#75 When Medicine Betrays Trust with Dr. Mary Kelly Sutton

#75 When Medicine Betrays Trust with Dr. Mary Kelly Sutton

Health Freedom News You'll Never Hear on the MSM with Lisa Mair July 15, 2025

Schara v. Ascension Health: The Tragic Death of Grace Schara - The HighWire

https://thehighwire.com/editorial/schara-v-ascension-health-the-tragic-death-of-grace-schara/

HEARING! An Act Relative to Parental Rights in Education 

https://malegislature.gov/Bills/194/H551

Monday July 21st at 11am to 5pm in front of the education committee.

Registration will CLOSE at 12:00 p.m. on Friday, July 18th, 2025.

Hearing Details: https://malegislature.gov/Events/Hearings/Detail/5299?sm_guid=ODc2MTA0fDc3OTI2MDY2fC0xfGpib29yYXNAbWUuY29tfDgwNTQ2MjB8fDB8MHwyNjk0Mzc5NzJ8MTA4MXwwfDB8fDg3MjI2MHww

This bill (adding Section 32B to Chapter 71 of the Massachusetts General Laws) establishes parental rights and notification requirements regarding their child's health and well-being in public schools. Here's a summary of the key provisions:

🔹 Section 1 – New Parental Rights in Schools

(a) Requires all public school committees (including regional/vocational) to:

  • Notify parents if there is a change in a student’s mental, emotional, or physical health services or monitoring.
  • Encourage students to discuss such issues with parents.
  • Allow parents access to all education and health records.

(b) Prohibits schools from:

  • Keeping health-related changes from parents.
  • Using forms or policies that encourage secrecy from parents.
  • Exception: Schools may withhold information if disclosure may lead to abuse or neglect, per DCF definitions.

(c) Prohibits instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity in grades K–3 by school staff or third parties.

(d) Requires parental notification at the start of each school year about:

  • All healthcare services provided at school.
  • Parents’ right to opt-out of specific services.

(e) Requires parental permission before administering:

  • Health screenings or wellness questionnaires in grades K–3.

(f) Sets up a formal complaint process for parents:

  • Schools must respond to a parent's concern within 7 days.
  • Concerns must be resolved or explained within 30 days.
  • Parents can appeal to the Commissioner of Education or sue the district for violations. Courts must award attorney fees and costs if relief is granted.

Also affirms that:

  • The government can’t infringe on these parental rights unless there’s a compelling interest and no less restrictive alternative.
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