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A07687 Summary:

BILL NOA07687C
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORWoerner
 
COSPNSRHevesi, McDonald, Shimsky, Lunsford, Barrett, Levenberg, Kay, O'Pharrow, Simone, Kelles, Kassay
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd Ed L, generally
 
Updates provisions relating to dignity for all students including curriculum and teacher training requirements designed to prevent student suicide with a focus on LGBTQ students.
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A07687 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         7687--C
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                      April 4, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A. WOERNER, HEVESI, McDONALD, SHIMSKY, LUNSFORD,
          BARRETT, LEVENBERG, KAY, O'PHARROW, SIMONE,  KELLES,  KASSAY  --  read
          once   and  referred  to  the  Committee  on  Education  --  committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee -- again reported from said  committee  with  amend-
          ments,  ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
          --  again  reported  from  said  committee  with  amendments,  ordered
          reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
 
        AN  ACT  to  amend the education law, in relation to updating provisions
          relating to dignity for all students
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Section 10 of the education law, as added by chapter 482 of
     2  the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
     3    § 10. Legislative intent. The legislature finds that students' ability
     4  to  learn and to meet high academic standards, and a school's ability to
     5  educate its students, are compromised by incidents of discrimination  or
     6  harassment  including  bullying,  taunting or intimidation. It is hereby
     7  declared to be the policy of the state to afford all students in  public
     8  schools an environment free of discrimination and harassment, whether in
     9  the  school  building or on the internet. The purpose of this article is
    10  to foster civility in public schools and to prevent and prohibit conduct
    11  which is inconsistent with a school's educational mission.
    12    § 2. Subdivisions 1, 2, 7 and 8 of section 11 of  the  education  law,
    13  subdivisions 1 and 2 as added by chapter 482 of the laws of 2010, subdi-
    14  vision  7  as  amended  and subdivision 8 as added by chapter 102 of the
    15  laws of 2012, are amended and three new subdivisions 11, 12 and  13  are
    16  added to read as follows:
    17    1.  "School property" shall mean in or within any building, structure,
    18  athletic playing field, playground, parking lot, or land contained with-
    19  in the real property boundary line of a public elementary  or  secondary
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD07978-11-5

        A. 7687--C                          2
 
     1  school;  or  in  or  on  a school bus, as defined in section one hundred
     2  forty-two of the vehicle and traffic law;  or  in  or  within  a  school
     3  administrative building.
     4    2. "School function" shall mean a school board or trustee meeting or a
     5  school-sponsored  [extra-curricular] or school-authorized extra-curricu-
     6  lar event or activity regardless of where such event or  activity  takes
     7  place,  including  any  event or activity that may take place in another
     8  state including but not limited to field trips and  athletic  practices,
     9  scrimmages and events.
    10    7.  "Harassment" [and "bullying"] shall mean the creation of a hostile
    11  environment by conduct or by threats, intimidation or  abuse,  including
    12  by  bullying,  cyberbullying  or coercive control, that (a) has or would
    13  have the effect of unreasonably [and substantially] interfering with [a]
    14  the student's educational performance,  opportunities  or  benefits,  or
    15  mental,  emotional  or  physical well-being; or (b) reasonably causes or
    16  would reasonably be expected to cause [a] such student to fear for  [his
    17  or her] their physical safety; or (c) reasonably causes or would reason-
    18  ably  be expected to cause physical injury or emotional harm to [a] such
    19  student; or (d) occurs off school property and creates or would foresee-
    20  ably create a risk of [substantial] unreasonable disruption  within  the
    21  school  environment,  where it is foreseeable that the conduct, threats,
    22  intimidation or abuse might reach school property. Acts  of  harassment,
    23  [and]  bullying  and  coercive control shall include, but not be limited
    24  to, [those] acts based on a person's actual or  perceived  race,  color,
    25  weight,  national  origin,  ethnic  group, religion, religious practice,
    26  disability, sexual orientation, gender or sex. For the purposes of  this
    27  definition  the  term  "threats,  intimidation  or  abuse" shall include
    28  verbal and non-verbal actions.
    29    8. "Cyberbullying" shall mean harassment [or],  bullying  or  coercive
    30  control  as  defined  in [subdivision seven of] this section, [including
    31  paragraphs (a), (b), (c)  and  (d)  of  such  subdivision,]  where  such
    32  harassment  [or],  bullying, or coercive control occurs through any form
    33  of electronic communication, including but not limited to  cell  phones,
    34  email, social media or text messaging.
    35    11. "Bullying" shall mean a pattern of deliberate aggressive acts by a
    36  person  or  group intended to harm, dominate or humiliate another person
    37  who is in any way perceived to be more vulnerable  than  the  aggressor.
    38  Bullying  may  involve  verbal  attacks,  teasing,  physical attacks, or
    39  threats of harm to such other person or  another  person,  intentionally
    40  sharing  personal or private information or images about someone without
    41  their consent causing embarrassment or reputational harm to them, inten-
    42  tionally altering the personal information or the social  media  account
    43  of a person without their consent, intentionally using artificial intel-
    44  ligence    to  mimic or alter a person's likeness or voice without their
    45  consent,  deliberately excluding   a person from  activities,  or  other
    46  forms  of  intimidation.  The  deliberate targeting of a more vulnerable
    47  person by one person or a group of persons distinguishes "bullying" from
    48  "conflict" or other kinds of aggression not addressed by  this  article.
    49  "Bullying"  involves one person or a group with an intent to harm, domi-
    50  nate or humiliate another person who is perceived by the bully as having
    51  less power, including but not  limited  to  less  physical  strength  or
    52  social  power,  and  in a "conflict" there is a disagreement between two
    53  active parties.
    54    12. "Coercive control" shall mean a pattern  of  behavior  used  by  a
    55  person  with  leverage  over  another  person  to  influence  such other
    56  person's  conduct  by  dominating,  isolating  or  instilling  fear   or

        A. 7687--C                          3

     1  confusion in them and which results in distress or erodes their sense of
     2  autonomy  or safety. Coercive control may manifest between student part-
     3  ners in an affectionate  relationship  or  between  a  school  employee,
     4  school  coach  or board member or trustee and a student, and may involve
     5  surveillance over the other person,  isolating  the  other  person  from
     6  friends  or  family,  gaslighting  the other person, punishing the other
     7  person for  asserting  autonomy,  or  asserting  rules  over  the  other
     8  person's friendships, clothing, movements, communications, bodily auton-
     9  omy or emotional expression through fear, guilt or manipulation.
    10    13.  "Gaslighting"  shall  mean  the act of manipulating a person into
    11  doubting their own perceptions, memory, or understanding of reality.
    12    § 3. Subdivision 1 of section 12 of the education law, as  amended  by
    13  chapter 102 of the laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows:
    14    1. No student shall be subjected to harassment [or], bullying or coer-
    15  cive control by employees, school coaches, school board members or trus-
    16  tees,  or  students  on  school  property  [or], at a school function or
    17  through any form of electronic communication; nor shall any  student  be
    18  subjected  to  discrimination  based  on  a person's actual or perceived
    19  race, color, weight, national origin, ethnic group, religion,  religious
    20  practice,  disability,  sexual  orientation,  gender,  or  sex by school
    21  employees, school coaches, school board members or trustees, or students
    22  on school property [or], at a school function or  through  any  form  of
    23  electronic communication. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed
    24  to  prohibit  a denial of admission into, or exclusion from, a course of
    25  instruction based on a person's gender that would be  permissible  under
    26  section  thirty-two hundred one-a or paragraph (a) of subdivision two of
    27  section twenty-eight hundred fifty-four of this chapter and title IX  of
    28  the  Education Amendments of 1972 (20 U.S.C. section 1681, et. seq.), or
    29  to prohibit, as discrimination based on disability, actions  that  would
    30  be permissible under section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
    31    §  4.  Subdivisions  1, 2, 4 and 5 of section 13 of the education law,
    32  subdivisions 1 and 2 as amended and subdivisions 4 and  5  as  added  by
    33  chapter  102 of the laws of 2012, are amended and a new subdivision 6 is
    34  added to read as follows:
    35    1. Policies and procedures intended to  create  a  school  environment
    36  that  is  free from harassment, bullying, coercive control and discrimi-
    37  nation, that include but are not limited to provisions which:
    38    a. identify the principal, superintendent or the principal's or super-
    39  intendent's designee as  the  school  employee  charged  with  receiving
    40  reports of harassment, bullying, coercive control and discrimination;
    41    b.  enable  students  and parents to make an oral or written report of
    42  harassment, bullying, coercive control or  discrimination  to  teachers,
    43  administrators and other school personnel that the school district deems
    44  appropriate,  as  identified  in the district's policies, procedures and
    45  guidelines;
    46    c. require school employees, school coaches or school board members or
    47  trustees who witness harassment, bullying, coercive control or discrimi-
    48  nation, or receive an oral or written report  of  harassment,  bullying,
    49  coercive  control or discrimination, to promptly orally notify the prin-
    50  cipal, superintendent or the principal's or  superintendent's  designee,
    51  or  in  the  case of an employee, school coach or school board member or
    52  trustee who receives a written report, to promptly deliver such  report,
    53  not  later  than one school day after such school employee, school coach
    54  or school board member or trustee witnesses  or  receives  a  report  of
    55  harassment, bullying, coercive control or discrimination[, and to file a
    56  written  report  with  the principal, superintendent or the principal or

        A. 7687--C                          4

     1  superintendent's designee not later than two school  days  after  making
     2  such oral report];
     3    d.  require the principal, superintendent or the principal's or super-
     4  intendent's designee to (i) prepare a written report not later than  one
     5  school day after receiving an oral report of harassment, bullying, coer-
     6  cive  control  or discrimination from a school employee, school coach or
     7  school board member or trustee; (ii)  lead  or  supervise  the  thorough
     8  investigation  of  all reports of harassment, bullying, coercive control
     9  and discrimination, including to promptly but not later than one  school
    10  day  after  receiving a report of harassment, bullying, coercive control
    11  or discrimination, contact the individual who made  such  report,  where
    12  possible,  to  discuss allegations, any witnesses or other corroboration
    13  including but not limited to screenshots of  electronic  communications,
    14  and  desired  resolutions, and to prepare a written report of such meet-
    15  ing; and [to] (iii) ensure that such investigation is completed promptly
    16  after the completion or receipt of any written reports made  under  this
    17  section;
    18    e. require the school, when an investigation reveals any such verified
    19  harassment, bullying, coercive control or discrimination, to take prompt
    20  actions  reasonably calculated to end the harassment, bullying, coercive
    21  control or discrimination, eliminate any hostile environment,  create  a
    22  more  positive  school  culture  and  climate, prevent recurrence of the
    23  behavior, and ensure the safety of the student or students against  whom
    24  such  harassment,  bullying,  coercive  control  or  discrimination  was
    25  directed. Such actions shall be consistent with the  guidelines  created
    26  pursuant to subdivision four of this section and shall take into consid-
    27  eration  whether  notification  of  persons  in parental relation to the
    28  student who is  the  subject  of  such  harassment,  bullying,  coercive
    29  control or discrimination is in the best interest of the student;
    30    f.  prohibit  retaliation  against  any individual who, in good faith,
    31  reports, or assists in the investigation of, harassment, bullying, coer-
    32  cive control or discrimination;
    33    f-1. provide for the receipt of credible anonymous tips  and  informa-
    34  tion regarding harassment, bullying, coercive control or discrimination;
    35    g. include a school strategy to prevent harassment, bullying, coercive
    36  control  and discrimination, including but not limited to, parent educa-
    37  tion sessions and semiannual age-appropriate school assemblies regarding
    38  topics such as conflict resolution and de-escalation techniques;
    39    h. require the principal to make a regular report on data  and  trends
    40  related  to harassment, bullying, coercive control and discrimination to
    41  the superintendent;
    42    i. require the principal, superintendent or the principal's or  super-
    43  intendent's  designee,  to  notify  promptly  the  appropriate local law
    44  enforcement agency when such principal, superintendent  or  the  princi-
    45  pal's or superintendent's designee, believes that any harassment, bully-
    46  ing, coercive control or discrimination constitutes criminal conduct;
    47    j.  include  appropriate  references  to  the provisions of the school
    48  district's code of conduct, including the code  of  conduct  for  school
    49  coaches,  adopted  pursuant  to section twenty-eight hundred one of this
    50  chapter that are relevant to harassment, bullying, coercive control  and
    51  discrimination;
    52    k.  require  each  school,  at  least once during each school year, to
    53  provide all school employees, school coaches, students [and], parents or
    54  guardians and school board members or trustees with a written  or  elec-
    55  tronic  copy  of the school district's policies created pursuant to this
    56  section, or a plain-language summary thereof, including notification  of

        A. 7687--C                          5
 
     1  the  process  by  which  students,  parents  [and]  or guardians, school
     2  employees, school coaches or school board members or trustees may report
     3  harassment, bullying, or coercive control  and  discrimination,  provide
     4  copies  of  such  plain-language  summary  to  all students at a general
     5  assembly held at the beginning of the  school  year,  and  conspicuously
     6  post  a  written  notification informing students about such policy, the
     7  name of the school employee designated to receive reports of harassment,
     8  bullying, coercive control or discrimination and the web address for the
     9  New York state center for school safety in the school lobby and in every
    10  restroom used by students as well as other parts  of  the  school  where
    11  students  are  likely to see such posted notification. [This subdivision
    12  shall not be construed to require additional distribution of such  poli-
    13  cies  and guidelines if they are otherwise distributed to school employ-
    14  ees, students and parents];
    15    l. maintain current versions of the school district's policies created
    16  pursuant to this section on the school district's internet  website,  if
    17  one exists; and
    18    m.  include  a  school strategy to foster safe, responsible use of the
    19  internet and electronic communications; and
    20    2. Guidelines to be used in school training programs to discourage the
    21  development of harassment,  bullying,  coercive  control  and  discrimi-
    22  nation,  and  to  make school employees, school coaches and school board
    23  members or trustees aware of the effects of harassment, bullying,  coer-
    24  cive  control, cyberbullying and discrimination on students and that are
    25  designed:
    26    a. to raise the awareness and sensitivity of school employees,  school
    27  coaches  and  school  board members or trustees to potential harassment,
    28  bullying, coercive control and discrimination, and
    29    b. to enable employees, school coaches and  school  board  members  or
    30  trustees  to  prevent  and  respond  to  harassment,  bullying, coercive
    31  control and discrimination; and
    32    4. Guidelines relating to the development of  measured,  balanced  and
    33  age-appropriate responses to instances of harassment, bullying, coercive
    34  control  or  discrimination  by  students,  with remedies and procedures
    35  following a progressive model that make appropriate use of intervention,
    36  discipline and education, vary in method according to the nature of  the
    37  behavior, the developmental age of the student and the student's history
    38  of  problem  behaviors,  and  are consistent with the district's code of
    39  conduct; and
    40    5. Training required by this section shall address the social patterns
    41  of harassment, bullying, coercive control and discrimination, as defined
    42  in section eleven of this article, including but not  limited  to  those
    43  acts  based  on  a  person's  actual  or  perceived race, color, weight,
    44  national origin, ethnic group, religion, religious practice, disability,
    45  sexual orientation, gender or sex, the identification and mitigation  of
    46  harassment,  bullying, coercive control and discrimination including but
    47  not limited to training in restorative justice and mediation techniques,
    48  and strategies for effectively addressing problems  of  exclusion,  bias
    49  and aggression in educational settings[.]; and
    50    6.  The  governing  board  or body of a local educational agency shall
    51  review, at minimum every fifth year following the effective date of this
    52  subdivision, its policies, procedures,  and  guidelines  on  harassment,
    53  bullying,  coercive control and discrimination and, if necessary, update
    54  such policies, procedures, and guidelines.
    55    § 5. Subdivisions 1 and 5 of section 14 of the education law, subdivi-
    56  sion 1 as amended by chapter 102 of the laws of 2012, and subdivision  5

        A. 7687--C                          6
 
     1  as  amended  by  chapter  90 of the laws of 2013, are amended to read as
     2  follows:
     3    1.  Provide direction, which may include development of model policies
     4  and, to the  extent  possible,  direct  services,  to  school  districts
     5  related   to  preventing  harassment,  bullying,  coercive  control  and
     6  discrimination and to fostering an environment in every school where all
     7  children can learn free of manifestations of bias;
     8    5. [The  commissioner  shall  prescribe]  Prescribe  regulations  that
     9  school  professionals  applying  on  or after December thirty-first, two
    10  thousand thirteen for a certificate or license, including but not limit-
    11  ed to a certificate or license valid for service as a classroom teacher,
    12  school counselor, school  psychologist,  school  social  worker,  school
    13  coach,  school  administrator or supervisor or superintendent of schools
    14  shall, in addition to all other certification or licensing requirements,
    15  have completed training on the social patterns of  harassment,  bullying
    16  and  discrimination,  as  defined  in  section  eleven  of this article,
    17  including but not limited to those acts based on a  person's  actual  or
    18  perceived  race, color, weight, national origin, ethnic group, religion,
    19  religious practice, disability, sexual orientation, gender or  sex,  the
    20  identification  and mitigation of harassment, bullying, coercive control
    21  and discrimination, and strategies for effectively  addressing  problems
    22  of exclusion, bias and aggression in educational settings.
    23    § 6. Section 15 of the education law, as amended by chapter 102 of the
    24  laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows:
    25    §  15.  Reporting  by commissioner and use of reports.  1. The commis-
    26  sioner shall create a procedure under which  [material]  relevant  inci-
    27  dents of harassment, bullying and discrimination on school grounds [or],
    28  at  a  school  function, or through any form of electronic communication
    29  are reported to the department at least on an annual basis. Such  proce-
    30  dure  shall  provide  that such reports shall[, wherever possible,] also
    31  delineate the specific nature of such incidents of harassment,  bullying
    32  or  coercive control and discrimination, [provided that the commissioner
    33  may comply with the requirements of this  section  through  use  of  the
    34  existing  uniform  violent incident reporting system] including, but not
    35  limited to, whether an incident constituted harassment, bullying,  coer-
    36  cive  control, cyberbullying, discrimination or any combination thereof;
    37  whether an incident involved a student, school employee, school coach or
    38  school board member or trustee  aggressor  and  whether  such  aggressor
    39  acted  individually  or  in a group; the school's response to such inci-
    40  dent; whether a targeted  student  withdrew  from  school  or  relocated
    41  schools within the current or immediately subsequent school year follow-
    42  ing  a  report of an incident; and the total number of reports dismissed
    43  and the resolution for each. Notwithstanding any provision in this arti-
    44  cle to the contrary, effective resolution of an incident does not negate
    45  the district's obligation to report it to the department.  In  addition,
    46  the  department  [may conduct research or] shall request the comptroller
    47  to undertake studies to determine compliance throughout the  state  with
    48  the provisions of this article.
    49    2.  The  commissioner  shall  use  such  reports  and data to identify
    50  schools and districts that may benefit from assistance to meet the stan-
    51  dards and objectives of this article. The commissioner shall  promulgate
    52  policies  and  procedures  for  improving conditions at these schools to
    53  ensure proper training, support, and compliance with all requirements.
    54    3. The commissioner shall deliver the report referenced in subdivision
    55  one of this section to the temporary president of the senate, speaker of
    56  the assembly, minority leader of the  senate,  minority  leader  of  the

        A. 7687--C                          7
 
     1  assembly, chair and ranking member of the senate education committee and
     2  chair  and  ranking member of the assembly education committee every two
     3  years on or before the first day of November.
     4    § 7. Section 16 of the education law, as amended by chapter 102 of the
     5  laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows:
     6    §  16.  Protection of people who report harassment, bullying, coercive
     7  control or discrimination. Any person having reasonable cause to suspect
     8  that a student has been  subjected  to  harassment,  bullying,  coercive
     9  control  or  discrimination,  by an employee, school coach, school board
    10  member or trustee or student, on school grounds [or], at a school  func-
    11  tion  or  through  any  form  of  electronic  communication, who, acting
    12  reasonably and in good faith, reports such information to  school  offi-
    13  cials,  to  the  commissioner or to law enforcement authorities, acts in
    14  compliance with paragraph e or i of subdivision one of section  thirteen
    15  of  this  article,  or  otherwise  initiates, testifies, participates or
    16  assists in any formal or informal proceedings under this article,  shall
    17  have immunity from any civil liability that may arise from the making of
    18  such  report  or from initiating, testifying, participating or assisting
    19  in such formal or informal proceedings, and  no  school  district  [or],
    20  employee,  school  coach, or school board member or trustee  shall take,
    21  request or cause a retaliatory  action  against  any  such  person  who,
    22  acting  reasonably  and  in  good  faith,  either makes such a report or
    23  initiates, testifies, participates or assists in such formal or informal
    24  proceedings.
    25    § 8. The education law is amended by adding a new article 2-B to  read
    26  as follows:
    27                                  ARTICLE 2-B
    28                         STUDENT SUICIDE PREVENTION
 
    29  Section 24. Legislative intent.
    30          25. Definitions.
    31          26. Policies, procedures, and guidelines.
    32          27. Reporting.
    33          28. Application.
    34          29. Severability and construction.
    35    §  24.  Legislative  intent.  The  legislature  finds and declares the
    36  following:
    37    1. According to data from the National Center for  Health  Statistics,
    38  suicide remains a critical issue. In two thousand twenty-one suicide was
    39  the  second  leading  cause  of  death for youth and young adults ten to
    40  twenty-four years of age, inclusive, in both the United  States  and  in
    41  New York state.
    42    2.  As  children  and  teens spend a significant amount of their young
    43  lives in school, the personnel who interact with them on a  daily  basis
    44  are  essential  gatekeepers for recognizing warning signs of suicide and
    45  making the appropriate referrals for help.
    46    3. In a national survey conducted by the Jason Foundation,  a  teacher
    47  was  identified as the number one person to whom a student would turn to
    48  help a friend who might be suicidal. It is imperative that when a  young
    49  person  comes  to  a  teacher  for help, such teacher has the knowledge,
    50  tools, and resources to respond correctly.
    51    4. In the year two thousand eighteen, the federal centers for  disease
    52  control  and  prevention  found  in  its Youth Risk Behavior Survey that
    53  lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth are almost four times  more  likely  to
    54  seriously consider attempting suicide, have made a suicide plan, or have
    55  attempted  suicide,  than  their heterosexual peers. In the two thousand

        A. 7687--C                          8
 
     1  twenty-four Trevor  Project  National  Survey,  thirty-nine  percent  of
     2  lesbian,  gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning (LGBTQ) youth
     3  seriously considered attempting suicide in the  past  year,  and  twelve
     4  percent attempted suicide.
     5    5.  There  are  national  hotlines available to help adults and youth,
     6  including LGBTQ youth, who are experiencing suicidal ideation or who are
     7  worried about a family member or peer who may be at risk, including  the
     8  National  Suicide  Prevention Lifeline, the Crisis Text Line, the Trevor
     9  Project Lifeline, and TrevorChat.
    10    6. According to the Family  Acceptance  Project,  research  has  found
    11  that,  for  an  LGBTQ  youth,  having  at least one supportive adult can
    12  reduce the youth's risk of suicide.
    13    7. New York state schools face the serious issues of students at  high
    14  risk  of suicide and death by suicide in the school communities.  School
    15  personnel must be supported by  clear  policies  and  procedures,  which
    16  serve as an easily-accessible roadmap, eliminate confusion over educator
    17  roles  and  the  referral process, and equip educators with the tools to
    18  respond safely when a suicide does occur in the school community.
    19    § 25. Definitions. For the purposes of  this  article,  the  following
    20  terms shall have the following meanings:
    21    1. "Crisis situation" means a situation where a teacher or other local
    22  educational agency employee believes a student or other individual is in
    23  imminent danger of a suicide attempt.
    24    2.  "LGBTQ" means individuals who identify, with regards to gender, as
    25  being lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning.
    26    3. "Local educational agency" means a school district, board of  coop-
    27  erative educational services, school, or the education department.
    28    4.  "Suicide  intervention" means specific actions schools can take in
    29  response to suicidal behavior by a student, including, but  not  limited
    30  to:
    31    a. student supervision;
    32    b. notification of parents or guardians;
    33    c. crisis situation response protocols;
    34    d.  when  and  how to request an immediate mental health assessment or
    35  emergency services; and
    36    e. school  re-entry  procedures  following  a  student  mental  health
    37  crisis.
    38    5.  "Suicide  postvention"  means  planned  support  and interventions
    39  schools can implement after a suicide attempt  or  suicide  death  of  a
    40  member of the school community that are designed to:
    41    a. reduce the risk of the spread of suicidal thoughts or intentions;
    42    b. provide support for affected students and school-based personnel;
    43    c. address the social stigma associated with suicide; and
    44    d. disseminate factual information about suicide and its prevention.
    45    6.  "Suicide  prevention"  means  specific actions schools can take to
    46  recognize and reduce suicidal behavior, including, but not limited to:
    47    a. identifying risks and protective factors for  suicide  and  suicide
    48  warning signs;
    49    b.  establishing  a process by which students are referred to a mental
    50  and behavioral health provider for help;
    51    c. making available school-based  and  community-based  mental  health
    52  supports;
    53    d.  providing  the  location of available online and community suicide
    54  prevention resources, including local crisis centers and hotlines;

        A. 7687--C                          9
 
     1    e. adopting  policies  and  protocols  regarding  suicide  prevention,
     2  intervention,  and  postvention,  school  safety, and response to crisis
     3  situations;
     4    f.  training  for school personnel who interact directly with students
     5  in recognizing suicide risks and warning signs and how to refer students
     6  for further assessment and evaluation; and
     7    g. instruction to students in problem-solving  and  coping  skills  to
     8  promote  students'  mental, emotional, and social health and well-being,
     9  and instruction in recognizing and appropriately responding to signs  of
    10  suicidal intent in others.
    11    7. "Mechanical restraints" means any device that restricts an individ-
    12  ual's  freedom of movement and that the individual cannot easily remove,
    13  including but not limited to handcuffs and nylon or velcro restraints.
    14    § 26. Policies, procedures, and guidelines. 1. The governing board  or
    15  body  of  every  local educational agency that serves students in grades
    16  seven to twelve, inclusive, shall, before the first day of  August,  two
    17  thousand  twenty-seven,  adopt  policies,  procedures, and guidelines on
    18  student suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention  for  students
    19  in  such  grades.  Such  policies,  procedures,  and guidelines shall be
    20  developed  in  consultation  with  school  and  community  stakeholders,
    21  school-employed  mental  health  professionals,  and  suicide prevention
    22  experts, and shall include, but not be limited to:
    23    a. methods to increase awareness of the relationship  between  suicide
    24  and suicide risk factors, including, but not limited to:
    25    i. mental health and substance use conditions;
    26    ii. childhood abuse, neglect, or trauma;
    27    iii. prolonged stress, including individual experiences such as bully-
    28  ing,  harassment,  coercive  control,  family or relationship stress, or
    29  other stressful life events, as well as  collective  stressors  such  as
    30  systemic bias and discrimination;
    31    iv. exposure to another person's suicide, or sensationalized or graph-
    32  ic accounts of suicide; and
    33    v.  previous suicide attempts or history of suicide within a student's
    34  family;
    35    b. identification of training  opportunities  on  recognizing  suicide
    36  risks, and referral procedures available to school employees;
    37    c.  availability  of  expertise  from  school  employees who have been
    38  trained in recognizing suicide risks, and referral procedures;
    39    d. how school employees should  respond  to  suspicion,  concerns,  or
    40  warning signs of suicide in students;
    41    e.  how  school employees should respond to a crisis situation where a
    42  student is in imminent danger to themself;
    43    f. policies and protocols for communication  with  parents,  including
    44  those  that  specify  what  to do if parental notification is not in the
    45  best interest of the student;
    46    g. counseling services available within the school  for  students  and
    47  their families that are related to suicide prevention;
    48    h.  availability  of  information  concerning  crisis situation inter-
    49  vention, suicide prevention, and mental health services in the community
    50  for students and their families and school employees;
    51    i. identification  and  development  of  partnerships  with  community
    52  organizations  and  agencies  for referral of students to health, mental
    53  health, substance use, and social support services,  including  develop-
    54  ment  of  at  least  one  memorandum  of understanding between the local
    55  education agency and such an organization or agency in the community  or
    56  region, other than a law enforcement agency;

        A. 7687--C                         10
 
     1    j.  development  of a culturally competent plan to assist survivors of
     2  attempted suicide and to assist students and school employees in  coping
     3  with  an attempted suicide or a suicide death within the school communi-
     4  ty; and
     5    k.  development  of any other related program or activity for students
     6  or school employees.
     7    2. The policies, procedures, and guidelines adopted pursuant to subdi-
     8  vision one of this section shall specifically address the needs of high-
     9  risk groups, including, but not limited to, the following:
    10    a. students who have lost a friend or family member to suicide;
    11    b. students with  disabilities  or  with  chronic  health  conditions,
    12  including mental health and substance use conditions;
    13    c. students experiencing homelessness or in out-of-home settings, such
    14  as foster care;
    15    d. LGBTQ students; and
    16    e. students who have been the target of harassment, bullying, coercive
    17  control or discrimination.
    18    3. The policies, procedures, and guidelines adopted pursuant to subdi-
    19  vision  one  of  this  section  shall be written to ensure that a school
    20  employee acts only within the authorization and scope of such employee's
    21  credential or license.  Nothing in this section shall  be  construed  as
    22  authorizing or encouraging a school employee to diagnose or treat mental
    23  health  conditions  unless  such  employee  is specifically licensed and
    24  employed to do so.
    25    4. The policies, procedures and guidelines adopted  pursuant  to  this
    26  section  shall  ensure  that school officials are solely responsible for
    27  responding to student behavior. Such policies, procedures and guidelines
    28  shall make clear that law enforcement involvement in addressing  student
    29  behavior  should  be  the  last  resort and shall make clear that unless
    30  otherwise authorized by state law:
    31    a. Law enforcement officers and school resource officers shall not use
    32  mechanical restraints on a student unless such restraints are  necessary
    33  to  prevent  imminent  and  serious  physical  injury to such student or
    34  another person, and the use of such restraints is limited in duration to
    35  the time period in which such student presents a risk of causing serious
    36  physical injury to themselves or others; and
    37    b. Any determination that a student requires hospital transport for  a
    38  mental  health  evaluation shall whenever practicable be made by a clin-
    39  ically trained mental health professional. Such student shall be  accom-
    40  panied  during  such transport by a designated school employee, and such
    41  person shall stay with the student until their parent or parent's desig-
    42  nee arrives. The school shall be responsible for contacting  the  parent
    43  when such hospital transport is needed.
    44    5.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of law to the contrary, no
    45  cause of action may be brought for any loss or damage caused by any  act
    46  or  omission resulting from the implementation of the provisions of this
    47  article, or resulting from any training, or lack of  training,  required
    48  by  this  article.  Nothing in this article shall be construed to impose
    49  any specific duty of care.
    50    6. To assist local educational agencies  in  developing  policies  for
    51  student  suicide  prevention,  the department shall develop and maintain
    52  model policies, procedures,  and  guidelines  in  accordance  with  this
    53  section  to serve as a guide for local educational agencies.  Such model
    54  policies, procedures, and guidelines shall be posted within thirty  days
    55  of  their  completion  on  the department's internet website, along with
    56  relevant resources and information to support schools in developing  and

        A. 7687--C                         11
 
     1  implementing  the  policies,  procedures,  and guidelines required under
     2  subdivision one of this section.
     3    7.  The  governing  board  or  body of a local educational agency that
     4  serves students in grades seven to twelve, inclusive, shall  review,  at
     5  minimum  every  fifth year following the effective date of this article,
     6  its policies, procedures, and guidelines on student  suicide  prevention
     7  and, if necessary, update such policies, procedures, and guidelines.
     8    §  27. Reporting. 1. The commissioner, in conjunction with the commis-
     9  sioner of health, shall create a  procedure  under  which  incidents  of
    10  suicide  or attempted suicide by students are reported to the department
    11  at least on an annual basis. Such  procedure  shall  provide  that  such
    12  reports  shall  also delineate whether such student was the subject of a
    13  report of harassment, bullying, coercive control or discrimination;  and
    14  whether they had transferred into the school within the preceding twelve
    15  months.  In  addition,  the  department shall request the comptroller to
    16  undertake studies to determine compliance throughout the state with  the
    17  provisions of this article.
    18    2.  The  commissioner  shall  use  such  reports  and data to identify
    19  schools and districts that may benefit from assistance to meet the stan-
    20  dards and objectives of this article. The commissioner shall  promulgate
    21  policies  and  procedures  for  improving conditions at these schools to
    22  ensure proper training, support, and compliance with all requirements.
    23    3. The commissioner shall deliver the report referenced in subdivision
    24  one of this section to the temporary president of the senate, speaker of
    25  the assembly, minority leader of the  senate,  minority  leader  of  the
    26  assembly, chair and ranking member of the senate education committee and
    27  chair  and  ranking member of the assembly education committee every two
    28  years on or before the first day of November.
    29    § 28. Application. The provisions of this article shall apply  to  all
    30  private and public educational institutions in New York state.
    31    §  29.  Severability  and construction. The provisions of this article
    32  shall be severable, and if any court of competent jurisdiction  declares
    33  any phrase, clause, sentence or provision of this article to be invalid,
    34  or its applicability to any government agency, person or circumstance is
    35  declared  invalid, the remainder of this article and its relevant appli-
    36  cability shall not be affected. The provisions of this article shall  be
    37  liberally construed to give effect to the purposes thereof.
    38    §  9. Section 801-a of the education law, as amended by section 102 of
    39  the laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows:
    40    § 801-a. Instruction in civility, citizenship [and], character  educa-
    41  tion, digital citizenship, and media literacy.
    42    1.  The  regents shall ensure that the course of instruction in grades
    43  kindergarten through twelve includes a component on  civility,  citizen-
    44  ship, and character education. Such component shall instruct students on
    45  the  principles  of  honesty,  tolerance,  personal  responsibility, and
    46  respect for others, with an emphasis on discouraging acts of harassment,
    47  bullying, coercive  control,  discrimination,  observance  of  laws  and
    48  rules, courtesy, dignity, and other traits which will enhance the quali-
    49  ty  of  their  experiences in, and contributions to, the community. Such
    50  component shall include instruction of  safe,  responsible  use  of  the
    51  internet  and electronic communications. The regents shall determine how
    52  to incorporate such component in existing curricula and the commissioner
    53  shall promulgate any regulations needed to carry out such  determination
    54  of the regents.
    55    2.  For  the  purposes  of  this  section,  ["tolerance," "respect for
    56  others" and "dignity" shall include awareness and sensitivity to harass-

        A. 7687--C                         12

     1  ment, bullying, discrimination and civility in the relations  of  people
     2  of different races, weights, national origins, ethnic groups, religions,
     3  religious  practices, mental or physical abilities, sexual orientations,
     4  genders,  and sexes.] the following terms shall have the following mean-
     5  ings:
     6    a. "Tolerance", "respect for  others",  and  "dignity"  shall  include
     7  awareness  and  sensitivity  to  harassment, bullying, coercive control,
     8  discrimination, and  civility  in  the  relations  of  different  races,
     9  weights,  national  origins,  ethnic  groups, religions, religious prac-
    10  tices, mental or physical abilities, sexual orientations,  genders,  and
    11  sexes.
    12    b. "Digital citizenship" shall mean a diverse set of skills related to
    13  current technology and social media, including the norms of appropriate,
    14  responsible,  and healthy behavior and focuses on empowering learners to
    15  use online resources, applications, and spaces  to  improve  communities
    16  and curate a positive and effective digital footprint.
    17    c. "Media literacy" shall mean the ability to use media and to access,
    18  analyze,  evaluate, create, and act using all forms of communication and
    19  encompasses the foundational skills that lead to digital citizenship.
    20    3. The regents, in conjunction with  the  commissioner,  shall  ensure
    21  that  the  course  of  instruction in grades kindergarten through twelve
    22  includes a component on media literacy.  Such  component  shall  include
    23  instruction of internet safety, civility, and digital citizenship with a
    24  focus  on  the  principles  of safe, responsible use of the internet and
    25  electronic communications. The boards of education and trustees  of  the
    26  cities and school districts of the state shall require instruction to be
    27  given in media literacy by the teachers employed in the schools therein.
    28  If available, instruction in media literacy shall be provided by library
    29  media specialists employed by the schools therein.
    30    4.  The  commissioner, in conjunction with the regents, shall incorpo-
    31  rate  existing  state  media  literacy  standards  into  the   component
    32  described  in  subdivision  one  of  this section and create a clear and
    33  coherent set of media literacy education  standards  which  capture  the
    34  full  range of skills, experiences, and competencies that research indi-
    35  cates is necessary for media literacy.
    36    5. The commissioner, in conjunction with the regents, shall update the
    37  New York state professional  teaching  standards  to  incorporate  media
    38  literacy and educate library media specialists and teachers on the rele-
    39  vant  standards  of media literacy so that library media specialists and
    40  teachers can effectively incorporate such standards into  their  curric-
    41  ulums.
    42    6.  The  commissioner, in conjunction with the regents, shall annually
    43  review the media literacy education standards set forth in this  section
    44  and shall update such standards as necessary.
    45    7.  The  media  literacy education standards set forth in this section
    46  shall serve as an overview of the state's interdisciplinary approach  to
    47  media  literacy  education  and  shall emphasize the importance of media
    48  literacy for civic readiness.
    49    § 10. Subdivision 1 and the opening paragraph and paragraphs m  and  n
    50  of  subdivision 2 of section 2801 of the education law, subdivision 1 as
    51  amended by chapter 402 of the laws of 2005,  the  opening  paragraph  of
    52  subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 380 of the laws of 2001, paragraph m
    53  of subdivision 2 as amended and paragraph n of subdivision 2 as added by
    54  chapter  482  of  the laws of 2010, are amended and a new paragraph o of
    55  subdivision 2 is added to read as follows:

        A. 7687--C                         13
 
     1    1. a. For purposes of this section, [school  property]  the  following
     2  terms shall have the following meanings:
     3    (i)  "School  property"  means  in  or within any building, structure,
     4  athletic playing field, playground, parking lot, or land contained with-
     5  in the real property boundary line of a public elementary  or  secondary
     6  school;  [or]  in  or on a school bus, as defined in section one hundred
     7  forty-two of the vehicle and traffic law; [and a school  function  shall
     8  mean] or within a school administrative building.
     9    (ii)  "School  function"  means a school board or trustee meeting or a
    10  school-sponsored or school-authorized [extra-curricular]  extra  curric-
    11  ular  event or activity regardless of where such event or activity takes
    12  place, including any event or activity that may take  place  in  another
    13  state  including  but not limited to field trips and athletic practices,
    14  scrimmages and events.
    15    b. This section shall also apply to cyberbullying, whether on  or  off
    16  school property or at or away from a school function.
    17    The  board  of education or the trustees, as defined in section two of
    18  this chapter,  of  every  school  district  within  the  state,  however
    19  created,  and every board of cooperative educational services and county
    20  vocational extension board, shall adopt and  amend,  as  appropriate,  a
    21  code of conduct for the maintenance of order on school property, includ-
    22  ing  a  school  function,  which  shall  govern the conduct of students,
    23  teachers, coaches, board members or trustees, and other school personnel
    24  as well as visitors and shall provide for the enforcement thereof.  Such
    25  policy  may  be  adopted  by  the school board or trustees only after at
    26  least one public hearing that provides for the participation  of  school
    27  personnel, parents, students and any other interested parties. Such code
    28  of conduct shall include, at a minimum:
    29    m.  a  minimum suspension period for acts that would qualify the pupil
    30  to be defined as a violent pupil pursuant to paragraph a of  subdivision
    31  two-a  of  section thirty-two hundred fourteen of this chapter, provided
    32  that the suspending authority may reduce such period on a case  by  case
    33  basis to be consistent with any other state and federal law; [and]
    34    n.  provisions to comply with [article] articles two and two-B of this
    35  chapter[.]; and
    36    o. an additional code of conduct for coaches. To assist  local  educa-
    37  tional agencies in developing a code of conduct for coaches, the depart-
    38  ment  shall  develop  and  maintain a model code in accordance with this
    39  section to serve as a guide for local educational agencies.  Such  model
    40  code  shall  be  posted  on  the department's internet website and, at a
    41  minimum, shall include  provisions  regarding  the  program  mission,  a
    42  coach's  health,  safety  and  wellness  obligations  to the students, a
    43  coach's obligations to parents and  spectators,  a  central  summary  of
    44  mandated credentials, training and licenses or certifications applicable
    45  to  coaches, a communications policy as between coaches and students and
    46  parents, and an ethics policy.
    47    § 11. Paragraph a of subdivision 2 of section 3006-a of the  education
    48  law,  as added by section 2 of subpart C of part EE of chapter 56 of the
    49  laws of 2015, is amended and a new paragraph a-1 is  added  to  read  as
    50  follows:
    51    a. (i) During each five-year registration period beginning on or after
    52  July  first,  two  thousand sixteen, an applicant for registration shall
    53  successfully complete a minimum  of  one  hundred  hours  of  continuing
    54  teacher  and  leader education, as defined by the commissioner, provided
    55  that such one hundred hours shall include, at a minimum, five  hours  of
    56  professional  development that incorporates the principles and practices

        A. 7687--C                         14
 
     1  of the department's culturally responsive-sustaining  framework  and  is
     2  related to each of the following:
     3    (A)  media literacy education, as defined by the commissioner, that is
     4  provided by or in coordination with a library  media   specialist or  an
     5  employee   from   a school  district's library  system  in  every school
     6  district; and
     7    (B) dignity for all students  and  suicide  prevention  education,  in
     8  accordance  with  articles  two  and  two-B  of  this   chapter, that is
     9  provided by or in coordination with a teacher or guidance  counselor  in
    10  every school district.
    11    (ii)  Utilizing  funds  appropriated  for the professional development
    12  topics listed in subparagraph (i)  of  this  paragraph,  the  department
    13  shall  create  and  provide model curricula  and  teaching  and  profes-
    14  sional development resources on its website.  The department shall issue
    15  rigorous standards for courses, programs,  and  activities,  that  shall
    16  qualify  as  continuing  teacher  and  leader education pursuant to this
    17  section. For purposes of this section, a peer review teacher, or a prin-
    18  cipal acting as an independent trained evaluator, conducting a classroom
    19  observation as part of the teacher evaluation system pursuant to section
    20  three thousand twelve-d of this article may  credit  such  time  towards
    21  [his  or her] their continuing teacher and leader effectiveness require-
    22  ments.
    23    a-1. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph a  of  this  subdivi-
    24  sion,  any library  media specialist shall complete a minimum of fifteen
    25  hours of professional development related to media  literacy  education.
    26  The  commissioner shall require that library media specialists  in every
    27  school  district receive specific  training in how  to  provide  profes-
    28  sional  development  related  to media literacy education to teachers of
    29  all grade levels and subject areas contained  in  their  schools,  which
    30  shall include instruction on how to effectively  integrate  media liter-
    31  acy education into such teachers' curricula.
    32    §  12.  Section 3006-a of the education law is amended by adding a new
    33  subdivision 4 to read as follows:
    34    4. For the purposes of this section, "library media specialist"  shall
    35  mean  an  individual  employed  by  a school district as a library media
    36  specialist pursuant to section 91.2 of title eight of the  codes,  rules
    37  and regulations of the state of New York.
    38    § 13. This act shall take effect July 1, 2027.
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