Two Connecticut policy proposals moved through key committees this week, tackling homeschooling oversight and the state’s vaccine purchasing authority. The Education Committee advanced a bill that would require new homeschool families to show annual proof of “equivalent instruction.” The Public Health Committee backed bills giving the state public health commissioner broader power to buy vaccines even if federal guidance shifts. Both measures still need full votes in the General Assembly and the governor’s signature before they can become law.
The debates reached families and communities all over Connecticut. Advocates and opponents from Hartford to Danbury weighed in, voicing concerns about parental oversight, public health, and state authority.
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Homeschooling bill: what would change
If the measure passes, families starting to homeschool after the law takes effect (beginning with the 2028-29 school year) would have to provide annual evidence of “equivalent instruction.” This could mean submitting standardized test results or portfolios. Current homeschoolers wouldn’t have to meet the new requirement. The proposal also says the Department of Children and Families must check for active cases whenever a family notifies a public school about withdrawing a child.
The Education Committee approved the bill 26-20. The proposal drew strong protests from dozens of homeschooling families who argued it would intrude on parental authority and discourage legitimate home education.
Key provisions
- New homeschoolers after 2028-29 must submit annual proof of instruction, like tests or portfolios.
- Existing homeschoolers wouldn’t have to follow the new annual proof rule.
- The Department of Children and Families would review active cases whenever a withdrawal notice is filed with a public school.
Supporters say the safeguards help prevent neglect or abuse, especially in cases where families withdraw from public school after concerns arise. Opponents worry the bill goes too far and could discourage legitimate homeschooling across communities from Hartford and New Haven to Bridgeport, Stamford, and Norwalk.
Public health vaccine purchasing authority: what the bills propose
The Public Health Committee supported two measures that would give the state public health commissioner more authority to buy vaccines, even if the CDC or ACIP stop recommending them. Supporters, including Sen. Saud Anwar, say the change would help Connecticut stay ready to acquire vaccines if federal guidance changes or becomes unclear. Opponents like Sen. Heather Somers argue the current rules already provide enough authority and worry the new language could make it harder to challenge laws like the one that ended the religious vaccine exemption for students.
What the bills would do
- Let the state health commissioner purchase vaccines even if federal recommendations change.
- Give Connecticut more flexibility in vaccine procurement as federal guidance evolves.
- Raise concerns among critics about possible legal or public health consequences if the authority expands too much.
Critics warn about possible misalignment with federal guidance and the risk of giving the state too much power in a tricky area of public health policy.
Where this matters across Connecticut
As these proposals move forward, people across Connecticut are watching closely. Folks are curious about how changes might reshape both schooling and public health policy.
The conversations have touched residents from Hartford to New Haven and Bridgeport. Stamford, Waterbury, Norwalk, Danbury, and Greenwich have all been drawn in too.
Local officials in Bristol, New Britain, Meriden, and Milford have chimed in about possible compliance burdens. They’re also questioning how much authority the state should have here.
- Hartford
- New Haven
- Bridgeport
- Stamford
- Waterbury
- Norwalk
- Danbury
- Greenwich
- Bristol
- New Britain
- Meriden
- Milford
Here is the source article for this story: Connecticut legislative committees approve bills on homeschooling, vaccines
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