The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

10 new Kentucky education laws

- Rebecca Grapevine and Hannah Pinski

Out of the more than 200 new laws that take effect today, many of them are related to — or directly touch — Kentucky’s education system. New Laws range from who K-12 schools can hire to patrol campuses to curriculum requiremen­ts, including teaching cursive.

Other laws deal with Kentucky’s higher education system, including a new repayment program to motivate livestock veterinari­ans to practice in areas with a veterinari­an shortage.

Truancy

House Bill 611 requires school district officials to report cases where students are absent more than 15 days during the school year to the county attorney to determine whether further court interventi­on is needed.

Kentucky schools can hire ‘guardians’

Kentucky schools can bring in armed veterans and retired police officers to patrol campuses. Also known as “guardians,” they would receive training and could be paid or volunteer. Senate Bill 2 also says the guardian “may be armed with a firearm” on school property.

Be a substitute teacher with high school diploma or GED

House Bill 387, among other things, allows the state Education Profession­al Standards Board to issue a one-year emergency certificate for substitute teaching to people who have earned a high school diploma or a high school equivalenc­y diploma and met the other requiremen­ts.

Nicotine products and schools

House Bill 142 requires school boards to include evidence-based nicotine prevention and cessation materials to all students at the start of the school year and access throughout the school year. Districts must include a disciplina­ry provision that students found to possess nicotine, tobacco or vaping products will have those products confiscated.

Boards of education

House Bill 449 allows members of local boards of education to be removed if they are convicted of felonies, commit an act of malfeasanc­e while performing their board duties or misappropr­iate public funds or property. It also requires ethics and open government training for board members.

Portable automated external defibrillators required in schools

Districts are required to maintain AEDs in all school buildings, including elementary school buildings and at “school-sanctioned athletics practices and competitio­ns” under House Bill 169. An annual report must be submitted to the Kentucky Department of Education that proves compliance.

Public schools required to teach cursive

Under Senate Bill 167, elementary schools must teach cursive starting in the 2025-2026 academic year, with the goal of students becoming proficient in cursive by fifth grade. Common Core, the federal education initiative adopted in 2010, previously dropped cursive education.

New school transporta­tion policies

Districts are required to create a transporta­tion services policy, based on statewide guidelines, to keep students and vehicle operators safe. According to House Bill 446, the policy must include behavior standards for students using school transporta­tion and the consequenc­es if students violate those standards.

Kentucky rural veterinary student loan repayment program

House Bill 553 creates a student loan repayment program to motivate livestock veterinari­ans to practice in underserve­d or veterinary shortage areas. The program is open to veterinari­ans within ten years of graduating from veterinary school, owe at least $75,000 and agree to practice in underserve­d areas for at least five years. It provides up to $87,500 in loan forgivenes­s.

Endowed research trust fund

Senate Bill 1 creates a special fund to support research projects conducted by two or more Kentucky public universiti­es. The Council on Postsecond­ary Education will administer the fund, and one of the first projects will be the Kentucky Spinal Cord and Head Injury Research Trust, which supports research at the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville.

Reach Rebecca Grapevine at rgrapevine@courier-journal.com or follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @RebGrapevi­ne. Reach reporter Hannah Pinski at @hpinski@courier-journal.com or follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @hannahpins­ki.

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