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Let the courts decide.
That appears to be the stance of the California Department of Education as state regulators have so far declined to answer pleas from school districts to clarify what California’s new vaccination law means for the 700,000 students who receive special education services.
Known as Senate Bill 277, the state law makes California one of three states to permit exemptions to school vaccinations only for medical reasons. Gone are exemptions based on religious or personal beliefs. The law says all public and private school students must be vaccinated against 10 communicable diseases unless they have a medical exemption, they are home-schooled or they are enrolled in independent study with no classroom instruction.
With school districts beginning to enforce the law on July 1, legal experts say a conflict is likely to arise between the state mandate and the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, which says students who qualify for special education services, such as intensive reading interventions that are provided in general classrooms, must receive those services. A conflict also has the potential to unite two impassioned groups of parents — those who oppose vaccinations and those who insist on the right of students to receive special education services in mainstream classrooms, attorneys said.
But what if the special education student is unvaccinated? Would that student be allowed to attend school? Or would an unvaccinated special education student have to receive services at home? Lawyers have lined up on both sides of the issue, offering conflicting opinions on how the state law intends school districts to carry out its mandate. It’s an argument that lawyers on both sides say is likely to end up in court.
The California Department of Education has said it will not be providing guidance on interpreting the new law, although it typically does so with new legislation, said Greg Rhoten, chairman of the Special Education Local Plan Area Administrators of California, which represents special education programs in the state. Rhoten said he asked two experts — Fred Balcom, the director of the special education division of the California Department of Education who retired last year, and Chris Drouin, now the interim director of special education — for guidance from the department and was told by both that none would be forthcoming.
He said he was told to follow guidance from the California Department of Public Health. “That wasn’t helpful to us,” Rhoten said, noting that public health department officials are not likely to be well-versed in special education law.
“I assume the state is trying to be careful about assuming risk for interpretation of the law,” which could make the department a party to a lawsuit, Rhoten said. “In the end, it’s the implementers,” he said, referring to the school districts. “They’re the ones who have to make the calls and do their best.”
In lieu of state guidance, districts have hired lawyers or turned to their general counsel for advice on how to proceed. Los Angeles Unified School District, which serves more than 640,000 K-12 students, said that on the advice of legal counsel, the district will not require students in special education to comply with required immunizations if that requirement would prevent them from getting services, including instruction in general education classrooms, to which they are legally entitled.
The California Department of Education referred media inquiries about the vaccination law to the California Department of Public Health, which in turn, referred questioners to its Senate Bill 277 Frequently Asked Questions web page. Last month, the department quietly posted an update that had been long anticipated by districts, but the information fell short of providing helpful guidance, some lawyers said.
In describing students who have individualized education programs through special education, the update explained in words underlined for emphasis that “parents or guardians must continue to provide immunization records for these students to their schools, and schools must continue to maintain and report records of immunizations that have been received for these students.”
But does “continue to provide immunization records” mean that students in special education must be vaccinated? Ronald Wenkart, general counsel for the Orange County Office of Education, says it does. “You wouldn’t have a record if you were not immunized,” said Wenkart, who has become a bit of a Kremlinologist in trying to decipher the text of the law and the public health department updates. His office has advised districts that the intention of the law — to improve immunization rates — calls for all students who receive special education services to be vaccinated, unless they have a medical exemption.
“This is about the same guidance we got to begin with,” said Paul Lavigne, executive director of the Greater Anaheim Special Education Local Plan Area. “The law is vague on it. It says students need to receive IEP services but it also says they need to be vaccinated. More guidance would be great.”
“I would have hoped that if the state were to clarify this, they would provide a little more specific clarification than that,” said Jonathan Read, a partner at the law firm Fagen Friedman & Fulfrost.
At the same time, a March 1 revision to the California Department of Education Audit Guide, which instructs auditors how to monitor district compliance with the law, states that auditors who are checking on immunization compliance should exclude students who have individualized education programs and receive special education services.
Wenkart said the audit guidance would create further confusion. “That will give people the false impression that these kids don’t have to be vaccinated,” he said.
With this much uncertainty, the issue will likely make its way to court, said Rhoten of the statewide special education association. “What happens is that case law gets made,” he said.
Rhoten offered this scenario: A district decides that an unvaccinated special education student must be taught at home. The student’s parents file a complaint, arguing that their child is not receiving a “free and appropriate education” in the least restrictive environment. The matter goes before an administrative judge in a due process hearing. The judge considers the student’s right to special education services as well as the school’s obligation to protect the health and safety of other students and staff. One way or another, a ruling is made.
“Then things get decided,” Rhoten said.
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Fresno City College professor Tom Boroujeni is unable to fulfill his duties as academic senate president while on leave, the latest update reads.
This is a continuing EdSource series on proven innovations in higher education that relate to the problems facing California’s higher education systems.
Comments (15)
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Mama Lion 6 years ago6 years ago
Two of my three boys were vaccinated and injured. My oldest son was finally diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder just a few weeks before his 5th birthday back in 2016. Sadly the so called physicians who were seeing him failed to ever document his "reactions" to vaccines (yes all of them). They also denied him a referral for a evaluation of Autism and claimed it was my parenting. Once I received the authorization directly from … Read More
Two of my three boys were vaccinated and injured. My oldest son was finally diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder just a few weeks before his 5th birthday back in 2016. Sadly the so called physicians who were seeing him failed to ever document his “reactions” to vaccines (yes all of them). They also denied him a referral for a evaluation of Autism and claimed it was my parenting. Once I received the authorization directly from the insurance and obtained his diagnosis I threatened them with a lawsuit of negligence if they did not sign his medical exemption.
He has been attending a public school and is finishing up his 1st grade year there. He also has a individualized education plan that outlines his peer goals. The current physician will not rewrite an exemption because she claims there was no proof for her to exempt him permanently quite yet because she herself did not see any reactions.
My son has all required vaccines for entry at his age level except for a 4th dose of polio. I have outlined in many e-mails to the district how excluding my son from school ‘least restrictive environment” along with his diagnosis and current IEP is going against his federal and state rights to a free and appropriate public education. They claim that I can home school him with CAVA which as a online charter school “not right for his needs” but he would then no longer receive his services because the school would not be under their jurisdiction.
To sum it up they claim vaccinate him with his remaining shot or lose his services! Is this not contradiction to state and federal law?! Any advice or additional resources would be greatly appreciated. I am in a rough corner and know for a fact that the Hell my children and family are going through on a daily basis is due to the so called “immunizations.” Since I began a complete diet change in our household primarily for the boys, excluding GMOs, artificial preservatives and ingredients, cut back on dairy and gluten to the best of our capability, eating organic homemade meals and refusing all pharmaceutical drugs and practicing a homeopathic and holistic lifestyle and treatment, their health and diagnosis has improved greatly. Of course with added support of a public school community. Prayers are always welcomed and appreciated. Thank you!
Robert 8 years ago8 years ago
Ironically…how many of the special ed cases were actually caused by vaccinations in the first place…
Replies
Scott 8 years ago8 years ago
About .00001% of them.
Hiram Abiff 8 years ago8 years ago
I am a bit confused. If 99.95% of Californians are vaccinated, then what does it matter if .05% (1 out of 2000) is not? I mean, do they work or not? You cannot have it both ways, so which is it?
Kristie Burchit 8 years ago8 years ago
Did you ask if Orange County counsel is still advising districts to file court orders on families of students on an IEP that do not comply with SB 277? Did you ask any of the districts if they intend to do the same?
John D 8 years ago8 years ago
The updated FAQ from the California Department of Public Health is pretty clear:
“Students who have an individualized education program (IEP) should continue to receive all necessary services identified in their IEP regardless of their vaccination status.”
http://www.shotsforschool.org/laws/sb277faq/#Q3A
Replies
Jane Meredith Adams 8 years ago8 years ago
Hi John. What sounds clear evidently isn't clear, according to special education lawyers. Districts say they are of course obligated to provide all the necessary services identified in a student's individualized education program, regardless of a student's vaccination status. The issue is where those services would be provided. And that sentence you quote is followed by this one, which lawyers say adds to the ambiguity: "However, parents or guardians must continue to provide immunization records … Read More
Hi John. What sounds clear evidently isn’t clear, according to special education lawyers. Districts say they are of course obligated to provide all the necessary services identified in a student’s individualized education program, regardless of a student’s vaccination status. The issue is where those services would be provided. And that sentence you quote is followed by this one, which lawyers say adds to the ambiguity: “However, parents or guardians must continue to provide immunization records for these students to their schools, and schools must continue to maintain and report records of immunizations that have been received for these students.”
Stacey 8 years ago8 years ago
Isn’t EVERY child guaranteed a free and appropriate education by the CA constitution?
Replies
Jane Meredith Adams 8 years ago8 years ago
The California constitution guarantees every student a free education. Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 guarantees a free and appropriate education to qualified students with disabilities.
malka mueller 8 years ago8 years ago
I wonder how many special education students are completely unvaccinated.
Replies
Jane Meredith Adams 8 years ago8 years ago
Hi Malka. Great question. In my reporting, school district health administrators said the number of unvaccinated special education students was small. The California Department of Education said it does not track the number. Jane
K M H 8 years ago8 years ago
I wonder if that could be because the vaccines caused the health the problems the special education students have??? I would definitely say the vast majority of special education students are vaccinated.
Joanna 8 years ago8 years ago
But even if they are vaccinated, if the parents believe that they are vaccine injured they are likely no longer vaccinated and not up-to-date on the vaccines required by this mandate… If they are required by it…
Catherine 8 years ago8 years ago
This law does not only apply to children who are completely unvaccinated. A child missing any vaccine or boosters for a vaccine they've already had will be affected by this law. It isn't just the completely unvaccinated. If a parent has chosen to forgo hepatitis B vaccination, but has vaccinated for the other 9 mandated for school vaccines, that child will be prevented from attending school and will be made to homeschool. The number of … Read More
This law does not only apply to children who are completely unvaccinated. A child missing any vaccine or boosters for a vaccine they’ve already had will be affected by this law. It isn’t just the completely unvaccinated. If a parent has chosen to forgo hepatitis B vaccination, but has vaccinated for the other 9 mandated for school vaccines, that child will be prevented from attending school and will be made to homeschool. The number of completely unvaccinated students in California is extraordinarily low. Less than 1%.
Kristie Burchit 8 years ago8 years ago
Unfortunately there has never been a separate form for completely unvaccinated vs partially or even missing one vaccine from CDPH or CDE so we will never know. But certainly the amount of kids overall completely unvaccinated is very very small. The number of special education students completely unvaccinated is much much smaller than that. Many with special needs were completely vaccinated and were vaccine injured so obviously had their vaccines.