[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 30 (Monday, February 23, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S1029]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STUDENT NON-DISCRIMINATION ACT
Mr. BOOKER. Mr. President, I support the Student Non-Discrimination
Act, a bill first introduced in the 111th Congress and reintroduced
again now in the 114th Congress. This bill represents a critical step
forward in protecting the rights of our lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender youth to receive an education free from bullying and
harassment on account of who they are and who they love. I thank
Senator Franken for his leadership on this issue, and I am proud to be
an original cosponsor of this important civil rights legislation.
Education is the cornerstone of our democracy. In order for our
system of government to thrive we must promote the education of our
citizenry. It is what allows voters to make informed decisions on who
they think is best fit to serve as their Representative, Senator, or
President. It is a critical element of public debate and the free flow
of ideas and it is what drives our economy forward and makes our
country strong.
Given the importance of education, no student should be harassed in
school. We must do all we can to make education accessible to all. We
must ensure that schools are safe and welcoming to all children so that
students can enter the classroom ready and able to learn.
Bullying touches the lives of countless young people. Each school
year, LGBT students in New Jersey, and across America, are harassed,
bullied, and even assaulted based on their perceived or known status as
LGBT. Occasionally, these youth even experience bullying from teachers
and administrators. The very people that are supposed to educate and
protect these children at times serve as the root cause of the problem.
Bullying a student for any reason--but especially for simply being
themselves--is simply unacceptable.
The consequences of bullying can be devastating and potentially life
threatening. Studies show that discrimination at schools is a major
contributor to dropouts, absenteeism, and academic underachievement.
LGBT youth are twice as likely as their peers to experience verbal
harassment, assault, and exclusion. Suicide rates are
disproportionately high among children and young adults that identify
as LGBT. In fact, LGBT youth are four times more likely to commit
suicide than their peers. Most alarmingly, we have seen bullying and
harassment tragically lead to suicides in school districts across the
country.
Allowing discrimination of LGBT to go unchecked in our schools
deprives our youth from the equal access to education that they
deserve. Whether that discrimination is in the form harassment or
assault, we cannot stand idly by and watch our children's lives be torn
apart.
The Student Non-Discrimination Act is a critical civil rights bill
that would ban discrimination against any student on the basis of his
or her actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity.
The legislation expands the Federal definition of harassment to
protect the rights of LGBT students. The bill defines harassment to
include severe, persistent, or pervasive conduct that would limit a
student's ability to participate in a program or activity at a public
school.
The bill prohibits harassment of LGBT students as a form of
discrimination that is Federally protected.
All of these provisions provide the Federal Government with critical
new tools to prevent the scourge of persistent and offensive bullying
of youth simply because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
I am proud to be an original cosponsor of the Student Non-
Discrimination Act. I urge my fellow Senators to support this bill and
promptly pass it through the Senate.
____________________