Schools

Senators Kirk, Casey Introduce Bipartisan Anti-Bullying Bill


Dept. of Ed Study: 1 in 3 Children Between 12 and 18 Will Be Impacted by Bullying; Bill Would Require Schools Districts Across the Country to Develop and Implement Locally Driven Anti-Bullying Policies

WASHINGTON–(ENEWSPF)–January 29, 2015.  Today, U.S. Senators Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) and Bob Casey (D-Penn.) introduced The Safe Schools Improvement Act, which would require schools districts across the country to develop and implement locally driven anti-bullying policies that protect vulnerable children. A Department of Education study found that 1 in 3 children between the ages of 12 and 18 will be impacted by bullying.

“Every child deserves a safe environment, free of harassment, in which they can learn,” Senator Kirk said. “This bipartisan bill with Senator Casey would ensure that our schools have the means to prevent bullying and harassment before it starts.”

“Bullying is a challenge that impacts far too many children and families across the country,” Senator Casey said. “With the advent of text-messaging, social media, and social networking, many children find they cannot escape the harassment when they go home at night. It follows them from the moment they wake until the moment they go to sleep. This legislation will ensure that schools districts across the country take proactive steps to combat bullying and protect children.”

Bullying and harassment in schools is widespread and affects millions of students every year. The Safe Schools Improvement Act is designed to help schools address this problem by ensuring they have prevention programs in place that would better prepare teachers and officials to combat bullying before it begins.

What is the Safe Schools Improvement Act?

Requires schools and districts receiving federal funding to specifically prohibit bullying and harassment, including conduct based on a student’s actual or perceived race, color, national origin, sex, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity or religion.

Ensures that schools and school districts focus on effective prevention programs in order to better prevent and respond to incidents of bullying and harassment both in school and online.

Requires that states report data on incidents of bullying and harassment to the Department of Education

Why is this needed?

A 2009 U.S. Department of Education study found that bullying and harassment affects nearly one in every three American students between the ages of 12 through 18.

Research shows that bullying and harassment have adverse long-term consequences, including decreased concentration at school, increased school absenteeism, damage to the victim’s self-esteem, and increased social anxiety.

While we do have federal laws to provide support to promote school safety, there is nothing currently in place to comprehensively and expressly address issues of bullying or harassment.

Awareness of the problem is growing. According to a 2011 poll, 85 percent of Americans strongly support or somewhat support a federal law to require schools to enforce specific rules to prevent bullying.

Source: kirk.senate.gov


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