State Supreme Court Rules School Cannot Be Sued for Giving Child a COVID Vaccine Without Parental Consent

In a recent ⁣ruling, the Vermont⁢ Supreme Court ⁢decided that a school district‍ cannot​ be sued for ​administering ​a​ COVID-19 vaccine to a child⁣ against the parents’ wishes. The‌ case relates⁢ to an ‍incident that occurred ⁢in November 2021 when a six-year-old, referred to as L.P., received a dose of ​the Pfizer ⁤vaccine at a clinic organized by the Windham ‍Southeast School ‌District and the Vermont Department of Health, despite​ previously stated parental ‌objections. The ⁣parents informed the school of their decision, which was acknowledged ‌by a school ‌official, yet the child was still vaccinated after being mistakenly⁢ given another student’s⁣ nametag.

Following the incident, ‌the school⁣ district apologized and⁢ emphasized⁢ their commitment to improving procedures,⁢ but⁤ the parents were not satisfied and ⁢filed a lawsuit in September 2022. ⁢In its ruling,⁤ the⁢ Supreme Court cited the Federal Public Readiness and Emergency⁢ Preparedness Act (PREP ⁤Act),⁣ determining⁢ that the defendants were immune from the lawsuit. The⁣ court concluded that the PREP Act shields all parties involved from litigation ⁢concerning this case, and therefore, the family’s ⁤claims could not proceed.


A school district cannot be sued for administering a COVID-19 vaccine to a young child despite the parents’ explicit instructions against it.

The Vermont Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Windham Southeast School District and the Vermont Department of Health on Friday, saying the organizations are not legitimate targets of the family’s lawsuit and bringing an apparent end to a legal saga that has been in play since 2021.

The issue began in November of that year as a 6-year-old, named L.P. in court records, was given one dose of a Pfizer vaccine at a clinic hosted by the district and health department.

According to WPMI-TV, prior to the clinic the 6-year-old’s parents informed the school that their child was not to be vaccinated.

An official at the school allegedly understood and acknowledged the parents’ orders.

After the discussion, L.P. was given a nametag with another student’s name on it. The student whose name was on the tag had already received a dose earlier in the day.

L.P. protested and told the adults in charge that “Dad said no.”

Despite this, clinic workers administered the dose.

Soon realizing the gravity of this error, the district contacted the parents and apologized to no avail — L.P. was pulled from the school.

“We are deeply sorry that this mistake happened, and have worked internally to improve our screening procedures,” WSSD Superintendent Mark Speno said in a public apology shortly after the incident, the Bennington Banner reported.

“Thankfully, we are not aware of any harm to the student because of this mistake,” he continued. “We take our responsibilities to students and families very seriously, and we respect parents’ rights to make health care decisions for their children.”

The parents of L.P. were not convinced by this apology, and filed suit in September 2022.

Friday, the state’s highest court cited a federal law in its dismissal of the family’s lawsuit.

“Plaintiffs sued various named and unnamed state and school defendants,” the court’s ruling reads. “We conclude that defendants are immune from suit under the Federal Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act (PREP Act).”

Justices decided that all defendants in this case are protected from litigation under this law.

“We conclude that the PREP Act immunizes every defendant in this case and this fact alone is enough to dismiss the case,” the court’s ruling continues. “Plaintiffs’ arguments about preemption are misplaced, and therefore we need not decide today the extent of the PREP Act’s preemptive effect.

“We conclude that when the federal PREP Act immunizes a defendant, the PREP Act bars all state-law claims against that defendant as a matter of law.”

The parents’ case, the court finally affirmed, cannot proceed on a matter of law.






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