Legislature(2021 - 2022)DAVIS 106

03/31/2021 08:00 AM House EDUCATION

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Audio Topic
08:02:36 AM Start
08:03:25 AM University of Alaska Board of Regents
09:27:50 AM HB60
09:42:46 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Consideration of Governor's Appointees: TELECONFERENCED
- State Board of Education: Lorri van Diest
- Professional Teaching Practices Commission:
Lem Wheeles
- University of Alaska Board of Regents: Ralph
Seekins
-- Public Testimony --
*+ HB 60 PUBLIC SCHOOLS: MENTAL HEALTH EDUCATION TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
         HB 60-PUBLIC SCHOOLS: MENTAL HEALTH EDUCATION                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:27:50 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  DRUMMOND announced  that  the final  order of  business                                                               
would be  HOUSE BILL NO.  60, "An  Act relating to  mental health                                                               
education."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:28:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR STORY  moved to adopt the  proposed committee substitute                                                               
(CS) for  HB 60, Version  32-LS0261\B, Klein, 3/25/21, as  a work                                                               
draft.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:28:17 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR DRUMMOND objected for purposes of discussion.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:28:29 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MATT  CLAMAN, Alaska  State Legislature,  as prime                                                               
sponsor, introduced HB  60.  He stated that the  bill would amend                                                               
the  existing  K-12 public  school  health  education statute  to                                                               
include mental  health education guidelines.   He explained that,                                                               
currently,  the health  curriculum  guidelines  developed by  the                                                               
State  Board of  Education &  Early Development  include learning                                                               
about  prevention   and  treatment   of  diseases,   good  health                                                               
practices like  diet and exercise  and personal hygiene,  and bad                                                               
health habits  such as substance abuse,  alcoholism, and physical                                                               
abuse.  But the guidelines do not address mental health.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE CLAMAN related  that this bill was  brought to his                                                               
attention  in   2019  by  a  college   student  who  successfully                                                               
advocated for similar  legislation when he was in  high school in                                                               
Virginia, and who then worked with  a group of Alaska high school                                                               
students  advocating for  increased  mental  health resources  in                                                               
Alaska  schools.   These students  spoke of  their own  struggles                                                               
with  mental health  as  well  as those  of  their  peers.   Some                                                               
students even said  their mental health struggles  began as early                                                               
as elementary school.  These  students continue to say that while                                                               
they  learned  about treatments  for  physical  health at  school                                                               
there wasn't nearly enough conversation  about mental health with                                                               
their friends and teachers.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE CLAMAN specified  that Alaska's adolescent suicide                                                               
rate is  three times higher  than the nationwide rate.   Alaska's                                                               
adolescent suicide rates are increasing,  he noted.  According to                                                               
the 2019  Alaska High  School Youth  Risk Behavior  Survey, which                                                               
surveyed  1,875 students  in  grades 9-12  from  39 high  schools                                                               
across the state,  the percentage of students  who have attempted                                                               
suicide has  doubled since 2007.   Given  that 50 percent  of all                                                               
lifetime  cases of  a  mental illness  begin by  age  14, and  75                                                               
percent by age  24, these conversations about  mental health need                                                               
to be started at an early age.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN said  HB 60  requires the  State Board  of                                                               
Education &  Early Development to work  with representatives from                                                               
tribal  and  mental health  organizations  to  update the  health                                                               
education  standards  to  include  guidelines  in  mental  health                                                               
education.   Once the legislation  passes it  will be up  to high                                                               
schools and  school districts  across Alaska  whether to  use the                                                               
guidelines  to incorporate  mental  health  into their  education                                                               
curriculum.    As  is  the case  with  current  health  education                                                               
curriculum,  the  Department  of Education  &  Early  Development                                                               
(DEED) is  available to assist schools  with incorporating health                                                               
standards into  local curriculum.   He stressed  that HB  60 does                                                               
not create or mandate that schools adopt a curriculum.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN said  the  state has  a responsibility  to                                                               
treat the  current mental  health crisis in  Alaska as  a serious                                                               
public  health issue.    This bill  underscores  the notion  that                                                               
mental health is just as  important as physical health and should                                                               
be treated  as such.   Conversations about mental health  must be                                                               
normalized  starting  at an  early  age,  just  as is  done  with                                                               
physical  health, in  order to  de-stigmatize mental  illness and                                                               
increase knowledge  on the fundamental aspects  of mental health,                                                               
as  well the  causes,  risk factors,  and  treatments for  mental                                                               
illness.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:31:43 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SOPHIE  JONAS, Staff,  Representative Matt  Claman, Alaska  State                                                               
Legislature, on  behalf of  Representative Claman,  prime sponsor                                                               
of  HB  60,  provided  a   sectional  analysis  of  the  proposed                                                               
committee substitute,  Version B.   She  began by  first relating                                                               
that during  a hearing of  the Senate  companion bill, SB  80, in                                                               
the  Senate Education  Standing  Committee  (SEDC), the  Advisory                                                               
Board on Alcoholism  and Drug Abuse and the  Alaska Mental Health                                                               
Board  recommended  changing  the intent  language  to  eliminate                                                               
organizations  that were  specifically listed  out so  as to  not                                                               
exclude  anyone.   Additionally,  there was  confusion about  the                                                               
word "standard"  as opposed to  "guideline."  So,  she explained,                                                               
the  proposed  work  draft  before  this  committee  mirrors  the                                                               
changes  that  were  adopted in  the  Senate  Education  Standing                                                               
Committee.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. JONAS reviewed  the sectional analysis for  the proposed work                                                               
draft,  Version B.    She  said Section  1  adds intent  language                                                               
stating it  is the intent  of the  legislature that the  Board of                                                               
Education & Early Development  develop guidelines for instruction                                                               
in mental  health in consultation  with the Department  of Health                                                               
and Social  Services, regional  tribal health  organizations, and                                                               
representatives   of    national   and   state    mental   health                                                               
organizations.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  JONAS  stated  that  Section 2  amends  AS  14.30.360(a)  by                                                               
removing  the word  "physical" when  referencing instruction  for                                                               
health  education  and adding  "mental  health"  to the  list  of                                                               
curriculum items that  each district is encouraged  to include in                                                               
health education programs.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  JONAS specified  that Section  3 amends  AS 14.30.360(b)  by                                                               
adding that,  in addition to  establishing guidelines  for health                                                               
and  personal  safety  education  programs, the  State  Board  of                                                               
Education  & Early  Development  shall  establish guidelines  for                                                               
developmentally appropriate instruction in mental health.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. JONAS explained  that Section 4 amends the  uncodified law of                                                               
the  State  of  Alaska  by  providing that  the  State  Board  of                                                               
Education &  Early Development  shall develop  the aforementioned                                                               
guidelines within two years of the effective date of this Act.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:34:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR DRUMMOND opened invited testimony.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:34:43 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JASON LESSARD,  Executive Director,  National Alliance  of Mental                                                               
Illness (NAMI), Anchorage Chapter,  provided invited testimony in                                                               
support of  HB 60.   He first noted  that he  is the parent  of a                                                               
current Anchorage  School District  (ASD) student and  a graduate                                                               
of the  ASD.  He  said it is  important to recognize  that mental                                                               
health is  health; there  is not  one without  the other.   While                                                               
that is  a simple and obvious  statement, it is still  a struggle                                                               
to incorporate that  concept into school curricula.   This is why                                                               
NAMI chapters in  Alaska and the Lower 48 are  advocating for the                                                               
types of updates and guidance in bills like HB 60.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. LESSARD related that while  there is much national and Alaska                                                               
centric  data relevant  to this  conversation, he  will focus  on                                                               
just two in the  interest of time.  He said  the first data point                                                               
is that  one in  five U.S. adults  experiences a  mental illness.                                                               
Given this prevalence,  he urged members to think  about how many                                                               
people they  may know or how  many high school students  might go                                                               
home to a family member with a  mental illness.  This is not just                                                               
talking to students about their  own mental health, this is about                                                               
having evidence-based  curricula that discusses  and de-mystifies                                                               
a set  of illnesses  that affects 20  percent of  the population.                                                               
And, he  added, that's  just adults  and just  diagnosable mental                                                               
illnesses.   He urged  members to think  about the  benefits that                                                               
these conversations concerning wellness  and self-care could have                                                               
on  helping students  to process  grief or  a depressive  episode                                                               
that don't have anything to do with mental health necessarily.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. LESSARD  said the next data  point is that 50  percent of all                                                               
lifetime mental illnesses  begin by age 14, and  75 percent begin                                                               
by age 24.  He pointed out that  age 14 is a ninth grader.  These                                                               
illnesses are showing  their onset largely in  the teenage brain,                                                               
he continued,  and it's  really important to  talk about  it with                                                               
them in  a healthy,  supportive, and effective  manner.   This is                                                               
why  this   type  of  legislation  and,   hopefully,  changes  to                                                               
curricula  throughout Alaska's  districts  is  critical.   Giving                                                               
students  a better  understanding  of mental  illness and  mental                                                               
wellness,   the   language  to   talk   about   it  safely,   the                                                               
understanding of how and where  to find resources for themselves,                                                               
their  family, and  their peers  is  vital.   He urged  committee                                                               
members to  support HB 60  and pointed out  that it will  help to                                                               
address these topics in an  evidence-based, proactive, and caring                                                               
way.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:37:39 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CLAIR  RHYNEER, Representative,  Mental  Health Advocacy  Through                                                               
Storytelling (MHATS),  provided invited  testimony in  support of                                                               
HB 60.   She noted she is  testifying on behalf of  MHATS as well                                                               
as herself.   She related that a few years  ago she experienced a                                                               
difficult and  dark period  of depression.   But more  than being                                                               
difficult  and dark,  she said,  her experience  was governed  by                                                               
confusion.     She  was  self-harming   and  all  she   felt  was                                                               
uncertainty.   Did  she need  help?   How should  she know?   She                                                               
turned to Google and took  dozens of "Are you depressed quizzes?"                                                               
However,  she continued,  Google is  not a  doctor and  is in  no                                                               
position to diagnose a seventh  grade girl, let alone anyone, and                                                               
it left  her more  confused.   Each night  she wondered  not only                                                               
what was wrong, but if something  was wrong at all.  In hindsight                                                               
it is terrifying to know  that she was physically harming herself                                                               
and still unsure if she needed support.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. RHYNEER  pointed out that she  isn't the only one.   She said                                                               
she could  personally count on more  than one hand the  number of                                                               
close friends who experienced suicidal  ideation, and all of them                                                               
filled the  gap of  mental health  education with  scrappy online                                                               
resources.   In 2019, she  continued, 20 percent of  ASD students                                                               
reported  attempting  suicide one  or  more  times.   That  means                                                               
roughly  four people  in each  of her  classes attempted  suicide                                                               
that year.   This bill would teach someone like  her younger self                                                               
about how  to recognize symptoms  of mental illness, and  what to                                                               
do moving  forward.   She doesn't wish  her experience  on anyone                                                               
else  and the  best  way  of achieving  that  goal  is to  inform                                                               
Alaska's youth.   She  continued:  "We  cannot be  satisfied with                                                               
Google  University.   We  cannot be  satisfied  with allowing  my                                                               
friends  and classmates  and your  constituents and  neighbors to                                                               
remain  uneducated.    We  cannot   knowingly  let  our  students                                                               
experience the confusion  and harm that I felt."   She said HB 60                                                               
must be passed.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:39:55 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KEEGAN  BLAIN,  Representative,  Mental Health  Advocacy  Through                                                               
Storytelling (MHATS),  provided invited  testimony in  support of                                                               
HB 60.  She said she is testifying  on behalf of MHATS as well as                                                               
herself,  a graduate  of Dimond  High School.   She  related that                                                               
while growing up  her parents had all  the standard conversations                                                               
with  her,  and  answered  questions  like  the  standard  health                                                               
questions about sex  and where the places are that  only a doctor                                                               
should  touch.   At 10  years old,  her elementary  school health                                                               
teacher had  her and  her peers practicing  saying no  to alcohol                                                               
and drugs.   At age  13 her  middle school health  teacher taught                                                               
about STDs  and the  major signs  of domestic  abuse.   Ms. Blain                                                               
stated  that  10 years  old  is  the  age  when her  symptoms  of                                                               
depression first  started, and at  13, she  was institutionalized                                                               
for the first time.  She felt  alone in her fight against her own                                                               
mind.   She had never been  taught what mental illness  was.  She                                                               
didn't know  if she could go  back to school, whether  she should                                                               
tell  her friends  and  teachers.   It  was completely  uncharted                                                               
territory.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BLAIN  said  the  Alaska Department  of  Health  and  Social                                                               
Services reports that from 2005-2006,  8.6 percent of adolescents                                                               
aged  12-17 reported  having a  major depressive  episode.   That                                                               
percentage nearly doubled to 15.2  percent from 2015-2016.  There                                                               
is a  clear upward trend  in cases  of mental illness  in Alaskan                                                               
teens, she continued,  but no response at  the educational level.                                                               
She  stated  she is  a  success  story  of the  Anchorage  School                                                               
District.   She  graduated summa  cum laude  from Dimond  and has                                                               
gone on  to study  bioengineering at  a top  research university,                                                               
but the odds were against her.   Sixty percent of students with a                                                               
diagnosed  mental illness  don't ever  graduate high  school, she                                                               
specified.  Research has shown  that early intervention is key to                                                               
preventing  the development  of  severe mental  illness in  later                                                               
years, and  HB 60  has the potential  to bring  that intervention                                                               
into Alaska's  schools.   She asked  committee members  to please                                                               
take this first step towards  bringing mental health education to                                                               
Alaska's students who so desperately need it.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:42:30 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR DRUMMOND held  over HB 60 for  further consideration and                                                               
public testimony.   [The motion  to adopt the  proposed committee                                                               
substitute (CS)  for HB 60, Version  32-LS0261\B, Klein, 3/25/21,                                                               
as a work draft was left pending with an objection.]                                                                            

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB 60 Testimony - Received as of 3.29.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Draft CS Ver. B (EDC).pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 FN.EED.SSA.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Original Ver. A.PDF HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Sectional Analysis Ver. B 3.29.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Sponsor Statment v. A 3.3.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Supporting Document - 2019 Alaska Youth Risk Behavior Survey 3.3.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Complete EDC Committee Packet 3.31.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Supporting Document - CDC National Health Education Standards 3.3.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Supporting Document - DEED Alaska Content Standards Healthy Life Skills 3.3.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
HB 60 Supporting Document -SOA Epidemiology Bulletin Adolescent Suicide Death Rates 3.3.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
House Ed. Complete Confirmation Packet 3.31.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
Lem Wheeles PTPC email.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
Lorri Van Diest Board Application_Redacted.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
Lorri Van Diest Resume_Redacted.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
Ralph Seekins Board Application_Redacted.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
Lem Wheeles Resume_Redacted.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
Ralph Seekins Resume_Redacted.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60 FN.EED.SSA.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM
HB 60
Lem Wheeles PTPC Confirmation Prepared Statement 3.31.2021.pdf HEDC 3/31/2021 8:00:00 AM