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Connecticut's attorney general has given state lawmakers the legal go-ahead to pursue a measure that would keep parents from exempting their children from vaccinations for religious reasons.
Attorney General William Tong offered no stance Monday on whether the General Assembly should scrap the state's religious exemption. But the Democrat's formal opinion released Monday said Connecticut may "create, eliminate or suspend" the exemption. He said it is within the state's "well-settled power to protect public safety and health."
A top legislative Democrat had requested the nonbinding opinion, concerned that a growing number of families have sought the exemption in recent years. Critics say their constitutional rights would be violated.
Also Monday, some New York health officials urged lawmakers to pass similar legislation to end that state's religious exemption, given the uptick in measles cases.