A federal appeals court ruled on March 3 against Amish people who challenged New York state’s repeal of religious exemptions to school vaccination requirements.
A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit concluded that the Amish did not show violations of their constitutional rights.
The panel consisted of U.S. Circuit Judges Jose Cabranes, Eunice Lee, and Richard Wesley.
For years, New York allowed religious exemptions to school vaccination requirements, which include measles, polio, and pertussis.
Lawmakers approved an amendment to the state’s public health law in 2019 following a measles outbreak that spread partly among unvaccinated children. The amendment removed the ability to seek and receive a religious exemption. Now, only a medical exemption is available, provided a doctor certifies that a shot “may be detrimental to a child’s health.”
Amish parents and schools sued New York in 2023, alleging that the repeal of the religious exemption violated their constitutional rights, including their First Amendment right to free expression.
“However colorable Plaintiffs’ claims may have been at the outset of this action, this Court is bound by the Second Circuit’s intervening decision,” Wolford said.
In their appeal, the Amish argued that the law was motivated by discrimination, pointing to statements made by lawmakers.
The Second Circuit judges disagreed.
The judges said that while a small number of legislators may have offered such statements, the Amish did not show that a sizeable portion of legislators held those views. Instead, many legislators put forth statements in support of religious freedom, and about 40 percent of each legislative chamber voted against the repeal.
The judges also rejected arguments that the medical exemption to the vaccination requirements means New York is treating secular conduct more favorably than religious beliefs. They said the medical exemption is more narrow because it requires a doctor’s determination that a specific immunization would be detrimental to a child’s health and must be reissued on an annual basis. The religious exemption covered the duration of a child’s time in school and applied to all required vaccines.
“The religious exemption’s sweep had a far greater ability to undermine the State’s interest in preventing the spread of disease,” they said.