| 
		Governor defends mental health mandate, rejects parental consent plan
		[August 20, 2025]  
		By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributor 
		(The Center Square) – U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, who represents the 15th 
		Congressional district in southeastern Illinois, is reintroducing 
		legislation to “strengthen parental rights” following the state’s new 
		law mandating mental health screenings for public school students.
 The Parents Opt-In Protection Act would require written parental consent 
		before schools conduct mental health or sensitive-topic surveys, 
		replacing Illinois’ current opt-out system under SB1560 starting in 
		2027–2028. Asked why she didn’t move to ban school-based screenings 
		outright, Miller pointed to constitutional limits on federal authority.
 
 "I would love to see that, but I think it needs to be done at the state 
		level. My bill, the Parents Opt-In Protection Act, amends the existing 
		Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment, which governs surveys and 
		evaluations covering topics like religion, sex, politics, and guns. 
		Since I’m working at the federal level, there’s a concern about 
		violating the 10th Amendment, so I’m revising an existing federal law,” 
		said Miller. “I fully support a state-level ban, but since that isn’t 
		happening, we can use this law to protect parents and get it passed 
		federally."
 
 Pritzker’s office slammed Miller, accusing her of politicizing a 
		bipartisan effort to address the nation’s mental health crisis and 
		highlighting that she has “repeatedly voted to slash funding for public 
		schools.”
 
		
		 
		“As more students experience depression, anxiety, and other struggles, 
		Rep. Miller and her GOP allies are stigmatizing young people instead of 
		offering support,” a Governor’s spokesman told The Center Square. “While 
		Rep. Miller repeatedly voted to slash funding for public schools and 
		backed the Trump Administration’s cuts to stop schools from hiring 
		mental health professionals, Gov. Pritzker has been focused on giving 
		families more options and tools to help students succeed.”
 Miller fired back, saying the governor should look closer at his own 
		record.
 
 “It’s shameful that he is overseeing the state of Illinois, and our 
		schools are failing at their fundamental task, which is teaching 
		children to read,” Miller said. “Illinois’ literacy rates are 39% or 
		lower, pitiful. So why are we going to put them in charge of medical 
		oversight?”
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            Illinois U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, R-Hindsboro Greg Bishop | The Center Square
 
            
			
			
			 
            Miller criticized SB1560 for its confusing opt-out system.
 “I hate the opt-out thing because parents are always the last to 
			know,” she said. “Most parents, they’re super busy, and they think 
			their kids are in school being educated, not indoctrinated. My bill 
			is going to require the schools to get written consent from parents 
			before they conduct these screenings, which will be part of the 
			children’s permanent record.”
 
            Supporters of Miller’s legislation argue it restores parental 
			authority where state leaders have overstepped.
 David Smith, executive director of the Illinois Family Institute, 
			said the bill is “absolutely huge” because it flips Illinois’ 
			opt-out law into an opt-in standard.
 
 “There’s a lot of oblivious parents who are too busy to really take 
			notice of what’s going on in the classrooms,” Smith said. “Now, with 
			this law, it would require them to literally sign off on it before 
			subjecting their children to humanistic mental health screenings.”
 
 Miller told The Center Square that existing Illinois law will lead 
			to “lack of medical oversight” and a potential for over-diagnosis, 
			wrongly labeling children.
 
 Smith said he’s working with Debbie Kraulidis, vice president, chief 
			events officer, host of Moms For America podcast, to reach Secretary 
			of Education Linda McMahon because Smith fears Illinois will inspire 
			other states to adopt similar legislation.
 
 “It’s the job of parents, and their priests and pastors, to care for 
			a child’s mental and physical well-being. The school’s job is 
			academics: preparing kids to be fruitful, productive members of 
			society who can read, write, and do arithmetic,” Smith told The 
			Center Square.
 |