Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Calif. requiring schoolchil­dren to get vaccine

Governor says: “We want to end this pandemic”

- Olga Rodriguez and Adam Beam

SAN FRANCISCO – California will enact the nation’s first coronaviru­s vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday, aiming to have all students in seventh through 12th grades vaccinated by next fall once the shots gain final federal approval for everyone 12 and over.

The Democratic governor said he expects the U.S. government to give that final sign-off sometime next year, bumping up from the emergency authorizat­ion given now for those 12 to 15.

He said the state will require students in kindergart­en through sixth grades to get the vaccine once final federal approval comes for children 5 to 11.

“We have to do more,” Newsom said during a news conference at a San Francisco middle school after visiting with some seventh-graders. “We want to end this pandemic. We are all exhausted by it.”

A handful of school districts have imposed their own vaccine mandates, including five in California. But other states have resisted imposing pandemic rules on schools, including a new law in Kentucky that overturned a statewide mask mandate.

Newsom has been one of the most aggressive governors on coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, issuing the nation’s first statewide stay-at-home order in March 2020 and more recently requiring California’s roughly 2.2 million health care workers to get vaccinated to keep their jobs.

The governor seems to have been emboldened after easily defeating a recall effort last month fueled by anger over his handling of the pandemic. He says he interprete­d his landslide victory as an endorsemen­t of his vaccine policies.

Newsom hasn’t endorsed all vaccine mandates, however, recently opposing a similar requiremen­t for prison guards that a federal judge imposed. Critics used that example to say Newsom is driven more by politics than science, noting the labor union of correction­s officers had donated to his campaign to defeat the recall.

“California kids made the mistake of not giving millions to his campaigns,” Republican Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley, who ran to replace Newsom during the recall election, tweeted Friday.

Roughly 84% of everyone 12 and over in California has received at least one dose of the vaccine, one of the highest rates in the country. But Newsom said Friday that just 63.5% of people between 12 and 17 have received at least one dose.

His announceme­nt comes as COVID-19 infections in most of California have dropped markedly in the last month.

In Los Angeles County – the nation’s largest, with more than 10 million residents – just 1.7% of people tested for the virus have it, and daily infections are down by half in the last month, when most kids went back to school.

“These numbers are amazingly low given that 3,000-plus schools are now open countywide,” county Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Thursday, noting that though the number of outbreaks in schools has increased slightly in recent weeks, the overall number is small and largely related to youth sports.

California’s largest teachers unions supported the directive, as did the California Associatio­n of School Boards. Dr. Peter N. Bretah, president of the California Medical Associatio­n, said the group “strongly supports” the vaccine mandate for students.

“This is not a new idea. We already require vaccines against several known deadly diseases before students can enroll in schools,” Bretan said. “The Newsom administra­tion is simply extending existing public health protection­s to cover this new disease, which has caused so much pain and suffering across our state, our nation and the entire globe over the last 18 months.”

Yet the requiremen­t is sure to anger some parents who are skeptical of the vaccines. Last month, more than a thousand people gathered at the California Capitol to oppose vaccine mandates.

Students would be granted religious and medical exemptions, but the rules for how the state would apply them have not been written yet. Any student who refuses to take the vaccine would be forced to complete an independen­t study course at home.

Until now, Newsom had left the decision on student vaccine mandates to local school districts, leading to a variety of different orders across some of the state’s largest districts. In Los Angeles, a vaccine mandate for eligible students is set to take effect in January for the nation’s second largest school district.

Newsom’s plan does not override those districts’ plans, saying school districts can “accelerate” the requiremen­ts.

Newsom has made it a point of pride to be the first in the nation to issue a variety of pandemic-related school mandates.

In August, California became the first state to require all teachers and staff in K-12 public and private schools to get vaccinated or undergo weekly COVID-19 testing. Newsom also issued a school mask mandate earlier in the summer for indoor classes that applies to all teachers and students.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom has made it a point of pride to be the first to issue a variety of pandemic-related school mandates.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP California Gov. Gavin Newsom has made it a point of pride to be the first to issue a variety of pandemic-related school mandates.

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