Md. Lawmakers Introduce Bills to Expand Student School Board Member Voting Rights

Brayden Wallace, Kent County’s school board student member, does not have voting privileges.
Elected by his peers, he represents the county’s 1,200 students, including nearly 700 in high school. But Wallace isn’t permitted to vote on matters that affect Kent’s public schools.
A bill in the Maryland General Assembly would change that. Sponsored by Del. Jay Jacobs (R–36), HB 402 would make the student position an official member of the school board, according to Joanne Smith, Jacobs’s chief of staff.
This would allow the student board member to cast advisory votes to demonstrate how students feel on topics.
“It won’t be counted in the total votes of the board, but it’ll be recorded in the minutes and hopefully another student member of the board can take it further,” Wallace said.
Wallace, a senior, said he proposed implementing the idea to the school board. The adult members liked it, and he met with Del. Jacobs to discuss further steps.
Jacobs filed the bill and a hearing was held on Feb. 15 in the Ways and Means Committee. Sen. Stephen Hershey (R–36), introduced its counterpart in the upper chamber, with an early March hearing in the Education, Energy, and Environment Committee.
Wallace described working on the bill and his school board role as a “cool” experience.
“It’s expanded my role in government and my understanding of how our legislature works,” Wallace said.
Maryland’s 24 jurisdictions — 23 counties and Baltimore City — each have their own school systems and corresponding boards of education.
Five counties, all on the Eastern shore, have more than one student school board member: one representative for each full-time high school in the county.
Only Somerset and Wicomico counties do not have a student school board member; they have student representatives.
“We have a representative from each of our four high schools who reports monthly, and then each month one of those four sits at the board table,” Wicomico County Public Schools spokesperson Tracy Sahler said.
These representatives bring the student perspective to the board but cannot vote.
Seven counties give college scholarships of varying amounts to student board members upon completion of their term.
“We want to be able to allow more people to participate,” Wells said during the bill’s Feb. 1 hearing in the Ways and Means Committee.
Last session, previous iterations of these two bills passed both legislative chambers but met their downfalls at the governor’s desk.
“Student members of the board are more than capable of engaging and can handle a lot of the various issues that come before the board,” Wells said during the bill hearing.
Capital News Service is a student-powered news organization run by the University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism. For 26 years, they have provided deeply reported, award-winning coverage of issues of import to Marylanders.
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