House passes bill allowing districts to opt in to let charter, virtual and homeschool students join extracurriculars
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Summary
Lawmakers approved House Bill 44-91, which lets districts adopt policies allowing charter, virtual charter and homeschool students to participate in district extracurricular activities if eligibility rules are met. Supporters said it expands opportunities and helps rural districts field teams; opponents raised concerns about recruiting, eligibility fairness and funding.
Representative Cain presented House Bill 44-91, saying the measure allows school districts to adopt policies permitting charter, virtual charter and homeschool students to participate in district extracurricular activities provided the activity is not offered in the student's own school and the visiting students meet the hosting district’s eligibility standards.
During extended questioning, members raised issues about competitive fairness, eligibility enforcement, activity fees and the potential for districts to use the policy to recruit students. Representative Waldron asked whether offering this option could allow parents or districts to “pick and choose” advantages while retaining deregulated status; Cain said participation is voluntary for districts and that eligibility standards and July 1 declarations will allow planning.
Supporters, including representatives from rural districts and Pro Tem Moore, argued the bill helps districts that struggle to field teams and would expand opportunities for students. Opponents urged caution on eligibility and attendance records; Cain said local superintendents would be the gatekeepers for eligibility and that the bill leaves the decision to districts.
The House approved the bill on a roll call. The bill will proceed to the next legislative steps for enrollment and implementation guidance for districts.
