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		Parents seeking religious exemptions to school vaccines win reprieve in 
		a West Virginia county
		[July 25, 2025] 
		By JOHN RABY 
		A West Virginia judge on Thursday allowed the children of three families 
		in one county to attend school this fall without required vaccinations, 
		the latest move in a showdown between Republican Gov. Patrick Morrisey 
		and the state Board of Education.
 Raleigh County Circuit Judge Michael Froble issued a preliminary 
		injunction less than a month before the start of the new school year. 
		The ruling involves children whose parents sued and are claiming 
		religious exemptions to a long-standing school vaccine mandate.
 
 Morrisey issued an executive order upon taking office allowing such 
		religious exemptions. But the board voted last month to direct public 
		schools to ignore the order and instead follow school vaccine 
		requirements that are laid out in state law and prohibit the exemptions.
 
 Froble's ruling came in a lawsuit that was filed June 24. The injunction 
		was limited to the three children of the plaintiffs who sued the state 
		and local departments of education, and has no impact statewide.
 
 Morrisey, who served as West Virginia’s attorney general from 2013 until 
		he was sworn in as governor in January, said he believes the religious 
		exemptions to vaccinations should already be permitted under a 2023 law 
		passed by the Legislature called the Equal Protection for Religion Act.
 
		
		 
		“Today’s ruling is another legal victory in the fight for religious 
		freedom,” Morrisey said in a statement. “No family should be forced to 
		choose between their faith and their children’s education, which is 
		exactly what the unelected bureaucrats on the State Board of Education 
		are attempting to force West Virginians to do.”
 The board said in a statement that it was disappointed by the ruling and 
		that its members "will decide next steps in the near future.”
 
 The original lawsuit doesn’t explain what specific religion the families 
		follow. It was filed on behalf of parent Miranda Guzman, who identifies 
		as a Christian and said that altering her child's natural immune system 
		through required vaccinations “would demonstrate a lack of faith in God” 
		and “disobey the Holy Spirit's leading.” The suit was later amended to 
		add two other parents.
 
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			 Most religious denominations and 
			groups support medical vaccinations, according to the American Bar 
			Association.
 Vaccination mandates for public schools are seen as a way of to 
			prevent the spread of once-common childhood diseases such as 
			measles, mumps, whooping cough, chickenpox and polio. But due in 
			part to vaccine hesitancy, some preventable and deadly diseases are 
			on the rise. For example, the U.S. is having its worst year for 
			measles spread in more than three decades.
 
 Medical experts have long heralded West Virginia’s school 
			vaccination policy as one of the most protective in the country for 
			children. State law requires children to receive vaccines for 
			chickenpox, hepatitis B, measles, meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, 
			polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping cough before starting school.
 
 Several states grant medical exemptions from school vaccinations. At 
			least 30 states have religious freedom laws modeled after the 
			federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, signed in 1993 by 
			then-President Bill Clinton. It allows federal regulations that 
			interfere with religious beliefs to be challenged.
 
 On Wednesday, a Kanawha County judge dismissed a separate lawsuit 
			against Morrisey’s executive order because it didn't give the 
			required 30 days' notice prior to being filed. That lawsuit, filed 
			on behalf of two Cabell County parents, will be allowed to be 
			refiled. It alleged that only the Legislature, not the governor, has 
			the authority to make such decisions.
 
 During their regular session that ended in April, lawmakers failed 
			to pass legislation that was introduced to allow religious 
			exemptions for school vaccine mandates.
 
			
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