The Australian government
said on Wednesday that it will pass a law that would withhold child care and
other payments from families that fail to immunize their children. The "No Jab, No Pay
Bill" introduced to Parliament would also remove a category of
"conscientious objector" that allowed parents to remain eligible for
full government benefits despite not immunizing their children.
"The
choice made by some families not to vaccinate their children is not supported
by public policy or medical research, nor should such action be supported by
taxpayers in the form of family payments," Social Services Minister Scott
Morrison told Parliament.
AP
report continues:
Families
would lose up to AUS$15,000 (US$11,000) per child per year in
tax and child care benefits from Jan. 1, 2016, unless their children are
vaccinated.
Exemptions
would apply only for valid medical reasons.
The
legislation is likely to be passed by Parliament without any amendments. Public
reaction to the proposed change has been overwhelmingly positive.
While
97 percent of Australian families that claim tax benefits for their offspring
are vaccinated, the number of children under 7 years old who are not vaccinated
because their parents are objectors has increased by more than 24,000 over the
past decade to 39,000, the government said.
No comments:
Post a Comment