The Columbus Dispatch

Pass Collin’s Law to help stop hazing, bullying

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Few parents ever want to see lawmakers pass a bill named for their child, because when that happens, it typically comes after there has been a tragic end to a short life.

Once a mother and father have experience­d the horrific death of a son or daughter, they surely want to think their child didn’t die in vain. It won’t ease their pain – not in the least – but knowing that something has changed to try to prevent another senseless death can provide a ray of hope.

This is why the Ohio General Assembly must finish its work on House Bill 310 and send Collin’s Law: The Ohio Anti-bullying and Hazing Act to Gov. Mike DeWine. It will close a chapter in the nightmare lived by Kathleen and Wade Wiant of Dublin since they received the unthinkabl­e news that their son died after collapsing in an off-campus fraternity house at Ohio University on Nov. 12, 2018.

The legislatio­n is a much-needed effort to try to prevent injury and death from the deplorable behavior of any group or institutio­n that preys on individual­s’ desires to belong. As detailed in The Dispatch six-part digital series Broken Pledge last year, and in follow-up stories, some college fraterniti­es, sororities, as well as university bands, sports teams or other organizati­ons, still haze new members by requiring demeaning or dangerous tasks to demonstrat­e loyalty.

An Indiana university professor and author who tracks such behavior said 92 hazing-related deaths occurred in the United States since 2000. Hank Nuwer said the legislatio­n, which the Ohio House passed on Nov. 19 and sent to the Senate, “could help save a life, but it won’t stop hazing.” Still, he believes that Collin’s Law, if enacted, would offer “an important cudgel to hold over the heads of hazers who ignore basic human decency and personal safety.”

Collin Wiant, 18, was a freshman pledge of Sigma Pi when he inhaled a canister of nitrous oxide gas, known as a whippit, and died of asphyxiati­on. The Broken Pledge series chronicled pressures that had been put on him by the fraternity and drug use engaged in by members. OU subsequent­ly banned the fraternity permanentl­y.

HB 310 would expand definitions of bullies and their victims, require school districts to investigat­e claims of bullying in elementary through high schools and include forced consumptio­n of drugs and alcohol in the definition of hazing. The bill would also raise penalties for criminal charges, elevating hazing from a fourthdegr­ee misdemeano­r to a second-degree misdemeano­r unless it involves drugs or alcohol, which would make it a third-degree felony, punishable by a prison term.

At the very least, the Ohio Senate should pass HB 310 and send a message to discourage behavior that demeans others, which any form of hazing certainly does, no matter how anyone tries to dress it up differently.

Even better, senators may want to listen to Collin Wiant’s parents’ pleas to strengthen the bill even more with required hazing education and transparen­cy for colleges and universiti­es.

The Wiants vow to continue fighting to try to save other parents from the heartache they have suffered and to obtain results that give them some solace that their son would be proud of their efforts.

Sadly, there are too many examples these days of people who demean others to deflect their own insecuriti­es. We hope lawmakers pass HB 310 to strongly discourage such harmful acts in educationa­l institutio­ns.

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