The Norwalk Hour

Parents sue over law ending vaccine exemptions

- By Jenna Carlesso

Two organizati­ons and three parents opposed to the recently enacted law repealing Connecticu­t’s religious exemption from mandatory school vaccinatio­ns are suing the state Department­s of Education and Public Health, the Office of Early Childhood Developmen­t and three local boards of education, saying the new policy violates their rights to privacy and medical freedom, to exercise religion, and to child rearing, among other claims.

The state Senate on Tuesday gave final passage to a bill repealing Connecticu­t’s religious exemption. Gov. Ned Lamont signed the measure the next day.

The law will erase the state’s religious exemption beginning on Sept. 1, 2022. Children in prekinderg­arten, day care or those new to the school system would no longer be able to claim the exemption starting that day.

Children who are in kindergart­en through 12th grade would still qualify for the remainder of their academic careers.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Connecticu­t on Friday, was brought by nonprofit group We the Patriots USA, the CT Freedom Alliance, and three parents: Constantin­a Lora, who has a child in preschool in Bethel; Miriam Hidalgo, whose two young children will be eligible for preschool in the fall in Glastonbur­y; and Asma Elidrissi, who has one child eligible for preschool in the fall and another who has not yet completed registrati­on for kindergart­en. Elidrissi and her family live in Stamford.

All three parents decline vaccinatio­ns for religious reasons; Elidrissi and her husband are described as devout Muslims, Hidalgo and her husband as devout Catholics, and Lora and her husband as devout Greek Orthodox believers, according to the lawsuit.

The plaintiffs alleged that the state violated their First Amendment right to free exercise of religion and rights guaranteed under the Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. They have also claimed unlawful discrimina­tion in violation of the Individual­s with Disabiliti­es Education Act.

In addition, they alleged a violation of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment

because the law allows students in kindergart­en through 12th grade who have previously claimed the religious exemption to continue using it, while barring children in pre-kindergart­en and day care and any other future enrollees of the school system from refusing vaccinatio­ns on religious grounds. It also states that children are allowed to continue claiming medical exemptions but cannot claim the religious exemption.

The plaintiffs asked a judge to find the law unconstitu­tional and to grant a permanent injunction.

“Today we filed an action in federal court to fight for the right of every child to have equal access to an education, and to freely exercise their religious beliefs, without interferen­ce or intimidati­on from the government,” said Brian Festa, an attorney and co-founder of CT Freedom Alliance, a group that has rallied against the religious exemption legislatio­n passed this week. “We did this because we had to do this. The legislator­s and the governor of the state of Connecticu­t have abandoned their oath of office, rushing to pass into a law a bill that they knew full well ran afoul of the U.S. and Connecticu­t Constituti­ons.

“We will see this litigation through to the very end, and we are confident that we will gain a victory for the children of Connecticu­t.”

Festa said he and others will also file a lawsuit in state Superior Court. In addition to the state agencies, the federal suit names the Glastonbur­y, Bethel and Stamford boards of education.

In an emailed statement late Friday, a spokesman for Lamont’s office declined to comment on the court filing.

The new state law also requires Connecticu­t’s public health commission­er to release schoolby-school immunizati­on data; helps parents who cannot afford vaccines for their children by mandating that cities and towns cover the expense; and creates a board that will review the state’s vaccine program and issue recommenda­tions.

Connecticu­t is poised to become the sixth state without a religious exemption. New York, Maine, Mississipp­i, West Virginia and California do not have the vaccine exemption; 45 states and Washington D.C. do, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Joining thousands gathered outside the state Capitol, opponents of a bill to repeal Connecticu­t's religious exemption for required school vaccinatio­ns marches down Capitol Avenue before the state Senate voted on the legislatio­n Tuesday in Hartford.
Associated Press Joining thousands gathered outside the state Capitol, opponents of a bill to repeal Connecticu­t's religious exemption for required school vaccinatio­ns marches down Capitol Avenue before the state Senate voted on the legislatio­n Tuesday in Hartford.

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