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Bill named after Ohio student hit, killed by driver near school making way through Ohio Statehouse
Bill named after Ohio student hit, killed by driver near school making way through Ohio Statehouse

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Bill named after Ohio student hit, killed by driver near school making way through Ohio Statehouse

A new piece of legislation named in honor of an Ohio student is making its way through the Ohio Statehouse. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] House Bill 203, named the Aspen Runnels' Law, was introduced on March 26. The bill could create harsher penalties for distracted driving in a school zone. TRENDING STORIES: Township administrator on unpaid leave after OVI arrest Officers investigating after 1 shot in Downtown Dayton 11 minors, 1 adult arrested after attempted car break ins As our news partners at WCPO in Cincinnati reported, the bill comes after two crashes involving Lakota Local School District students walking to and from school. The student the bill is named after, Aspen Runnels, died after being hit while in a crosswalk at an intersection near Lakota East High School in May 2024. Runnels' mother, Christina Alcorn, told WCPO that she hopes this 'will be a deterrent.' As currently written, H.B. 203 would: Increase the penalties for vehicular manslaughter and vehicular assault involving speeding or the commission of a traffic offense in an active school zone. Require doubled fines for certain traffic offenses that occur in an active school zone. Establish additional requirements for driver's license reinstatement for an offender who committed vehicular homicide or assault in an active school zone. Establish requirements governing the posting of signage in school zones warning motorists of the bill's increased penalties. WCPO reported that Alcorn and Trisha Parnell have been pushing for harsher penalties for distracted driving while in a school zone. Parnell's daughter, Maddy Beare, was hit by a car near Lakota West High School in 2018. H.B. 203 is currently in the Ohio State House Judiciary Committee. We'll continue to track the bill as it moves through the statehouse. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

CYFD reform bills clear House, move on to Senate in New Mexico
CYFD reform bills clear House, move on to Senate in New Mexico

Yahoo

time05-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

CYFD reform bills clear House, move on to Senate in New Mexico

SANTA FE, N.M. (KRQE) – Three major bills to improve oversight, transparency, and accountability at the New Mexico Children, Youth, and Families Department have passed the House. House Bill 5 would create an independent office to oversee child welfare in the state. One of the functions of that office would be to review CYFD polices and procedures. Lawmakers want to raise New Mexico teacher salaries by $5,000 Meanwhile, House Bill 203 would require CYFD workers to retain and back up all electronic records. It would help in particular cases where a child is harmed. Lastly, House Bill 205 would strengthen plans of care for substance-exposed newborns. All three bills now head to the Senate. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

The weekend wrap: Housing, child care reform and Department of Wildlife advance
The weekend wrap: Housing, child care reform and Department of Wildlife advance

Yahoo

time03-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

The weekend wrap: Housing, child care reform and Department of Wildlife advance

The New Mexico Legislature in Santa Fe on April 17, 2024. (Photo by Austin Fisher / Source NM) It's never 9 to 5 at the Legislature, but this Saturday lawmakers met from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. between committee hearings and floor sessions — and one committee headed back Sunday for just a little more. Over the weekend, the House passed a handful of bills, including changes to limit housing discrimination against renters, addressing leadership at higher education and expanding solar for tribal and rural communities. One bill would prohibit so-called 'source-of-income discrimination' by landlords against prospective tenants. It amends the state Human Rights Act to prohibit landlords from refusing to rent to tenants who carry vouchers or other forms of subsidized rent, including Section 8 vouchers. The bill has been introduced in several recent sessions but never cleared the House until now. All the legislation that cleared the floor now heads to the Senate side for committee assignments and a full Senate vote. Also related to housing, the House Government, Elections and Indian Affairs Committee endorsed a bill creating a new executive Office of Housing Planning and Production. The effort, pushed by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, would create a small team in the governor's office to coordinate various housing programs across the state and collect real-time data. The governor's push for an Office of Housing failed last session amid objections from the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority. This year, NMFA Executive Director/Chief CEO Isidoro Hernandez spoke in favor of the legislation, which now heads to the House Appropriations and Finance Committee. The House Judiciary committee heard five bills on Saturday related to the Children Youth and Families Department. The committee advanced four of the bills unanimously to the House Floor. Those bills are: House Bill 5, which would create an independent Office of the Child Advocate attached to the New Mexico Attorney General. The advocate would have a six-year term and be appointed by a committee of nine members from all three branches of government. House Bill 203, which would require CYFD to back up all electronic records, including emails, texts, instant messages and interagency communications. House Bill 205, which would move the program for substance-addicted newborns out of CYFD and under the New Mexico Health Care Authority; establishes a nominating commission for CYFD leadership; beefs up the Substitute Care Advisory Council and moves it to the New Mexico Attorney General's office; and requires CYFD to implement evidence-based prevention services qualifying for federal funds. House Bill 364, which would require CYFD to determine if children in state custody are eligible or receiving federal benefits; build an account to keep the benefits in and prevent the CYFD from using those funds to pay or reimburse the department from costs of the child's care. The final piece of legislation, House Joint Resolution 5, advanced on a party line 6-4 vote. The bills would ask for voter's approval in 2026 to amend the state's Constitution to create a new commission to appoint CYFD's director, removing that responsibility from the executive office. The constitutional amendment overlaps with the same provision in HB 205. If both pass, the nominating commission in HB205 would be in place until voters make the decision on the 2026 constitutional amendment. CYFD reforms are part and parcel to the behavioral health and public safety reforms lawmakers put in place this session, said House Speaker Javier Martínez (D-Albuquerque) in a news release. 'New Mexico has made incredible strides in improving child well-being in recent years, but the systems designed to protect our most vulnerable children are failing them,' Martínez said. 'These failures contribute to generational cycles of poverty, trauma, and substance use, and worsen crime in our state. Preventing juvenile crime starts with protecting the health and safety of our kids.' CYFD, in turn, released statements saying that two of the bills would be disruptive, generate conflict of interest concerns and are opposed by experts overseeing court-ordered reform. 'Linking the Office of Child Advocate, administratively, to the Attorney General's Office will lead to jurisdictional disputes and potential conflicts of interest,' CYFD Secretary Teresa Casados said in a written statement. 'This would be a grave disservice to New Mexico's most vulnerable children and the dedicated CYFD professionals who have devoted their careers to protecting and helping them.' The news release advocated for putting an independent office in the Regulation and Licensing Department, which is in Senate Bill 363, which has not yet had a hearing before Senate Rules Committee. The news release said HJR5 would jeopardize the state's ability to meet requirements of 2019 Kevin S. settlement and court-mandated orders. The Senate gave the nod to a bill to alter the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish and the body that oversees it in a 28-12 vote. Senate Bill 5 renames the Department of Game and Fish to the Department of Wildlife, broadens the agency's mission and revamps how the New Mexico Game Commission is appointed. Lawmakers again aim to reform New Mexico Department of Game and Fish Hunting and angling groups, conservation and wildlife nonprofits and a good government policy organization back the bill. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Georgia Rep. introduces bill to require an HBCU graduate serve on Board of Regents
Georgia Rep. introduces bill to require an HBCU graduate serve on Board of Regents

Yahoo

time18-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Georgia Rep. introduces bill to require an HBCU graduate serve on Board of Regents

A Georgia lawmaker introduced new legislation to require that the University System of Georgia's Board of Regents has an at-large member who is a graduate of a Historically Black College or University. The legislation, put forward by Rep. Floyd Griffin of Milledgeville, would have the state put at least one HBCU graduate on the Board by Jan. 1, 2028 and would increase it to at least two at-large members by 2031. Griffin released a statement on his proposal, saying that the goal was to make the state's university system represent its students more fully. 'Under HB 203, we commit to accurately representing our state's university system by guaranteeing that a position of the Board of Regents is held by a member of a HBCU,' Griffin said. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] TRENDING STORIES: Georgia republishes list of low-performing schools eligible for voucher program South Fulton mayor can get back into his office, but not his car Georgia researchers say Southern accents are changing More specifically, House Bill 203 would require that the at-large member is from an HBCU within the University System of Georgia. Currently, the state has 10 such institutions, seven of which are in the City of Atlanta. Those institutions are: Albany State University Clark Atlanta University Fort Valley State University Interdenominational Theological Center Morehouse College Morehouse School of Medicine Morris Brown College Paine College Savannah State University Spelman College For a college or university to qualify for the purposes of this legislation, the institution must be eligible under the requirements of current federal law as of Jan. 1, 2025. [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

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