Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House OKs bill to aid pregnant students in state

Excused absences granted for medical appointmen­ts

- NEAL EARLEY

A bill to give excused absences to pregnant and new parent students passed out of an Arkansas House committee Tuesday.

House Bill 1161, by Rep. Ashley Hudson, D-Little Rock, would require public schools and open-enrollment public charter schools to “excuse absences due to conditions related to pregnancy or parenting,” including for labor, delivery, recovery, prenatal and postnatal appointmen­ts. Excused absences also will include a “legal appointmen­t related to pregnancy or parenting,” which would include hearings on adoptions, visitation and custody.

The House Education Committee unanimousl­y approved the bill on a voice vote.

Hudson said the bill is aimed at alleviatin­g a burden for teen parents, who may have to take time off from school to deal with medical and legal appointmen­ts that may arrive before or after the birth of a child.

“We know that outcomes are better for the parent and for the baby if their parents are able to obtain their high school degree,” Hudson said. “Certainly, [it] opens up a lot more opportunit­y for income, for getting jobs and for furthering their education, which of course opens up a lot more opportunit­y for their child.”

New parents would be afforded at least 10 days of excused absences after the birth of their child to help them avoid being flagged as a “habitual truant,” which can happen after a student has 10 unexcused absences in a school year. Teenage parents would need to provide the school with a note from a doctor, parent or guardian excusing their absence, Hudson said. Students would be given options to make up missed schoolwork, including retaking a semester, participat­ing in an online course credit program or be granted an additional six weeks to finish the semester at a later date.

The bill also would require schools to provide “reasonable accommodat­ions for a lactating student,” other than a restroom and “access to a place to safely store breast milk.” Schools also would be required to provide pregnant and new parent students with a list of daycare facilities near campus.

“This would lower the chance of a student falling so behind academical­ly that they risk dropping out of school altogether,” said Olivia Gardner, director of education policy at Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. “Unfortunat­ely this is a sad situation that is all too common in our

state.”

Arkansas has the second-highest teen birth rate in the nation, behind only Mississipp­i, according to 2020 statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hudson said her bill is modeled after a Louisiana law and her experience growing up in small-town Illinois, where teenage pregnancie­s were common.

“I wanted to sort of build on my experience as a high school student, and on that knowledge, and try to figure out some ways to be a little creative and [think] outside the box in trying to help these students be successful in high school and get their degrees,” Hudson said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States