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HEARING ADDRESSES WILLIAMS’ PARENT
ACCOUNTABILITY BILL
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Williams |
PHILADELPHIA, March 15
— State Sen. Anthony H. Williams welcomed a
key Senate committee to Philadelphia today
to discuss his legislation intended to hold
parents accountable for the actions of their
children.
“Parents must be involved in the lives of
their children,” Williams said. “This isn’t
just an issue of punishing parents for a
child’s actions. It’s about intervening and
taking steps to prevent children from making
future negative choices.”
Under the measure (Senate
Bill 99), parents and guardians could face
charges if their child is truant from
school, taken into protective custody, or
otherwise violates the law.
The bill also seeks to institute a formal,
voluntary diversionary training program that
teaches parents and guardians how to play a
positive role their children’s lives.
The bill is now before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, which held a hearing at the Boys
Latin Charter School of Philadelphia to take
testimony from local experts, including
Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles
Ramsey, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth
Williams and School District of Philadelphia
Superintendent Dr. Arlene Ackerman.
“Typically, troubled children come from
homes with little structure,” Williams said.
“We need a system that holds parents
accountable for their inability to instill
discipline, but also ensures parents that
they can steer their children in the right
direction. Today’s hearing offered a wealth
of knowledge and positive suggestions from
our speakers.”
Also testifying were:
state Rep. William Keller (D-Philadelphia);
Harvey Rice, 1st Safe School Advocate for
the School District of Philadelphia; Dr.
Deborah Vereen, president of Parent
Accountability Initiative in Public
Education; Dr. Charles Williams, assistant
clinical professor at Drexel University and
director of the Center for Prevention of
School-Aged Violence; Shelly Yanoff,
executive director for Public Citizens for
Children & Youth;
Michael Churchill, Esquire, Public Interest
Law Center; and Henry Gordon, retired
teacher.
Senate Bill 99 currently sits in the Senate
Judiciary Committee. Williams introduced a
similar bill (Senate Bill 1092) in the
2007-08 session.
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