This article was originally published by The Defender â Childrenâs Health Defenseâs News & Views Website.
(Childrenâs Health Defense) â The West Virginia Department of Education has directed the stateâs schools to follow existing vaccine laws, which donât recognize religious exemptions, instead of Gov. Patrick Morriseyâs executive order, which allows for the exemptions, West Virginia Watch reported Wednesday.
In January, Morrisey signed Executive Order 7-25 allowing religious and conscientious objections to the stateâs vaccine requirements for schoolchildren. To comply with the order, parents only need to provide a written statement explaining why they object to the vaccines.
However, on Wednesday, the state Department of Education voted unanimously to require State Superintendent of Schools Michelle Blatt to issue guidance to county school systems instructing them to follow the stateâs current school vaccination law.
Last month, Blatt sent a memo to county school superintendents ordering them to continue following the stateâs vaccination law and recommending that students not be allowed to attend school during the 2025-26 academic year if they havenât received the required immunizations.
However, on the same day she issued the memo, Blatt rescinded it at Morriseyâs request, NPR affiliate WOUB reported last month.
West Virginia 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 shots for children.
California, Maine, New York and Connecticut are the only remaining states that donât allow religious or philosophical exemptions to school vaccine mandates.
According to West Virginia Watch, âThe difference between the governorâs order and state law has led to a fractured response from schools,â with some private and religious schools opting not to comply with the executive order.
In a statement Wednesday, Alex Lanfranconi, a spokesperson for Morrisey, said education department officials are âtrampling on the religious liberties of children, ignoring the stateâs religious freedom law, and trying to make the state an extreme outlier on vaccine policy when there isnât a valid public policy reason to do so.â
âThis decision isnât about public health â itâs about making West Virginia more like liberal states such as California and New York,â Lanfranconi said. Lanfranconi said the state Department of Health will continue granting religious exemptions.
As of last month, the health department had approved approximately 300 religious exemptions, West Virginia Watch reported.
Morriseyâs office did not respond to a request for comment by press time.
Dispute âis not just legal â itâs political and philosophicalâ
California-based attorney Greg Glaser said an executive order âhas the power of law.â
âTechnically, executive orders are directives issued by a governor to manage state operations under existing law, whereas statutes passed by the legislature create or change existing law,â Glaser said.
âThe current law in West Virginia includes a state-based Religious Freedom and Restoration Act (RFRA) law called the Equal Protection for Religion Act of 2023,â he said.
Similar laws exist across the U.S. and âcategorically uphold religious exemptions from government mandates,â Glaser said.
Writing on his blog, California-based attorney Rick Jaffe said Morrissey âis relying on that law to argue that the vaccine statute, as currently enforced, is likely unconstitutional unless it allows religious exemptions.â
By contrast, the state Department of Education is arguing that it is obliged to enforce the statute as written.
âThey put mandates under âstrict scrutinyâ by judges and governors,â Glaser said. âHence, the RFRA statute in West Virginia provides a strong legal basis for the governorâs executive order protecting West Virginiansâ rights to freely exercise their religion.â
According to the Legal Information Institute, strict scrutiny âis the highest standard of review that a court will use to evaluate the constitutionality of government actionâ and starts from a âpresumption of unconstitutionality.â
Jaffe said the issue at hand âis not just legal â itâs political and philosophical.â
âWho decides what counts as a valid exercise of executive power? Can a governor act to protect civil liberties when the legislature fails to do so? Or are we bound forever to agency policies that may no longer reflect either current science or constitutional values?â Jaffe asked.
Sean Whelan, general counsel for Morrisey, said the governor isnât defying the law or casting doubt on science. In remarks quoted by West Virginia Watch, Whelan cited the 2023 law:
â[Morrisey] is reading that vaccine law together with another law, the Equal Protection for Religion Act of 2023, which prohibits government action that substantially burdens a personâs exercise of religion unless it serves a compelling government interest and is the least restrictive means of achieving that interest.â
âThat language mirrors the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which federal courts across the country have described as a super statute, displacing the normal operation of otherwise applicable federal laws.â
Whelan said Morrisey is asking for the departmentâs âpartnership and supportâ in applying the Equal Protection for Religion Act, noting that it had not been enforced until Morrisey took office in January.
âThat law should be applied as written, and when it is, it requires the religious exemptions to compulsory vaccination that the health department provides,â Whelan said.
According to The Weirton Daily Times, four others who spoke at Wednesdayâs meeting, including a pediatrician and a pastor, urged education department officials to continue following the existing vaccine law.
Efforts to recognize religious exemptions to vaccination in West Virginia have followed a circuitous path in the last year.
In March, the West Virginia House of Delegates rejected Senate Bill 460, which would have codified religious exemptions into law. Despite rejection of the bill, Morriseyâs executive order remains in effect.
Last year, former Gov. Jim Justice vetoed a bill that would have allowed private schools to grant religious exemptions and also exempted virtual-only public school students. The bill garnered majorities in the stateâs legislative chambers.
Morriseyâs executive order is facing a legal challenge. Last month, the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia and Mountain State Justice, a legal advocacy organization, filed a lawsuit in Kanawha County Circuit Court asking the court to deem the order unlawful or invalid. The lawsuit remains pending.
The challenge comes amid rising public support for religious and medical exemptions. A survey conducted by the Annenberg Public Policy Center in January showed that public support for religious exemptions has nearly doubled in the last six years.
A July 2024 Gallup poll found that support for mandatory school vaccination has declined in recent years. A study funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in the journal Vaccine in February found that 74 percent of elementary school personnel surveyed in California did not believe their schools had the authority to deny medical exemptions and that a majority opposed COVID-19 mandates.
Glaser and Jaffe predicted further legal battles ahead for Morriseyâs executive order.
âBecause the Board of Education is not respecting RFRA, this will likely end up in court to determine if the RFRA law supports religious exemptions to vaccine mandates (very likely) or is the governorâs interpretation an overreach (unlikely).â
According to Glaser, the âstrict scrutinyâ standard places the burden of proof on the education department and means âreligious exemptions will almost certainly be upheld.â
Jaffe wrote that courts will likely be asked to decide if a governor can âact unilaterally to protect parental rights and religious freedomâ or if schools must âfollow agency policies until the Legislature â or the judiciary â weighs in.â
âThe answer depends on how courts interpret the relationship between executive authority, legislative action, and newly enacted religious liberty protections,â Jaffe wrote, suggesting that the state Department of Education may prevail, at least initially, âon narrow statutory grounds.â
Glaser said such a legal showdown over the order âwould highlight a broader national issue: why are some state bureaucrats still prioritizing archaic vaccine mandates that injure children for life, rather than prioritizing religious liberty that protects children from government-mandated shots?â
Related articles in The Defender
News Source : https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/west-virginia-schools-ordered-to-defy-governor-on-religious-exemptions/