logo
Bipartisan bill would require daily moment of silence in Ohio schools

Bipartisan bill would require daily moment of silence in Ohio schools

Yahoo15-05-2025

School lockers in a hallway. Getty Images.
A proposed bill would require Ohio school districts to have a moment of silence every day.
Ohio state Reps. Gary Click, R-Vickery, and Eric Synenberg, D-Beachwood, gave sponsor testimony on House Bill 187 Tuesday during the House Education Committee.
State law currently allows teachers to have a moment of silence in the classroom, so this bill would change one word in the law — from may to shall, creating a new mandate. The bill leaves the implementation up to the teacher.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
'This bill does not ask for much and is extremely non-prescriptive,' Click said in his sponsor testimony. 'It does not say where, when, or how long. It just says simply a moment. … Mindfulness is becoming a lost art in the hustle and bustle of modern society and is a discipline worth teaching.'
Students are constantly being bombarded with technology, Synenberg said.
'While we as lawmakers can't solve every mental health challenge students face, we do have the ability to create a space for a brief opportunity of peace and quiet,' he said.
Students have the right to leave the classroom if they do not wish to participate in the moment of silence under the bill, but Synenberg said the legislation can't prevent a student who chooses not to participate from getting bullied or made fun of.
'That will have to be dealt with on an individual basis by the teachers (and) administration at school,' he said. 'Hopefully, students are not going to do that. I'm sure it could happen, but we unfortunately can't prevent that.'
Lawmakers on the committee had a lively discussion weighing the pros and cons of the bill.
'We've been having a lot of discussion in the committee so far about how to roll back some of the mandates and regulations in our schools, and obviously this one says shall, as opposed to may,' Education Committee Chair Rep. Sarah Fowler Arthur, R-Ashtabula, said. 'So how do you propose that fits into the context of trying to be less burdensome and not adding costs to the local districts?'
Click responded by saying there would be no cost to this bill.
'This could be defined as a mandate,' Synenberg said. 'It is sort of an anti-mandate mandate. So it's do this, but really what we are having you do is for a small part of the day telling you don't have to teach, you don't have to instruct, you don't have to be disciplining students. You'll just be present with your students for that time.'
State Rep. Beryl Brown Piccolantonio, D-Gahanna, asked what currently prevents a school from having a daily moment of silence?
'There's nothing that prevents them,' Click said. 'And yet, for some reason, not everyone does, and we just think it would be a good practice to implement across the state in every school.'
State Rep. Sean Patrick Brennan, D-Parma, said he would occasionally do a moment of silence in his classroom.
'In today's day and age — with the mental health crisis that we have on our hands — I think it's wise,' he said.
Brennan asked the lawmakers how having a daily moment of silence could help students foster mindfulness, empathy, and gratitude.
'I don't know if our young people are consistently taught the value of just being still,' Click said. 'I think that is a discipline that is worth teaching, and some teachers might want to expand on that and teach their students how to meditate.'
Ohio's new religious release time law — which passed during the last General Assembly — also changed one word in the law from may to shall, requiring school districts to come up with a religious release time policy. Click sponsored a religious release time bill and language from that bill was eventually added to another education bill that was later signed into law by Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine earlier this year.
Follow Capital Journal Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘The girls are fighting' AOC mocks Trump-Musk break-up
‘The girls are fighting' AOC mocks Trump-Musk break-up

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

‘The girls are fighting' AOC mocks Trump-Musk break-up

She had her popcorn ready. A smug Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had a snarky six-word comment for broken-up bros President Trump and former 'First Buddy' Elon Musk. 'Oh man . . . the girls are fighting, aren't they?' the socialist lawmaker gloated in a story she shared to her 9.2 million Instagram followers Friday. Advertisement 3 AOC gloated as she commented on the bromance beak-up. instagram/aoc The gleeful remark, which came outside the US Capitol, was in response to a journalist asking the New York congresswoman for her two cents on the highly public spat. 3 Big, beautiful break up: President Trump and former 'First Buddy' Elon Musk are no longer an item. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement AOC, who previously blasted the once-burgeoning bromance and called Musk 'one of the most unintelligent billionaires I have ever met,' went on to say, 'I told you so.' 'This was something that was a long time coming. . . . These two huge egos were not long for being together in this world as friends,' she mocked. 'We'll see what the impacts of it are legislatively.' 3 The two men engaged in a public spat this week, trading insults on their respective platforms. Getty Images Advertisement AOC previously slammed Trump's big beautiful bill — which is at the center of the feud between the former BFFs. The social media tiff escalated quite quickly this week, after Musk called Trump's budget bill a 'pork-filled . . . abomination,' and the president accused the Tesla CEO of having 'lost his mind.'

Trump will ban X for ‘national security' reasons if nasty feud with Elon Musk escalates: AI guru
Trump will ban X for ‘national security' reasons if nasty feud with Elon Musk escalates: AI guru

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Trump will ban X for ‘national security' reasons if nasty feud with Elon Musk escalates: AI guru

An influential techie predicts President Trump will ban Elon Musk's X if the feud between the two titans escalates. The bromance came to an abrupt end this week in a very public and ugly way, as both men traded insults on their respective platforms. Now former a former Disney child star turned AI guru says the hostility could lead to a government ban of the social-media platform under national-security pretexts. Advertisement 5 Big, beautiful break-up: the bromance came to an abrupt and ugly end this week. Getty Images 'The President possesses executive authority to declare X a national security risk, which would permit him to ban the platform outright,' said Devan Leos, co-founder of Undetectable AI, a tool embraced by 15 million users which claims to make AI-generated text sound more human. 'Elon's a very smart person – yet he's prone to kind of having these mood swings and going on these campaigns and tirades. I think there's only so much Elon can do before Trump is ultimately going to invoke a show of force,' Leos told The Post. Advertisement 'An executive order is definitely something Trump could do to say, 'hey, I'm the one who's in control, I'm president, I am the commander in chief.'' 5 Former Disney actor Devan Leos co-founded Undetectable AI in 2023. Devan Leos/ Instagram Things spiraled quickly this week, after Musk called Trump's big, beautiful bill a 'pork-filled…abomination,' which led the president to accuse the tech billionaire of having 'lost his mind' and falling victim to 'Trump Derangement Syndrome.' 'Musk now faces a difficult choice. He can ban Trump from X in retaliation, but that would almost certainly trigger an executive response from the White House,' Leos predicted. Advertisement Leos believes Trump could invoke Musk's security clearance – or even the South African-born billionaire's recent claim that Trump is part of the Epstein files – as justification that the Tesla CEO's X rants could pose a national security threat. 5 Before he turned to AI, Leos was most famous for staring in the Disney series 'Mighty Med.' Penske Media via Getty Images 'If there's anything related to that that could be the true, or if he is referencing something that is classified or privileged information, that could be considered a national security threat,' he said. Leos believes the legal framework for a ban already exists, and that Trump would likely invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Advertisement 5 The men traded insults on their respective social media platforms. 5 Things got ugly real quick after Musk's last day in government as part of DOGE a week ago. realDonaldTrump/TruthSocial He also thinks the spat will lead to discussions about regulating social media platforms and their influence on politics. Trump said Friday he has zero interest in speaking to Elon Musk amid their escalating feud.

Vance says Musk's public feud with Trump is a ‘huge mistake,' hopes billionaire ‘comes back into fold'
Vance says Musk's public feud with Trump is a ‘huge mistake,' hopes billionaire ‘comes back into fold'

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Vance says Musk's public feud with Trump is a ‘huge mistake,' hopes billionaire ‘comes back into fold'

Vice President JD Vance said it was a huge mistake for Elon Musk to be at war with President Trump amid their escalating feud and is hopeful that the billionaire Tesla founder 'comes back into the fold.' 'Elon is entitled to his opinion,' Vance said during an interview with comedian Theo Von, which was released on Saturday. 'I'm not saying he has to agree with the bill or agree with everything that I'm saying. I just think it's a huge mistake for the world's wealthiest man — I think one of the most transformational entrepreneurs ever — to be at war with the world's most powerful man, who I think is doing more to save the country than anybody in my lifetime.' Advertisement Vance's appearance on Von's popular podcast, 'This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von,' was recorded as Trump and billionaire Musk traded barbs on social media over the latter's complaints about the Trump-backed One Big Beautiful Bill Act. 'I just think you've got to have some respect for him and say, 'yeah, we don't have to agree on every issue.' But is this war actually in the interest of the country? I don't think so,' Vance said. 'Hopefully, Elon figures it out, comes back into the fold. I know the president was getting a little frustrated, feeling like some of the criticisms were unfair coming from Elon. But I think it has been very restrained, because the president doesn't think that he needs to be in a blood feud with Elon Musk. And I actually think that if Elon chilled out a little bit everything would be fine.' Advertisement 3 Vice President JD Vance appeared on Theo Von's podcast. X/JDVance The SpaceX founder signaled support for impeaching Trump and replacing him with Vance in one of several jabs directed at the commander in chief. 'President vs Elon. Who wins? My money's on Elon. Trump should be impeached and JD Vance should replace him,' right-wing commentator Ian Miles Cheong wrote on X. To which Musk replied: 'Yes.' Advertisement Vance appears to be fully in Trump's corner amid the public spat between the two billionaires — and expressed his support of the president in an X post late Thursday night. 'President Trump has done more than any person in my lifetime to earn the trust of the movement he leads. I'm proud to stand beside him,' the veep wrote. In an earlier post, as the Trump-Musk drama was simmering down on social media, Vance had teased that he would be appearing on Von's show. 'Slow news day, what are we even going to talk about?' Vance wrote on X. Advertisement 3 President Donald Trump points at Elon Musk during a conversation inside the Oval Office of the White House on March 14, 2025. AFP via Getty Images 3 Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump and vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance appear on the first day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisc. on July 15, 2024. Getty Images Musk shared the vice president's post and reacted with a laughing emoji. Von previously interviewed both Vance and Trump in the run-up to the 2024 presidential election. Trump's August 2024 appearance on Von's show racked up nearly 17 million views on YouTube. The podcaster later attended Trump's inauguration and made a surprise appearance at a US air base in Qatar, where the president spoke to service members and their families last month.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store