CHARLESTON — Media attention was
scant, and legislative regard proved
even smaller, but a grassroots
movement to change West Virginia law
so that vaccination of school-age
children no longer is mandatory
isn’t going away.
In fact, We the Parents says it is
keeping alive its struggle to allow
West Virginians to refuse
immunizations on religious or
philosophical grounds.
Authored by Sens. Donna Boley, R-Pleasants,
and David Nohe, R-Wood, SB50 would
have allowed parents to reject
vaccinations for nonmedical reasons.
As existing law stands, any parent
failing to let a child be immunized
against diphtheria, polio, rubeola,
rubella, tetanus and whooping cough
can be fined $10 to $50 for each
separate offense.
We the Parents objects to compulsory
vaccinations on a number of grounds,
says its director, Lori Lee, a
Jackson County mother of two
nonvaccinated children.
Lee points out that West Virginia is
one of only two states that disallow
the option of vaccinations when it
comes to religious or philosophical
reasons. The other state with a
built-in disallowance is no surprise
— Mississippi.
“Many parents object to some or all
immunizations based on religious or
personal beliefs,” she said.
For instance, Lee said, 14 of the
required immunizations employ human
cells derived from aborted fetal
tissue.
“Many believe that man is made in
God’s image and the injection of
toxic chemicals and foreign proteins
into the bloodstream is a violation
of God’s directive to keep the
body/temple holy and free from
impurities,” she said.
For others, there is the doctrine
that holds it unethical to mix the
blood of man with that of animals.
Lee says many are produced in animal
tissues, listing calf serum protein
or fetal bovine serum, as among the
ingredients.
Opposition to compulsory
immunization transcends the
religious community and it isn’t
confined to one particular church or
denomination.
In fact, says Lee, “The group is so
large that our members are not part
of one denomination. I know that
Catholic, Baptist, Nazarene and
Jewish faiths are represented, but I
am sure there are more.”
The fight against the existing law
is an old one, going back several
years, and Lee says it is far from
over.
“In nearly a decade, we have never
had any problems finding someone to
sponsor our bill,” she said.
Above all, We the Parents sees the
state law as a violation of the
Constitution, the Patient Bill of
Rights, and the Nuremburg Code. The
organization is made up of some 150
families, and all 55 counties are
represented.
Another objection, voiced by some,
is what Lee terms “the high rate of
vaccine reactions and lack of risk
to hepatitis B to infants and
children.”
Lee says a number of parents have
removed their children from public
schools in favor of home schooling
or, in her case, drive their
children into bordering states.
“Christians are told they must
choose between their faith and
private/public schooling,” Lee said.
“Veterans who fought for freedom and
returned to our state to raise
families are told their
constitutional rights are repressed.
And parents are told they do not
have the latitude to make informed
health care decisions with their
pediatrician regarding their own
children, which will not violate
their personal beliefs and family
values. Does this sound like a place
you’d like to establish your
business or raise a family? This is
West Virginia.”


