HARRISBURG, PA — Democratic lawmakers in Pennsylvania’s House Education Committee have announced new legislation focused on ensuring the safety and well-being of cyber charter school students. The Cyber Student Safety Act seeks to close significant safety gaps for the approximately 65,000 students enrolled in these schools across the state.
State Rep. Peter Schweyer, Majority Chairman of the House Education Committee, detailed the rationale behind this initiative. “Traditional in-person schools, whether in school districts, brick-and-mortar charter, parochial, or private schools, have a support structure in place to identify abuse, neglect, and mental health concerns, but this system does not exist for cyber charter education,” he said. “It is our goal to close loopholes, too often exploited by the purveyors of cyber charter schools that allow some students to fall through the cracks.”
According to Schweyer, the Act includes measures such as mandatory training for personnel conducting wellness checks, timely communication with families and crisis teams, and strict accountability for failure to address or report wellness concerns promptly.
State Rep. Mary Isaacson, a co-prime sponsor of the bill, cited the urgent need for reform. “It has become quite clear that our cyber charter schools are in an immediate need of accountability and responsibility for the children and families they are serving,” Isaacson said. “As the General Assembly continues working on updating and modernizing our cyber charter law, we must include cyber charter student safety and ensure no child falls through the cracks because their education happens to take place outside of a physical school building.”
The lawmakers, who have gained unanimous backing from the 14 Democratic members of the committee, are working to gain broader support for the proposal as part of a larger effort to modernize Pennsylvania’s cyber charter school laws to address transparency and accountability.
The legislation reflects a growing emphasis on ensuring that all students, regardless of their educational setting, have access to a safe and supportive learning environment.
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