Rome News-Tribune

Bill passes requiring college hazing incidents to be reported

♦ The bill’s sponsor will try for tougher penalties next year.

- By Beau Evans

A bill requiring Georgia colleges and universiti­es to report hazing incidents that happen in school clubs like fraterniti­es and sororities passed in the General Assembly Wednesday.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. John Albers, R-roswell, is a greatly stripped-down version of the original measure, which would have made it a felony with prison time and large fines for anyone who injures or contribute­s to killing someone through hazing, including by alcohol abuse or physical torture.

Albers, who has pushed the criminal-hazing penalties since last year, said the state House of Representa­tives made “substantia­l changes” to his bill after it passed unanimousl­y in the state Senate in late February.

He pledged to bring back the felony proposals in next year’s legislativ­e session.

“This bill is a down payment on the further work we’re going to do next year and the years in the future to make sure we honor Max’s legacy and keep kids safe,” Albers said from the Senate floor Wednesday.

Albers referred in his floor remarks to Max Gruver, a Louisiana State University student from Georgia who died in 2017 from alcohol poisoning after being hazed by members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. The bill was named in honor of Gruver.

With the overhauled bill, Georgia college administra­tors will need to publicly disclose hazing incidents involving forced consumptio­n of alcohol, food or otherwise harmful substances within 15 days after the school has adjudicate­d the matter or there has been a criminal conviction.

Schools would also have to name the organizati­on where the hazing took place, which House lawmakers who revised Albers’ bill said recently should be enough to scare groups like fraterniti­es, sororities and sports teams into clamping down on dangerous ritual hazing.

“They are not going to want to be on a list like this,” said Rep. Bert Reeves, R-marietta, who helped draft the bill changes in the House Judiciary Non-civil Committee last week.

 ??  ?? John Albers
John Albers

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