Those parents protesting for vaccine exemptions were doing one thing: Freeloading

January 21, 2020

If only the parents and their allies, storming the Trenton barricades earlier this week, could hear what they were saying and to whom they were actually saying it to.

They thought they were speaking to members of the legislature about a bill that would eliminate religion as a reason for school children to avoid getting vaccinations (S2173). Not so. They were speaking to parents who agree with the necessity of vaccination, and what they were saying was not very nice. It went something like this.

Opinion by T. Patrick Hill, NJ.com, January 19, 2020

Recent Posts

Prof. Smart Researches Youth Driver Licensing Determinants

Explaining Youth Driver Licensing Determinants Using XGBoost and SHAP by Kailai Wang, Jonas De Vos, Michael Smart, Sicheng Wang Highlights Examined trend in youth driver licensing between Millennials and GenZ in the US. Used explainable AI approaches to understand...

RAISE-25 Recap: Our Future With AI: Utopian or Dystopian?

Summary Hosted by the Master of Public Informatics (MPI) program, the final round of the second annual RAISE-25 Informatics – Data Science competition was held Friday, April 11, 2025 at the Bloustein School. The competition challenge focused on "Our Future With AI:...

Generative Artificial Intelligence and the Workforce

The proliferation of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) in the workplace, a type of artificial intelligence capable of generating new content, has fostered growing concerns about how deployment will impact work and workers. While the effects of GenAI on the...

Dr. Williams Studies Telemedicine for Behavioral Health

Improved Access to Behavioral Health Care for Patients in a Large New York City Behavioral Health Clinic by the Transition to Telemedicine Abstract Objective To examine the transition to telemental health within the behavioral health program of a large federally...

NJSDS Launches External Access Program

The New Jersey Statewide Data System (NJSDS) is excited to announce the launch of the NJSDS External Access program, which provides approved researchers the opportunity to access longitudinal administrative data from four New Jersey state agencies: New Jersey...