Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Maine's Governor Mills Just Made Vaccinations Mandatory By Eliminating Religious and Philosophical Exemptions

Maine's Governor Mills Just Made Vaccinations Mandatory By Eliminating Religious and Philosophical Exemptions
Portland Press Herald / Contributor / Getty Images

Governor Janet Mills has been quite busy since she took office in January, making it a point to help pass legislation that was stalled indefinitely by former Governor Paul LePage.

Her most recently signed law is a little more timely, however.


Governor Mills Just signed LD 798:

"An Act To Protect Maine Children and Students from Preventable Diseases by Repealing Certain Exemptions from the Laws Governing Immunization Requirements"

The bill's sponsor, Representative Ryan Tipping of Orono, said of the bill's signing:

"As we hear more reports of measles and other preventable diseases in Maine and across the country, it has become clear that we must act to ensure the health of our communities."
"I am grateful to my colleagues for working so hard on this bill and to Governor Mills for supporting this measure to protect our kids. I look forward to seeing this implemented and keeping our schools and daycares safe."

According to the CDC, vaccination has reduced deaths from measles by 80% since 2000.

Ensuring vaccination among those who have not yet been inoculated is the only way to halt the outbreaks of the disease we are seeing today.

This bill goes a long way toward ensuring those vaccinations, as it prevents parents from simply opting not to vaccinate their children for religious or philosophical reasons then sending them to public schools, day cares and post-secondary schools.

Parents who choose to homeschool and hire their own in home childcare will be free to continue to not vaccinate their children.

The bill, now law set for enaction in 2021, still allows for medical exemptions such as if a person is allergic to one of the vaccine components or if their immune system is too compromised to be safely vaccinated.

Health care facility staffers are also subject to the law and will be required to be up-to-date on vaccinations unless they have reason for a medical exemption.

Students and healthcare workers who are not currently vaccinated, or are missing some required vaccines, have until 2021 to get them.

Maine became the fourth state alongside California, Mississippi and West Virginia to remove religious exemptions for vaccines for students attending schools outside their own homes.

Reaction to Mills' signing on social media was mixed, with many attempting to incite fear and anger in those who are opposed to vaccination.

The voice of reason was also present, however.





With Maine's first case of measles since 2017 officially recognized by the CDC, measures like this seem more necessary than ever.

The youth who was infected had been previously vaccinated and has since fully recovered from the virus.

According to the CDC, two doses of the MMR vaccine are 97% effective against measles and 88% effective against mumps, so there is still a remote possibility of infection after vaccination.

And disease symptoms are generally less severe in those who have received the vaccine.

Like condoms, vaccines can't be 100% effective every time but they're 100% more effective than doing nothing at all to protect your health.

More from Trending/best-of-reddit

Donald Trump
Mehmet Eser/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Demands 'Boss Of AT&T' Fix Equipment After Failed Conference Call In Bizarre Meltdown

When most of us have technical difficulties, we contact tech support or customer service.

But if you're President of the United States, just ranting on social media—then having your White House Press Secretary post a screenshot of your post on a social media platform people actually use—is apparently the answer.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Lauren Boebert speaking to Alex Stein
Prime Time with Alex Stein/Blaze Media

Lauren Boebert Casts Doubt On Moon Landing During Wild Interview With Conspiracy Theorist

Colorado Republican Representative Lauren Boebert was criticized after she seemingly agreed with the conspiracy theory that the moon landing was faked in a wide-ranging interview with conservative conspiracy theorist Alex Stein.

The segment began with the duo casting doubt on nuclear weapons—Boebert even joked about needing "tin foil"—and moved into weirder territory when Stein praised Boebert for "vibing" with him on the topic of the moon landing. Conspiracy theorists have long alleged the moon landing was fabricated by NASA in what they claim was an elaborate hoax.

Keep ReadingShow less
Rosie O'Donnell; Oprah Winfrey
Simon Ackerman/Getty Images; Ernesto Ruscio/GC Images

Rosie O'Donnell Calls Out Oprah For Attending Jeff Bezos' Wedding In Scathing Poem

Among the various celebrity hangers-on who attended Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's Venice wedding, the one that seemed to generate the most controversy was Oprah Winfrey.

After all, a woman known for her progressive politics whose entire ethos is about teaching people how to be their best selves, attending the wedding of man who directly funded a fascist regime dismantling our country before our eyes doesn't exactly add up.

Keep ReadingShow less
Lisa Murkowski
Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

Lisa Murkowski Slammed After Criticizing Massive Budget Bill She Just Voted For

Alaska Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski was slammed after she claimed that President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill is "not there yet" despite casting the deciding vote to narrowly pass it before sending it back to the House.

In a marathon voting session, the Senate narrowly passed the legislation in a 51-50 vote, with Vice President JD Vance casting the tie-breaking vote after three Republicans joined all Democrats in opposition.

Keep ReadingShow less
Woman listening to her boyfriend play guitar
Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

Things People Initially Found Attractive About Their Partner That Now Annoy Them

Being in a relationship can be wonderful, but it's not without its ups and downs.

In order for it to work, we have to allow it to grow and change over time rather than being locked forever into what it was when we first started dating our person.

Keep ReadingShow less