Daily Digest for February 25, 2021 Posted at 7:45 a.m. by Michael Olson | Good morning, A bill that would require school districts and charter schools to provide a comprehensive sexual health education program in elementary and secondary grades beginning in the fall of 2023 won approval in a Minnesotan House committee Wednesday — without the support of Republicans. The legislation sponsored by Rep. Sydney Jordan, DFL-Minneapolis, would require the Minnesota Department of Education to develop a model program, including written materials, curriculum resources and instructional training. Young people need good information when making decisions about their health, their bodies and their relationships, Jordan said, and right now there is no statewide standard to make sure students get that information. “This means that students across different school districts receive completely different information about sexual and reproductive health, while others get no information at all,” Jordan said, adding that the programs developed by the Education Department would be age and developmentally appropriate. They would also have to stress the importance of sexual consent, she said. “Prevention begins with educating young people about these issues, how to identify them and how to handle when they arise,” Jordan said. The House Preventative Health Policy Division approved the bill by a vote of 7-4 with all Republicans opposed. The bill goes next to the House Health Finance and Policy Committee, but even if the DFL-controlled House passes it, it's unclear what the plan's future is. A companion bill in the Republican-controlled Senate has not received a hearing. [ Read more from Tim Pugmire] Republicans rallied solidly against Democrats' proposed $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill as lawmakers awaited a decision by the Senate's parliamentarian that could bolster or potentially kill a pivotal provision hiking the federal minimum wage.[Read more from AP] It's all about Trump: CPAC seems poised to ignore Republican identity crisis The former president will headline the annual conservative conference with a Sunday address, his first speech since leaving office. His baseless election fraud claims could also get heavy play. [Read more from NPR] Got story ideas or a question for MPR News? Let me know molson@mpr.org |
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