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Oppose Changes to Immunization Requirements

TAKE ACTIONOppose Changes to Immunization Requirements

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New Hampshire law requires that all children enrolled in any school, preschool, or child care center have certain immunizations to protect them and those around them from preventable diseases. Certain exemptions are allowed for families. 

Several bills introduced in New Hampshire in 2026 seek to change immunization requirements and create administrative barriers that make it harder for New Hampshire families to learn about or access immunizations. 

Take Action

Sign in to Oppose HB 1449 (by midnight on 2/25)

Virtually sign in to the public hearing to show your opposition to HB 1449:

  • Go to the House Sign In Form on the GenCourt website.
  • Fill in your personal information.
  • Select the date: February 25
  • Select the committee: House Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs
  • Choose the bill number: HB 1449
  • Select "I am: A member of the public" unless one of the other labels is appropriate to you.
  • Fill in "I'm Representing: Myself" unless you are approved to represent another entity (i.e. your workplace or an organization).
  • Select "I OPPOSE this bill."
  • Upload or write your written testimony (this step is optional; please note your testimony becomes immediately visible on the website to anyone).
  • Click "Submit."
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Email Your Representative(s)

Attend the Hearings in Person

Show your opposition to the bills by attending and testifying at the public hearings. New Futures can help you prepare remarks, find the committee room, and offer moral support at the hearing. 

Share Your Perspective

Why is community immunity against preventable diseases important to you?

Why do you want to ensure that childhood immunizations are widely available, easy to access, and affordable for everyone?

Your story can help lawmakers understand the real impact.

About the Bills

HB 1449 - School Vaccine Clinic Restrictions 

This bill bans vaccine clinics from operating at schools during school hours and requires a parent or guardian to be physically present with their child for the child to receive any vaccine at a school clinic. This creates significant barriers for working families and could reduce vaccination rates by making it harder for many parents to access convenient, no-cost vaccine clinics. School-based clinics, run through the New Hampshire Public Health Association in eight different public health regions, have been a critical tool for reaching underserved communities and ensuring all children—not just those whose parents can take time off work—have access to protections against disease. 

HB 1584 - Mandatory Exemption Notices 

This bill requires the Department of Health and Human Services to prominently display "MEDICAL AND RELIGIOUS EXEMPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE UNDER NEW HAMPSHIRE LAW" on all vaccine-related communications and materials. This bill also creates penalties of up to $1,000 for state employees who don't include the required notice. HB 1584 undermines public health messaging at a time when New Hampshire already faces rising exemption rates—from 2.7% in 2020-2021 to 4.1% in 2024-2025. 

HB 1616 - Ban on Vaccine Advertising 

This bill prohibits state agencies and local governments from advertising vaccines or spending any money on vaccine advertising. According to the fiscal note, this bill would eliminate approximately $61,000 in federal funding currently used for medical provider education about vaccines. This silences the state's ability to communicate with families about vaccine-preventable diseases during outbreaks or to provide educational resources to health care providers. This bill could also jeopardize up to $3.5 million in federal immunization funding if the state cannot meet federal requirements for public education and communication. 

HB 1719 - Remove Hepatitis B Requirement 

This bill removes Hepatitis B from the list of vaccines required for children to attend school or child care. The vaccine would still be available, but parents could choose whether or not their child receives it. This "death by a thousand cuts" approach chips away at our immunization program one vaccine at a time, setting a dangerous precedent that invites future bills to remove additional vaccines. An increase in Hepatitis B outbreaks requiring emergency response could cost the state $100,000-$350,000 per outbreak. 

HB 1811 - Eliminate All Vaccine Requirements 

This bill completely repeals all childhood immunization requirements for school and child care attendance in New Hampshire. Under this bill, vaccines would become entirely optional recommendations that cannot be required by the state or any local government for any public service or access. This represents the complete dismantling of New Hampshire's successful immunization program. This bill would reverse decades of public health progress and put New Hampshire children at risk of diseases we haven't seen in generations. It also puts millions of dollars in federal funding for child care scholarships at risk. 

Bill Status

All five bills will start in the House of Representatives. 

HB 1449 - Public Hearing on 2/25

HB 1449:

The House Health, Human Services, and Elderly Affairs Committee will hold a public hearing on HB 1449 on Wednesday, February 25 at 10:30 am at Granite Place in Room 158. Learn how you can take action to oppose HB 1449 above.

HB 1584 - Passed the House

HB 1584:

February 12: The House of Representatives votes 197-163 to pass HB 1584. The bill will be sent to the House Finance Committee for further review. 

January 28: House HHSEA Committee votes 10-8 to advance HB 1584 with an amendment that changes the penalties to state employees from a fine to disciplinary action. 

January 14: The House Health, Human Services, and Elderly Affairs Committee held a public hearing.

HB 1616 - In Committee

HB 1616: 

January 15: The House Executive Departments and Administration Committee held a public hearing. 

 
HB 1719 - Passed the House

 HB 1719: 

February 12: The House of Representatives votes 186-168 to pass HB 1719. The bill will be sent to the House Finance Committee for further review. 

January 28: The House HHSEA Committee voted 10-8 to advance HB 1719. 

January 14: The House Health, Human Services, and Elderly Affairs Committee held a public hearing. 

HB 1811 - Died in the House

HB 1811:

February 19: The House of Representatives voted 192-155 to kill HB 1811! 

February 11: The House HHSEA Committee voted 10-8 to advance HB 1811 with an amendment that maintains the polio vaccine requirement. 

February 4: The House Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs Committee held a public hearing on HB 1811. 

Related Resources

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