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Senate approves bill allowing religious preschool providers into statewide program amid heated debate

March 03, 2026 | 2026 Senate, Legislative, Iowa


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Senate approves bill allowing religious preschool providers into statewide program amid heated debate
Senators voted to pass Senate File 22-31, a measure that would let religious and other community-based providers participate in Iowa's Statewide Voluntary Preschool Program without state oversight that limits religious instruction. Proponents said the bill corrects state law that they view as discriminating against faith-based providers; opponents said it moves beyond nondiscrimination and risks using taxpayer dollars to support explicitly religious activities.

Senator Sinclair, the bill sponsor, said the measure fixes what he described as discriminatory provisions in state code and aligns Iowa law with recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings on religious freedom. "These code sections and rules promulgated around them also have their roots in an antiquated understanding of the First Amendment," Sinclair said, adding the bill "removes rules restricting faith-based educational institutions from meeting their broader missions." He moved the bill for final passage.

Senator Trone Garriott criticized the bill's fiscal and policy consequences, warning it "is moving beyond what is required by the courts" and arguing it would use state dollars to fund "explicitly religious materials and activities." He cited the bill's fiscal note and said the legislation would add roughly $500,000 a year to the state tab at a time the budget faces large deficits.

The Senate also debated how the bill interacts with current Iowa Department of Education guidance and existing statutory restrictions. Opponents noted provisions in Iowa law and administrative guidance that limit public funding for religious instruction and said the bill's language weakens oversight. Supporters pointed to recent Supreme Court decisions they said limit a state's ability to exclude religious organizations from generally available public benefits.

After debate and a roll-call vote, the bill passed 30-14. Following passage, senators asked that the measure be immediately messaged. The Senate took no further amendment on the floor and adjourned at the close of the session.

What happens next: The bill will be messaged as passed to the next step in the legislative process; any implementation details or guidance changes would follow at the Department of Education level if the law is enacted.

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