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Saturday, November 2, 2019

How state-funded charter schools are avoiding vaccine requirements

How state-funded charter schools are avoiding vaccine requirements

How state-funded charter schools are avoiding vaccine requirements

SACRAMENTO — Nearly all California students must get vaccinated after state leaders tightened laws following the 2014 Disneyland measles scare, but at least one loophole remains: new hybrid programs known as charter home schools.

Across the country, state leaders and health advocates have aggressively pushed for new vaccination requirements, especially after the U.S. this year experienced its highest number of measles cases since 1992. California has been at the forefront, enacting a law last month that cracks down on doctors known for approving scores of waivers so unvaccinated children can attend school.

But there remain ways to get around the law and still receive a taxpayer-funded education, even in California. Though many home-based charters bring students together for regular classroom instruction or activities, the state doesn't uniformly enforce vaccination laws for such programs.

Monique Labarre, a San Diego attorney turned nursing student with an interest in public health, has two children in home-based charter programs. She said she appreciates the flexibility they offer, but that she's "unpopular" within the home school movement because of her pro-vaccine stance.

"People are taking public money but they aren't vaccinating. They believe that [the law] doesn't apply to public home-school charters," Labarre said. “Home-schooling doesn’t look like what people think — they are clustering together. But the law is not super clear and needs greater regulation.”

The state's strict vaccination laws, both written by State Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), a pediatrician, apply to all schools except for “home-based private schools and students enrolled in an independent study program." Charter schools are public. But for the increasing number of programs that blend home instruction and class time, the rules blur.

California doesn't have a clear interpretation of whether home-based charter CONTINUE READING: How state-funded charter schools are avoiding vaccine requirements