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Bill

Bill

HB 3372

Relating to prohibiting certain personal services performed by school district administrators; providing a civil penalty.

89th Legislature (2025) Introduced by Brandon Creighton and 5 co-sponsors

Texas law now prohibits school administrators from performing undefined personal services, effective immediately, with civil penalties for violations.

Effective immediately
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Bill Summary · HB 3372

Legislative bill overview

HB 3372 prohibits school district administrators from performing certain personal services and establishes civil penalties for violations. The bill became effective immediately upon the Governor's signature on June 22, 2025. The specific personal services restricted are not detailed in the available bill information.

Why is this important

This legislation directly affects how school administrators allocate their time and professional duties. It reflects legislative priorities around defining appropriate administrator responsibilities, though the impact depends entirely on which services are prohibited—a detail that would significantly influence practical enforcement and administrative operations across Texas school districts.

Potential points of contention

  • Ambiguity in scope: Without knowing which "personal services" are prohibited, administrators and districts face uncertainty about compliance requirements
  • Civil penalty structure: The bill's penalty mechanism is undefined in available information, creating questions about enforcement severity and due process
  • Administrative burden vs. intent: Legislation could either streamline administrator focus on core duties or create unnecessary restrictions on services that benefit students and families

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

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