Bills target easier interstate moves for military homeschoolers

·

·

1–2 minutes

Summary

House, Senate bills would let military homeschool families follow either old or new state education rules after a move.

Why this matters

The proposal could affect military families who homeschool by reducing legal and administrative changes tied to relocations. It would also extend an existing federal protection framework to education requirements during interstate moves.

Military families who homeschool their children would face fewer legal changes when moving between states under legislation introduced this week in Congress.

Rep. Pat Harrigan, R-N.C., introduced the House bill Tuesday, and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, introduced a similar Senate bill Monday.

The proposal would amend the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act. Under the bill, military families would be considered in compliance with homeschooling and compulsory education laws in a new state as long as they follow either the laws of the service member’s state of legal residence or the laws of the state where the new duty station is located.

“Military families homeschool their children at roughly twice the rate of civilian families,” Cruz said in a statement to Military Times. “Conflicting state homeschooling laws can undermine military readiness, family resilience, and retention by forcing service members and their spouses to navigate different requirements each time the Department of Defense relocates them.”

Harrigan said the legislation would allow military families to continue homeschooling without interruption when they move across state lines and would reduce administrative burdens tied to frequent relocations.

According to Harrigan’s office, families who receive permanent change-of-station orders that move them across state lines can face different curriculum standards, testing mandates, notice requirements, and possible penalties for noncompliance.

“Strong military families are essential to military readiness, and parents serving this country should not be penalized simply because the military asked them to move,” Harrigan said in a statement to Military Times. “Military families live with enough uncertainty. Every permanent change of station brings a new set of challenges, and a child’s education should not be one of them.”

  • N.C. Democrats seek cannabis vote, Senate odds low

    A House proposal moving forward would bar people younger than 21 from buying hemp-derived consumable products.

    Full story +

  • Surf City Pier cleared after bomb threat report

    Authorities said the investigation remained ongoing.

    Full story +

  • UNC reaches College World Series championship series

    The best-of-three championship series begins Saturday night.

    Full story +

  • ,

    Raleigh man charged over threats against President Trump

    Carnes was charged under federal law and faced up to five years in prison if convicted.

    Full story +

  • Hilton Head shell rings park set to open this summer

    The rings were intentionally circular and would have stood several feet tall. They date to 5,000 to 3,000 years ago.

    Full story +

  • Oahu visitor had dengue case, Hawaii count stays at 5

    Anyone who suspects a dengue infection should call the Disease Reporting Line at 808-586-4586.

    Full story +

  • NC bill would tighten Medicaid rules for autism care

    A North Carolina bill would add Medicaid requirements for autism therapy providers after a sharp rise in ABA spending.

    Full story +

  • NC lawmakers report progress on state budget talks

    NC last passed a comprehensive budget in 2023. House and Senate Republican leaders did not reach agreement last year on a full spending plan.

    Full story +

  • Beaufort adopts $70.2M budget after TIF review

    To help close gaps, the city delayed the third police hire, left a deputy police chief and a building inspector position vacant, reduced consulting for the comprehensive plan update, renegotiated part of a GIS contract, and deferred smaller purchases and programs.

    Full story +

  • Virginia Senate keeps data center tax break, adds fee

    Virginia Senate proposed keeping a data center tax break while adding a generator tax expected to raise $1.8 billion over two years.

    Full story +