Health & Fitness
California Eliminates Vaccine Opt-Out for School Children, OC Lawmakers Balk
Despite massive opposition from anti-vaxxers, the governor has signed a law, eliminating the vaccine requirement personal belief exemption.

Almost all school children in the Southland and across California will be required to be vaccinated against diseases such as measles and whooping cough under legislation signed into law today by Gov. Jerry Brown.
SB 277 was co-sponsored by Sen. Ben Allen, D-Santa Monica, and Sen. Richard Pan, D-Sacramento. Pan is also a pediatrician. The legislation was prompted in part by an outbreak of measles traced to Disneyland that began in late December and ultimately spread to more than 130 people across the state. Cases were also reported in Arizona, California, Colorado, Nebraska, Oregon, Utah and Washington state.
The legislation eliminates vaccination exemptions based on religious or personal beliefs. It will require all children entering kindergarten to be vaccinated unless a doctor certifies that a child has a medical condition, such as allergies, preventing it.
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āI want to thank all of the parents, families and my colleagues and Governor Brown for their advocacy and thoughtful deliberation of this legislation,ā said Allen, former president of the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District board. āToday is a good day for California.ā
Brown, in a bill-signing message sent to the state Senate, acknowledged there was opposition to the bill, but said childrenās health is important to protect.
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āThe science is clear that vaccines dramatically protect children against a number of infection and dangerous diseases,ā Brown wrote in his message. āWhile itās true that no medical intervention is without risk, the evidence shows that immunization powerfully benefits and protects the community.ā
Brown noted that the legislation exempts children from immunizations if there are ācircumstances, including but not limited to, family medical history for which the physician does not recommend immunization.ā
Although the Disneyland outbreak happened in Orange County, nearly all of the countyās lawmakers opposed the legislation.
Assemblyman Don Wagner, R-Tustin, who represents Anaheim, said he supports vaccination as a general rule, but he voted against the legislation because he felt it did too much to curtail choice among parents.
āI am a proponent of vaccines and Iāve got my kids vaccinated,ā Wagner told City News Service. āI think by and large itās the right thing to do from a medical and public health standpoint. However, there are people who have very legitimate concerns that are either religious or with their own particular children in the timing of the vaccines. I think itās bad precedent to have the government run roughshod over those concerns, so my vote was to err on the side of freedom and liberty and parental choice.ā
Sen. John Moorlach, R-Irvine, said he also does not oppose vaccinations in principle, but said he was concerned after hearing appeals from mothers who claimed their children were disabled or permanently injured by a shot.
āIām not anti-vaccination. Iām just saying make sure the mothers are comfortable. Let them own the position. Once they understand it and once theyāre convinced thereās no reactionsā then they will support it, Moorlach told CNS. āI come from a place of freedom and liberty, and to be told I have to do something or face dire consequences, it just smacks of totalitarianism.ā
Moorlach also said he has concerns about ābig pharmaceuticalā companies having an undue influence on the debate.
āWhen I was a kid it was three shots, then when my kids were growing up it was eight shots,ā Moorlach said.
Moorlach said he was especially moved by the anecdote from state Sen. Ted Gaines, R-Redding, who recounted on the Senate floor how his daughter suffered a frightening reaction to a vaccination.
āWe took her in for shots and she had a seizure that night and we had to rush her into a hospital where they stabilized her and did an MRIā and found the coating around the brain had separated, Gaines told City News Service. āThe doctors said we donāt want your child to have any more vaccinations for 10 years, so we were very careful with spreading those out. Sheās vaccinated -- sheās 13 now -- so we had to take a very slow approach.ā
Sen. Patricia Bates, R-San Juan Capistrano, said she supports vaccinations but opposed the bill.
āWhile the bill grandfathers in non-vaccinated children currently attending public schools, it does not apply to their younger siblings who have yet to enter school,ā she wrote in a letter to constituents. āThis would force parents to either violate their personal beliefs or take them out of public school.
āSimply put, SB 277 does not go far enough to ensure that non- vaccinated children receive equal access to the high quality public education that the California Constitution guarantees and therefore I cannot support it.ā
Opponents criticized the bill as infringing on the rights of parents to make medical decisions for their children. Randy Thomasson, president of SaveCalifornia.com, said it ādenies parents the right to exempt genetically susceptible brothers and sisters of vaccine-injured children, denies parents a religious exemption and denies conscientious objectors a public-school education.ā
Leah Russin, co-founder of Vaccinate California, an advocacy group that pushed for the legislation, said parents can now ābreathe a sigh of relief knowing our children and others will be better protected from preventative diseases.ā
Tom Torlakson, state superintendent of public instruction, said vaccination rates have dropped in schools in recent years, raising the risk of disease outbreaks.
āThe bill protects the health of our children and our communities, especially those too young or too ill to receive vaccines,ā Torlakson said. āThe bill protects against the outbreaks of debilitating, crippling and costly preventavle diseases such as measles, mumps, rubella and chicken pox. It will help keep students healthy so they can attend school, learn and succeed.ā
TELL US WHAT YOU THINK IN THE COMMENTS: Should parents have a choice in whether or not to vaccinate their children?
City News Service
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