Boston Herald

Calif. heads for schoolkids’ vax mandate

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California is poised to impose the nation’s first coronaviru­s vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren, a move announced Friday that could push other states to follow as many did after Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the first statewide stay-at-home order in the U.S. during the early days of the pandemic.

Newsom said the mandate won’t take effect for all children until the U.S. government has finished fully vetting the vaccine for two age groups — 12 to 15 and 5 to 11. That means those in seventh to 12th grades probably will have until July to get their shots. It will be even longer for children in kindergart­en through sixth grades because the government has yet to approve any COVID19 vaccine for that age group.

California will grant exemptions for medical reasons, plus religious and personal beliefs. The rules for those exemptions will be written after the state hears comments from the public. Any student without an exemption who refuses to get the vaccine would be forced to do independen­t study at home.

The mandate eventually will affect more than 6.7 million public and private school students in the nation’s most populous state. California already has a mask requiremen­t for schoolchil­dren.

“We have to do more,” the Democratic governor said during a news conference at a San Francisco middle school after visiting with seventh-graders. “We want to end this pandemic. We are all exhausted by it.”

The federal government has fully approved coronaviru­s vaccines for anyone over 16 and has given emergency authorizat­ion to vaccinate those 12 to 15. Full endorsemen­t for that age group is likely within a few months. Vaccines for children 5 to 11 are still in the testing stage.

California has one of the highest vaccine rates in the country — 84% of people 12 and older have gotten at least one shot, and 70% are fully vaccinated. But the state has a vocal minority skeptical of both the vaccine and the government’s assurances of its safety. Last month, more than a thousand people gathered at the state Capitol to protest vaccine mandates.

“I just think it’s a parent’s decision, you know. Period,” said Fabio Zamora, the father of an eighth-grader at Edna Brewer Middle School. “The government in no shape or form should be having mandates like that. I don’t care for that. I’m a veteran. I served this country, and I fought for those rights.”

A small number of school districts nationwide have imposed their own vaccine mandates, including five in California. Among those are the state’s two largest districts — Los Angeles and San Diego.

Other states have resisted imposing pandemic rules in schools, including a new law in Kentucky that overturned a statewide mask mandate.

Newsom has been one of the most aggressive governors on coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, issuing the nation’s first statewide stay-at-home order in March 2020 and more recently requiring California’s roughly 2.2 million health care workers and most state employees to get vaccinated to keep their jobs.

Newsom hasn’t backed all vaccine mandates, however. He recently opposed a requiremen­t for prison guards that a federal judge imposed. Critics used that example to say Newsom is driven more by politics than science, noting the labor union of correction­s officers had donated to his campaign to defeat the recall.

“California kids made the mistake of not giving millions to his campaigns,” Republican Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley tweeted Friday.

 ?? AP ?? OUT IN FRONT: California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks Friday at a San Francisco middle school. Newsom is readying for the first statewide vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren in the country.
AP OUT IN FRONT: California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks Friday at a San Francisco middle school. Newsom is readying for the first statewide vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren in the country.

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