Week 5

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[Week 5] Legislative Update

🗝️ Key Education Legislative Actions: Education committees continued advancing proposals focused on special education funding, facilities, virtual learning, student health, and system modernization. Several bills were moved forward to the full chamber for consideration.

🥔 STATE — Shared Services Between Districts (RS 33392): Provides a framework for two or more school districts or charter schools to share services that may be cost-prohibitive or impractical to deliver independently. Status: Introduced; awaiting further action.

🥔 STATE — Federal IDEA Funding Resolution (HJM 11): Calls on Congress to fulfill the 40% federal funding commitment under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Status: Advanced out of committee with a Do Pass recommendation.
🥔 STATE — High-Needs Student Fund (H 624 / S 1288): Establishes the Idaho High-Needs Student Fund to provide targeted support for students requiring intensive services.
Status: Advanced out of committee with a Do Pass recommendation.
🥔 STATE — Virtual Public Education Updates (H 531): Revises provisions related to virtual public education in Idaho. Status: Advanced out of committee with a Do Pass recommendation.
🥔 STATE — Epinephrine Delivery Systems in Schools (Presentation by Sen. Blaylock): Updates provisions regarding the use and administration of epinephrine in schools to support student health and emergency response. Status: Advanced out of committee with a Do Pass recommendation.
🥔 STATE — School Facilities and Cooperative Funding (RS 33325 / H 608 / H 636): Addresses public school facilities funding, cooperative funding structures, and district facility funds. Status: H 608 and H 636 advanced out of committee with Do Pass recommendations; RS 33325 pending further action.
🥔 STATE — School Policy and Code Updates: RS 32974: Public school start date revisions (pending)
🔹 What This Means for You: Several education bills are now headed to the full House or Senate for debate. This is the stage where amendments can still occur, and where family voices are particularly important. The High-Needs Student Fund and the federal IDEA funding resolution signal continued acknowledgment that special education is underfunded.
🗝️ Key Health & Welfare Legislative Actions: Health and Welfare committees moved multiple child welfare, Medicaid, and professional licensure bills forward this week.
🥔 STATE — Foster Care and Child Safety S 1292 / S 1293: Additional foster parent training requirements Status: Advanced out of committee with Do Pass recommendations. RS 33422 / H 578: Strengthens child safety in foster and residential care settings
Status: Advanced with Do Pass recommendations.
🥔 STATE — Department of Health & Welfare Oversight (H 494 / S 1314): Updates background check procedures and revises governance structures, including behavioral health regions. Status: Advanced out of committee with Do Pass recommendations.
🥔 STATE — Infant & Newborn Health (S 1316 / S 1294): Revises newborn testing exemptions and establishes hearing loss screening requirements. Status: Advanced with Do Pass recommendations.
🔹 What This Means for Families: Many of these bills are now moving to full chamber debate. When a bill receives a Do Pass recommendation, it signals committee support, but it is not final. Legislators can still debate, amend, or vote down the measure on the floor. This is often the most effective point for families to reach out to their own district legislators.
Get Involved! Use IPUL’s Power of a Personal Story template to share testimony with lawmakers. You can find advocacy tools and tips here: https://shorturl.at/kSLOf

Looking Ahead: Floor votes are expected on several education and health-related measures in the coming days. Budget discussions, particularly around special education and Medicaid, remain ongoing.

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