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Panel advances bill directing state to standardize student fitness testing amid obesity concerns

Education Oversight Committee · April 15, 2026

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Summary

The committee voted to send SB 1437 out as a do pass. The bill directs the state Department of Education to set guidelines for physical fitness tests and encourages districts to use the results to improve student health; proponents cited childhood obesity and public-health goals.

Representative Sterling urged the committee to adopt Senate Bill 1437, saying the measure would require the state Department of Education to establish guidelines for physical fitness tests and encourage school districts to use student performance data to improve health outcomes.

The chair pressed Sterling on the bill’s tone, asking, “Is this another picking on fat kids, Bill?” Representative Sterling rejected that characterization and described the bill as part of a public-health response. Sterling said there is “right now, we have a obesity epidemic among our young people,” adding that on current trajectories “1 out of 3 will not live as long as the parents.” He said the Department of Health wants the results to inform a state obesity plan.

Sterling also offered a personal example to underscore his point, saying routine exercise was critical to his recovery after a major cardiac event and calling regular fitness “medicine.” “I call it taking medicine and it’s not it’s better than medicine in a bottle,” he said.

Committee members moved and seconded the bill and the chair called the vote; the committee agreed to send SB 1437 out as a do pass and the measure will proceed to the next stage of consideration.

The discussion focused on the bill’s stated purpose — gathering and using assessment data to support health interventions — and included brief concerns about stigmatizing students. The committee did not adopt further amendments during the hearing.