Senator Abler presented Senate File 4023 seeking to allow up to an additional day of dismissal (interpreted in testimony as up to a day and a half) for kindergarten through third-grade students following certain disciplinary incidents. Supporters, including superintendents and elementary principals, said the change would provide time for school teams to convene, plan supports and ensure victim safety after serious incidents. Corey McIntyre (Anoka-Hennepin superintendent) said his district recorded 142 K3 classroom evacuations this school year and 157 staff injuries, with 70 percent at the K3 level; he argued the extra time would allow individualized planning.
Opponents including Solutions Not Suspensions, Legal Aid, the Multicultural Autism Action Network and educators'led groups warned that reinstating suspensions for the youngest learners would increase lost instructional time, disproportionately affect Black and Indigenous students and undermine recent equity-focused reforms. Legal Aid's attorney said the suspension ban addressed decades of disproportionate discipline and cautioned the bill lacks safeguards (limits, oversight, or clear definitions) and could reopen disparities.
Senator Abler said he sought a narrowly targeted change and proposed record-keeping, data collection and objective standards to limit subjective use; after extensive testimony and questioning the author laid the bill over for possible inclusion in the omnibus bill so stakeholders can continue negotiations.