Current:Home > NewsIowa lawmakers address immigration, religious freedom and taxes in 2024 session -CapitalEdge
Iowa lawmakers address immigration, religious freedom and taxes in 2024 session
View
Date:2025-04-11 15:44:41
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — After a marathon day that stretched into Saturday’s early hours, Iowa lawmakers wrapped up a four-month legislative session that focused on reforming the way special education is managed and speeding up tax cuts. The Republican-led General Assembly also waded into issues like immigration and religious freedom, which have proven core to the party’s 2024 campaign message.
Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Republican, pushed many priorities through the Legislature after submitting 18 requests for bill drafts, more than any other year of her tenure and any other governor since 2006, publicly available data shows.
Here’s a look at the issues that made headlines:
REYNOLDS’ PRIORITIES DOMINATE SESSION
Education was a key issue for Reynolds this session, including one proposal to revise the state’s education system for students with disabilities that consumed lawmakers’ attention.
Reynolds wanted school districts to be able to choose how to use their special education dollars. For decades, those funds have gone directly to cooperatives known as area education agencies, or AEAs, that provide special education services.
A compromise lets schools choose, starting in 2025, how to spend 10% of their special education funding. But that approach, along with other changes in the final bill, still leaves many disability advocates and AEA staff concerned that the agencies and special education will suffer.
MORE ON EDUCATION
Lawmakers also approved an increased minimum salary for Iowa teachers. In the upcoming school year, teachers with less than 12 years of experience will earn at least $47,500, up from $33,500. The minimum salary for more experienced teachers rises to $60,000. Both figures will increase again in the following school year.
The law also addressed non-salaried teachers and staff, allocating $14 million to help schools raise supplemental teacher pay.
In the final days of the session, lawmakers passed provisions to restrict programs related to diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, at the state’s public universities, joining a wave of Republican-led states weighing in on the initiatives. The bill prohibits staff positions and offices dedicated to creating or promoting DEI policies, programming or training, except as otherwise required by federal regulations.
IMMIGRATION LAW
Iowa Republicans followed Texas’ footsteps by passing a bill making it a state crime for a person to be in Iowa if previously denied admission to or removed from the United States. Reynolds signed it into law on April 10.
In Iowa and across the country, Republican leaders have accused President Joe Biden of neglecting his responsibilities to enforce federal immigration law.
The Iowa law, which takes effect July 1, has elevated anxiety in Iowa’s immigrant communities and has prompted questions among legal experts and law enforcement on how it will be enforced. It mirrors part of a Texas law that is currently blocked in court. The Justice Department has argued that such state laws are a clear violation of federal authority.
PREGNANCY BILLS
A bill passed this year updated an existing program that funds nonprofits known as crisis pregnancy centers, typically nonmedical facilities that counsel clients against having an abortion, charging the state’s health agency with implementation after it had difficulty finding a third-party administrator.
A separate budget bill provides an additional $1 million in funding for the program.
Lawmakers, with Reynolds’ recommendation, also expanded maternity leave from 60 days to 12 months for the state’s lowest-income moms on Medicaid.
Iowa Democrats, who have proposed expanded Medicaid maternity leave in the past, said the bill would remove benefits for certain mothers who did not meet the lower income threshold.
RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
Iowa joined about two dozen other states by enacting an echo of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a 1993 federal law that said government would not be able to “substantially burden” someone’s constitutional right to freedom of religion.
Republicans argued that religious freedom is under attack, so the state’s code needed to further enshrine those rights, while Democrats said it would allow some people’s religious beliefs to justify discrimination.
TAX CUTS
Republican lawmakers voted to speed up the state’s 2022 income tax cuts, instituting a 3.8% flat income tax rate beginning next year.
Republicans also took the first steps toward two tax-related constitutional amendments to put before Iowa voters. One would enshrine the state’s use of a single rate for income taxes, and the other would require a two-thirds majority of lawmakers to change the tax code. To put a constitutional amendment on the ballot, Iowa lawmakers have to approve it in two consecutive sessions, so both resolutions would have to pass again in 2025 or 2026 to make the ballot.
WHAT DIDN’T SUCCEED
Lawmakers rejected one bill that would have removed gender identity from the state’s civil right law and another that would have narrowly defined male and female. The latter, requested by Reynolds, would have required a transgender person’s assigned sex at birth to be listed alongside their gender identity on their birth certificate.
House Republicans failed to advance a Senate-approved bill proposed by chemical giant Bayer that would have given the company legal protections against claims it failed to warn that its popular pesticide Roundup causes cancer, if the company is otherwise in compliance with federal regulations. One House Republican, a farmer, said he’ll put his name on it next year to try to see it through.
Iowa lawmakers also did not put forth a ballot initiative declaring there is no constitutional right to abortion in the state — after initially advancing the measure in 2021. Reynolds has said she’ll let the issue move through the courts rather than push for a vote. Iowa’s current law banning most abortions after roughly six weeks, before many women know they are pregnant, was enacted in July but paused by a judge soon after. The state Supreme Court will weigh in on the case in June.
A bill that would have made changes to Iowa’s fetal homicide law was shelved after a Senate Republican joined Democrats in voicing concerns about the potential impact on in vitro fertilization following an Alabama court ruling that frozen embryos can be considered children. Iowa’s law currently outlines penalties for terminating or seriously injuring a “human pregnancy.” The House-approved bill would have changed that language to apply to the death of, or serious injury to, an “unborn person” from fertilization to live birth.
veryGood! (81898)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- HUD secretary learns about housing challenges during Alaska visit
- More than 85,000 highchairs are under recall after two dozen reports of falls
- Did you buy a lotto ticket in Texas? You may be $6.75 million richer and not know it.
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Miranda Kerr is pregnant! Model shares excitement over being a mom to 4 boys
- NASA said its orbiter likely found the crash site of Russia's failed Luna-25 moon mission
- 1 killed, 6 injured in overnight shooting at a gathering in Massachusetts
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Get Ready for Game Day With These 20 Tailgating Essentials
Ranking
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- September Surge: Career experts disagree whether hiring surge is coming in 2023's market
- Paris' rental electric scooter ban has taken effect
- Pro-Kremlin rapper who calls Putin a die-hard superhero takes over Domino's Pizza outlets in Russia
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Pope praises Mongolia’s tradition of religious freedom from times of Genghis Khan at start of visit
- New Jersey gas tax to increase by about a penny per gallon starting Oct. 1
- Man convicted of 4-month-old son’s 1997 death dies on Alabama death row
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Hear Tom Brady's Historic First Phone Call With the Patriots After Being Selected 199th in 2000 NFL Draft
Travis Kelce pleads to Chris Jones as Chiefs await contract holdout: 'We need you bad'
Margaritaville Singer Jimmy Buffett Dead at 76
FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
Britney Spears Debuts Snake Tattoo After Sam Asghari Breakup
Paris' rental electric scooter ban has taken effect
Before summer ends, let's squeeze in one last trip to 'Our Pool'