A new, powerful Citizen Portal experience is ready. Switch now

Committee advances bullying‑policy provisions after intense debate over school authority, parental responsibility and civil remedies

April 07, 2026 | Education, Senate , Committees , Legislative, New Hampshire


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Committee advances bullying‑policy provisions after intense debate over school authority, parental responsibility and civil remedies
The committee debated a broad bullying and safety bill (referred to in transcript as HB 131) and multiple committee amendments that would change reporting, monitoring and liability language.

Scope and enforcement: Debate centered on whether the law should reach off‑campus cyberbullying and under what circumstances off‑campus conduct that disrupts school should be actionable. Committee members and witnesses repeatedly discussed the tension between parental responsibility and placing more duties on schools to prevent or remediate bullying that originates outside school hours. Opponents worried the bill could vest disproportionate responsibility with teachers and certifying bodies.

Private remedies and negligence: A contentious revision reinstated the existing statutory threshold — “gross negligence” defined as deliberate indifference — for private rights of action. Some committee members pressed to lower the threshold to ordinary negligence; others argued that would create excessive exposure for districts and staff. The committee ultimately restored language aligning with existing RSA 193‑F9 definitions.

Administrative report and monitoring requirements: Members negotiated amendments directing departments to create and distribute monitoring and financial reports to relevant elected school‑board officials and to permit electronic delivery. The Department of Education provided recommended definitions for “monitoring report” to ensure the new requirement identifies substantive compliance concerns rather than routine documents.

Why it matters: The bill grapples with the hard policy tradeoffs between protecting students and preserving local discretion, while resolving how and when schools may act on off‑campus online conduct. It also touches dispute‑resolution pathways — whether families have a civil remedy and what showing is required.

Committee action: The committee debated committee amendments, adopted clarifying language restoring the deliberate‑indifference standard, and moved some items to consent for floor consideration. Several members urged a fuller study process to consolidate existing bullying statutes and enforcement gaps.

Provenance: Transcript testimony and committee deliberation, SEG 2980–SEG 3736.

View the Full Meeting & All Its Details

This article offers just a summary. Unlock complete video, transcripts, and insights as a Founder Member.

Watch full, unedited meeting videos
Search every word spoken in unlimited transcripts
AI summaries & real-time alerts (all government levels)
Permanent access to expanding government content
Access Full Meeting

30-day money-back guarantee