BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



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          ASSEMBLY THIRD READING
          AB 1455 (Campos)
          As Amended  March 17, 2014
          Majority vote 

           EDUCATION           7-0                                         
           
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          |Ayes:|Buchanan, Olsen, Ch�vez,  |     |                          |
          |     |Gonzalez, Nazarian,       |     |                          |
          |     |Weber, Williams           |     |                          |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |     |                          |     |                          |
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           SUMMARY  :  Authorizes the superintendent of a school district,  
          the principal of a school, or the principal's designee to refer  
          a victim of, witness to, or other pupil affected by an act of  
          bullying, committed on or after January 1, 2015, to the school  
          counselor, school psychologist, social worker, child welfare  
          attendance personnel, school nurse, or other school support  
          service personnel for case management, counseling, and  
          participation in a restorative justice program.  

           EXISTING LAW  :

          1)Provides that a pupil may be suspended or expelled for  
            committing any of a number of specified acts, including  
            engaging in the act of bullying, including, but not limited  
            to, bullying committed by means of an electronic act.   
            (Education Code (EC) Section 48900)

          2)Defines "bullying" to mean any severe or pervasive physical or  
            verbal act or conduct, including communications made in  
            writing or by means of an electronic act, and including one or  
            more acts committed by a pupil or group of pupils as defined  
            in EC Sections 48900.2, 48900.3, or 48900.4, directed toward  
            one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to  
            have the effect of one or more of the following:

             a)   Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to  
               that pupil's or those pupils' person or property; 

             b)   Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially  
               detrimental effect on his or her physical or mental health;








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             c)   Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial  
               interference with his or her academic performance; and, 

             d)   Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial  
               interference with his or her ability to participate in or  
               benefit from the services, activities, or privileges  
               provided by a school.  (EC Section 48900)

          3)Provides that suspension, including supervised suspension,  
            shall be imposed only when other means of correction fail to  
            bring about proper conduct.  Provides that other means of  
            correction include, but are not limited to, any of the  
            following:  student, parent, and teacher conferences;  
            referrals to support service providers including counselors,  
            psychologists, social workers, child welfare attendance  
            personnel, or other school support personnel;  
            intervention-related teams who assess behavior and address the  
            behavior; prosocial behavior or anger management programs;  
            restorative justice programs; positive behavior interventions  
            and support programs; after school programs that address  
            specific behavior issues; and community service programs. (EC  
            Section 48900.5)

          4)Establishes the Safe Place to Learn Act and requires the  
            California Department of Education (CDE) to, as part of its  
            monitoring and review of local educational agencies (LEAs),  
            assess whether LEAs have developed policy prohibiting  
            discrimination, harassment, intimidation, and bullying based  
            on specified actual or perceived characteristics.  (EC Section  
            234.1)

          5)Requires the Superintendent of Public Instruction to post, and  
            annually update, on the CDE's Internet Web site and provide to  
            each school district a list of statewide resources, including  
            community-based organizations, that provide support to youth  
            who have been subjected to school-based discrimination,  
            harassment, intimidation, or bullying, and their families. (EC  
            Section 234.5)

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  Unknown.  This bill is keyed non-fiscal by the  
          Legislative Counsel.

           COMMENTS  :  Under existing law, a principal or a superintendent  








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          may suspend or recommend expulsion of a pupil for committing any  
          of a number of specified acts, including bullying and bullying  
          via an electronic act (cyberbullying).  "Bullying" is defined as  
          any severe or pervasive physical or verbal act or conduct,  
          including communications made in writing or by means of an  
          electronic act, and including one or more acts committed by a  
          pupil or group of pupils engaging in sexual harassment, hate  
          violence, harassment, threats, or intimidation, directed toward  
          one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to  
          cause fear and have an impact on a student's physical and mental  
          health, academic performance, or a student's ability to  
          participate in school and school activities.  

          AB 1729 (Ammiano), Chapter 425, Statutes of 2012, requires  
          schools to impose suspensions only when other means of  
          correction fail to bring about proper conduct.  "Other means of  
          correction" include, but are not limited to:  a conference  
          between school personnel, parents and a pupil; referrals to  
          school support service personnel for case management and  
          counseling; intervention-related teams that implement  
          individualized plans to address the behavior in partnership with  
          the pupil and his or her parents; referral for a comprehensive  
          psychosocial or psychoeducational assessment for purposes of  
          creating an individualized education program or plan pursuant to  
          Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973;  
          enrollment in a program for teaching prosocial behavior or anger  
          management; participation in a restorative justice program; a  
          positive behavior support approach with tiered interventions  
          that occur during the schoolday; any after-school programs  
          designed to address specific behavioral issues and expose a  
          pupil to positive activities and behaviors; and, community  
          service, including, but not limited to, outdoor beautification,  
          community or campus betterment and teacher, peer or youth  
          assistance programs. 

          This bill authorizes the superintendent of a school district,  
          the principal or the principal's designee to refer a victim,  
          witness, or other pupil affected by bullying to the school  
          counselor, school psychologist, social worker, child welfare  
          attendance personnel, school nurse, or other school support  
          service personnel for case management, counseling, and  
          participation in a restorative justice program.

          The author states that existing law is "silent on authorizing  








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          schools to provide counseling services to the victims or  
          witnesses.  Schools would likely want to avoid any potential  
          liability by providing services not permitted by law."   
          According to the author, 24 states include mental health and  
          counseling services in schools for victims and witnesses of  
          bullying, including Florida, Massachusetts, New York, New  
          Jersey, Texas and Connecticut.  

          The education code is permissive in nature.  Superintendents and  
          principals are already authorized to refer victims of and other  
          pupils affected by bullying to the types of services specified  
          in this bill.  

          The California School Nurses Association supports the bill and  
          states, "Bullying is unfortunately a growing phenomenon within  
          our schools and it has a detrimental effect on not only the  
          victims but the perpetrators as well.  The sequel of bullying  
          manifests itself in many different ways - headaches, complaints  
          of various physical ailments as well as emotional issues that  
          impact their ability to function in school setting.  In a May  
          2011 article in the journal Pediatrics 'the school's nurse's  
          office tends to be a haven for students who have been bullied,  
          and for those who bully.  The study's authors found that both  
          groups of children tend to come to the school nurse more often  
          than other students for illnesses and injuries, and complaints  
          without clear medical cause, such as stomachaches.'   
          Additionally, the school nurse can play a critical role in  
          developing programs that address prevention, early intervention  
          and treatment of those that bully and those that are bullied."  

          There is no opposition on file.


           Analysis Prepared by  :    Sophia Kwong Kim / ED. / (916) 319-2087  



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