Citizen Portal
Sign In

Senate committee advances two drowning-prevention measures aimed at infants and young children

Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services · February 4, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The committee advanced SB 428 to expand swim-lesson voucher eligibility to ages 1–7 and CS for SB 606 to add drowning-prevention and safe-bathing education to postpartum materials; sponsors cited Florida's high child-drowning counts and recommended evidence-based training and materials.

The Senate Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services advanced two bills sponsors said aim to reduce child drownings in Florida.

Senate Bill 428 (sponsor: Senator Yarbrough) would extend the state's swim-lesson voucher program from children 4 and under to ages 1 through 7, aligning eligibility with YMCA and American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations for early childhood lessons. Senator Yarbrough cited higher drowning rates for young children and said age-appropriate lessons reduce risk.

CS for Senate Bill 606 (sponsor: Senator Smith) would add drowning-prevention and safe-bathing procedures to postpartum education provided by hospitals, birthing centers and home-birth providers, and require the Florida Department of Health to develop standardized educational materials. Senator Smith cited Department of Children and Families and Department of Health figures and said Florida recorded 119 fatal child drownings last year.

Senator Harrell emphasized including specific bathtub safety guidance in postpartum materials, noting that a share of early-child drownings occur in home bathtubs and urging clear, actionable instructions for caregivers. Supporters from the Florida Swimming Pool Association and other advocates were recorded in support.

Both bills were reported favorably by the committee and will proceed to further Senate consideration.