Bill Text: NY A03606 | 2011-2012 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Requires public school students in grades 1 through 12 to wear a school district uniform.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2012-09-04 - enacting clause stricken [A03606 Detail]

Download: New_York-2011-A03606-Introduced.html
                           S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________
                                         3606
                              2011-2012 Regular Sessions
                                 I N  A S S E M B L Y
                                   January 26, 2011
                                      ___________
       Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  P. RIVERA  -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A.
         ARROYO -- read once and referred to the Committee on Education
       AN ACT to amend the education law, in relation to requiring  all  public
         school students to wear a school district uniform
         THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
    1    Section 1. Legislative findings and  intent.  The  legislature  hereby
    2  finds  that  there  is a strong co-relation between school gang violence
    3  proliferation, and the distinctive and casual clothing school kids  wear
    4  to  school.  This  legislature sees necessary to address and combat this
    5  issue, which is of great public concern, with all practical  and  empir-
    6  ical  means  at  its  disposal,  and that those means should be put into
    7  practice by all competent  authorities  and  institutions  in  New  York
    8  state.
    9    A study found out that due to increased prevalence of school violence,
   10  one  in  five  public  school  students feels less eager to go to school
   11  every day, one in seven feels less inclined to pay attention  to  learn-
   12  ing,  and one in ten stays home from school or cuts class. Moreover, one
   13  of every 10 to 12 youths who stay away from school does  so  because  of
   14  fear.  Meanwhile,  of  the 5,500 principals surveyed as attendees of the
   15  National Association of Secondary School Principals' annual  conference,
   16  more  than  70%  believed  that  requiring  students to wear uniforms to
   17  school would reduce violent incidents and discipline problems.
   18    More than 12 states, including California, New Jersey, Texas, Virginia
   19  and Washington, have state policies that permit  individual  schools  or
   20  districts to adopt school uniform policies or dress codes. To emphasize,
   21  there  have been several successful programs implemented during the past
   22  few years, with the Long Beach, California program being by far the most
   23  widely reviewed and written about. The program that began in the fall of
   24  1994 requires uniforms  for  70,000  students  in  kindergarten  through
   25  eighth  grades.   With a 98% compliance rate, results during their first
        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD00414-01-1
       A. 3606                             2
    1  years have proven the dramatic effect a successful school uniform policy
    2  can have on a school system.  The  first  year  alone  they  saw  a  43%
    3  reduction in suspensions, 54% fewer fights, a 70% reduction in substance
    4  abuse,  over  20%  fewer cases of weapons possession and robbery, and an
    5  over 50% reduction in reports of battery against employees. Other school
    6  systems nationwide likewise report similar  changes  in  statistics.  As
    7  recently  as  the  summer  of  2002, school districts were adding school
    8  uniform requirements to district mandates.  The  school  board  for  the
    9  Memphis  City  Schools in Tennessee voted in June, 2002, to require each
   10  school's leadership council to establish a uniform  dress  code  policy,
   11  and  more  schools  in  the  Cincinnati, Ohio area were requiring either
   12  school uniforms or the  adoption  of  standard  dress  codes.  For  this
   13  reason,  as  more  states in the country are implementing these policies
   14  that are working towards fighting gang  proliferation,  New  York  state
   15  should  not  be  the  exception, especially when, in the past ten years,
   16  there has been a dramatic increase in  the  number  of  school  students
   17  recruited by gangs.
   18    According  to  USA  Today,  parents spent an average of $185 per child
   19  buying non-uniform clothing in 1998, compared with an  average  of  $104
   20  spent per child to purchase uniforms. Furthermore, a more recent article
   21  in the Wall Street Journal lists uniform costs; the range is $25-$40 per
   22  outfit.
   23    This  act will not only impact the social and economic status of fami-
   24  lies throughout the state by providing inexpensive uniforms, but it will
   25  enhance students' concentration on studying rather than  on  forming  or
   26  joining  gangs. Also, it is the finding of this legislature that requir-
   27  ing school students in this state to wear uniforms will diminish  exclu-
   28  sion of students based on what they are wearing, place stronger focus on
   29  academic  performance, decrease opportunity for showing gang affiliation
   30  or hiding weapons,  create  an  atmosphere  of  teamwork  and  pride  in
   31  personal appearance and school, promote safety (makes it easier to iden-
   32  tify  strangers  in  school),  put students in a more common ground, and
   33  reduce discrepancies in administering dress-codes justice.
   34    S 2. Section 305 of the education law  is  amended  by  adding  a  new
   35  subdivision 42 to read as follows:
   36    42.  HE OR SHE SHALL PROMULGATE RULES AND REGULATIONS REQUIRING SCHOOL
   37  DISTRICTS TO ESTABLISH AND IMPLEMENT A SCHOOL  DISTRICT  UNIFORM  POLICY
   38  FOR ALL STUDENTS IN GRADES ONE THROUGH TWELVE, PURSUANT TO SECTION TWEN-
   39  TY-EIGHT  HUNDRED  THREE  OF  THIS  CHAPTER.  PROVIDED THAT FOR THE CITY
   40  SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, THE COMMISSIONER  SHALL  ESTAB-
   41  LISH  BY  RULE  A  REQUIREMENT  THAT  EVERY STUDENT IN SUCH DISTRICT, IN
   42  GRADES ONE THROUGH TWELVE, WEAR A UNIFORM SPECIFIED FOR SUCH CITY SCHOOL
   43  DISTRICT BY THE COMMISSIONER.
   44    S 3. The education law is amended by adding a new section 2803 to read
   45  as follows:
   46    S 2803. SCHOOL  DISTRICT  UNIFORMS.  1.  EXCEPT  IN  THE  CITY  SCHOOL
   47  DISTRICT  OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OR TRUSTEES OF
   48  EVERY SCHOOL DISTRICT IN THE STATE, AND EACH BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCA-
   49  TIONAL SERVICES SHALL ESTABLISH A  REQUIREMENT  THAT  EVERY  STUDENT  IN
   50  GRADES  ONE  THROUGH  TWELVE  WEAR THE STUDENT UNIFORM SPECIFIED BY SUCH
   51  BOARD.
   52    2. IN THE CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, EVERY  STUDENT
   53  IN GRADES ONE THROUGH TWELVE SHALL WEAR THE STUDENT UNIFORM SPECIFIED BY
   54  THE  COMMISSIONER  FOR STUDENTS IN SUCH DISTRICT PURSUANT TO SUBDIVISION
   55  FORTY-TWO OF SECTION THREE HUNDRED FIVE OF THIS CHAPTER.
       A. 3606                             3
    1    S 4. This act shall take effect  immediately,  provided  that  section
    2  three  of  this  act  shall take effect on the first of September or the
    3  first of January,  whichever  occurs  first,  next  succeeding  the  one
    4  hundred eightieth day after the effective date of this act.
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