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Bill

HB 1805

Professions and occupations; Oklahoma Professions and Occupations Act of 2025; effective date.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Dell Kerbs

Arkansas version: Allows schools to investigate or handle bullying allegations under other laws when applicable, coordinating or replacing the antibullying process as needed.

Second Reading referred to Rules
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Bill Summary · HB 1805

Summary — HB 1805

Note: The materials provided contain multiple, conflicting versions of HB 1805 from different jurisdictions and on different topics (Arkansas antibullying amendments and an Illinois regulatory/dental-practice bill). Below are concise, separate summaries of the two primary legislative texts contained in the packet, plus a procedural/status note. If you want a single definitive summary, please confirm which jurisdiction/version you intend (Arkansas or Illinois).

A. Arkansas version — Amendments to school antibullying law (Ark. Code § 6‑18‑514)

Purpose
- To revise the statutory definition of “bullying” in Arkansas public‑school antibullying policy law and to clarify when a public school may pursue investigations under other laws or rules in lieu of the antibullying statute’s process.

Key provisions
- Revises definition language in § 6‑18‑514(b)(2)(A) to reorganize and clarify elements of bullying, including:
- Listing intentional conduct (harassment, intimidation, humiliation, ridicule, defamation, threat/incitement of violence) by a student against another student or a public‑school employee via written, verbal, electronic, or physical act.
- Clarifying that bullying may address an attribute of the target and that it causes or reasonably may cause foreseeable harms.
- Enumerating harms that qualify: physical harm or property damage; substantial interference with a student’s education or an employee’s role; creation of a hostile educational environment due to severity/persistence/pervasiveness; or substantial disruption of orderly school operation.
- Retaining elements relating to repetition and perceived power imbalance.
- Adds new subsections (m), (n), (o):
- (m) Allows a public school/district to investigate and dispose of an allegation under another state or federal law or regulation (for example, criminal statutes, civil rights rules) when the same facts implicate those laws — thereby permitting an alternative process and avoiding duplicate, simultaneous investigations.
- (n) Requires the school/district to complete the process or investigation it selects under (m).
- (o) States that the section does not relieve schools from complying with applicable federal or state obligations.

Who is affected
- Public school students and employees, school districts and schools, and potentially entities responsible for enforcement of other state/federal laws (e.g., law enforcement, civil‑rights agencies).

Fiscal impact
- Arkansas Department of Education fiscal note: No fiscal impact reported.

B. Illinois version — Regulatory Sunset & Illinois Dental Practice Act amendments (introduced by Rep. Bob Morgan)

Purpose
- To amend the Regulatory Sunset Act and the Illinois Dental Practice Act; notably to change repeal timing for the Dental Practice Act and make multiple regulatory/administrative changes to licensing and enforcement.

Key provisions (highlights)
- Regulatory Sunset Act: adjust repeal scheduling so the Illinois Dental Practice Act is repealed on January 1, 2031 (moved from Jan 1, 2026).
- Illinois Dental Practice Act changes include (among many sections amended):
- New/clarified definitions, including “email address of record.”
- Require applicants/licensees to provide and keep current a valid mailing address and an email address; notify the Department of changes within 14 days.
- Add Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) as allowable applicant information.
- Add “concealment” in an application as grounds for Department action against a license.
- Authorize the Department, upon a finding of reasonable cause, to subpoena individual patients’ dental records of dentists and dental hygienists without patient consent.
- Various conforming and procedural changes related to licensure, board composition, supervision rules, and enforcement; some provisions labeled for immediate effect (per synopsis).

Who is affected
- Dentists, dental hygienists, dental assistants, dental laboratories, the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, patients (regarding record subpoenas), and licensing/board stakeholders.

Fiscal impact
- No fiscal note provided in packet; the synopsis notes immediate effect for some Regulatory Sunset changes.

Procedural / Status note and conflicting records

  • The packet contains mixed procedural entries and sponsor lists from different jurisdictions. At the top you provided: Title referencing Mississippi appropriations for Northeast Mississippi Community College and a status of “Died In Committee” — that appears unrelated to either the Arkansas or Illinois texts included.
  • Legislative actions in the packet show extensive activity (readings, committee referrals, amendments, hearings, and in some entries even passage/enrollment) inconsistent with the “Died In Committee” label. Because of these conflicts, the current legal status of any specific HB 1805 in a given legislature cannot be confirmed from these materials alone.
  • Recommendation: verify the correct jurisdiction (Arkansas, Illinois, or Mississippi), then check the official legislative website for that state (bill text and final status) to confirm the enacted/amended language and final disposition.

If you want, I can:
- Produce a single consolidated summary focused on one jurisdiction (specify which), or
- Pull out and summarize additional specific sections (e.g., full redline changes to Arkansas Code § 6‑18‑514), or
- Check the official status if you provide which state’s legislative website to consult.

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

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