Recent California Vaccine Law Already Being
Challenged in Court

California’s controversial new
vaccination law, SB277 which is scheduled to go into effect this month
(July 2016), has been challenged in court. SB277 became the first law in
the United States to remove the philosophical and religious exemption
for childhood vaccines, thereby completely removing parental choice in
any decisions about vaccinating their children as a requirement for
attending school. Only two other states do not have philosophical or
religious exemptions (and apparently never did), Mississippi and West
Virginia.
Consumer Advocate Tim Bolen of the
BolenReport reported on the new lawsuit filed in California, where
parents and non-profit organizations are suing the State of California
Department of Health, Department of Education, three school districts,
and one County Public Health Department.

The Lawsuit Against SB 277 Has Been
Filed
The case I talked about two days ago has
been electronically filed by Carl Lewis in the San Diego Federal Court.
I have attached copies of each of the individual document sets to this
article.
The actual name of the filing is
“Complaint For Declaratory and Injunctive Relief – Temporary Restraining
Order Sought.”
What, exactly is that? It is simple…
(1) The Plaintiffs are asking the Court,
in this case, to temporarily stop the enforcement of SB 277 until the
issues brought to the Court, in the Motion, are finally decided, and
then,
(2) on the findings, issue a Permanent
Injunction against SB 277.
The Case Outline
(1) There are TEN Plaintiffs.
four non-profit organization, and six individuals.
(2) There are TEN Defendant
groups– which include the State of California Department of
Health, Department of Education, three Schools Districts, and one County
Public Health Department (Santa Barbara), and their employees, some
named individually, and others in a group.
(3) There are, SIX Counts
(Causes of Action) – (a) Infringement on Rights protected by
the California Constitution, (b) Infringement on Rights protected by the
US Constitution, (c) Violation of Federal Family Educational Rights and
Privacy Act (FERPA), (d) Violation of California Confidentiality of
Medical Information Act, and (e) Violation of California Information
Practices Act, and Violation of California Health and Safety Code
120440.
The Relief Requested has FIVE parts –
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully
requests that the Court grant judgment for Plaintiffs and:
(1) Declare unconstitutional and set
aside SB 277 and its regulatory scheme;
(2) Grant temporary, preliminary, and
permanent injunctive relief prohibiting the enforcement of the
unconstitutional ban on personal belief and religious objections and the
restriction of medical choice exemptions;
(3) Grant temporary, preliminary, and
permanent injunctive relief immediately prohibiting the denial of school
admission to the children of the individual Plaintiffs and all others
similarly situated.
(4) Award to Plaintiffs reasonable
attorney’s fees, expert witness fees, and costs incurred in connection
with this action; and
(5) Grant such other and further relief
as the Court deems just and proper.
The
Plaintiffs
There are six individual Plaintiffs and
four non-profit Plaintiffs:
The
individuals:
(1) Plaintiff Ana Whitlow resides with
her husband, family and minor sons B.A.W. and D.M.F-W., in the city of
San Diego, located in San Diego County. Plaintiff Ana Whitlow and her
husband have chosen to selectively vaccinate B.A.W. and D.M.F-W. to
avoid vaccines that offend their religious beliefs by virtue of certain
ingredients, and in the interest of B.A.W’s and D.M.F-W’s health and
wellbeing. Plaintiff Ana Whitlow’s son D.M.F-W. shows sufficient
antibody levels to be deemed “proof of immunity” to the diseases for
which he has not received all required vaccine doses. Plaintiff Ana
Whitlow seeks injunctive relief requiring the defendant state actors and
agencies of the State of California to admit B.A.W. into kindergarten at
the defendant Ocean Beach Elementary School, operated by the defendant
San Diego Unified School District. Plaintiff Ana Whitlow seeks
injunctive relief prohibiting the defendant state actors and agencies of
the State of California from denying admission of D.M.F-W into the
defendant Correa Middle School, operated by the San Diego Unified School
District. (Decl. of Ana Whitlock, pp. 1-6)
(2) Plaintiff Erik Nicolaisen lives with
his wife, family and minor son A.W.N. in Studio City, Los Angeles
County, California. Erik Nicolaisen in concert with A.W.N’s mother has
chosen to selectively vaccinate A.W.N. in the interest of A.W.N’s health
and wellbeing, and seeks injunctive relief prohibiting the defendant
state actors and agencies of the State of California from denying A.W.N.
into the Carpenter Elementary School, operated by the Los Angeles
Unified School District. (Decl. of Erik Nicolaisen, pp. 1-5)
(3) Plaintiff Dene Schultze-Alva resides
with her husband, family and minor daughter S.M.A. in Sierra Madre,
California, in Los Angeles County. Plaintiff Dene Schultze-Alva has
chosen to selectively vaccinate S.M.A. according to the guidance of her
religion and in the interest of S.M.A’s health and wellbeing, and seeks
injunctive relief prohibiting the defendant state actors and agencies of
the State of California from denying admission of S.M.A. into the
preschool facility known as the Early Childhood Development Center
located in Altedena California, operated by the Pasadena Unified School
District. (Decl. of Dr. Dene Schultze-Alva, pp. 1-6)
(4) Plaintiff Nicole Andrade resides in
Placer County, near Loomis, California, with her husband and family,
including her minor daughter I.G.A., who is ready to enter the seventh
grade. Plaintiff Nicole Andrade is religiously opposed to vaccines
manufactured from aborted fetal cell lines, having fully vaccinated her
oldest child before she became aware that Measles Mumps Rubella vaccine
is manufactured using an aborted fetal cell line. Plaintiff Nicole
Andrade has taken up in her prayers the question of whether to
vaccinate, and believes that God would want her pro-life family to wait
for more pure and safe vaccines, before vaccinating I.G.A. again.
Plaintiff Nicole Andrade has chosen to selectively vaccinate S.M.A.
according to the guidance of her religion and in the interest of S.M.A’s
health and wellbeing and seeks an order prohibiting the defendant state
actors and agencies of the State of California from denying admission of
I.G.A. into Franklin Elementary School, operated by the Loomis Union
School District. (Decl. of Nicole Andrade, pp. 1-6)
(5) Plaintiff Brianna Owens resides in
Petrolia, Humboldt County, California. She is the parent of four
children, two of whom are impacted by SB 277 and its ban from education
of children who are not fully vaccinated. She has been hesitant to
vaccinate her children because of a family history of autoimmune disease
and her own reaction to the Tdap vaccine when she was 26 years old. Her
daughter received the Tdap vaccine and had a reaction similar to her
own, but less severe. Her pediatrician told her that she could not get a
medical exemption for her children because he had received a “special
class” where he was told that to qualify for a medical exemption her
children would have to have a “documented anaphylactic reaction” to a
particular vaccine and then only for that particular vaccine. She seeks
an order prohibiting the defendant state actors and agencies of the
State of California from denying admission of her children into school
under SB 277. (Decl. of Brianna Owens, pp. 1-5)
(6) Plaintiff Veronica Delgado is the
parent of seven children, one of whom, A.N.D., has been selectively
vaccinated and is about to enter 7th A.N.D. had a PBE prior
to the effective date of SB 277 but is now being told he cannot return
to school unless his vaccinations are “caught up.” He also has an IEP,
but she has been told by the school that it does not entitle him to an
exemption. Next year she will have a second child, who also has an IEP
that she believes is a consequence of a vaccine reaction, ready to enter
7th grade who will encounter the same problem. She seeks an
order prohibiting the defendant state actors and agencies of the State
of California from denying admission of her children into school under
SB 277. (Decl. of Veronica Delgado, pp. 1-4)
The
non-profits –
(1) Plaintiff E4A Foundation is a
non-profit organization under the laws of the State of Nevada, with its
principal place of business in California, whose purpose is to promote
and protect equal access to public and private education.
(2) Plaintiff
Weston A. Price Foundation is
a nonprofit, tax exempt nutrition education foundation whose members
follow healthy natural approaches to health and healing. It has 39 local
chapters and 1,836 members in California, many of whom are families with
young children who would avail themselves, or may have in the past
received, a personal belief exemption.
(3) Plaintiff
Citizens for Health is a
nonprofit, 501(c)(4) advocacy organization providing information about
natural healing and laws affecting health to approximately 30,000
Californians.
(4) Plaintiff
Alliance for Natural Health USA
(ANH-USA) is a Georgia-based nonprofit corporation founded in 1992. The
ANH-USA mission is to protect access to natural health options and a
toxin free lifestyle, including the ability to decline vaccination or
modify the vaccine schedule for one’s children. The ANH -USA consists of
over 500,000 members, including 78,000 California residents, many of
whom will be harmed by SB 277 because they will not be able to make
their own decisions for their school age children based on their beliefs
about vaccine-related harms.
Source(s):
vaccineimpact.com
healthimpactnews.com
http://www.healthfreedoms.org/recent-california-vaccine-law-already-being-challenged-in-court/
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