White
House sees no federal mandate for COVID-19 vaccine verification
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[March 30, 2021]
By Reuters Staff
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House said it expected the
private sector to take the lead on verification of COVID-19 vaccines, or
so-called vaccine passports, and would not issue a federal mandate
requiring everyone to obtain a single vaccination credential.
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The Biden administration was reviewing the issue and would make
recommendations, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on
Monday, but she added, "We believe it will be driven by the private
sector."
Japan is gearing up to issue digital health certificates to citizens
who have been vaccinated against the novel coronavirus, joining
China, the European Union and others that have adopted similar
measures aimed at opening up overseas travel, the Nikkei reported on
Saturday.
Psaki said the White House was leading an inter-agency process
looking at these issues, and would provide guidance in line with
several key principles:
"There are a couple key principles that we are working from. One is
that there will be no centralized universal federal vaccinations
database, and no federal mandate requiring everyone to obtain a
single vaccination credential," she said.
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"Secondly, we want to encourage an open marketplace with a variety
of private sector companies and nonprofit coalitions developing
solutions. And third, we want to drive the market toward meeting
public interest goals."
Psaki said the Biden Administration would work to ensure that all
vaccination credential systems met key standards such as universal
accessibility, affordability and availability, both digitally and on
paper.
She gave no indication when the process would be completed.
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