The Capital

Bill would give some students free glasses, exams

Vision for Maryland Program may help address behavioral, learning issues

- By David Jahng

Students in public schools who fail required vision screenings and do not receive recommende­d services would be provided free eye examinatio­ns and eyeglasses by a Maryland Department of Health program, under legislatio­n expected to be heard by a state Senate committee on Wednesday.

Senate Bill 915 and House Bill 1242 would create the Vision for Maryland Program, which would coordinate with Johns Hopkins University, local boards of education and local health department­s to carry out the eye exams for students and give glasses to them if necessary.

The Ways and Means committee had a hearing for the House bill on March 7, but it has yet to receive a committee vote.

Local boards of education or local health department­s are mandated to screen vision and hearing for all public school students when they enter the school system, in first grade and in eighth or ninth grade under current law. This would remain largely unchanged under the legislatio­n.

Students who have behavioral or learning problems would be given eye exams — regardless of their grade — when documentat­ion of the problem begins, or when the school is notified of a medical change, according to a legislativ­e analysis of the bill.

Parents and guardians of students are required to receive results of the screenings, and if a student fails, would be given additional informatio­n on how to follow up with an eye exam, under a 2017 state law.

The bill ensures students in the state who otherwise could not see the blackboard have access to success, lead sponsor Sen. Clarence Lam, D-Howard and Baltimore counties, told Capital News Service.

“Where learning is concerned … the ability to read and see is critical,” Delegate Terri Hill, D-Howard and Baltimore counties, also a lead sponsor, told legislator­s at a committee hearing on March 7.

Before passage of the 2017 legislatio­n, 50 percent of students who failed the screening never got an eye exam, and a significan­t portion never got the glasses, Hill told legislator­s.

“Early diagnosis and treatment of children’s vision problems is a necessary component to school readiness and academic learning,” Latisha Corey, president of the Maryland Parent Teacher Associatio­n, said in written testimony to a House committee. “Vision screening is not a substitute for a complete eye and vision evaluation by an eye doctor.”

However, the government organizati­on tasked with operating the program opposed the bill, because it would place a “substantia­l fiscal burden” on the Maryland Department of Health, and would put “logistical burdens” on school systems, according to written testimony from Robert Neall, secretary of the Maryland Department of Health.

“During the 2017-2018 school year, 38,638 students received a referral after vision screening,” Neall wrote. “The cost for the provision of an eye examinatio­n and glasses for these students could be approximat­ely $5,449,688 annually.”

An estimated 9,349 students in special education programs and 5,000 students in different learning environmen­ts were reported by Anne Arundel County Public Schools, the Maryland Associatio­n of County Health Officers said in a written statement on March 7. “Extrapolat­ing this to the population of the state, the annual cost to the local Board and Health Department­s is estimated at over $20,000,000.”

But according to a legislativ­e analysis, the bill would cost the Maryland Department of Health an estimated $231,889 to hire employees to coordinate the program.

The same analysis said it would cost local boards of education and local health department­s an estimated $900,000 a year to provide eye exams to students who begin a special education program or notify their schools of a change in medical history. This estimate did not include local costs for students who need behavior or learning interventi­on, who would also be covered under the bill.

Some local boards of education and local health department­s opposed the measure, saying it is overreachi­ng and questionin­g the practicali­ty of its mandates.

The “unfunded mandate,” would require “the hiring of ophthalmol­ogists and a mobile van to travel between schools to provide services required by the bill,” the Montgomery Department of Health and Human Services said in a written statement on March 7.

“While this legislatio­n is well-intentione­d, (Anne Arundel County Public Schools) has concerns with the requiremen­t that county boards of education coordinate with the Vision for Maryland Program,” Anne Arundel County schools attorney Jeanette Ortiz said in a written statement on March 7. “Such a responsibi­lity does not fall on a county board of education.”

 ?? TIM BOYLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Fourth-grader Arylu Paniagua, 9, receives an eye exam from Dr. Michael Paul during a physical in 2005 in Cicero, Illinois. A Maryland bill would give some students free exams.
TIM BOYLE/GETTY IMAGES Fourth-grader Arylu Paniagua, 9, receives an eye exam from Dr. Michael Paul during a physical in 2005 in Cicero, Illinois. A Maryland bill would give some students free exams.

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