Approximately 150 people gathered on the Pentacrest in Iowa City on Friday, Feb. 23, 2024 for a vigil in memory of Nex Benedict, a nonbinary and Indigenous Oklahoma teen who died after being assaulted at their high school by classmates who regularly bullied them. — Jo Allen/Little Village

The Iowa Senate Education Committee approved legislation Monday to change state law defining bullying in schools, keeping it alive ahead of this week’s committee deadline.

The panel also sent five other bills to the Senate floor dealing with topics ranging from National Guard scholarships to attendance policies. The anti-bullying legislation was the only bill that did not receive unanimous support during the meeting.

HF 865 would redefine “harassment” and “bullying” as “repeated and targeted” actions. The bill removes from current law a list of 17 traits or characteristics of a targeted student that would fall under bullying, including gender identity, sexuality, race, political belief and familial status.

Sen. Sandy Salmon, R-Janesville, said schools have used the current list of possible traits and characteristics to say their hands are tied when instances of bullying have not fallen under what is in Iowa code, leading to confusion and unequal treatment of students.

Video still of Sen. Sandy Salmon, R-Janesville.

“These changes to the law ensure that all students are protected no matter what their particular traits or characteristics are,” Salmon said. “This removes any confusion schools may have about what constitutes bullying, and simplifies and clarifies the issue.”

Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott, D-West Des Moines, voiced two concerns over the legislation, the first with changing the definitions of bullying and harassment.

“That’s a problem for me, because we should have a zero-tolerance policy on bullying of any kind in our schools,” Trone Garriott said. “That’s the concern I hear from parents, is that schools are not taking bullying seriously and they’re not reporting it.”

Trone Garriott also took issue with removing the list of characteristics for schools to look toward for reporting bullying. She said the list is broad and not limiting for schools, and being able to identify specifically what the bullying is about is helpful for school response and for research into larger trends.

While Sen. Mike Zimmer, D-DeWitt, agreed with Trone Garriott’s point about specified characteristics being a good resource for schools, he said defining bullying as being targeted and repeated would be helpful in allowing school staff to take the direction of their interventions with students that makes the most sense for the situation.

The bill passed with a vote of 11-5.

This was the committee’s first meeting since the week of the first “funnel” deadline in the Iowa Legislature on March 7, with the second funnel only days away. Most policy bills have to receive approval from one chamber and a committee in the opposite chamber to remain eligible for debate after this week. Budget and tax bills are exempt from the funnel and bills that do not make the deadline could be revived as amendments to other bills.

Brooklyn Draisey is a Report for America corps member covering higher education for Iowa Capital Dispatch, where this story first appeared.