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Bill

Bill

LC 1465

Revise laws related to minors

2025 Regular Session

LC 1465 would revise laws governing minors, potentially reshaping guardianship, consent, and child welfare; text not released and the bill died in process.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · LC 1465

Summary: LC 1465 — Revise laws related to minors

  • Bill number: LC 1465
  • Title: Revise laws related to minors
  • Status: Draft Died in Process
  • Introduced: November 16, 2024
  • Classification: bill
  • Subject: Minors (Family Law)

Purpose and scope

The bill’s stated purpose, as indicated by the title, is to revise laws related to minors. The available information does not include the bill text or a detailed description of intended changes. Therefore, the specific policy goals, reform areas, and substantive provisions are not publicly provided here. Once the text is released, a precise, provision-by-provision summary should be prepared.

Key provisions (as of current public information)

  • No specific provisions or text are publicly available in the summary data provided.
  • Possible content areas, if addressed by the bill, could include elements commonly found in minors-related laws (e.g., child welfare, guardianship/parental rights, emancipation, education, medical consent, juvenile justice, reporting requirements). However, these are general possibilities and not asserted features of LC 1465 without the bill’s text.

Who would be affected

  • Minors and their families/guardians
  • Schools and school districts
  • Child welfare and juvenile justice agencies
  • Courts and legal practitioners specializing in family law
  • Other entities interacting with minors under state law

Status and timeline

  • 2024-11-16: Drafter Assigned
  • 2024-12-12: Draft On Hold
  • 2025-05-26: Draft Died in Process

Notes on status:
- “Drafter Assigned” indicates preparation of the bill text began on or near introduction.
- “Draft On Hold” suggests it was paused and not actively moving through committee or passage processes at that time.
- “Draft Died in Process” (the latest status) means the bill did not advance and is considered dead for the current session. This typically implies it will not become law unless reintroduced with a new bill number in a future session.

Potential impacts (conditional on final text)

Because the specific provisions are not available, the actual impact cannot be determined. Generally, if such a bill were enacted, impacts could include changes to:
- How minors’ rights and protections are defined and applied
- Procedures in family court, child welfare, and custody cases
- Requirements for consent or emancipation, education, health care, or reporting
- Administrative processes within agencies serving minors

Next steps for readers

  • Monitor for the full text or fiscal note, which would detail exact provisions, sponsors, and fiscal impact.
  • Check the legislative website or contact the drafter/sponsor for access to the bill’s text and official analyses.
  • If you are affected by minors-related law, assess how any future bill—if reintroduced—could alter current practices and obligations.

Note: This summary reflects publicly available metadata and status. A precise, provision-level summary requires the actual bill text.

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

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