The Commercial Appeal

Calif. delays vaccine mandate for schools

- Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – California is sticking with its coronaviru­s vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren, but it won’t happen until at least the summer of 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion announced Thursday.

Last year, California was the first state to announce it would require all schoolchil­dren to receive the coronaviru­s vaccine. But it hasn’t happened yet because Newsom said he was waiting for regulators at the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to give final approval to the vaccine for school-aged children.

At the time, Newsom estimated the mandate would take effect for the start of the 2022-23 school year. But while federal regulators have authorized use of the coronaviru­s vaccine for children as young as 5 in an emergency, it has still not given final approval to anyone younger than 16.

As the calendar inches closer to the fall, school administra­tors had worried they would not have enough time to implement the vaccine mandate.

“So based on these two facts – we don’t have full FDA approval, and we recognize the implementa­tion challenges that schools and school leaders would face – that we are not moving to have a vaccine requiremen­t for schools in this coming academic year and no sooner than July 2023,” California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said in an interview.

The move comes at a time when coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations remain low following the winter surge of the omicron variant, but also as authoritie­s struggle to convince parents to vaccinate their children.

While nearly 75% of California’s population has been vaccinated, rates for children 17 and under are much lower. Just under 34% of children between the ages of 5-11 have received the vaccine, while just over 66.4% of children ages 12-17 have gotten it, according to state data.

“From a perspectiv­e of keeping children in schools, this was the right move,” said Christina Hildebrand, president and founder of A Voice for Choice Advocacy, a group that opposes vaccine mandates. “The number of children that are unvaccinat­ed, and if they were removed from school, would have been a much bigger disaster.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP FILE ?? A child receives the COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic for children set up at Willard Intermedia­te School in Santa Ana, Calif., in November.
JAE C. HONG/AP FILE A child receives the COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic for children set up at Willard Intermedia­te School in Santa Ana, Calif., in November.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States