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Bill

Bill

S 395

Requires a reading proficiency level assessment and dyslexia screening for certain incarcerated individuals

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Jake Ashby and 12 co-sponsors

Creates a 15-member Comprehensive Athletic Surface Performance Commission to study athletic surfaces (natural and artificial), assess safety, costs, and long-term value, and issue

REPORTED AND COMMITTED TO FINANCE
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Bill Summary · S 395

Summary — S.395 (filed Jan 16, 2025)

Note up front: the bill metadata provided (title: “Requires a reading proficiency level assessment and dyslexia screening for certain incarcerated individuals”; sponsors; committee referrals) conflicts with the actual bill text included below. The full bill text proposes creation of a special commission to study athletic performance surfaces (including artificial turf). This summary describes the substantive content of the bill text as filed.

Purpose / Intent

The bill would establish a Special Commission — the Comprehensive Athletic Surface Performance Commission (CASPC) — to conduct a comprehensive, evidence‑based study of athletic performance surfaces (including artificial grass and turf). The stated goal is to examine public health concerns, costs, safety, and long‑term value before further public investment in such surfaces across schools, athletic facilities, parks, and other locations in the Commonwealth.

Key provisions

  • Creates a new statutory chapter establishing the Comprehensive Athletic Surface Performance Commission (CASPC).
  • Commission charge: research and analyze types of athletic surfaces (natural and artificial), assess:
    • public health effects and safety concerns,
    • capital and maintenance costs,
    • long‑term value and lifecycle considerations,
    • any other relevant scientific or medical evidence.
  • Public process: the Commission must hold a series of hearings across the Commonwealth and solicit public comment and expert testimony.
  • Report deadline: produce a detailed, factual report no later than 24 months after beginning operations, with findings and recommendations.

Membership and administration

  • Total membership: 15 members.
    • Includes 3 scientific members (at least one designated researcher from the PFAS Lab at Northeastern University’s Social Science Health Research Institute).
    • One representative designated by the Secretary of the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EOEEA).
    • One representative each for outdoor high school and outdoor college sports coaches.
    • One sports medicine physician.
    • Three representatives of established environmental organizations.
    • Five members of the general public; at least one must be a parent of an outdoor sport student.
  • The Commission selects its own chair.
  • The Secretary of EOEEA is directed to designate the EOEEA representative and to provide resources, experts, and facilitation as needed.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • Bill filed Jan 16, 2025; introduced in the Senate and read twice/referred on Feb 4, 2025.
  • The bill text requires the Commission to complete its report within 24 months of starting operations.
  • Legislative action entries listed in the provided record show multiple committee referrals and scheduled hearings (some dates in 2025), but the metadata is inconsistent; readers should consult the official legislative docket for current status.

Potential impacts

  • Provides a centralized, research‑driven basis for future policy or procurement decisions about artificial turf and similar surfaces in public spaces, especially schools.
  • Findings could influence capital spending, maintenance standards, installation moratoria, or health/safety guidance for athletic facilities.
  • Commission recommendations may lead to regulatory changes, funding shifts, or legislative proposals based on identified risks, costs, or benefits.

Caveat about document inconsistencies

The supplied packet contains conflicting information (different titles, sponsor lists, and committee referrals). This summary is limited to the bill text creating the CASPC. Verify the official legislative docket for authoritative title, sponsor, and status information.

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

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