Grady’s elementary classroom discipline, travel ball bills in limbo in House Education Committee

Charleston, W.V.

Sen Amy Gradi (R-Manan)

Graddie, R-Manan, crossed Capital and testified on behalf of SB 614, which would give more rights to primary school teachers to deal with disruptive students.

Graddy told the committee several times that the bill is not correct, but this is a good first step to deal with a major problem.

Graddy said, “We have no answer to everything, I want us to do and I want this bill to solve every problem we have, it will be very good.” “I worked so hard to try and make this perfect and I realized that it is not right and it is never going to be right because let’s face it that every student is different.”

According to the bill, when a teacher in grade kind of grade through 6 determines that a student’s behavior is violent, threatening or intimidated – or an unprotected learning environment – the behavioral intervention program provided by the county to the student It is necessary to be kept in.

If a county does not have access to such a program, then an incident in an event will be immediately removed from the class, the parents will be informed, the student will be banned from riding the bus and if the student is Is not raised. By the end of the day, school representatives can then inform the law enforcement.

The student will be suspended for one to three school days until an alternative learning accommodation is done. The student will be stopped from returning to school until the risk evaluation is completed.


The House Education Committee was discussing a possible change in the bill to amend the ‘Teachers Bill of Rights’ law of the House.

After a long discussion, which included Graddy’s testimony, the chairman of the House Education Committee, Joe Ellington, R-Mark, called for a half-hour holiday and the Cocks of the Republican members of the committee. Ellington returned half an hour later and postponed the meeting without any clarification.

Travel ball bill

Graddy’s travel ball bill was also on the committee’s agenda, but no action was taken.

The Senate passed SB 813 that would allow children to play travel bills during their school game season.

Joe stator

The Vice President of the House Education Committee, Joe Joe Joe State, said that during an attendance on the metronus “talkline” on Monday, the committee was working on the option of a possible committee to try to balance those concerns about the coaches bills. .

“Parents and students have to accept in school that their priority would be with the game they were participating in school at that time,” the state said.

For a long time, West Virginia High School Basketball Coach George Washington’s Rick Green and POCA’s Alan Osborne Education Committee had been in hand, but the bill was never discussed.

Ellington said that at the beginning of Monday’s meeting, the committee held a meeting again on Wednesday, which would be a time limit for most bills to be out of the committee if they read three times on the house floor before the deadline of Saturday night session. Are going

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