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A10711

An act to amend the Public Health Law — 2026-04-21 · Calendar #658

The New York State Senate passed a controversial Governor's program bill amending the Public Health Law to allow pharmacists to administer COVID vaccines to children under 2 years old and older, with a vote of 39-23. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Stavisky and designated as Calendar Number 658, Assembly Bill 10711, removes the requirement that immunization scheduling comply with federal standards approved by the United States Public Health Service and instead vests authority in the New York State Commissioner of Health. Sen. Rhoads conducted extensive questioning of the sponsor, raising concerns that the bill eliminates federal FDA approval standards and ACIP guidelines as binding requirements, removes conflict-of-interest disclosure protections, allows consultation with unaccountable international organizations including the WHO, and could result in loss of $350 million in federal Vaccines for Children funding. He also warned the bill removes legal liability protections and allows the commissioner to recommend vaccines not approved by the FDA. Sen. Weik voted against the bill, arguing it eliminates individual medical choice and parental consent. Sen. Stavisky defended the legislation as necessary to address communicable disease concerns and misinformation from federal officials, emphasizing that COVID vaccination remains optional for parents outside school requirements. The bill passed largely along party lines, with 23 Republicans voting against it.
Passed Senate Ayes: 39 · Nays: 23

Debate Summary

This Governor's program bill, sponsored by Sen. Stavisky, amends the Public Health Law, Education Law, and Social Services Law to allow pharmacists to administer COVID vaccines to children under 2 years old and older with patient-specific or non-patient-specific prescriptions. The bill removes the requirement that immunization scheduling and administration comply with standards approved by the United States Public Health Service and instead vests authority in the New York State Commissioner of Health to determine immunization schedules in consultation with organizations including the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Academy of Family Physicians, ACIP, and other nationally or internationally recognized scientific organizations. Sen. Rhoads raised extensive concerns that the bill removes federal guardrails, eliminates transparency and conflict-of-interest disclosure requirements, allows consultation with international organizations including the WHO, and could result in loss of $350 million in federal Vaccines for Children funding. Sen. Weik opposed the bill as eliminating individual medical choice and parental consent. Sen. Stavisky defended the bill as necessary to address communicable diseases and concerns about misinformation from federal officials.

Transcript Mentions

These votes were extracted from the floor transcript by AI. NYS Senate roll calls are read in full, but AI extraction may not capture every senator — so this list is incomplete and skews toward named dissenting votes. Use the Official API Data table above for the complete roll call.

Senator Vote Party
Gonzalez aye Democrat
Stavisky aye Democrat
Ashby nay Republican
Borrello nay Republican
Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick nay Republican
Chan nay Republican
Gallivan nay Republican
Griffo nay Republican
Helming nay Republican
Lanza nay Republican
Martinez nay Democrat
Martins nay Republican
Mattera nay Republican
Murray nay Republican
O'Mara nay Republican
Oberacker nay Republican
Ortt nay Republican
Palumbo nay Republican
Rhoads nay Republican
Rolison nay Republican
Stec nay Republican
Tedisco nay Republican
Walczyk nay Republican
Weber nay Republican
Weik nay Republican