Bill Requires Colleges to Pay for Injuries Caused by Vaccine Mandates – JP
Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-MT) introduced a bill requiring colleges to pay for injuries caused by the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
The University Forced Vaccination Student Injury Mitigation Act will “direct certain institutions of higher education to pay the medical costs of students who were diagnosed with certain diseases following a required COVID–19 vaccination, and for other purposes.”
Students may seek reimbursement for medical costs by submitting documentation of the vaccination, certification from a medical provider that the student was injured, medical costs, and medical records. If the student submits insufficient information, the “institution shall assist such student in completing such request,” the bill notes.
Diseases linked to the vaccine and covered by the bill include myocarditis, pericarditis, thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome, Gullian-Barre Syndrome, and “any other disease with a positive association with the COVID-19 vaccine which the Secretary of Education determines to be warranted.”
Colleges must review the request within 30 days.
The university may also sue a student if the student intends to defraud the institution.
“If you are not prepared to face the consequences, you should have never committed the act,” Rosendale said. “Colleges and universities forced students to inject themselves with an experimental vaccine knowing it was not going to prevent COVID-19 while potentially simultaneously causing life-threatening health defects like Guillian-Barre Syndrome and myocarditis. It is now time for schools to be held accountable for their brazen disregard for students’ health and pay for the issues they are responsible for causing.”