REFERENCE TITLE: schools; corporal punishment; prohibition |
State of Arizona House of Representatives Fifty-sixth Legislature First Regular Session 2023
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HB 2071 |
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Introduced by Representatives Terech: Austin, Blattman, Bravo, Cano, Contreras P, De Los Santos, Gutierrez, Mathis, Pawlik, Sandoval, Schwiebert, Stahl Hamilton, Travers, Tsosie
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An Act
amending section 15-105, Arizona Revised Statutes; amending title 15, chapter 1, article 1, Arizona Revised Statutes, by adding section 15-120.04; amending section 15-843, Arizona Revised Statutes; relating to student discipline.
(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:
Section 1. Section 15-105, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:
15-105. Use of restraint and seclusion techniques; requirements; definitions
A. A school may permit allow the use of restraint or seclusion techniques on any pupil student if both of the following apply:
1. The pupil's student's behavior presents an imminent danger of bodily harm to the pupil or others.
2. Less restrictive interventions appear insufficient to mitigate the imminent danger of bodily harm.
B. If a restraint or seclusion technique is used on a pupil student:
1. School personnel shall maintain continuous visual observation and monitoring of the pupil student while the restraint or seclusion technique is in use.
2. The restraint or seclusion technique shall end when the pupil's student's behavior no longer presents an imminent danger to the pupil student or others.
3. The restraint or seclusion technique shall be used only by school personnel who are trained in the safe and effective use of restraint and seclusion techniques unless an emergency situation does not allow sufficient time to summon trained personnel.
4. The restraint technique employed may not impede the pupil's student's ability to breathe.
5. The restraint technique may not be out of proportion to the pupil's student's age or physical condition.
C. Schools may establish policies and procedures for the use of using restraint or seclusion techniques in a school safety or crisis intervention plan if the plan is not specific to any individual pupil student.
D. Schools shall establish reporting and documentation procedures to be followed when a restraint or seclusion technique has been used on a pupil student. The procedures shall include the following requirements:
1. School personnel shall provide the pupil's student's parent or guardian with written or oral notice on the same day that the incident occurred, unless circumstances prevent same-day notification. If the notice is not provided on the same day of the incident, notice shall be given within twenty-four hours after the incident.
2. Within a reasonable time following the incident, school personnel shall provide the pupil's student's parent or guardian with written documentation that includes information about any persons, locations or activities that may have triggered the behavior, if known, and specific information about the behavior and its precursors, the type of restraint or seclusion technique used and the duration of its use.
3. Schools shall review strategies used to address a pupil's student's dangerous behavior if there has been repeated use of restraint or seclusion techniques for the pupil student during a school year. The review shall include a review of the incidents in which a restraint or seclusion technique were was used and an analysis of how future incidents may be avoided, including whether the pupil student requires a functional behavioral assessment.
E. If a school district or charter school summons law enforcement instead of using a restraint or seclusion technique on a pupil student, the school shall comply with the reporting, documentation and review procedures established under subsection D of this section. Notwithstanding this section, school resource officers are authorized to respond to situations that present the imminent danger of bodily harm according to protocols established by their law enforcement agency.
F. This section does not prohibit schools from adopting policies pursuant to section 15-843, subsection B, paragraph 3 2.
G. For the purposes of this section:
1. "Restraint" means any method or device that immobilizes or reduces the ability of a pupil student to move the pupil's student's torso, arms, legs or head freely, including physical force or mechanical devices. Restraint does not include any of the following:
(a) Methods or devices implemented by trained school personnel or used by a pupil student for the specific and approved therapeutic or safety purposes for which the method or device is designed and, if applicable, prescribed.
(b) The temporary touching or holding of the hand, wrist, arm, shoulder or back for the purpose of inducing a pupil student to comply with a reasonable request or to go to a safe location.
(c) The brief holding of a pupil student by one adult for the purpose of calming or comforting the pupil student.
(d) Physical force used to take a weapon away from a pupil student or to separate and remove a pupil student from another person when the pupil student is engaged in a physical assault on another person.
2. "School" means a school district, a charter school, a public or private special education school that provides services to pupils students placed by a public school, the Arizona state schools for the deaf and the blind and a private school.
3. "Seclusion" means the involuntary confinement of a pupil student alone in a room from which egress is prevented. Seclusion does not include the use of a voluntary behavior management technique, including a timeout location, as part of a pupil's student's education plan, individual safety plan, behavioral plan or individualized education program that involves the pupil's student's separation from a larger group for purposes of calming.
Sec. 2. Title 15, chapter 1, article 1, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended by adding section 15-120.04, to read:
15-120.04. Corporal punishment; prohibition; definition
A. A teacher, principal or other person employed by a school district or charter school may not subject a student to corporal punishment. The prohibition on corporal punishment does not prevent the use of restraint or seclusion techniques that comply with section 15-105. In determining whether a person was complying with a restraint or seclusion technique, consideration shall be given to reasonable judgments that were made at the time of the event by a teacher, principal or other person employed by the school district or charter school.
B. For the purposes of this section, "corporal punishment":
1. Means inflicting, or causing the infliction of, physical pain on a student as a means of discipline.
2. Does not include physical pain, injury or discomfort caused by using incidental, minor or reasonable physical contact or other actions designed to maintain order, control and safety in the school or classroom setting.
Sec. 3. Section 15-843, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:
15-843. Student disciplinary proceedings; definition
A. An action concerning discipline, suspension or expulsion of a pupil student is not subject to title 38, chapter 3, article 3.1, except that the governing board of a school district shall post regular notice and shall take minutes of any hearing held by the governing board concerning the discipline, suspension or expulsion of a pupil student.
B. The governing board of any school district, in consultation with the teachers and parents of the school district, shall prescribe rules for the discipline, suspension and expulsion of pupils students. The rules shall be consistent with the constitutional rights of pupils students and shall include at least the following:
1. Penalties for excessive pupil student absenteeism pursuant to section 15-803, including failure in a subject, failure to pass a grade, suspension or expulsion.
2. Procedures for using corporal punishment if allowed by the governing board.
3. 2. Procedures for the reasonable use of physical force by certificated or classified personnel in self-defense, defense of others and defense of property.
4. 3. Procedures for dealing with pupils students who have committed or who are believed to have committed a crime.
5. 4. A notice and hearing procedure for cases concerning the suspension of a pupil student for more than ten days.
6. 5. Procedures and conditions for readmitting a pupil student who has been expelled or suspended for more than ten days.
7. 6. Procedures to appeal to the governing board the suspension of a pupil student for more than ten days, if the decision to suspend the pupil student was not made by the governing board.
8. 7. Procedures to appeal the recommendation of the hearing officer or officers designated by the board as provided in subsection F of this section at the time the board considers the recommendation.
9. 8. Disciplinary policies for confining pupils students who are left alone in an enclosed space. These policies shall include the following:
(a) A process for prior written parental notification that confinement may be used for disciplinary purposes and that is included in the pupil's student's enrollment packet or admission form.
(b) A process for prior written parental consent before confinement is allowed for any pupil student in the school district. The policies shall provide for an exemption to prior written parental consent if a school principal or teacher determines that the pupil student poses imminent physical harm to self or others. The school principal or teacher shall make reasonable attempts to notify the pupil's student's parent or guardian in writing by the end of the same day that confinement was used.
10. 9. Procedures that require the school district to annually report to the department of education in a manner prescribed by the department the number of suspensions and expulsions that involve the possession, use or sale of an illegal substance under title 13, chapter 34 and the type of illegal substance involved in each suspension or expulsion. The department of education shall compile this information and annually post the information on its website. The information shall comply with the family educational rights and privacy act of 1974 (P.L. 93-380; 88 Stat. 57 571; 20 United States Code section 1232g), shall not include personally identifiable information and shall show the number of suspensions and expulsions associated with each illegal substance aggregated statewide and by county.
C. Penalties adopted pursuant to subsection B, paragraph 1 of this section for excessive absenteeism shall not be applied to pupils students who have completed the course requirements and whose absence from school is due solely to illness, disease or accident as certified by a person who is licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 7, 13, 14, 15 or 17.
D. The governing board shall:
1. Support and assist teachers in implementing and enforcing the rules prescribed pursuant to subsection B of this section.
2. Develop procedures allowing teachers and principals to recommend the suspension or expulsion of pupils students.
3. Develop procedures allowing teachers and principals to temporarily remove disruptive pupils students from a class.
4. Delegate to the principal the authority to remove a disruptive pupil student from the classroom.
E. If a pupil student withdraws from school after receiving notice of possible action concerning discipline, expulsion or suspension, the governing board may continue with the action after the withdrawal and may record the results of such action in the pupil's permanent file.
F. In all actions concerning the expulsion of a pupil student, the governing board of a school district shall:
1. Be notified of the intended action.
2. Either:
(a) Decide, in executive session, whether to hold a hearing or to designate one or more hearing officers to hold a hearing to hear the evidence, prepare a record and bring a recommendation to the board for action and whether the hearing shall be held in executive session.
(b) Provide by policy or vote at its annual organizational meeting that all hearings concerning the expulsion of a pupil student conducted pursuant to this section will be conducted before a hearing officer selected from a list of hearing officers approved by the governing board.
3. Give written notice, at least five working days before the hearing by the governing board or the hearing officer or officers designated by the governing board, to all pupils students subject to expulsion and their parents or guardians of the date, time and place of the hearing. If the governing board decides that the hearing is to be held in executive session, the written notice shall include a statement of the right of the parents or guardians or an emancipated pupil student who is subject to expulsion to object to the governing board's decision to have the hearing held in executive session. Objections shall be made in writing to the governing board.
G. If a parent or guardian or an emancipated pupil student who is subject to expulsion disagrees that the hearing should be held in executive session, the hearing shall be held in an open meeting unless:
1. If only one pupil student is subject to expulsion and disagreement exists between that pupil's student's parents or guardians, the governing board, after consultations with the pupil's student's parents or guardians or the emancipated pupil student, shall decide in executive session whether the hearing will be in executive session.
2. If more than one pupil student is subject to expulsion and disagreement exists between the parents or guardians of different pupils students, separate hearings shall be held subject to this section.
H. This section does not prevent the pupil student who is subject to expulsion or suspension, and the pupil's student's parents or guardians and legal counsel, from attending any executive session pertaining to the proposed disciplinary action, from having access to the minutes and testimony of the executive session or from recording the session at the parent's or guardian's expense.
I. In schools employing a superintendent or a principal, the authority to suspend a pupil student from school is vested in the superintendent, principal or other school officials granted this power by the governing board of the school district.
J. In schools that do not have a superintendent or principal, a teacher may suspend a pupil student from school.
K. Unless required by section 15-841, subsection G, a school district or charter school may suspend or expel a pupil student who is enrolled in a kindergarten program, first grade, second grade, third grade or fourth grade only if all of the following apply:
1. The pupil student is seven years of age or older.
2. The pupil student engaged in conduct on school grounds that meets one of the following criteria:
(a) Involves the possession of a dangerous weapon without authorization from the school.
(b) Involves the possession, use or sale of a dangerous drug as defined in section 13-3401 or a narcotic drug as defined in section 13-3401 or a violation of section 13-3411.
(c) Immediately endangers the health or safety of others.
(d) The pupil's student's behavior is determined by the school district governing board or charter school governing body to qualify as aggravating circumstances and that all of the following apply:
(i) The pupil student is engaged in persistent behavior that has been documented by the school and that prevents other pupils students from learning or prevents the teacher from maintaining control of the classroom environment.
(ii) The pupil's student's ongoing behavior is unresponsive to targeted interventions as documented through an established intervention process that includes consultation with a school counselor, school psychologist or other mental health professional or social worker if available within the school district or charter school or through a state-sponsored program.
(iii) The pupil's student's parent or guardian was notified and consulted about the ongoing behavior.
(iv) Before a long-term suspension or expulsion, the school provides the pupil student with a disability screening and the screening finds that the behavioral issues were not the result of a disability.
3. Failing to remove the pupil student from the school building would create a safety threat that cannot otherwise reasonably be addressed or qualifies as aggravating circumstances as specified in paragraph 2 of this subsection.
4. Before suspending or expelling the pupil student, the school district or charter school considers and, if feasible while maintaining the health and safety of others, in consultation with the pupil's student's parent or guardian to the extent possible, employs alternative behavioral and disciplinary interventions that are available to the school district or charter school, that are appropriate to the circumstances and that are considerate of health and safety. The school district or charter school shall document the alternative behavioral and disciplinary interventions it considers and employs.
5. The school district or charter school, by policy, provides for both:
(a) A readmission procedure for pupils students who are in kindergarten programs, first grade, second grade, third grade and fourth grade and who have served at least five school days of a suspension from the school that exceeds ten school days to be considered for readmission on appeal of the pupil's student's parent or guardian.
(b) A readmission procedure for pupils students who are in kindergarten programs, first grade, second grade, third grade and fourth grade and who are expelled from or subject to alternative reassignment at the school to be considered for readmission on appeal of the pupil's student's parent or guardian at least twenty school days after the effective date of the expulsion or alternative reassignment.
L. All cases of suspension shall be for good cause and shall be reported within five days to the governing board by the superintendent or the person imposing the suspension.
M. Rules pertaining to the discipline, suspension and expulsion of pupils students shall not be based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin or ancestry. If the department of education, the auditor general or the attorney general determines that a school district is substantially and deliberately not in compliance with this subsection and if the school district has failed to correct the deficiency within ninety days after receiving notice from the department of education, the superintendent of public instruction may withhold the monies the school district would otherwise be entitled to receive from the date of the determination of noncompliance until the department of education determines that the school district is in compliance with this subsection.
N. The principal of each school shall ensure that a copy of all rules pertaining to the discipline, suspension and expulsion of pupils students is distributed to the parents of each pupil student at the time the pupil student is enrolled in the school.
O. The principal of each school shall ensure that all rules pertaining to the discipline, suspension and expulsion of pupils students are communicated to students at the beginning of each school year, and to transfer students at the time of their enrollment in the school.
P. School districts may refer a pupil student who has been subject to discipline, suspension or expulsion pursuant to this section to a career and college readiness program for at-risk students established pursuant to section 15-707.
Q. For the purposes of this section, "aggravating circumstances" means the pupil student is engaged in persistent behavior that:
1. Has been documented by the school.
2. Prevents other students from learning or prevents the teacher from maintaining control of the classroom environment.
3. Is unresponsive to targeted interventions as documented through an established intervention process.