Cyber-bullying ban could be on the way
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Cyber-bullying ban could be on the way

Date: January 27, 2010
By: Michael Bushnell
State Capitol Bureau
Links: SB 614

JEFFERSON CITY - Public school students who use text messaging, social networking sites and other electronics to harass and intimidate their peers could find themselves in trouble if a bill heard Wednesday is enacted.

Sen. Yvonne Wilson, D-Kansas City, who sponsored the bill, told the Senate Education Committee that "cyber-bullying" has gained prevalence over the past few years as a growing number of teens have access to cell phones and broadband Internet.

According to a 2008 Pew Research study, 71 percent of those between the ages of 12 and 17 have a cell phone.

Wilson's bill would require every school system to enact a bullying policy and include electronic communication in it. She said, as bullying evolves, regulations need to keep up the pace. Her measure, however, does not define cyber-bullying.

"We are seeing this all over the place and it's a serious problem," said Wilson, a former long-term school teacher and principal. "If you look in the news, it's a real issue that impacts a lot of people."

News reports Tuesday stated that a 15-year-old Irish immigrant who hanged herself in her Boston-area home on Jan. 14 had been repeatedly insulted by classmates using Facebook and text messages.

One of the first high-profile cases related to cyber-bullying happened more than three years ago in Missouri. Megan Meier, 14, hanged herself in her Dardenne Prairie home in 2006 after being repeatedly taunted by a woman posing as an adolescent boy on MySpace.

That woman, Lori Drew, the mother of one of Meier's classmates, was tried in federal court for violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. She was convicted in 2008, but that was overturned on appeal.

Wilson said she had not spoken to the Meier family, but her constituents in Jackson County have been overwhelmingly supportive.

"I feel like this bill has the support of everybody," Wilson said. "It's simple, and its the right thing to do."

Last year, the same legislation passed the Senate as a unanimous consent bill, but it never came up for a vote in the House before the session ended in May.

Wilson said she hopes that politicians see more urgency in passing a bill she calls non-controversial.

"All of the opposition has been procedural and not based on the bill itself," she said. "I would like to think that legislators will, if nothing else, see the good that can come politically from passing this."