Senate Democrats Formally Request Repeal Of Controversial DEI Bill

The state Senate’s two democrats have both signed a letter to Senate President Randy Smith stating that Senate Bill 474 did not properly complete legislative action, and should not be enrolled, authenticated, or presented to the Governor for approval. They are also calling on the governor to veto the bill if it reaches him.

Senate Democrats are formally requesting a controversial bill that completed legislative action Saturday night be stopped from becoming law. 

The state Senate’s two democrats have both signed a letter to Senate President Randy Smith stating that Senate Bill 474 did not properly complete legislative action, and should not be enrolled, authenticated, or presented to the Governor for approval.

“Due to the Senate’s patent disregard of established legislative procedure, the bill did not properly complete legislative action,” the letter says.

The bill, which would end diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives – referred to collectively as DEI – statewide, was a key part of Gov. Patrick Morrisey’s legislative agenda going into the 2025 legislative session.

The letter from Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell, and Sen. Joey Garcia, D-Marion, argues that not only were 15 amendments to the bill not considered but that the procedure used to do so was carried out improperly.

“The Senate took up the bill in the final hour of the session, and during that time, it improperly suspended a Joint Rule of the Senate and House of Delegates, failed to correctly reconsider its actions in passing the bill and suspending the Joint Rule, and refused to consider numerous properly filed Senate amendments to the House of Delegates amendments to the bill,” they said.

In the letter, Woelfel and Garcia also call on Morrisey to veto the bill if it reaches his desk.

“If the bill is enrolled and presented to the governor, it will be incumbent upon the governor to veto the bill in order to send a strong message to the Legislature that compliance with that branch of government’s own rules is essential to the making of sound public policy in the State of West Virginia,” they said.


The West Virginia Democratic Party published a letter Tuesday criticizing Senate leadership for the handling of the bill and calling for the reversal of the anti-DEI bill.

In Eleventh Hour, Senate Republicans Suspend Rules To Pass DEI Ban

Both chambers of the West Virginia Legislature voted to pass a bill banning diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. But a technical error sent the state Senate into chaos Saturday night.

With minutes left in this year’s legislative session, the West Virginia Senate fell into chaos over a late-night technical error.

Senate Bill 474 — ending diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives statewide — has been one of the most hotly contested pieces of legislation set forth this year, shepherded by Gov. Patrick Morrisey. But procedural confusion threw the state’s upper legislative chamber into a scramble Saturday night, casting doubt over the bill’s fate.

The Senate ultimately passed the bill, but ranking members say they are unsure whether the steps taken to do so were entirely legal. Some even say the debate over Senate Bill 474 could spill into the courtroom.

A procedural back-and-forth

After receiving approval from its chamber of origin last month, Senate Bill 474 passed the West Virginia House of Delegates Saturday night 87 to 12, following hours of debate and numerous amendments from the body’s Democrats.

“We’re handcuffing our educators so they’re not wanting to teach these sorts of things. That’s what we’re doing,” said Del. Hollis Lewis, D-Kanawha. “But when we start attacking education, that’s where we’re failing.”

Once the bill returned to the Senate for final approval, things got messy.

Sen. Amy Grady, R-Mason, motioned for a vote in the bill’s favor, but withdrew it shortly thereafter. Senators said the House needed to iron out technical issues before giving it an okay.

Later, Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, called to suspend Joint Rule 3, which pertains to disagreements over amendments between the two chambers. He urged senators to concur with the House amendments that were sent back to the House “due to technical flaws.”

“I request unanimous consent to suspend Joint Rule 3 and concur and pass on Senate Bill 474,” Tarr said.

Meanwhile, Sen. Joey Garcia, D-Marion, had proposed 15 amendments on the bill that were yet to be reviewed. Tarr said calling a suspension of Joint Rule 3 meant the Senate did not need to take up those amendments.

“It makes it so that, if it is amended, we don’t have to consider any of those amendments,” Tarr told West Virginia Public Broadcasting after the floor discussion. He said he had planned on debating the amendments, but thought summoning Joint Rule 3 would more effectively avoid a lengthy amendment review.

“If we hadn’t went ahead and done that all in one motion, we would have had to consider all the amendments,” Tarr said.

Efforts to intervene fall short

Bills that do not pass both chambers by midnight on the final day of session are considered dead. Tarr said cutting off debate over the bill was an important next step toward ensuring the bill’s passage.

The Senate currently includes just two Democrats: Garcia and Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell. During the process, both stood up to speak, but their microphones appeared to be disabled.

“They did not allow any debate,” Garcia told WVPB. “They didn’t even allow us to take the amendments that we had filed in the system and have a hearing on each of them — which I believe, under the rules, is something that had to happen.”

“I think there is, technically, a legal deficiency with how that bill was passed,” he continued. “The rules were not followed.”

Both Democrats repeatedly requested points of order from Senate President Randy Smith, R-Preston. That process seeks to ensure legislative procedure is being followed correctly. But Smith shot down some of their appeals, and did not recognize the rest.

The Senate then voted to suspend its rules and passed the bill 32 to 2. After a protracted legislative battle, it now heads to the governor’s desk, where it can be signed into law.

Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, attends a Senate Education Committee meeting March 18.

Photo Credit: Will Price/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell, speaks on the Senate floor March 10.

Photo Credit: Will Price/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

‘What lies ahead’: Lawmakers react

Woelfel said an “agenda by certain senators” overpowered legislative procedure.

“I’m disappointed that the rules of the Senate were just roughshod run over tonight. I’m disappointed,” Woelfel said. “It wasn’t about any particular bill. But if we don’t go by the rules that are set, we’re letting people down.”

Smith said the passage of Senate Bill 474 was agreed upon by most lawmakers, regardless of technicalities.

“We’ll find out if it was legal or not if someone challenges it,” Smith said. “But, as far as I’m concerned, … everything was in order.”

House Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, declined to comment after the legislature’s lower chamber gaveled out at midnight. “We’ll talk about all that next week,” he told WVPB.

Both Garcia and Smith said their party used procedural rules to advance their policy priorities.

“You’re damn right,” Garcia told reporters after the chamber gaveled out. “I’m gonna do every single thing I can to try to stop bad policies from happening.”

“It’s just part of the process. They tried to kill it that way, and we tried to save it this way,” Smith said. “It’s all part of the system.”

Garcia argued the state legislature’s Republican supermajority allows some lawmakers to circumvent the rules. The state’s Senate has the highest concentration of one party in a single legislative chamber in the United States.

“They have the ability to do a lot of these different things,” Garcia said. “It just goes to show we have a lack of balance.”

Smith said he was personally unsure about the procedure that occurred, and felt Tarr or a lawyer “above my pay grade” was better equipped to speak to the legality of the bill’s passage.

“Every bill can be challenged in court,” he said. “This one might be.”

In his first term as Senate president and thirteenth year as a state lawmaker, Smith described Saturday night as a first.

“Who knows what lies ahead?” he said.

Del. Anitra Hamilton, D-Monongalia, urges members of the West Virginia House of Delegates to reject Senate Bill 474 on the chamber’s floor Saturday.

Photo Credit: Perry Bennett/WV Legislative Photography

Extensive debate

Just before the Senate frenzy, members of the House spent hours debating Senate Bill 474.

Like the Senate, the House took steps to limit discussion. The chamber cut off comments after particularly impassioned opposition to the bill from each of the state legislature’s only Black members: Del. Anitra Hamilton, D-Monongalia, House Minority Leader Sean Hornbuckle, D-Cabell and Del. Hollis Lewis, D-Kanawha.

The three lawmakers urged their colleagues to reject the bill outright.

“We keep passing legislation that more than likely will affect people who look like me,” Hamilton said. “We’ve got to do something different, guys.”

“You’re gonna tell me, ‘I had to do it, man. I don’t believe in it, but I had to do it. I had to do it,’” Hornbuckle said to his fellow delegates. “You didn’t have to do nothing.”

Senate Attempts To Bar Cities From Making Local Anti-Discrimination Laws

Senate Bill 579 would prohibit municipalities from establishing ordinances to protect groups of people that aren’t already protected in state statute. Protected classes in state code include race, religion and national origin but not sexual orientation.

Cities around the state have passed local ordinances outlawing discrimination when it comes to housing and hiring, beyond what is presently spelled out in state law. Monday the Senate passed a bill that would take away that local control. 

Senate Bill 579 would prohibit municipalities from establishing ordinances to protect groups of people that aren’t already protected in state statute. Protected classes in state code include  race, religion and national origin.

At least 20 towns and cities across the state have passed their own anti-discrimination or human rights ordinances barring discrimination against LGBTQ people in hiring or housing.

Sen. Brian Helton, R-Fayette, and the bill’s lead sponsor, said the bill was necessary to maintain uniformity of law across the state. 

“A patchwork of varying local ordinances creates uncertainty for individuals and businesses,” Helton said. “Centralizing anti-discrimination laws in our state allows for a more efficient and consistent enforcement through dedicated agencies like the Human Rights Commission of West Virginia, limiting protected classes to those defined in the state Human Rights Act, stops a continuous expansion of classes. Where does it end? It leads to overreach.”

Several lawmakers stood in opposition to the bill, including Sen. Ryan Weld, R-Brook, who questioned the need for the bill.

“Uniformity is key. Okay, I understand that,” Weld said. “But have we been hearing from people that said, you know, I really wanted to discriminate against a gay person for all my rental units. But then I found out that this town, I couldn’t do that, so now I get to sell all these and move to another town where I can discriminate against them. Is anybody asking for that uniformity?”

Weld also said the bill went against West Virginia’s welcoming attitude, and generally went against Republican ideals of local control.

“This isn’t constitutional or unconstitutional. I should say none of these municipalities did anything that was unconstitutional. None of them did anything that conflicts with state law,” Weld said. “So these ordinances are valid, the protections they offer to people who are different than us are completely valid. But here comes Charleston. We know better than you. Your city council, who you elected, enacted an ordinance to protect these individuals, but Charleston says we know better than you.”

Much of Helton’s discussion of the need for his bill focused on an ordinance passed in Morgantown banning conversion therapy, practices or treatments that seek to change an individual’s sexual orientation or gender identity. Helton argued that the ban limited parents’ ability to address their child’s mental and physical health needs, and also violated state law with language threatening to revoke an individual’s state medical license for practicing conversion therapy in city limits.

“We have to protect our parents’ rights,”  he said. “We also have to protect those providers, because if they’re operating within certain cities right now, their licenses are in jeopardy. That’s the kind of overreach we see when we allow cities to go against the common laws of the state of West Virginia and to go against our Human Rights Act.”

Morgantown is one of at least four cities in West Virginia that has approved ordinances outlawing conversion therapy in city limits.

Weld agreed with Helton that the language in Morgantown’s ordinance relating to state medical licenses was invalid, but pointed out that such language didn’t appear in the 19 other ordinances across the state, sparking a heated exchange.

“There are, again, 20 of these ordinances around the state. Not all of them have provisions related to conversion therapy,” Weld said. “Very few of them do, actually. And so would you then be open to those ordinances remaining in place, but only nullifying those that clearly violate state law as related to their provisions on conversion therapy?”

In response, Helton asked Weld if he had read the bill to which Weld said he had.

“Okay, well, by the question, I wasn’t sure if you understood the bill or not, because the bill addresses consistency in law, following the Human Rights Act of West Virginia, making sure that we get consistent enforcement and compliance using agencies like our state Human Rights Commission,” Helton said. “You know, that’s why all that’s in place.”

After the discussion’s focus turned to conversion therapy, Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell, and a judge of many years, stood to speak against the practice, citing dozens of professional organizations that have denounced conversion therapy.

“I’m going to say this as a juvenile judge for 32 years, I’m going to tell you that conversion therapy is pretty damn close to child abuse,” Woelfel said. “And I’m going to tell you who says that, and these aren’t a bunch of San Franciscans: American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of Pediatrics.”

Woelfel listed at least a dozen national and international organizations that have come out against conversion therapy for minors.

Sen. Tom Takubo, R-Kanawha, and the only licensed doctor in the Senate, also stood to speak against conversion therapy.

“I just want to point out to the body, 21 states have completely banned it. 21 states, 70 major cities, including across Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Ohio, have banned conversion therapy,” he said. “The Supreme Court, three times. The most recent, being in 2019 has upheld bans of conversion therapy. It’s essentially trying to hypnotize a child to say that they’re straight. Lots of consequences can come out of that, as it’s been discussed here on the floor.”

Takubo went on to speak directly to the bill’s purpose, saying that his constituents have repeatedly voted to enshrine into local law protections for certain classes.

“I’ve said many times on this floor, there is no easier vote,” he said. “This is obviously a very heated issue amongst this body, and obviously for various reasons that have said you can see why. However, the easiest vote I will ever make in the Senate is to allow the voters to decide, and the local voters have voted their local city councils and meet to make those decisions for themselves.” 

Senate Bill 579, prohibiting municipalities from establishing nondiscrimination ordinances, was ultimately passed on a vote of 25-8 and now heads to the House of Delegates for its consideration.

After the bill’s passage, leaders from all 20 municipalities in West Virginia that have passed nondiscrimination ordinances signed on to a letter opposing the legislation.

“Local governance is a cornerstone of our democracy, allowing communities to make decisions that reflect their values and priorities,” the letter reads. “Each of our cities and towns adopted fairness laws through thoughtful deliberation, often with bipartisan support, to foster inclusive and welcoming environments for residents, businesses, and visitors alike. Overturning these protections would disregard the will of our constituents and undermine the ability of local governments to respond to the needs of their communities.”

The letter ends by urging lawmakers to not pass the bill and “take away protections that have given so many people hope.” 

“Stand with us in protecting the dignity and future of all West Virginians,” the letter finishes.

Parents Bill Of Rights

The Senate also passed House Bill 2129, Creating the Parents Bill of Rights. The bill prohibits the state from infringing on the fundamental rights of a parent to direct the upbringing, education, health care and mental health of a child. The Parent’s Bill of Rights does include provisions that protect child welfare workers and law enforcement officers who act within the scope of their employment.

In presenting the bill, Sen. Mike Stuart, R-Kanawha, and chair of the Judiciary Committee, noted that 25 other states have approved similar legislation.

The Parents Bill of Rights was passed without discussion and if the House concurs, the bill will soon be on the governor’s desk.

Education Committees Focus On Regional Issues Of Extremely Rural Schools, Locality Pay 

Legislative education committees debated bills to address unique regional issues affecting schools across the state.

From the Eastern Panhandle to the southern mountain counties, West Virginia contains great variety. To start the week, both education committees debated bills to address unique regional issues.

House Bill 2939, the Remote Schools Support Act, would provide additional financial support to ‘extremely remote schools’ and address unique challenges relating to operational costs and training tailored to rural schools.

Extremely remote schools are defined in the bill as serving at least 20 students and being located 20 traveling miles or more from another school.

Del. Jonathan Kyle, R-Randolph, is the bill’s lead sponsor. Under his bill, schools that meet the “extremely remote” criteria would be exempt from closure or consolidation. Kyle told the House Education Committee Monday afternoon that consolidation is just not feasible for some schools in West Virginia due to mountainous terrain that’s difficult to traverse.

“It’s just not reasonable for those students to have to travel an hour or more on a good day, in the morning, an hour or more in the evening, to travel, and then if something happens during that hour, let’s say there’s bad weather, there’s a car crash, there is no opportunity for emergency services,” he said. “Frankly, there’s no place for the bus to even turn around.”

Kyle identified six schools across the state that would qualify under his bill’s criteria. He was asked about the financial need extremely rural schools face, and said some schools are running as much as $1 million over budget despite slashing staff to the absolute minimum.

“For 100 kids, they have 19 positions. They can’t cut it anymore,” Kyle said. “They have some special needs kids and some things. They have cut their budget as tight as they possibly can. And these schools still run in the red.” 

A committee substitute of House Bill 2939 was advanced by the committee Tuesday afternoon, with a reference to the House Finance Committee. 

House Education also advanced House Bill 2003, a statewide ban of cell phones in schools, as well as House Bill 2394. Titled “Alyssa’s Law,” the bill would require teachers to wear a “mobile alert button” for emergency situations.

Locality Pay, Referee Safety

In the Senate Education Committee Tuesday morning, lawmakers turned their attention to border counties and the issue of locality pay. Many of West Virginia’s school districts have to compete for staff with better-paying districts in neighboring Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio. 

Senate Bill 506 aims to retain and attract certified teachers by creating an enhancement to teacher salary based on the home prices in a county.

Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, is the bill’s lead sponsor and the former chair of the Senate Finance committee. He said the bill makes compensation more consistent with market forces rather than arbitrary raises across the board.

“That’s the intent, whether or not the legislature adopts it, I think that the concept is something that bears discussion,” Tarr said. “Should we be looking at market pay in order to attract professionals into West Virginia, into state government positions that our citizens depend on?”

The bill does carry a fiscal note of close to $200 million.

Sen. Craig Hart, R-Mingo, was of two minds over the bill. He said as a teacher he was excited at the prospect that such a bill could help raise pay across the state, but also recognized 30 counties would not qualify for the bill’s pay enhancements.

“I feel like the richer counties have, or should have, properly budgeted the money to offset the pay for their teachers, whereas the poor are not helped out with this and the poor just get poorer,” he said. “I have really mixed feelings. I want to see teachers paid more, I’m not sure of having the state pay them more.”

The bill was advanced with a reference to the Senate Finance committee.

The committee also considered Senate Bill 531, which would increase penalties for offenses of assault and battery on athletic officials.

Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell, and the bill’s sponsor, told the committee Tuesday morning referees are getting harder and harder to find because of the increasing regularity of verbal and even physical abuse.

He said penalties need to be enhanced, but admitted he may have gone too far in making simple assault a felony in the bill.

“I just felt like if I made it outrageous, to be honest with you, like felonies for assault, I might get on an agenda,I might get somebody to listen” Woelfel said. “Sometimes you’ve got to be a little bit outrageous to get things moving. So I’m very comfortable, I’m not married to any of the language, no pride in authorship. Whatever this committee thinks, I’m very comfortable with.”

Sen. Vince Deeds, R-Greenbrier, amended the bill to step both battery and assault back down to misdemeanors, but now with the possibility of up to a year in jail. The amendment also expanded the enhanced penalties to other athletic staff like coaches and coordinators.

The amended bill was advanced with a reference to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Student Health, Prescription Power And March Madness In The Senate

Monday, the Senate sent two bills nearing completion to their Rules committee, took action on bills related to student safety and heard comments on WVU men’s basketball’s exclusion from the NCAA tournament.

Rules committees don’t meet very often, and bills assigned to them are often considered shelved for the session. Monday, the Senate sent two bills nearing completion to their Rules committee.

Senate Bill 526 was on third reading Monday but was sent to the Senate Rules Committee. The bill, which would authorize pharmacists to prescribe low-risk medications to patients, sparked heated discussion on the Senate floor Friday over safety, legislative overreach and access to medical care.

The Senate also took action on three bills relating to schools and student safety.

Senate Bill 449 would clarify code to allow for the transportation and storage of compressed air and rimfire rifles for the use of shooting teams in public schools. It was passed with no discussion and now heads to the House of Delegates for consideration. 

Senate Bill 220 would require annual, age-appropriate instruction in child sexual abuse prevention, as well as in-service training for school staff. The bill was on second reading Monday, but was also sent to the Senate Rules Committee.

Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell, and the bill’s sponsor, formally objected to the action. He expressed frustration that such action would be taken as the Capitol was observing West Virginia Coalition Against Domestic Violence Day.

“I understand there’s some religious concerns expressed by folks in the body that I’ve heard,” Woelfel said. “That word, the word ‘sex’ triggers them. Sex abuse; this is not a sex education bill. This is a bill to educate children if they’re victims of sexual abuse, we may be able to ferret that out and interrupt the abuse and save them.”

However, Senate Education Chair Amy Grady, R-Mason, said the reason for the reference were concerns raised by the West Virginia Department of Education about overburdening teachers with training requirements, and not religious objection.

“(Much) of this training has already taken place, and we want to make sure that we’re not duplicating something,” she said. “We want to make sure that we’re looking at that language and we can clarify it if there, if it needs to come out of rules, and we need to run the bill a little bit differently because of that, then that would be the purpose, and that’s the only sole reason for it being sent to rules. Mr. President.”

Woelfel was unconvinced, and requested Grady provide the existing policy. 

Senate Bill 548 would require the creation and implementation of student safety and violence prevention training, as well as student training on combating social isolation.

Grady, the bill’s sponsor, presented an amendment to remove mentions of social inclusion in favor of the phrase social isolation. 

Sen. Joey Garcia, D-Marion, questioned the need for the change, and Grady conceded the phrases seemed synonymous to her. Garcia proposed his own theory for the change.

“We’ve been discussing this idea of DEI: diversity, equity and inclusion. And I guess that inclusion is just a scary word for some people,” he said. “I don’t get it, because I think, you know, to me, I always try to make something clear, try to use less words, I think, be less verbose. And this kind of goes the other direction, right there. But I think I understand. I think there’s just an aversion to any bill using the word inclusion. And I think that’s kind of sad. So for that reason, I’d oppose the amendment.”

The amendment was adopted and Senate Bill 548 will be on third reading Tuesday.

NCAA Tournament

The announcement of the NCAA Men’s Basketball tournament bracket Sunday sparked considerable political action in the state Monday due to the exclusion of the West Virginia University Mountaineers.

Gov. Patrick Morrisey was joined by Attorney General J.B. McCuskey to announce a lawsuit against the collegiate athletics’ governing body Monday afternoon. But Sen. Mike Stuart,  R-Kanawha, took the floor at the end of Monday’s session to express his disappointment and state the case for the body’s attention to the issue. 

“This is worthy of remarks. Let me point out real quick that college athletics matter because they promote school spirit, offer educational career benefits to student athletes, and can contribute to a university’s reputation and financial stability,” he said. “After each one of those historic bowl games the Mountaineers played in, it was serious money that flowed into the university and serious upticks in attendance flowed into the university.” 

The WVU Women’s Basketball team was included in their NCAA tournament as a six seed.

Student Welfare Bills Passed By Senate

The Senate had a lively day to start the week, passing 10 bills on issues ranging from optometry to carbon sequestration. Two of those bills deal with the wellbeing of students in the state’s public schools.

The Senate had a lively day to start the week, passing 10 bills on issues ranging from optometry to carbon sequestration. Two of those bills deal with the wellbeing of students in the state’s public schools.

For the past several years, Sen. Mike Woelfel, D-Cabell, has sponsored Senate Bill 155, establishing the “Summer Feeding For All” program. He said certain counties like Cabell have been able to successfully feed students when school isn’t in session, but childhood hunger remains a problem across the state.

“And unfortunately, around the state, there are still pockets of poverty where children are hungry in the summer,” Woelfel said. “This will identify those pockets and make sure that we can get food to those children.”

According to the Food Research and Action Center, a nonprofit organization that works to end hunger and improve health outcomes for people in poverty, only 15% of children who received a free or reduced-price lunch nationally during the 2022–2023 school year received a summer lunch. The West Virginia Department of Education estimates that close to 70% of the state’s school-aged children qualify for free or reduced-priced meals.

Woelfel said his bill doesn’t require counties to establish summer feeding programs or even engage with existing programs like the federal Summer Food Service Program.

“It doesn’t impose any unfunded cost on the county boards of education,” he said. “This is just to find a way to identify the kids that are hungry and let social services, the churches – the communities can feed them, but if we don’t know who they are, they’re going to be hungry in the summer.”

The bill has found success in the Senate, passing in both 2023 and 2024, but never in the House of Delegates. Despite its many failed attempts, Woelfel said he is happy to see it run again this year and hopes the House will advance it as well. But he did not leave things to chance, and on the Senate floor Monday Woelfel urged his Republican colleagues to apply some pressure in the lower chamber.

“This bill did not get taken up in the House last year, if you’d imagine that, so kids just continued to suffer from hunger over the summer,” he said. “So if those in the majority party feel so inclined, please reach out across the hallway and try to encourage folks in the house to stand up for these hungry kids. Thank you.”

A similar bill, House Bill 3254, was introduced in the House on Friday and was sent to the House Education Committee. 

Another School Discipline Bill

For the past several years, legislators have heard from concerned citizens and educators about the rise in violent behavior in younger and younger students. Last week the House of Delegates passed House Bill 2515, which would give teachers from Kindergarten to grade six the ability to remove students from their classroom for extreme disciplinary issues.

Monday the Senate passed Senate Bill 199, their own version of elementary school discipline. Senate Education Chair Sen. Amy Grady, a Republican from Mason County, presented a similar bill last year and said in committee that she put significant effort this year to ensure the bill provided the best outcomes for students. That includes requiring that students work with mental health professionals.

“The school counselor, social worker, psychologist or behavior intervention is required to establish a behavior plan for the student,” Grady said while explaining the bill on the Senate floor Monday. “The behavior plan is required to be followed for a period [of] two weeks. After that, a re-evaluation of the student’s behavior is to be made. If adequate progress is being made, the behavior plan is continued.” 

Requirements in both the House and Senate versions of the bill that students be placed in alternative education settings have raised concerns from lawmakers and school administrators about costs. Only 13 such programs exist in the state at this time, and many more would need to be established to comply if the law were to pass.

The two discipline bills will now need to clear the legislative process again in the opposing chambers and be reconciled before being able to find their way to the governor’s desk for signature.

Exit mobile version