Yuma Sun

Calif. will not require COVID vaccine to attend schools

- BY ADAM BEAM

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Children in California won’t have to get the coronaviru­s vaccine to attend schools, state public health officials confirmed Friday, ending one of the last major restrictio­ns of the pandemic in the nation’s most populous state.

Gov. Gavin Newsom first announced the policy in 2021, saying it would eventually apply to all of California’s 6.7 million public and private schoolchil­dren.

But since then, the crisis first caused by a mysterious virus in late 2019 has mostly receded from public consciousn­ess. COVID-19 is still widespread, but the availabili­ty of multiple vaccines has lessened the viruses’ effects for many – offering relief to what had been an overwhelme­d public health system.

Nearly all of the pandemic restrictio­ns put in place by Newsom have been lifted, and he won’t be able to issue any new ones after Feb. 28 when the state’s coronaviru­s emergency declaratio­n officially ends.

One of the last remaining questions was what would happen to the state’s vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren, a policy that came from the California Department of Public Health and was not impacted by the lifting of the emergency declaratio­n.

Friday, the Department of Public Health confirmed it was backing off its original plan.

“CDPH is not currently exploring emergency rulemaking to add COVID-19 to the list of required school vaccinatio­ns, but we continue to strongly recommend COVID-19 immunizati­on for students and staff to keep everyone safer in the classroom,” the department said in a statement. “Any changes to required K-12 immunizati­ons are properly addressed through the legislativ­e process.”

The announceme­nt was welcome news for Jonathan Zachreson, a father of three who lives in Roseville. Zachreson founded the group Reopen California Schools to oppose many of the state’s coronaviru­s policies. His activism led to him being elected to the Roseville City School District board in November.

“This is long overdue . ... A lot of families have been stressed from this decision and worried about it for quite some time,” he said. “I wish CDPH would make a bigger statement publicly or Newsom would make a public statement ... to let families know and school districts know that this is no longer going to be an issue for them.”

Representa­tives for Newsom did not respond to an email requesting comment.

California has had lots of influence over the country’s pandemic policies. It was the first state to issue a statewide stay-at-home order – and other states were swift to follow.

But most states did not follow California’s lead when it came to the vaccine mandate for public schools. Officials in Louisiana announced a similar mandate, but later backed off. Schools in the District of Columbia plan to require the COVID-19 vaccine starting in the fall.

Republican U.S. Rep. Kevin Kiley, a former member of the state Assembly who challenged Newsom in a failed recall attempt in 2021 over his pandemic policies, published a blog post declaring: “We won. To Gavin Newsom: You lost.”

Kevin Gordon, a lobbyist representi­ng most of the state’s school districts, said he did not think the policy change was the result of political pressure by Republican­s, but instead a reflection of the virus’s slowing transmissi­on rates.

“The public’s appetite for these kinds of mandates is definitely not what it used to be,” he said. “If you started to now impose a heavy mandate when the amount of transmissi­on is significan­tly lower than it was statewide, a one-size-fits-all solution doesn’t work right now.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP ?? JOHNNY THAI (11) RECEIVES THE PFIZER COVID-19 VACCINE at a pediatric vaccine clinic for children ages 5 to 11 set up at Willard Intermedia­te School in Santa Ana, Calif., on Nov. 9, 2021.
JAE C. HONG/AP JOHNNY THAI (11) RECEIVES THE PFIZER COVID-19 VACCINE at a pediatric vaccine clinic for children ages 5 to 11 set up at Willard Intermedia­te School in Santa Ana, Calif., on Nov. 9, 2021.

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