Kansas bill would require documentation of students
A Kansas legislator wants the state to count and report the number of children in public schools who might be in the country illegally.
Rep. Allan Rothlisberg, a Republican from Grandview Plaza, on Tuesday introduced a bill that he says would help determine how much taxpayer money is spent to educate children who aren't legal residents.
The bill would require a school board to ask for proof of residency when a child enrolls for the first time in a public school. The proof would be a birth certificate, Social Security card or other document.
The Lawrence Journal-World reports the state would publish a record of the number of children who didn't provide the proof, and the average per pupil school finance cost.
This story was originally published January 29, 2014 at 9:29 AM with the headline "Kansas bill would require documentation of students."