Groups sue over West Virginia governor's order on religious exemptions
for school vaccines
[May 24, 2025]
By JOHN RABY
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Two groups filed a lawsuit Friday over an
executive order by West Virginia Republican Gov. Patrick Morrisey
granting religious exemptions from required school vaccinations.
The American Civil Liberties Union's West Virginia chapter and Mountain
State Justice filed the lawsuit against the state Department of Health,
its Bureau for Public Health and agency leaders on behalf of two parents
in Kanawha County Circuit Court.
The vaccine exemption was among several executive orders issued by
Morrisey on his first full day in office in January.
“Governors do not rule by decree,” ACLU-West Virginia legal director
Aubrey Sparks said in a statement. “At the center of this lawsuit is who
gets to make these decisions for our students. On this question, the
state Constitution is clear that the authority lies with the
Legislature, not the governor.”
The governor's office and the Department of Health did not immediately
respond to emailed requests for comment Friday on the lawsuit.
Morrisey's order upended a school vaccination policy long heralded by
medical experts as one of the most protective in the country for kids.
State law requires children to receive vaccines for chickenpox,
hepatitis B, measles, meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, polio, rubella,
tetanus and whooping cough before starting school. The state does not
require COVID-19 vaccinations.
Legislation that would have allowed religious exemptions to vaccination
requirements, among other things, was passed by the state Senate and
rejected by the House of Delegates earlier this year.
State schools Superintendent Michelle Blatt issued a memorandum to all
55 county superintendents May 2 recommending that students not be
allowed to attend school in the 2025-26 without required immunizations.
But that same day, Blatt rescinded the memo at Morrisey's request,
according to the lawsuit.
Morrisey later issued a statement saying he had no intention of
rescinding the executive order. He said parents can apply for a
religious exemption from vaccinations through the Bureau for Public
Health.

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West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey speaks during a news conference
at the Hubert Humphrey Building Auditorium in Washington, April 22,
2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)
 Last year, Republican then-Gov. Jim
Justice vetoed a less sweeping vaccination bill passed by the
Republican-supermajority Legislature that would have exempted
private school and some nontraditional public school students from
vaccination requirements.
Morrisey, who served as West Virginia’s attorney general from 2013
until he was sworn in as governor, said he believes religious
exemptions to vaccinations should already be permitted under a 2023
law passed by the state Legislature called the Equal Protection for
Religion Act. The law stipulates that the government can't
“substantially burden” someone’s constitutional right to freedom of
religion unless it can prove there is a “compelling interest” to
restrict that right.
Morrisey has said that law hasn’t “been fully and properly enforced”
since it passed.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Dr. Joshua Hess of Cabell County
and Marisa Jackson of Kanawha County. It said Hess has a child who
is immunocompromised and that Jackson has a child who, because of
decreased community use of immunizations, is more susceptible to
illness.
Along with Mississippi, West Virginia is the U.S. state with the
worst health outcomes and lowest life expectancy rates.
“Parents should be able to know their child will be safe when they
send them off to school,” said Mountain State Justice executive
director Sarah Brown. “We are seeing the devastating effects of
loosening vaccine requirements across the country, and that’s why
the Legislature wisely declined to loosen the restrictions here in
West Virginia. It’s vital that their decision not be undermined by
the executive branch.”
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