HB 1002, HB 1634, SB 365 and SB 448 / Chamber Supports

Last week, several Chamber-supported measures moved across the finish line. This included House Bill 1634 on math instruction, authored by Rep. Jake Teshka (R-North Liberty); Senate Bill 365 on career coaching programs, authored by Sen. Jeff Raatz (R-Richmond); and Senate Bill 448 on postsecondary education realignment and market driven stackable credentials, authored by Sen. Greg Goode (R-Terre Haute). All achieved final passage and have moved on to the Governor for action.

While House Bill 1002 – authored by Rep. Bob Behning (R-Indianapolis) and often dubbed a “deregulation bill” for K-12 schools – passed the Senate last week, it did so after a heated floor debate and with nine “No” votes among Senate Republicans. The House has dissented on the Senate-passed version, and this goes to conference committee to see if a compromise can be hammered out. This bill remains a top priority for both the House majority and the Indiana Chamber.

House Bill 1002 is far from the “massive deregulation” critics have claimed. It’s more of a cleanup effort that removes outdated and unnecessary provisions in statutes and relieves burdens of compliance. It marks the first of an envisioned three-year deregulation effort of Title 20 statutes governing Indiana’s public schools.

Some Senate amendments, such as proposals to eliminate social-emotional learning instruction and trauma-informed care practice, sparked significant pushback and confusion during floor debate.

As lawmakers head into the final week of the legislative session, several other high-profile K-12 bills await resolution in conference committee. Among them: Senate Bill 287 on partisan school board elections and Senate Bill 373 on centralized school facilities, student transportation and mastery-based education pilot programs, as well as the new Indianapolis local education alliance effort.

Jeff Brantley is the senior vice president of political affairs at the Indiana Chamber. He was with the organization 1995-2000 and rejoined the Chamber in 2014.