Connecticut law ending religious vaccine exemptions for children is
upheld
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[August 05, 2023]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) -A divided federal appeals court on Friday rejected a
challenge to a Connecticut law that ended the state's decades-old
religious exemptions from immunization requirements for children in
schools, colleges and day care.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan said ending religious
exemptions, while still allowing medical exemptions, was a rational
means to promote health and safety by reducing the potential spread of
vaccine-preventable diseases.
In a 2-1 decision, Circuit Judge Denny Chin said the April 2021 law
contained "no trace" of hostility toward religious believers, and did
not violate objectors' constitutional rights to due process and the free
exercise of religion.
He said many U.S. courts have reviewed vaccination mandates for children
that lack religious exemptions, and only one, in Mississippi, has ever
found constitutional problems.
"We decline to disturb this nearly unanimous consensus," Chin, an
appointee of Democratic President Barack Obama, wrote.
Five other U.S. states--California, Maine, Mississippi, New York and
West Virginia--also lack religious exemptions.
Connecticut's law, signed by Governor Ned Lamont, does not apply to
children from kindergarten to 12th grade who previously had received
religious exemptions.
The law had been challenged by the groups We the Patriots USA and the CT
Freedom Alliance, and by three Connecticut parents.
Circuit Judge Joseph Bianco, an appointee of Republican President Donald
Trump, dissented.
He said the majority was too quick to dismiss the free exercise claims,
and that its approach could imperil challenges to other vaccine
mandates, including against COVID-19, "once the government invoked
generalized concerns about public safety."
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A prepared dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech
coronavirus vaccine (COVID-19) for 5-11 year olds is seen in Storrs,
Connecticut, U.S., November 3, 2021. REUTERS/Michelle McLoughlin/File
Photo
Norm Pattis, a lawyer for the
objectors, said they may ask the three-judge panel, the full
13-judge appeals court or the Supreme Court to review the case.
"The dissent got it right--it is irrational to permit students to
claim a medical exemption but to deny other students the right to
claim a religious exemption," he said.
We The Patriots USA co-founder Brian Festa said Connecticut's
position reflected a "fundamental misunderstanding" of First
Amendment rights.
Connecticut Attorney General William Tong called the decision, which
upheld a lower court ruling, "a full and resounding affirmation of
the constitutionality and legality of Connecticut's vaccine
requirements. Vaccines save lives."
Lamont, in a separate statement, said: "I applaud the courts for
upholding decades of medical research and understanding how
important it is to stop the spread of preventable diseases."
The law did not mandate COVID-19 vaccinations, and not all children
were eligible at the time for vaccines.
The case is We the Patriots USA Inc et al v Connecticut Office of
Early Childhood Development et al, 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, No. 22-249.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by David
Gregorio, Leslie Adler and Deepa Babington)
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