Chattanooga Times Free Press

Colleges divided over vaccinatio­n requiremen­t

- BY COLLIN BINKLEY

BOSTON — U.S. colleges hoping for a return to normalcy next fall are weighing how far they should go in urging students to get the COVID-19 vaccine, including whether they should — or legally can — require it.

Universiti­es including Rutgers, Brown, Cornell and Northeaste­rn recently told students they must get vaccinated before returning to campus next fall. They hope to achieve herd immunity on campus, which they say would allow them to loosen spacing restrictio­ns in classrooms and dorms.

“It ... provides a level of confidence for the entire community that we are taking all appropriat­e measures.”

– KENNETH HENDERSON, CHANCELLOR OF NORTHEASTE­RN UNIVERSITY

But some colleges are leaving the decision to students, and others believe they can’t legally require vaccinatio­ns. At Virginia Tech, officials determined that they can’t because the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has only allowed the emergency use of the vaccines and hasn’t given them its full approval.

The question looms large as more colleges plan to shift back from remote to in-person instructio­n. Many schools have launched vaccinatio­n blitzes to get students immunized before they leave for the summer. At some schools, the added requiremen­t is meant to encourage holdouts and to build confidence that students and faculty will be safe on campus.

“It takes away any ambiguity about whether individual­s should be vaccinated,” said Kenneth Henderson, the chancellor of Northeaste­rn University in Boston. “It also provides a level of confidence for the entire community that we are taking all appropriat­e measures.”

Northeaste­rn and other colleges requiring shots believe they’re on solid legal ground. It’s not unusual for colleges to require students to be vaccinated for other types of diseases, and a California court last year upheld a flu shot requiremen­t at the University of California system.

But legal scholars say the COVID-19 vaccines’ emergency use status moves the issue to a legal gray area that’s likely to be challenged in court, and some colleges may take a more cautious approach to avoid litigation.

Harvard Law professor Glenn Cohen, who teaches health law and bioethics, said there’s no legal reason colleges wouldn’t be allowed to require COVID19 vaccinatio­ns. It makes no difference that the shots haven’t been given full approval, he said, noting that many colleges already require students to take coronaviru­s tests that are approved under the same FDA emergency authorizat­ion. But there’s also no federal guidance explicitly permitting vaccinatio­n mandates.

The biggest clashes could come in states taking a stance against vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts, he said.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis this month banned all businesses from requiring customers to show proof of vaccinatio­n. The order raises questions about Nova Southeaste­rn University’s plan to require students and staff to get vaccinated. The college’s president said he’s still confident in the plan, but he also promised to “respect the laws of our state and all federal directives.”

The governor of Texas, the country’s second-largest state, issued a similar order.

There’s a parallel debate about whether to require vaccinatio­n for faculty and staff, an issue that employers across the nation are grappling with. At the University of Notre Dame, one of the latest schools to require student vaccinatio­ns, shots are still optional for workers. Northeaste­rn is considerin­g whether to extend its mandate to employees.

Even at schools making shots mandatory, there are exemptions. Federal law requires colleges to provide accommodat­ions to students who refuse a vaccine for medical reasons, and most schools are also offering exemptions for religious reasons.

At Brown, students who forgo shots and have no valid exemption must file a petition to study remotely or take a leave of absence next fall, the school’s president, Christina Paxson, told students in a letter last week.

But enforcing vaccine mandates will bring its own challenges. Cornell and Northeaste­rn say students will be asked to show proof of vaccinatio­n, but there is no widely accepted vaccine credential. Cornell told students they can provide the card given out at their vaccinatio­n site, but card formats vary and generally seem like they would be easy to forge.

At Northeaste­rn, officials are still deciding whether students will have to provide a medical record proving they were vaccinated or whether they will be allowed to attest to having been immunized — essentiall­y taking their word for it.

“We would expect students to be honest and forthright about any attestatio­n they make to the university,” Henderson said.

Northeaste­rn student Tyler Lee said he thinks requiring vaccinatio­ns is the right move because it will help stop the virus’ spread and protect the community around the downtown Boston campus. There has been some pushback from parents, but little from students, he said.

“It’s Northeaste­rn’s decision,” said Lee, a senior who is awaiting his second shot. “If I didn’t like it, I would transfer. And that’s what most students feel.”

Ariana Palomo, an incoming freshman at Brown, said the university’s mandate sends the message that it’s serious about keeping students safe. She was “happy and relieved” when she heard about it, she said.

“I know that I’m going to feel so much safer on campus,” said Palomo, 18. “This is the next step in protecting one another and preventing more lives from being lost.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/PHIL LONG ?? Kent State University student Marz Anderson gets his Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccinatio­n from Kent State nurse Beth Krul in Kent, Ohio, on Thursday.
AP PHOTO/PHIL LONG Kent State University student Marz Anderson gets his Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccinatio­n from Kent State nurse Beth Krul in Kent, Ohio, on Thursday.

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