The House Education Committee has voted to advance the bill, HB473 School Digital Materials Amendments. This bill seeks to apply the same "Sensitive Materials" definition that has led to over 140 books being banned in Utah.

Take Action: Don’t Censor Research Databases in Utah

If HB473 passes it will lead to more widespread censorship in our schools, the possible cancellation of contracts for vendors of research databases, and it will leave Utah's students without high quality reliable resources to support their academic success.

RESEARCH DATABASES ARE SAFE - MUCH SAFER THAN THE OPEN WEB
The bill is being advanced on the false premise that curated, grade-level appropriate databases are not safe for students.  This was proven untrue in 2018, when allegations were brought before the Utah Education Network (UEN), and they were unable to replicate any problematic results.

UEN continued to monitor and report on appropriate use of research databases by students from 2018-2023, issuing 28 separate reports.

WE HAVE STATE AND FEDERAL LAWS ALREADY IN PLACE TO THAT ADDRESS DATABASE SAFETY

Students are protected by the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA), a federal law that requires schools to block anything that meets the legal definition of “harmful to minors”. Likewise, in 2021, Utah passed HB38 School Technology Amendments which requires digital resources used by students to have safety policies and technology protection measures that prohibit and prevent the sending, receiving, viewing, or downloading obscene or pornographic material.

Please sign and share this petition and then send an email to your state senator (look up your legislator here) asking them not to pass unnecessary regulations that will harm our students, and create another tangled bureaucracy. For key points, see FAQ on HB473

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