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Bill

Bill

SB 182

Maryland Veterans Service Animal Program - Eligibility - Family Members of Veterans

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Bryan Simonaire

Establish a statewide Indian Language Preservation Program to revitalize Indigenous languages in Montana schools, with tribal-led governance and grants.

Approved by the Governor - Chapter 268
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Bill Summary · SB 182

I don’t have the text or legislative analysis for a Montana (MT) “SB 182 — Generally revise MT Indian language preservation program” in the documents you attached. The materials you provided contain many different SB 182 bills from other states and on other topics (Florida tax credits, Maryland veterans program, Michigan appropriations, etc.), but not the Montana bill text or committee reports for an Indian language preservation measure.

I can either (A) produce an accurate, specific summary if you paste or link the Montana SB 182 text or the official bill analysis, or (B) provide a short, clearly labeled model summary that reflects the kinds of provisions typically included in state Indian language preservation bills (useful as a template or preliminary briefing). Please tell me which you prefer.

Below is a concise, transparent “placeholder” summary (model/template) you can use immediately; it is NOT a substitute for a summary of the actual Montana bill and is explicitly framed as hypothetical/typical content based on similar legislation elsewhere.

Model / Template summary (hypothetical — based on the bill title)
- Purpose and intent
- Establish or revise a statewide Indian Language Preservation Program to support revitalization, teaching, and use of American Indian/Alaska Native languages in Montana schools and communities. Emphasis on tribal partnerships, immersion and community-based programs, and intergenerational transmission.

  • Key provisions likely included

    • Program structure: places program within an existing state agency (e.g., Office of Public Instruction or a tribal liaison office) or creates a new council/board with tribal representation.
    • Grants and funding: authorizes competitive grants to tribes, schools, tribal colleges, immersion programs, and community organizations to support curriculum development, teacher training, language nests, materials, and digital resources; may specify an appropriation or grant cap.
    • Tribal consultation and governance: requires meaningful consultation with federally recognized tribes, gives tribes a lead role in program design and grant decision-making, and protects tribal sovereignty over language materials.
    • Education integration: authorizes or encourages inclusion of tribal languages in K–12 curricula, dual-language/immersion programs, and teacher certification pathways (e.g., alternative licensure for fluent community teachers).
    • Teacher support: funds training, stipends, recruitment, and retention incentives for language teachers; may fund scholarships for language teacher candidates.
    • Materials & technology: funds development of teaching materials, dictionaries, recordings, and online/digital tools.
    • Reporting & accountability: requires annual reports on grants awarded, outcomes (enrollment, teacher counts), and program evaluation metrics.
    • Safeguards: intellectual property and cultural-sensitivity protections for language materials; restrictions on commercial exploitation.
    • Effective date and rulemaking: sets effective date and directs agency rulemaking and implementation timelines.
  • Who is affected

    • Primary: Montana tribes, tribal colleges, Indigenous language instructors, immersion programs, K–12 districts and students participating in language programs.
    • Secondary: state education agencies, teacher-preparation programs, cultural organizations, and state budget/fiscal planners.
  • Procedural/timeline aspects (typical)

    • Effective date often at start of next fiscal year (e.g., July 1).
    • Agency rulemaking timelines (e.g., within 90–180 days) and first grant cycle specified.
    • Reporting deadlines (annual or biennial) to the governor and legislature.

Next steps
- If you can paste or link the Montana SB 182 text (or an official bill analysis, fiscal note, or enacted chapter), I will produce a precise, objective summary: purpose, exact statutory changes, dollar amounts, affected parties, and timeline (200–500 words, with clear sections).

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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