Los Angeles Times

Indiana college’s vaccine mandate upheld

Federal judge’s ruling comes days after UC required shots for all students and staff.

- Times staff writer Teresa Watanabe contribute­d to this report.

INDIANAPOL­IS — A federal judge is allowing Indiana University to continue with its COVID-19 vaccine requiremen­t for all students and employees, a ruling that came days after the University of California became the largest public university system in the nation to say it would require vaccinatio­ns this fall for all even without full federal approval.

The ruling from a judge in South Bend rejected a request from eight students to block the requiremen­t while they pursued a lawsuit alleging that the university’s policy violated their constituti­onal rights and the state’s new law banning vaccine passports.

The judge wrote in his ruling dated Sunday that evidence so far shows that the university has pursued a reasonable policy in the “legitimate interest of public health for its students, faculty and staff.”

Indiana University has pursued a reasonable policy in the ‘legitimate interest of public health for its students, faculty and staff.’ — A federal judge

The judge said the students who object to receiving the vaccine shots can seek medical and religious exemptions offered by the university, while also having the option of taking the fall semester off or attending another school.

The university said in a statement that the ruling allows the school to focus on “a full and safe return” for the fall semester on all its campuses.

The court action comes as colleges and universiti­es are scrambling to decide how far to push vaccinatio­n mandates because legal questions had been raised over whether they could require vaccines without full approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. More than 580 campuses across the nation have issued vaccinatio­n mandates, according to a Chronicle of Higher Education tracker, including more than 60 in California, such as USC, Caltech, Stanford, Occidental and the Claremont Colleges.

Last week, UC became the largest public university system to announce it would require them this fall for all students, faculty and others to access campus. The UC system initially said it would wait for full FDA approval but decided to move forward with the mandate after reviewing medical and scientific research on the threat of the virus and the safety and efficacy of the vaccines. Also, the university said a vaccine requiremen­t drew broad support from students, staff, faculty and others, although at least two employee unions are arguing that any policy to impose one is subject to negotiatio­n.

The UC policy allows narrow exemptions for medical, religious or disability reasons and deferrals due to pregnancy. Proof of vaccinatio­n or approved exemptions must be submitted no later than two weeks before the start of fall term.

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