Current:Home > reviewsWest Virginia House passes bill to allow religious exemptions for student vaccines -Capitatum
West Virginia House passes bill to allow religious exemptions for student vaccines
SafeX Pro Exchange View
Date:2025-04-05 22:46:21
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia would join 45 other states that allow religious exemptions from childhood vaccines required for school attendance under a bill that passed the House of Delegates on Monday.
The religious exemption is included in a bill that would let private schools decide whether to implement vaccine mandates. It was added to the bill as an amendment that passed on Friday. The overall bill was approved Monday on a 57-41 vote and now goes to the state Senate, where its chances of passage are uncertain. But the Senate will have to act quickly: the 60-day regular session ends on March 9.
Some medical experts in West Virginia, one of the unhealthiest states in the nation among adults, called the bill archaic.
“Legislators want to turn the clock back nearly 100 years and remove some of the safeguards in our vaccination policies,” said Dr. Steven Eshenaur, the health officer for the Kanawha-Charleston health department. “It escapes sound reasoning why anyone would want to weaken childhood immunization laws. Our children are more important than any agenda that would bring these horrific diseases back to the Mountain State.”
The bill’s original intent was to eliminate vaccine requirements for students in public virtual schools. It was expanded in committee to allow private schools to set their own vaccination standards. Then came the religious exemption added in last week’s amendment.
Amendment sponsor Todd Kirby, a Raleigh County Republican, said the exemption sends a message about existing guarantees of religious freedom. Kirby, who said his children are fully vaccinated, added that it would allow unvaccinated children to be welcomed into schools and day-care facilities and “to have the camaraderie and social interactions that we all know are so important.”
Last year, Kirby co-sponsored a bill later signed by Republican Gov. Jim Justice that would create a test for courts to apply when people challenge government regulations they believe interfere with their constitutional right to religious freedom. About two dozen other states have similar laws.
A federal appeals court last August upheld a 2021 Connecticut law that eliminated the state’s longstanding religious exemption from childhood immunization requirements for schools, colleges and day care facilities. And in Mississippi, a federal judge ruled in April 2023 that the state must allow such exemptions.
Other states that currently don’t have religious exemptions for school immunization requirements are California, Maine and New York, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Unless they have a valid medical excuse, children entering school for the first time in West Virginia currently must be immunized against nine diseases or infections, including chickenpox, measles, whooping cough and tetanus.
Kanawha County Republican JB Akers said he supports the religious exemption but doesn’t like how the bill would let private schools decide on student vaccine requirements while public school students currently must be immunized.
“I think we are potentially creating an equal protection problem,” he said in voting against the bill.
Students who compete in state-sponsored athletic competitions must be immunized and cannot receive a religious exemption under the bill.
Kanawha County Democrat Mike Pushkin chided the House for meddling with the current school vaccine law.
“We do not have the right to harm others,” Pushkin said. “This bill does harm.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, West Virginia’s life expectancy in 2020 was 72.8 years. Only Mississippi’s was lower at 71.9. West Virginia has the nation’s highest death rate from diabetes and heart disease, and has long had the nation’s highest drug-related death rate. It was among three states with an obesity prevalence of 40% or greater in adults in 2022, the CDC said.
veryGood! (44679)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Yankees rookie Ben Rice enters franchise history with three homers against the Red Sox
- Hurricane watch issued for Beryl in Texas
- 3 men killed in weekend shooting at homeless encampment near Los Angeles, police say
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Shakur Stevenson beats Artem Harutyunyan: Round-by-round analysis, highlights
- Pink resumes tour after health scare, tells fans 'We are going to shake our juicy booties'
- 2 Mississippi inmates captured after escape from prison
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Torrid heat bakes millions of people in large swaths of US, setting records and fanning wildfires
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Teen killed by police in New York to be laid to rest
- ‘Despicable Me 4’ debuts with $122.6M as boom times return to the box office
- June sizzles to 13th straight monthly heat record. String may end soon, but dangerous heat won’t
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- A green flag for clean power: NASCAR to unveil its first electric racecar
- Shakur Stevenson beats Artem Harutyunyan: Round-by-round analysis, highlights
- June sizzles to 13th straight monthly heat record. String may end soon, but dangerous heat won’t
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
3 men killed in weekend shooting at homeless encampment near Los Angeles, police say
Which states could have abortion on the ballot in 2024? Arkansas organizers aim to join the list
The most luxurious full-size pickup trucks on the market
Could your smelly farts help science?
Connecticut officials warn beachgoers of nesting shorebirds as they announce some park area closures
Scorched by history: Discriminatory past shapes heat waves in minority and low-income neighborhoods
Voters in France’s overseas territories kick off a pivotal parliamentary election