An Arizona bill meant to improve how schools and law enforcement communicate during emergencies hit a roadblock last week after failing to pass the state House of Representatives, and the opposition is coming from both sides of the aisle.
Senate Bill 1315 went down in a 25-25 tie on Monday, with several lawmakers absent from the floor. Republicans quickly moved to bring it back for another vote, but the measure's future remains uncertain.
At its core, SB 1315 would require every public school district and charter school in Arizona to establish a secure communication system that connects them directly to local law enforcement.
Schools would need three things in place: a way for staff to instantly alert nearby police during an emergency, a way to share campus maps securely and building floor plans with law enforcement, and a way for school personnel to communicate with officers in real time during a crisis.
They would then have a qualifying system through an existing state program, which wouldn't require building a new one.
Starting July 1, 2027, every school would be required to submit a yearly affidavit to the Arizona Department of Education confirming their system is active, their maps have been shared with police, and they've tested everything at least once that year.
The Department of Education would then compile those reports into an annual statewide readiness report delivered to the governor and legislative leaders.
The idea is straightforward: if something dangerous happens on campus, police could immediately access school cameras, floor plans, and emergency alerts instead of being flooded with individual 911 calls.
State Senator Kevin Payne (R-AZ) helped create the program back in 2019 and has championed the concept ever since. However, some lawmakers believe the bill goes too far in one specific direction, toward a single company.
Arizona Capitol Times reported that three vendors have worked with Arizona law enforcement under the existing program: Mutualink, Motorola Solutions, and Navigate360. Most county agencies have signed contracts with Mutualink.
Democrats like Representative Stephanie Stahl Hamilton (D-AZ) argue the bill is essentially written to drive more business to that one company, calling it a "vendor bill" that limits the state's options and bargaining power.
Rep. Payne has denied those claims, arguing he didn't even know Mutualink existed when he first introduced the program.
Pushback from Republicans has also emerged. Representative Alex Kolodin (R-AZ) argued that the bill unfairly subjects charter schools to regulations he believes should apply only to public schools.
Democrats have raised additional concerns about fairness, including who decides which schools receive the safety systems when there isn't enough funding to cover everyone.
The bill could return to the House for another vote soon.
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