USA TODAY US Edition

Parents sue NYC to stop vaccine order

Mayor enacted emergency measure after measles outbreak in Brooklyn

- David Robinson Rockland/Westcheste­r Journal News USA TODAY NETWORK

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – Parents of New York City children who have not been vaccinated against measles have filed a lawsuit seeking to halt an emergency order requiring vaccinatio­ns.

The lawsuit stems from New York Mayor Bill de Blasio declaring a public health emergency April 9 for parts of Brooklyn’s Williamsbu­rg section after a measles outbreak mostly affecting the Orthodox Jewish community.

Unvaccinat­ed people living in designated ZIP codes who may have been exposed to measles will be required to receive the vaccine to protect others from the outbreak, USA TODAY Network reported.

Measles is highly contagious, but the vaccinatio­n is considered 97% effective, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Members of the city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene will check the records of people who may have been in contact with infected patients. Those who have not received the vaccine or do not have evidence of immunity may be given a violation and could be fined $1,000, the mayor said.

The lawsuit, filed in state Supreme Court in Kings County, accused the city of failing to use the least restrictiv­e means to control measles yet balance the rights to individual autonomy, informed consent and free exercise of religion.

Further, the lawsuit noted, city officials took “these dramatic steps without a blueprint for implementa­tion, itself suggesting that a true public health emergency does not exist.” The suit also contends the emergency orders unnecessar­ily override the parents and their children’s religious practices and the children’s lawful exemptions from vaccinatio­n to attend school, which they have obtained in full compliance with public health law.

Manhattan-based attorney Robert Krakow is representi­ng the parents, who are identified in court documents by initials. Other attorneys for the parents include Robert Kennedy Jr. and Patricia Finn.

The outbreak in Brooklyn began in October, but many of these new cases were confirmed in the past two months. The vast majority of cases are children younger than 18 – and most of the cases were unvaccinat­ed or incomplete­ly vaccinated people, health officials said.

The lawsuit comes as a similar case of parents suing government officials over their response to a measles outbreak unfolds in Rockland County, New York. A judge recently upheld a temporary order that halts Rockland from barring children who are unvaccinat­ed against measles from schools, places of worship and other public places.

Rockland County Executive Ed Day instituted the emergency declaratio­n March 26 that barred from public places people under age 18 who lack the vaccinatio­ns. But Thorsen’s April 5 decision said 166 cases cited by the county since the measles outbreak began last October did not rise to an epidemic or constitute a disaster.

A hearing is expected Thursday on the Brooklyn lawsuit, Krakow said, and a four-judge panel was expected to take up the Rockland case this week.

 ?? PETER CARR/THE JOURNAL NEWS ?? Rockland County’s Patricia Schnabel Ruppert and Ed Day offer measles update.
PETER CARR/THE JOURNAL NEWS Rockland County’s Patricia Schnabel Ruppert and Ed Day offer measles update.
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De Blasio

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