A state pol wants to add the measles vaccine to summer campers’ pack lists this year.

State Sen. David Carlucci (D) introduced a bill Thursday that would require all kids going to New York summer camps prove they’ve received a slew of vaccinations — as the state legislature desperately tries to curb a growing measles crisis that’s plagued his Rockland County district, as well as Orthodox Jewish sections of Brooklyn.

The state Department of Health can review campers’ vaccinations records, but it does not currently require vaccinations for admittance at around 10,000 niche camps — mostly single-day camps, religious-affiliated getaways and those that focus on sports, according to the American Camp Association.

“Not all camps are treated the same,” said Carlucci. “There’s a major loophole in the system that allows for all the protections that we know are important … but with the increase of the single-purpose day camps, whether it’s a football camp or a computer camp, these camps are not regulated and I think our children are at risk and parents just don’t know.”

If passed, Carlucci’s bill would require kids submit to a cocktail of vaccinations that also ward against mumps, rubella, tetanus, pneumococcal disease and hepatitis B. Only kids with a medical note would be exempted.

Camps already have the right to turn away un-vaccinated campers.

The proposal comes as the nearly eliminated virus has made a powerful resurgence in New York and across the nation thanks to opponents who believe the vaccines are dangerous — despite mountains of scientific evidence to the contrary.

The CDC reported 256 confirmed cases of measles in Rockland alone between October 2018 and June 5 this year — while 566 were reported in New York City between September of last year and June 3, 2019.

Mayor Bill de Blasio and Rockland County Executive Ed Day have both issued emergency orders to stifle the contagion — while de Blasio has also closed Big Apple private schools that allowed un-vaccinated kids to attend.

The state health department “continues to work with local health departments and other stakeholders to alert and educate the public about the current measles outbreak and the facts about vaccination in order to boost vaccination rates and end this outbreak once and for all,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

Lawmakers are trying to ram through a bill that would eliminate all non-medical exemptions by session’s end on June 19, which Gov. Andrew Cuomo Thursday said he would sign.

“Measles vaccines we have to pass,” he said on WAMC.

But when asked if the bill is a definite, he wavered.

“Fifty-fifty. But if it doesn’t happen, I think we put this state’s public health at risk. I respect the religious exemption. I hear the anti-vaxxers. But public health comes first. And I think it’s a mandate for public health that we pass that bill,” he said.

But Carlucci said he expects a vote next week citing “positive” conversations among lawmakers.

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Westchester) said last Wednesday that she has the votes.

But the holdup is in the state Assembly, where it’s stuck in committee.

The legislative session ends on June 19.