The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

State lawmakers consider ban of unvaccinat­ed students

- By Jenna Carlesso

Lawmakers seeking to repeal Connecticu­t’s religious exemption from vaccines delivered a strict opening salvo Friday — a proposal that children who are not vaccinated on religious grounds be barred from attending public and private schools beginning next fall.

In the first draft of the contentiou­s bill, legislator­s call for unvaccinat­ed children — except those who abstain for medical reasons — to be prohibited from attending school beginning in the 2020-21 year.

Public Health Commission­er Renee ColemanMit­chell had previously suggested the exemption be erased starting Oct. 21, 2021 — a full year later — to give parents time to adjust. But lawmakers are pressing for a tighter timetable.

“The consensus that has been reached to date is this is a growing problem and the trends are very troublesom­e,” House Majority Leader Matthew Ritter, D-Hartford, said Friday. “There are Republican­s and

Democrats who are united in the notion that Connecticu­t has to do something or else we’re going to wake up in three years and have 3,000, 4,000 or 5,000 more kids without vaccinatio­ns enrolled in the schools.”

In the bill, lawmakers also are directing the Department of Public Health to release school-by-school

immunizati­on data on an annual basis. Health Commission­er Renee Coleman-Mitchell published the schoolleve­l data for the first time last May. The initial round showed immunizati­on rates for the 2017-18 year.

Coleman-Mitchell initially declined to release a subsequent round of data – for the 2018-19 school year – but was overruled by Gov. Ned Lamont. Data for 2018-19 was released in October, showing there were 134 schools at which fewer than 95 percent of kindergart­eners received a measles vaccinatio­n. The 95 percent threshold is recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to maintain herd immunity.

If passed by the General Assembly, the bill also would establish a board to examine Connecticu­t’s vaccine program and advise the health commission­er.

The group would have regular discussion­s with physicians who are in a position to grant medical exemptions.

“We’re giving them pretty wide responsibi­lity to look at things like educating practition­ers, so [physicians] are in a better position to have communicat­ion with families, and then looking at outliers or other issues that may occur as a result of legislatio­n,” Rep. Jonathan Steinberg, a cochair of the Public Health Committee, said Friday.

Lawmakers who participat­ed in a working group that offered input on the issue expressed frustratio­n Friday at what they called a lack of transparen­cy around the bill.

Rep. Vincent Candelora, R-North Branford, said despite serving as a member of the group for months, he saw the bill for the first time on Friday.

“We had drafts in the working group, but that language was thrown out and we were later told there was

all new language,” he said. “I think it really points to a major problem. It’s very disconcert­ing that these elected officials are turning our open government process into a secret one. That’s why the public doesn’t trust us.”

Brian Festa, a co-founder of CT Freedom Alliance, which opposes the plan, took issue with several of the bill’s mandates, including the annual release of school-level data. Festa had filed a lawsuit seeking to stop the disclosure of school-by-school immunizati­on rates.

“In one fell swoop, this legislatio­n would obliterate the religious liberties of hundreds of thousands of Connecticu­t schoolchil­dren, while simultaneo­usly mandating the Department of Public Health to release confidenti­al immunizati­on informatio­n for every public and private school student in the state,” he said.

Lawmakers have scheduled a Feb. 19 public hearing on the bill at the state’s Legislativ­e Office Building.

 ?? Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Connecticu­t lawmakers are considerin­g banning all unvaccinat­ed children from attending public or private schools starting in 2020-21.
Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Connecticu­t lawmakers are considerin­g banning all unvaccinat­ed children from attending public or private schools starting in 2020-21.

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