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SB 277, Pan. Public health: vaccinations. (2015)


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2021 Dec 20, 6:58pm   721 views  4 comments

by EBGuy   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

From the legislative summary:
The bill... allow[s] exemption from future immunization requirements deemed appropriate by the State Department of Public Health for either medical reasons or personal beliefs. (See Section 120338 )
This was the reason that San Diego Judge Halts SDUSDā€˜s COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate For Students.
Short of the legislature acting, they can't mandate a new vaccine for students without allowing exemptions.

Comments 1 - 4 of 4        Search these comments

1   PerfectlyFlawed   2021 Dec 20, 8:25pm  

I'm skeptical about any new so-called 'law' that supposedly grants us things WE ALREADY HAVE!! (i.e. must see the fine print, or all 1500 pages of the bill - the devil is always in the details).
2   just_passing_through   2021 Dec 20, 9:05pm  

I'm still moving. Fuck San Diego. It's going to shit.
3   EBGuy   2021 Dec 20, 9:21pm  

EBGuy says
I'm skeptical about any new so-called 'law' that supposedly grants us things WE ALREADY HAVE!!

To be clear, this bill passed in 2015 (click on the link, it's very short) and mandated a schedule of 10 vaccines for kids entering California public schools. It also says the CA Dept of Public Health can mandate additional vaccines (Section 120338) only if exemptions are allowed for both medical reasons and personal beliefs. It is currently the law of the land in California.
4   ElYorsh   2021 Dec 20, 10:07pm  

EBGuy says
EBGuy says
I'm skeptical about any new so-called 'law' that supposedly grants us things WE ALREADY HAVE!!

To be clear, this bill passed in 2015 (click on the link, it's very short) and mandated a schedule of 10 vaccines for kids entering California public schools. It also says the CA Dept of Public Health can mandate additional vaccines (Section 120338) only if exemptions are allowed for both medical reasons and personal beliefs. It is currently the law of the land in California.


I read it. Then wondered why nobody had even brought this up in court, if it became law way back in 2016

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