VERMONT: WE NEED A VETO
H305 is unnecessary, costs workers money, and trivializes very real vaccine risks and serious reactions by allowing pharmacists and pharmacy technicians to administer possibly life-threatening vaccines to young children.
Our Stand: At-A-Glance
- H305 has now passed both the House and Senate and is on the way to the governor’s desk. We need mass amounts of emails and phone calls asking the governor to veto the bill. Talking points for your customized email and phone calls are below:
- No more fee hikes. H305 increases professional licensing fees by >15% across the board.
- Please act responsibly. H305 allows pharmacy technicians to give shots to little kids. This bill may prove to be hazardous to children’s health.
- No more COVID shot program expansions until the safety data are examined.
- This bill undermines the doctor-patient relationship and removes critical health history screenings prior to vaccination.
- Neither pharmacists nor less-qualified pharmacy technicians know the medical history of each 5-year-old child or the time to prescreen for contraindications based on a child’s personal and family history and unique heath needs prior to vaccination. Vaccines, just like all pharmaceutical products, can cause injury and death in some people.
- Neither pharmacists nor pharmacy technicians have enough training on product risks, prescreening, contraindications, emergency interventions for reactions, reporting reactions to Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS), or advising parents about the statute of limitations and instructions for filing a claim with the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program.
- Remember, this bill recklessly proposes to give COVID and flu shots to children as young as 5 years of age at drug stores.
- Also, remember there was no testimony taken on this provision. This bill is unnecessary, costs workers money, and trivializes very real vaccine risks and serious reactions by allowing pharmacists and pharmacy technicians to administer possibly life-threatening vaccines to young children.

