Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen Pushes Bill Allowing Students to Leave Campus for Religious Instruction
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Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen is championing new legislation that would require public schools to allow students to leave campus for religious instruction, a proposal that has sparked debate over parental rights and constitutional limits.
Senate Bill 1741, sponsored by Petersen, R-Gilbert, aims to address what he describes as inconsistent school district policies that prevent parents from exercising their rights to direct their children's religious and moral education.
The Bill's Key Provisions
The legislation would require districts to permit students, with parental consent, to leave campus for voluntary religious courses for up to five hours per week. The instruction must take place off school grounds and cannot receive public funding.
"This is completely voluntary and also requires the parents to sign off on it," said Arizona State Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix, who chairs the House's education committee and supports the bill.
The bill would also require organizations providing religious instruction to assume legal responsibility for students while off campus.
Petersen's Arguments
Petersen told The Center Square that SB 1741 "solves the problem of inconsistent local policies that sometimes prevent parents from exercising their rights to direct their children's religious and moral education."
"It standardizes a clear requirement with strong safeguards, building on Arizona's Parents' Bill of Rights," Petersen said.
The Senate President argued the legislation is intended to reinforce parental rights while remaining within constitutional limits.
"The main goal is to affirm parents' fundamental right to guide their child's religious and moral upbringing," Petersen said. "The program operates entirely off school property with no public funds, consistent with longstanding constitutional precedent."
Gress pointed to a 1952 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that upheld students may leave school during the day if such programs are conducted off campus.
"It's called the First Amendment, folks," Gress said. "The Free Exercise provision of the First Amendment trumps whatever instructional time model we have."
Opposition and Concerns
Opponents argue the bill could blur the separation of church and state and reduce instructional time.
During an Arizona House floor session, Arizona State Rep. Nancy Gutierrez, D-Tucson, criticized the proposal and organizations backing such programs.
"The program is designed to inject religious instruction into the public school day with the goal of 'providing Bible education for every child in Arizona,'" Gutierrez said, gesturing with air quotes. "People do not choose public and charter schools for Bible education."
Gutierrez also said the bill would take away from valuable instructional time.
"This is a ridiculous ask of public schools to allow students out of their control, off of their campus for this and sacrifice school time for it," Gutierrez said.
Legislative Status
SB 1741 passed the Arizona Senate in February with only Republican support and has received preliminary approval in the House.
The bill still needs a final House vote before heading to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs' desk.
The legislation would require districts to permit students, with parental consent, to leave campus for voluntary religious courses for up to five hours per week. The instruction must take place off school grounds and cannot receive public funding.