Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Conference committee adopts House language on school resource officer bill

Rep. Cedrick Frazier and Sen. Bonnie Westlin listen to Sen. Jim Abeler during Tuesday’s conference committee regarding the school resource officer bill. (Photo by Michele Jokinen)
Rep. Cedrick Frazier and Sen. Bonnie Westlin listen to Sen. Jim Abeler during Tuesday’s conference committee regarding the school resource officer bill. (Photo by Michele Jokinen)

It took about eight minutes Tuesday morning to resolve what should be the final piece in providing clarity to school resource officers.

A conference committee on HF3489 quickly approved an agreement that it is expected to be before both the House and Senate later this week.

Rep. Cedrick Frazier (DFL-New Hope), the House sponsor, did not give a closing comment, but Rep. Jeff Witte (R-Lakeville) offered kudos.

Conference Committee on HF3489 3/12/24

“We’ve worked hard, we’ve worked together, and we found compromise. The goal now is to get our SROs back in the schools so our students and teachers can be safe,” he said.

The bill would clarify language around the use of certain choke holds and face-down prone restraints resource officers can place on students and update use-of-force standards for those officers. It would remove language specific to contracted security and school resource officers placing restraining holds on students.

Passed 124-8 by the House March 4, the Senate amended the bill Monday and passed it 57-9.

The Senate amendment, which House supporters object to, would have allowed a teacher, school principal, school employee or, school bus driver to restrain students “to prevent theft, damage, or destruction of property.”

“This literally expanded the use of prone restraints in schools, not constrict them,” said Sen. Bonnie Westlin (DFL-Plymouth), the Senate sponsor.


Related Articles


Priority Dailies

Walz proposes slimmed-down 2026-27 state budget, sales tax changes
Gov. Tim Walz speaks last month during a news conference following the release of the November Budget and Economic Forecast. The governor on Thursday proposed a slimmed-down $66 billion state budget for the 2026-27 biennium. (Photo by Michele Jokinen) This is an odd-numbered year, and so the Legislature is constitutionally required to craft a budget to fund the state government for the next two fiscal years. Gov. Tim Walz...
House closes 2024 session in chaotic fashion, trading bonding for budget boosts
(House Photography file photo) It was a session of modest ambitions. After 2023 produced a record $72 billion in biennial funding, Minnesota’s legislative leaders were dampening expectations for anything ...

Minnesota House on Twitter