Legislation enacted in 2024 (Initiative Measure No. 2081) declared parents and guardians of public school children younger than age 18 to have 15 specified rights. The delineated rights related to: receiving or being notified of academic, medical, campus removal, and law enforcement matters; examining and inspecting certain materials and records; and opting their children out of certain activities.
Examining and Inspecting Instructional Materials and Student Records.
In accordance with the 2024 legislation, parents and legal guardians of public school children younger than age 18 have the right to examine the textbooks, curriculum, and supplemental material used in their child's classroom. Parents and legal guardians also have the right to inspect their child's public school records, and to receive a copy of their child's records within 10 business days of submitting a written request, either electronically or on paper.
For purposes of the inspection and copying right, public school records include the following eight classifications of records:
Parental and Guardian Notification.
State laws establish numerous requirements for notifying the parents and legal guardians of children enrolled in public schools related to academic, medical, campus removal, and law enforcement matters, and opting their children out of certain activities. Some notification requirements are expressly established in statute as parental and guardian rights. Examples of those, by classification type, include:
Academic.
Medical.
Removal from School Campus.
Law Enforcement.
Nondiscrimination.
Opt-Out.
Student Education Records—Privacy and Parental Access Rights.
Federal laws protect the privacy of children's education records in public schools and provide parental access to those records. State laws either follow or are more protective of children's privacy than federal laws.
The federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) gives parents the right to inspect and review the public school education records of their minor children within 45 days of requesting access to the records, unless a court order, state statute, or other legally binding document specifically revokes this right. If circumstances effectively prevent a parent from exercising this right, the school must either provide the parent with a copy of the requested records or make other arrangements for the parent to access the records.
Under state law, the parent or guardian of a student has the right to review all education records of the student, which are academic, attendance, and disciplinary records. Additionally, school district boards of directors must establish a procedure in conformity with the FERPA for granting a request by a parent or guardian for access to the education records of his or her child, and prohibiting the release of student information without the written consent of the student's parent or guardian.
Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment.
The federal Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment (PPRA) requires public schools to notify parents and offer the option to opt their children out of administration of surveys, analyses, and evaluations that may reveal certain information of the child or parent, such as: political or religious beliefs, psychological problems, or sex attitudes. The PPRA also requires that certain instructional materials used in connection with the surveys, analysis, and evaluations be available for inspection by parents.
Student Records: Nondisclosure in Certain Child Abuse and Neglect Investigations.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, unless the parent has obtained a court order, a public school may not be required to release any records or information regarding a student's medical or health records or mental health counseling to a parent during the pendency of an investigation of child abuse or neglect. This non-release requirement applies if the investigation is of the parent and is being conducted by a law enforcement agency or the Department of Children, Youth, and Families.
Alleged Sexual Misconduct by School Employee: Notification Requirements.
School districts must, at the first opportunity but in all cases within 48 hours of receiving a report alleging sexual misconduct by a school employee, notify the parents of a student alleged to be the victim, target, or recipient of the misconduct. School districts must also provide parents with information regarding their rights under Washington's Public Records Act to request the public records regarding school employee discipline.
Right of Action.
A private right of action is the right of a person to bring a civil legal claim in court to obtain a remedy for a specific harm to that person. Private rights of action can be created and recognized by the courts or through legislation. Examples of statutory private rights of action include the right to obtain legal relief for violations of the Washington Consumer Protection Act and the Washington Law Against Discrimination.
Parental and Guardian Rights—Changes and No Right of Private Action.
Additions, modifications, and deletions are made to the list of declared rights for parents and guardians of children enrolled public schools. The list of declared rights does not create a private right of action.
Added Rights. Examples of added declared rights, all of which include cross references to existing state law, include the right to:
Modified Rights. Examples of modified rights include the right to:
"Education records" is defined as those official records, files, and data directly related to a student and maintained by the public school including, but not limited to, records encompassing all the material kept in the child's cumulative folder, such as general identifying data, records of attendance and of academic work completed, records of achievement and results of evaluative tests, disciplinary status, test protocols, and individualized education programs.
"Education records" do not include records that are kept in the sole possession of the maker, are used only as a personal memory aid, and are not accessible or revealed to any other person except a temporary substitute for the maker of the record.
Removed Rights. Removed rights from list of declared rights are as follows:
Student Records: Nondisclosure in Certain Child Abuse, Neglect, and Criminal Investigations.
Student record disclosure limitations for parents that are related to certain child abuse and neglect investigations of law enforcement or the Department of Children, Youth, and Families are extended to health care, social work, counseling, and disciplinary records (rather than records and information regarding medical or health records or mental health counseling). The disclosure limitations are also extended to apply in criminal proceedings of parents and legal guardians where the student is the named victim.
Alleged Sexual Misconduct by School Employee: Notification Requirements.
School districts must immediately notify the parents or legal guardians of a student alleged to be the victim, target, or recipient of an allegation of sexual misconduct by a school employee, rather than at the first opportunity but in all cases within 48 hours of receiving such a report. Additionally, requirements of school districts to notify parents about their public records rights regarding school employee discipline records are explicitly made applicable to legal guardians.
Nonapplication.
Nothing in the bill changes access and disclosure provisions established in specified state laws related to health care information, or affects specified provisions in state law related to host homes, youth shelters, and children being taken into custody in relation to abuse or neglect allegations.
In comparison to the original bill, the amended bill:
(In support) This bill is part of House Bill 1296. When the Legislature passed the parents' rights initiative last year, legislators said, if needed, we would come back and make changes, and that is the reason for this bill. Changes are needed because the poorly written provisions in the initiative caused confusion for school districts and some provisions contradicted current law without amending those laws. This bill preserves the core of the parents' rights initiative while adjusting key provisions and adds 10 additional rights. The bill doesn't change any rights but protects the healthy privacy of students. The bill also aligns definitions of health records for consistency and protects existing student rights.
This bill will help children learn to be themselves and to grow up healthy and safe. This bill brings the initiative into alignment with current law. The language of the initiative misleads parents into believing that their child frequently receives medical treatment in schools without their permission.
There is strong support for protecting students and ensuring that schools are safe and welcoming places for them to learn and thrive. This bill helps to clarify the law and adds additional provisions. The fabric of a healthy school community includes staff, students, parents, and guardians.
A teacher discarded reading materials because they included a story about a transgender youth. This action erased more than the story, it erased children's sense of safety and belonging. This bill is about partnership and safety, not erasing parents. All students deserve accurate, inclusive education and safe schools with trusted adults.
This bill aligns Initiative 2081 with existing state and federal laws and clarifies and protects student rights while maintaining parental involvement. School is a good place to try pronouns before coming out to your family. All students deserve a safe place. If they do not feel safe, they cannot learn. When students are subjected to hostile learning environments, they are not safe. Transgender kids deserve to come out in their own time and way.
Teachers now have to navigate misinformation resulting from the initiative. Parental rights should not be about controlling all aspects of a child’s life, especially if the child's safety or well-being is at risk. Real parental responsibility means ensuring that schools are safe and supportive environments.
This bill addresses tragic sexual violence realities, including violence against students that is perpetrated by family members, and sometimes parents. Schools play a critical role in providing a supportive environment for students as well as connecting them to needed resources. LGBTQ+ youth are targeted for, and experience, sexual violence, bullying, and harassment at significantly higher rates than their peers. When teachers and trusted adults set the tone on acceptable behavior it interrupts cycles of violence.
Parents, for many years, have had a right to access their child's education records. The duty to advocate for children supersedes the importance of supporting parents. The right to a free and appropriate education is withheld from diverse populations, but the bill works to ensure that protections addressing withheld education access rights are maintained. The ability of school psychologists to provide care to students would be significantly reduced if they cannot provide safe and expected confidentiality to students.
(Opposed) There are 4,600 people signed in as opposed to the bill, with 1,200 in support. Removing parents' rights is not an emergency. The sole motive for the emergency clause is to require an initiative instead of a referendum, as initiatives require twice as many signatures. An emergency clause is used on 20 percent of enacted bills.
God entrusts parents, not schools, with the sacred duty of raising children. Parents know their children's medical histories and struggles, not schools. The bill prevents parents from suing, leaving parents without protections. How can parents protect and train their children if they are in the dark?
Stakeholders refute the claims that rights are not being taken away. The parents' bill of rights with health and mental health notifications is current law and not in conflict with disclosures allowed under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act and the Health Insurance Portability Act. Stakeholders are also increasingly concerned about school-based health centers. Student medical information can become available to third parties, but if this bill passes, not to parents. The default position of the state should be disclosure to parents.
This bill is a clear attempt to weaken parental rights under Initiative 2081. The initiative has been declared constitutional. The Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction is in violation of Title IX and so is this legislation. Passing this bill could cost the state $2 billion or more in federal money.
The bill is a systematic destruction of the parents' bill of rights. Page 2 of the bill removes public records provisions. The parents of Washington see through this action. The bill crosses a moral line and should be dismantled. The rights and responsibilities of parents come from God and not the state.
(In support) Senator Claire Wilson, prime sponsor; Jessica Cole; Tiffany Kelly; Nicole Kern, Planned Parenthood Alliance Advocates; Albert Johnson; Carrie Suchy, NCSP, Washington State Association of School Psychologists; and Elizabeth Hendren, Sexual Violence Law Center.
More than 20 persons signed in. Please contact the House Public Records Office at
https://leg.wa.gov/public-records-requests/ or call (360) 786-0926.