Criminal History Checks for School Positions
Plain English Summary
This bill requires criminal history checks for charter school board members and public school employees before hiring, modifies reporting rules for school employee misconduct, strengthens reporting requirements for threats and assaults on teachers, and encourages the State Board of Education to align its licensure system with a national educator database.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue that criminal history checks protect students from individuals with dangerous backgrounds, ensuring safer school environments. They contend that reporting requirements help identify problematic employees and prevent them from moving to other schools without disclosure. Requiring background checks for charter school board members and using a multistate educator database adds oversight to these areas that supporters say currently lack sufficient safeguards.
Arguments Against
Opponents may argue that the bill creates administrative burdens and costs for schools, including fingerprinting requirements and background check expenses. Some may be concerned that requiring certain reports within tight timeframes (5 days) could interfere with due process protections for accused employees or that the provisions could expose districts to liability. Others might question whether the list of disqualifying crimes is appropriately tailored or worry about information sharing between districts affecting employee privacy.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 70

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 68

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 78

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 105
Cosponsors (12)
Representative · District 77
Representative · District 64
Representative · District 52
Representative · District 19
Representative · District 6
Representative · District 5
Representative · District 23
Representative · District 94
Representative · District 109
Representative · District 59
Representative · District 17
Representative · District 113
Vote Breakdown (2 roll calls)
Final Vote
On: Second Reading
Party Breakdown