrophe"
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