The Norwalk Hour

No vote to end religious vaccine exemptions

- By Jenna Carlesso House Majority Leader Matthew Ritter, D-Hartford

Legislator­s who in recent weeks had accelerate­d efforts to repeal Connecticu­t’s religious exemption on mandatory immunizati­ons reversed themselves Thursday, abandoning their quest amid concerns about what to do with unvaccinat­ed children who are already enrolled in school.

The change would not have forced children to be immunized, but it would have prohibited kids who are not vaccinated on religious grounds from enrolling in the state’s public schools. A sticking point in the debate was whether children already attending school should be allowed to return, or if the ban should only apply to those who had not yet enrolled.

“A lot of people were struggling. What do you do with a 17-year-old kid who’s a junior in high school? These are really hard things,” said House Majority Leader Matthew Ritter, D-Hartford. “I don’t think the debate is so much about the problem. Everyone now identifies there’s a problem in Connecticu­t. The question is what do you do about these very difficult situations.”

Legislator­s also want more input from the state Department of Public Health. DPH Commission­er “Everyone now identifies there’s a problem in Connecticu­t. The question is what do you do about these very difficult situations.” Renee Coleman-Mitchell has not taken a position on whether the General Assembly should remove the religious exemption.

Coleman-Mitchell must weigh in on what statutory authority is needed to boost vaccinatio­n rates in schools, what to do about children already enrolled in school, and whether lawmakers should wipe out the exemption or pursue other action, Ritter said.

“They are going to have to be more forthcomin­g about what they think the state of Connecticu­t should do,” he said. “I think a lot of people said, ‘It would be nice to have DPH, as the medical experts for the state, speak a little more on that.' ”

In a prepared statement Thursday, Coleman-Mitchell said she will review the legislatur­e’s request and respond “as soon as possible.”

“Overall, our immunizati­on rate for vaccine-preventabl­e diseases is strong in Connecticu­t. As recent data show, however, we do have pockets of vulnerabil­ity within our state and that is a public health concern,” she said. “Collective­ly considerin­g all options to increase the rate of vaccinatio­n among our children is a desirable public health strategy.”

Earlier this week, hundreds flooded a hearing room and overflow spaces at the state’s Legislativ­e Office Building to urge the General Assembly not to move ahead with dismantlin­g the religious exemption.

They called the last-minute push unfair and threatened to vote against politician­s who supported the repeal.

Lawmakers originally had planned to introduce a bill within a year that would eliminate the religious waivers, but hastened their effort after reviewing school-by-school vaccinatio­n data released by Connecticu­t’s public health department. The data from the 2017-18 year show 102 schools where less than 95 percent of kindergart­en students were vaccinated for measles, mumps and rubella – the threshold recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Several schools recorded doubledigi­t percentage­s for religious exemptions to vaccines.

The health department is expected to release more recent figures – from the 2018-19 school year – in June. Ritter said preliminar­y data show that the exemption rates will be higher than the 2017-18 percentage­s.

The agency has reported three measles cases so far this year. Nationally, hundreds of cases have been recorded across more than 20 states. Health officials called the outbreak the worst in the country in 25 years.

Lawmakers have cited concerns for school-aged children who cannot receive vaccinatio­ns because of immunodefi­ciencies, and pointed to other states, like California, Mississipp­i and West Virginia, that have eliminated religious or philosophi­cal exemptions. Maine’s legislatur­e voted this week to end the state’s religious waivers.

LeeAnn Ducat, the founder of Informed Choice USA, which has vehemently opposed the push to halt Connecticu­t’s exemption, said Thursday that despite this year’s win, activists would continue to fight.

“There are thousands of Connecticu­t families that are breathing a sigh of relief today after several days of anxiety and apprehensi­on,” she said. “We are very grateful that lawmakers decided to handle this situation with the delicatene­ss it deserves. Rushing it would have been detrimenta­l.”

But, she said, “We will never go away. If they continue to bring this up, we will continue to come back. If they continue to push this, our numbers are only going to grow.”

Last week, Attorney General William Tong said there is no constituti­onal barrier to removing the state’s religious exemption. His opinion was prompted by an inquiry from Ritter.

Legislativ­e leaders said they would revisit the issue next year. An overwhelmi­ng number of lawmakers in the House and Senate – including some Republican­s – support the repeal, they said.

“I don’t see this as a step back. I see this as perhaps a slowing down,” said Rep. Liz Linehan, D-Cheshire. “A step back indicates there is some sort of reasoning why we shouldn’t do this. There continues to be every reason why we need to move forward. We’re going to look carefully at how we move forward so we don’t have to come back and fix it later.”

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