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WI SB950

WI SB950
Eliminating personal conviction exemption from immunizations.


summary

Introduced
02/06/2026
In Committee
02/06/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2025-2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Under current law, a student admitted to elementary, middle, junior, or senior high school, a child care center, or a nursery school must, within 30 days of admission, present evidence of having completed the first immunization for each vaccine required for the student’s grade and being on schedule for the remainder of the basic and booster immunization series for mumps, measles, rubella, diphtheria, whooping cough, poliomyelitis, tetanus, and any other diseases the Department of Health Services specifies by rule. This immunization requirement is waived, however, if the student or the student’s parent, guardian, or legal custodian instead submits a written statement to the school, child care center, or nursery school objecting to the immunization for reasons of health, religion, or personal conviction. A school, child care center, or nursery school may exclude a student who does not meet the immunization requirement or does not present a waiver and is required to exclude a student who does not meet the immunization requirement or does not present a waiver if fewer than 99 percent of the students have complied with the immunization requirement or presented a waiver. A court may issue an order directing a student to comply with the immunization requirement or present a waiver by a certain date, and if the student is not in compliance, the court may require an adult student or the parent, guardian, or legal custodian of a minor LRB-5703/1 KMS:skw 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 950 student to pay a forfeiture. This bill eliminates personal conviction as a reason for a waiver of the immunization requirement.

AI Summary

This bill modifies existing Wisconsin law regarding student immunizations by removing "personal conviction" as a valid reason for a waiver, meaning students will no longer be able to opt out of required vaccinations for schools, child care centers, or nursery schools based solely on personal beliefs. Currently, students must provide proof of immunizations for diseases like measles and polio within 30 days of admission, but waivers were previously allowed for health, religious, or personal conviction reasons. This change, which amends statutes 49.155 and 252.04, will now only permit waivers for documented health or religious objections, aligning with the goal of increasing overall student vaccination rates.

Committee Categories

Government Affairs

Sponsors (8)

Last Action

Read first time and referred to Committee on Licensing, Regulatory Reform, State and Federal Affairs (on 02/06/2026)

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