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Idaho House passes bill requiring schools to notify parents if a minor requests help to transition
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Summary
The House passed House Bill 8-22, requiring covered entities (pre-K–12 schools, charters, virtual schools and childcare) to notify a minor student's parent within 72 hours if the minor requests assistance to facilitate a social or medical transition; the measure includes civil remedies and penalties that opponents said could chill professionals and invite legal challenges.
The Idaho House on March 11 passed House Bill 8-22, which requires covered entities to notify a minor student's parent within 72 hours if the student requests assistance to facilitate a social or medical transition. The measure passed on final passage after floor debate and was recorded as "passed" by the Clerk; the transcript does not include the final numerical roll-call tally.
The sponsor framed H.B. 8-22 as a parental-rights bill intended to close a perceived loophole on "social transitioning," emphasizing that notification is triggered only when a minor requests help to facilitate a transition. "If parents ask ... the covered entity may not hide that information," the bill sponsor said on the floor. The sponsor also described available remedies for parents, including declaratory and injunctive relief and compensatory damages, and said the Attorney General may seek a civil penalty up to $100,000 that "shall be proportionate to the violation" rather than an automatic fine.
Opponents raised two main objections on the floor. First, several lawmakers warned the potential six-figure penalty is disproportionate compared with other Idaho statutes and could expose the state to constitutional challenges and costly litigation. "A six-figure fine for a failure to report ... is grossly disproportionate to the offense," one opponent said, urging rejection of the bill because of the legal and fiscal risks. Second, members said the procedural record was skewed in committee: they reported that 89 individuals submitted written testimony opposing the bill while only four submitted written support and that some who signed up to testify against the bill were not permitted to speak.
Supporters described H.B. 8-22 as narrow and focused on ensuring parents are informed. "It simply informs the parents about what is going on with their child in a school setting," a supporter said on the floor, urging colleagues to give the bill a green light. Backers repeatedly stressed the bill applies only when a student asks a covered entity to facilitate a transition and does not criminalize dress, appearance or non-requested behavior.
Floor debate also included questions about statutory drafting: at least one lawmaker urged adding the word "guardian" to clarify who must be notified and noted a severability clause that could affect enforceability. The sponsor answered that notifying a single appropriate parent was intentional so schools would not be required to contact both parents in every custody situation and reiterated the threshold of an explicit student request.
After passage, a member drew attention to a minority report on H.B. 8-22 that was on the desk and a separate motion was made and passed to suspend House Rule 27 so the minority report would not be placed in the journal. The motion to suspend the rule passed with the Clerk announcing more than a two-thirds vote in favor; the transcript records the result but does not give a detailed roll-call list in the passage announcement.
The House continued with routine committee announcements and adjourned to reconvene at 10:30 a.m. on March 12, 2026.
What the transcript does and does not show: the record contains multiple direct floor quotes and extended debate over the bill's language, penalties and committee process. The transcript does not show the precise vote tally on final passage of H.B. 8-22 (the Clerk announced the bill "passed").
