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Nevada School Discipline Rules Change Bill Moves To Assembly

  •  Ky Plaskon 
Thursday, March 19, 2015 | Sacramento, CA
Ky Plaskon / Capital Public Radio

Nevada State Senator Scott Hammond in his office.

Ky Plaskon / Capital Public Radio

The Nevada Senate has approved a bill that would give school superintendents new discretion in student discipline.

Current law requires a student be suspended on a first offense for drug sales, firearms possession, or battery. The bill that the Senate approved Thursday would allow superintendents to write new policies and exceptions for those offenses.

It would also remove the requirement that students who use indecent language be charged with a misdemeanor. The bill's sponsor is Republican Senator and teacher Scott Hammond.

“For me it is a teachable moment to go over there and tell them that this is not the kind of language that you use here. But it's not an offense that I think warrants a misdemeanor," Hammond says.

The bill also gives administrators the flexibility to consider whether a student committed a crime on campus “maliciously" or not. The bill moves now to the Nevada Assembly.

 

 

 


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 nevada legislature

Ky Plaskon

Former Contributing Sierra/Reno Reporter

Ky was a contributing reporter to Capital Public Radio through June 2015.  Read Full Bio 

 Email Ky Plaskon

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