summary
Introduced
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026-2027 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill establishes the "Parents' Bill of Rights." Under the provisions of this bill, the Legislature finds and declares that it is a fundamental right of parents to direct the upbringing, education, and care of their minor children. The Legislature finds that important information relating to a minor child should not be withheld, either inadvertently or purposefully, from the child's parent, including information relating to the minor child's health, well-being, and education, while the minor child is in the custody of the school district. The Legislature finds it is necessary to establish a consistent mechanism for parents to be notified of information relating to the health and well-being of their minor children. The provides that the State, any of its political subdivisions, any governmental entity, or any other institution will not infringe on the fundamental rights of a parent to direct the upbringing, education, health care and mental health of the parent's minor child without demonstrating that such action is reasonable and necessary to achieve a compelling State interest and that such action is narrowly tailored and is not otherwise served by a less restrictive means. Under the provisions of the bill, all rights are reserved to the parent of a minor child in this State, including, but not limited to, all of the following rights of the parent of a minor child in this State: (1) the right to direct the education and care of the parent's minor child; (2) the right to direct the upbringing and the moral or religious training of the parent's minor child; (3) the right to apply to enroll the parent's minor child in a public school or, as an alternative to public education, a private school, including a religious school, a home education program, or any other available options permitted by law; (4) the right to enroll the parent's minor child in a school outside of the public school system if the school in which the parent's minor child is currently enrolled in is classified by the State Department of Education as consistently underperforming, as that term is defined by the State pursuant to the federal "Every Student Succeeds Act," Pub.L. 114-95; (5) the right to access and review all school records relating to the minor child; (6) the right to make health care decisions for the parent's minor child, unless otherwise prohibited by law; (7) the right to access and review all medical records of the parent's minor child, unless prohibited by law or if the parent is the subject of an investigation of a crime committed against the minor child and a law enforcement agency or official requests that the information not be released; (8) the right to consent in writing before a biometric scan of the parent's minor child is made, shared, or stored; (9) the right to consent in writing before any record of the parent's minor child's blood or deoxyribonucleic acid is created, stored, or shared, except as may be required by law or authorized pursuant to a court order; (10) the right to consent in writing before the State or any its political subdivisions, any governmental entity, or any other institution make a video or voice recording of the parent's minor child unless such recording is made during or as part of a court proceeding or a forensic interview in a criminal or Department of Children and Families investigation, or to be used solely for the following purposes: (a) a safety demonstration, including the maintenance of order and discipline in the common areas of a school or on school transportation vehicles; (b) a legitimate academic or extracurricular activity; (c) regular classroom instruction; (d) security or surveillance of buildings or grounds; or (e) a photo identification card; and (11) the right to be notified promptly if an employee of the State, any of its political subdivisions, any other governmental entity, or any other institutions suspect that a criminal offense has been committed against the minor child, unless the incident has first been reported to law enforcement or the Department of Children and Families and notifying the parent would impede the investigation. This bill does not: (1) authorize the parent of a minor child in this State to engage in conduct that is unlawful or to abuse or neglect the parent's minor child in violation of any State or federal law; (2) condone, authorize, approve, or apply to a parental action or decision that would harm or end life; (3) prohibit a court of competent jurisdiction, a law enforcement officer, or an employee of a government agency that is responsible for child welfare from acting in their official capacity within the reasonable and prudent scope of their authority; or (4) prohibit a court of competent jurisdiction from issuing an order that is otherwise permitted by law. The bill provides that an employee of the State, any of its political subdivisions, or any other governmental entity who encourages or coerces, or attempts to encourage or coerce, a minor child to withhold information from the child's parent may be subject to disciplinary action. This bill also provides that the parent of a minor child in this State has inalienable rights that are more comprehensive than those listed in this bill, unless such rights have been legally waived or terminated. This bill does not prescribe all the rights to the parent of a minor child in this State. Unless required by law, the rights of the parent of a minor child in this State may not be limited or denied. The bill is not be construed to apply to a parental action or decision that would harm or end life. This bill requires each district board of education, in consultation with the parents, teachers, and administrators in that district, to develop and adopt a policy to promote parental involvement in the district's public school system. The policy will include: (1) a plan for parental participation in schools to improve parent and teacher cooperation in areas such as homework, school attendance, and discipline; (2) a procedure for the parent to learn about the parent's minor child's course of study including the source of any supplemental education materials; (3) procedures for the parent to object to instructional materials and other materials used in the class, where such objection may be based on beliefs regarding morality, sex, and religion that such materials are harmful; (4) procedures for the parent to withdraw the parent's minor child out of the school district's comprehensive health education that relates to sex education or instruction regarding sexuality, sexual orientation, and sexual transitioning, if the parent provides a written objection to the minor child's participation, and for the parent to be notified in advance of such course content so that the parent may withdraw the parent's minor child from those portions of the course; (5) procedures for the parent to learn about the nature and purpose of clubs and activities offered at the minor child's school, including those that are extracurricular or part of the school curriculum; and (6) procedures for the parent to learn about the rights of parents including all of the following: (a) the right to review information concerning school choice options including open enrollment; (b) the right of the parent to exempt the minor child from immunizations; (c) the right of the parent to review Statewide, standardized assessment results; (d) the right of the parent to enroll the child in gifted or special education programs; (e) the right of the parent to inspect school district instructional materials; (f) the right of the parent to access information relating to the school district's policies for promotion or retention including high school graduation requirements; (g) the right of the parent to receive a school report card and be informed of the minor child's attendance requirements; (h) the right of the parent to access information relating to the State public education system, State standards, report card requirements, attendance requirements, and instruction materials requirements; (i) the right of the parent to participate in parent-teacher associations and organizations that are sanctioned by a district board of education or the Department of Education; (j) the right of the parent to enroll the parent's minor child in the local school within the child's school district; and (k) the right of the parent to opt out of any district-level data collection relating to the minor child not required by law. This bill requires each district board of education to provide the information required by the bill electronically or post such information on its Internet website. The bill provides that the parent of a minor child may request, in writing, from the school superintendent the information required by the bill. Within 10 days, the school superintendent will provide such information to the parent. If the school superintendent denies the parent's request for information or does not respond to the parent's request within 10 days, the parent may appeal the denial to the district board of education. The district board of education will place the parent's appeal on the agenda for its next public meeting, or as soon as practicable, if the agenda can no longer be amended. Except as otherwise provided by law, the bill prohibits a health care provider from providing, soliciting, or arranging to provide health care services or prescribe medicinal drugs to a minor child without first obtaining written parental consent. Except as otherwise provided by law, the bill prohibits a health care facility from allowing a medical procedure to be performed on a minor child in its facility without first obtaining written parental consent. The provisions of the bill will not apply to the performance of medical or surgical care and procedures by a hospital, or by a physician licensed to practice medicine and surgery, on a married person who is a minor or a pregnant person who is a minor, who has provided consent to the care or procedure pursuant to P.L.1965, c.217 (C.9:17A-1). The provisions of the bill will also not apply to services provided by a clinical laboratory, unless the services are delivered through a direct encounter with a minor child at the clinical laboratory. The bill provides that a health care provider or any other person who violates this bill will be subject to disciplinary action and will be guilty of a misdemeanor.
AI Summary
This bill, titled the "Parents' Bill of Rights," establishes that parents have a fundamental right to direct the upbringing, education, and care of their minor children, and that important information about a child's health, well-being, and education should not be withheld from parents while the child is in the custody of a school district. The bill outlines specific rights parents possess, including the right to direct their child's education and moral training, choose educational settings like public, private, religious, or home schooling, access school and medical records (with some exceptions for ongoing investigations), consent in writing before biometric scans or DNA records are created or shared, and consent before video or voice recordings of their child are made, unless for specific purposes like safety demonstrations or academic activities. It also mandates that parents be promptly notified if a criminal offense is suspected against their child, unless doing so would impede an investigation. Furthermore, the bill requires school districts to develop policies promoting parental involvement, including procedures for parents to review curriculum, object to instructional materials, withdraw children from sex education, learn about school activities, and be informed about various parental rights related to education, such as school choice, immunization exemptions, and access to school performance data. The bill also prohibits healthcare providers from offering services or prescribing medication to minors without written parental consent, with certain exceptions for married or pregnant minors and clinical laboratory services not involving direct encounters. Violations of these provisions can lead to disciplinary action and misdemeanor charges. The bill clarifies that these rights do not authorize unlawful conduct or child abuse and do not supersede court orders or the authority of child welfare agencies.
Committee Categories
Education
Sponsors (2)
Last Action
Introduced, Referred to Assembly Education Committee (on 01/13/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A3135 |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A3500/3135_I1.HTM |
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