On Tuesday, the New York State Senate unanimously approved a measure, initiated by Agudath Israel of America, that is designed to significantly increase the level of reimbursement to nonpublic schools for their costs in complying with the state's program for verifying and reporting the immunization status of their students.

New York State is required, by law, to reimburse nonpublic schools for certain mandated services, such as taking attendance, state testing, and monitoring and reporting immunization levels in their students. Senate Bill S7664, sponsored by New York State Senator Martin Golden, is one of two bills - one in the Senate and the other in the Assembly (A10309) - intended to remove a cap in the New York State law that limits reimbursement to nonpublic schools for immunization costs to no more than 60 cents a student.

For more than thirty years, the 60-cent limit has remained unchanged; however, rising staff costs and increasingly complex vaccination requirements put the actual expense of monitoring immunizations at a much higher level. According to detailed estimates arrived at by polling 63 schools across New York City, Buffalo and Rochester, nonpublic schools are currently incurring approximately $8 million of unreimbursed mandated services to comply with this statute.

During its Mission to Albany this past March, Agudath Israel proposed that the reimbursement for immunization be brought current. The organization played a significant role in drafting and developing these bills. Agudath Israel's vice president for community services Rabbi Shmuel Lefkowitz, and board member Leon Goldenberg, nurtured the development of this bill in the Senate. Working together with Jim Cultrara of the New York State Catholic Conference, they then asked Assemblyman Walter Mosley to introduce it in the Assembly.  Co-sponsored by Assemblywoman Helene Weinstein, Assemblyman Dov Hikind and Assemblyman Anthony Brindisi, A10309 is being considered by the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.

Agudath Israel encourages members of the community to contact their local assemblymembers and asking them to push for the passage of Assembly Bill A10309.