Good news!
The California Department of Public Health has announced that the state will no longer require all K-12 students to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in order to attend school.
As a reminder, the state of California will require all students to receive the COVID-19 vaccine before being allowed to enroll in public schools, according to an executive order signed by Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom in 2021.
Just after the rigged impeachment election, Newsom went overboard.
“It’s still a struggle to get where we need to be,” Newsom said. “And that means we have to do more, and we have to do better.”
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“This is just another vaccine,” Newsom said. The Covid vaccine will join “a well-established list that currently includes 10 vaccines and well-established rules and regulations that have been advanced by the legislature for decades.”
Last year, state officials announced a delay in implementing this mandate, giving people until at least the summer of 2023 to comply.
On Friday, public health officials announced they would no longer pursue this strategy as the state nears the end of the state of emergency related to COVID on February 28.
However, the Institute still recommends vaccination of students and staff.
“CDPH is not currently investigating an emergency rulemaking to add COVID-19 to the list of mandatory school vaccinations, but we continue to strongly recommend the COVID-19 vaccination for students and staff to keep everyone safer in the classroom,” the Department said in a statement. . “All changes to required K-12 vaccinations are properly addressed through the legislative process.”
Watch the video below:
California will not require a COVID-19 vaccine to attend school
Source: KCRA 3 (YouTube) pic.twitter.com/rIKPaJjyxb— Wittgenstein (@backtolife_2023) February 4, 2023