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- Violates the 14th Amendment's Due Process Clause by taking parental authority away from parents without the Supreme Court's required showing that the parents are unfit;
- Violates parents' First and 14th Amendment Constitutional rights, and State freedom of worship Constitutional rights, with respect to parents' right to exercise religious and medical exemptions to immunizations, rights which minor children cannot exercise for themselves;
- Conflicts with the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 (NCVIA), a superseding federal law, which requires healthcare professionals administering vaccines to minors to first provide documentation on vaccine safety and risks and information about the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (NVICP) to the parent or guardian before administering vaccines;
- Encourages New York healthcare professionals administering vaccines to violate federal law and, therefore, state board ethical rules, since parents and guardians must first be provided information required by the NCVIA prior to the administration of vaccines to minors;
- Subverts the fact that vaccination carries a risk of permanent disability and death. Children are neither legally competent nor sufficiently mature emotionally to make such decisions without parental guidance and input; and
- Is unnecessary. New York State law already allows: [a] medical authorities to provide care to children in emergencies, [b] state social workers to assume temporary custody of abused and neglected children and to then make medical decisions for them, and [c] emancipated children to make medical decisions for themselves. There is no need for children to make immunization decisions outside of these Constitutionally acceptable situations.
and on behalf of, concerned citizens
of the Great State of New York,
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