State House ready to OK mandatory school immunizations
HARTFORD — After hours of debate in one of its most-contentious issues in years, the state House of Representatives on Monday was poised to approve legislation that would eliminate Connecticut’s socalled religious exemption for school children whose parents do not want them vaccinated for childhood diseases.
Illustrating an apparent split among majority Democrats, an amendment was submitted Monday to allow about 8,000 currently enrolled school kids to retain the exemption. Under the original bill, only children already-enrolled in grades seven through 12 would be allowed to remain unvaccinated.
After more than three hours of debate, with sometimes emotional criticism from conservative Republicans including Rep. Mitch Bolinsky of Newtown, a test vote on the issue passed easily, 106-36, with eight absent. That vote indicated the likely passage of the bill, depending how long GOP lawmakers wanted to talk about the legislation.
Ten liberal Democrats opposed the proposal in the first vote, out of support for its original intent to allow only seventh through twelfth graders to remain unvaccinated. But 26 Republicans joined Democrats in favor of the legislation, indicating the possibility of eventual bipartisan passage. Republicans planned as many as 47 amendments, signaling that the debate could continue throughout the day and into the evening.
“I would sign it,” said Gov. Ned Lamont during his daily news conference in the State Capitol. “We have learned over and over again over the last six months that vaccines are safe.”
Sixth-term Rep. Christie Carpino, R-Cromwell, said she was worried about the potential for a major public health crisis in the school system, charging that the Department of Public Health “kept their head in the sand,” while the state Education Department “dodged important questions” and declined to meet with Republicans during the legislative process.
“As a parent of public school children and as a policy maker I have to make this decision today and I know many will disagree with it,” Carpino said. “But I am voting today and supporting this amendment to prevent a public health emergency. The best way to address an emergency is to avoid it.”
After the preliminary vote, at about 2:20 p.m., a motion to sidetrack and send the bill to the Education Committee, was offered by Bolinsky. It was rejected in a mainly partisan vote.
“I know the passions on this bill are extremely high and raw,” said Rep. Tom O’Dea, R-New Canaan, who sided with Democrats in the early vote. But he stressed the need to provide children with a public education. “We are going to be throwing kids out of school,” he warned. An estimated 800 kindergarten and newly enrolling children would be required to show proof of measles, Mumps and Rubella vaccines, in September 2022, if the legislation becomes law.
“We need to ensure that these children stay in school,” said Rep. Michelle Cook, D-Torrington, who introduced the Democratic compromise to allow all current students under the religious exemption to remain.
While he voted in favor of the expansion of exemptions from the original bill to include all current students, Rep,. Jonathan Steinberg, D-Westport, noted that declining vaccination rates statewide are a warning, particularly at the elementary school level. “I have concerns about grandfathering children all the way down to the kindergarten level because of the data,” he said. “It is not an emergency today, but everyone will tell you that good public health policy is proactive.”
Steinberg said he hoped that if the bill becomes law, more families will foster better relationships with family doctors and discuss their concerns that could lead to medical exemptions, which would still be allowed under the bill. Currently there are about 1,200 school kids with medical exemptions.
“We need to act and act before we have an epidemic, an epidemic that we can prevent,” Steinberg said. “No one wants to declare any student ineligible for attending school, but efforts by health care professionals and educators to educate families about vaccines have been unable to compete with the fear instilled by the misinformation net. There are many well-meaning families refusing to vaccinate because they bought into slickly produced presentations which question safety and efficacy while inciting fear of Big Pharma and secret cabals intent on inserting microchip made it really hard to have a calm and constructive conversation on the subject.”
Republicans critical of the bill charged that Connecticut has the fifth-highest rate in the nation for students with childhood vaccinations and the legislation wasn’t needed. They added that there is no enforcement system in the legislation to assure compliance.
During the 2019-20 school year, 8,328 kids had the religious exemption, including 5,667 in K thru 6, and 2,661 in the 7 through 12 group. But more than 20,000 other children in the 550,000-student public school system are noncompliant for proof of vaccination.
“Today we will be voting on one bill and only one bill is our expectation,” Speaker of the House Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, told reporters during a morning news conference. The issue was discussed during a House Democratic caucus on Sunday night.
Pending a special election in Stamford, Democrats have a 96-54 majority in the House, and the first two hours of the debate, Republican opposition focused on religious freedom and charges over legislative overreach.
“It feels like we’re trying to solve a problem that has nothing to do with our problem here,” said Bolinsky, R-Newtown. “To me this is segregating the children and families in the state of Connecticut.”