Committee advances HB 2717 lowering school-entry age and approves minutes; members ask about Promise Scholarship coverage for CDL training

Committee on Education · February 16, 2026

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Summary

The Committee on Education voted to recommend House Bill 2717 (lowering mandatory attendance age from 7 to 6) favorably out of committee, approved minutes from February 6 and 12, and heard a query about whether Promise Scholarship funds can be used for CDL training; staff said eligible Promise fields include transportation if an institution opts in.

The Committee on Education moved House Bill 2717 favorably out of committee by voice vote after Madam Chair introduced the measure to change the mandatory school-attendance age from 7 to 6.

There was no substantive floor discussion on HB 2717; Representative Chauncey seconded the motion and the committee recommended the bill favorably.

The committee then approved minutes from the Feb. 6 and Feb. 12 committee meetings by voice vote after a motion from Representative Ruiz and a second from Representative Wolf.

Promise Scholarship question: Representative Pichney raised a constituent concern that Promise Scholarship funds may not cover CDL (commercial driver's license) training costs needed after students complete CDL coursework. Elena (staff) explained the Promise Scholarship’s eligible fields include information technology and security, health care, advanced manufacturing and building trades, early childhood education and development, and distribution logistics and transportation if an institution designates that additional field of study. She said institutions can opt to include distribution logistics and transportation as an eligible field, which may allow Promise Scholarship-eligible students to use the scholarship for programs related to CDL training if the institution has designated that field.

Committee members noted practical constraints: CDL licensing includes fees (for example, licensing costs after course completion) and age or endorsement restrictions (hazmat endorsements often require higher age limits). Representative McNorton and others recommended the constituent continue investigating local financial-aid sources; Madam Chair invited follow-up and suggested interested parties could pursue a bill next session if gaps remain.

Ending: HB 2717 was recommended favorably out of committee; the committee approved meeting minutes and concluded the day’s business.