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Ohio Republicans suggest adding religious education bill to 'Parents’ Bill of Rights'

Two smaller Lifewise buses outside the Westerville Board of Education meeting on Sept. 30, 2024. The board voted to rescind its policy that Lifewise used to offer its Bible study program during school hours.
Karen Kasler
/
Statehouse News Bureau
Two smaller LifeWise buses outside the Westerville Board of Education meeting on Sept. 30, 2024. The board voted to rescind its policy that LifeWise used to offer its Bible study program during school hours.

The so-called “Parents’ Bill of Rights” could move forward with a big and expected change, as an Ohio Senate committee heard and read testimony from more than 170 people who oppose it.

House Bill 8, which opponents say is Ohio's equivalent of a "don't say gay bill”, would require parents to be notified of any content or discussion about "sexuality" in public K-12 schools, so they can remove their child.

Republican lawmakers proposed adding a measure to require K-12 schools to adopt a policy to allow release time for religious instruction. It’s known as the “LifeWise” bill, named after the Ohio-based Christian program in which students can leave school during the day with a parent’s permission to attend religious classes off school grounds.

The LifeWise Academy website said it’s operating in 29 states. In Ohio, some districts have not allowed LifeWise or other programs, and some districts have rescinded their policies allowing it. Two central Ohio districts, Worthington and Westerville, did so recently.

The leader of the Ohio House has been a proponent of HB 8. But Speaker Jason Stephens (R-Kitts Hill) is not a fan of adding the release for religious instruction bill to it.

“By being specific and adding on a lot of other things, it can be maybe unintended consequences and there may have been things in a bill like that that may not have been thoroughly vetted,” Stephens said.

While the committee merged the two bills together into one, it did not take a vote on the bill, which is necessary for the bill to go to the full Senate. It would turn have to return to the House for their vote on any changes. Ohio lawmakers are attempting to wrap up the lame-duck session this week.

Contact Jo Ingles at jingles@statehousenews.org.
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