By Ethan Faverino |
The Arizona Senate has taken significant steps to strengthen child welfare protections, passing two key bipartisan bills aimed at closing dangerous gaps in information sharing and coordination within the state’s child protection system.
In a strong show of support, Senate Bill 1126 (SB 1126) passed the Senate on February 16, with 29 ayes and 1 NV.
Sponsored by Senator Carine Werner (R-LD4), Chair of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee, the legislation addresses critical failures in communication between schools and the Arizona Department of Child Safety (DCS).
It amends ARS Section 15 -141 to require schools—in compliance with the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)—to promptly provide DCS caseworkers with requested educational records and related information during active investigations of abuse or neglect.
The bill further prohibits public or private schools from preventing employees, contractors, or volunteers from speaking directly with DCS investigators handling allegations of child abuse or neglect. These changes aim to eliminate barriers that have historically delayed assessments of risk and timely interventions.
“Too often, tragedies reveal that pieces of information existed in different places, but the system failed to connect them in time,” stated Senator Werner. “This bill removes barriers so investigators can get answers quickly and make informed decisions when a child’s safety is on the line.”
SB 1126 responds directly to findings from legislative oversight reviews and several high-profile child death cases in Arizona, where warning signs were reported—sometimes through schools—but fragmented coordination and delayed access to information prevented earlier action.
Recent tragedies have underscored the urgent need for reforms to ensure warning signs do not slip through the cracks.
Complementing this effort, Senate Bill 1125 (SB 1125)—also sponsored by Werner—passed the Senate unanimously on February 10. The measure adds Section 8-469.03 to ARS Title 8 Chapter 4 Article 1, directing DCS to make annual efforts to enter memorandums of understanding (MOU) with each Indian tribe in Arizona that lacks a current agreement.
These MOUs must include provisions for sharing best practices, policies, training materials, and operational standards related to child welfare functions such as intake, investigations, placement, case management, and service coordination. They also require designating a specific DCS tribal liaison to coordinate communication, provide technical assistance, and foster collaboration.
Additionally, the agreements establish processes allowing tribes access to information on regulatory actions, licensing sanctions, corrective plans, substantial violations, and other enforcement measures against DCS-licensed group homes where tribal children are placed.
Together, SB 1125 and SB 1126 address systemic weaknesses uncovered through sustained legislative oversight, strengthening interagency coordination to better safeguard vulnerable children.
“Every child deserves a system that responds quickly and works together to keep them safe,” Werner added. “These reforms are about making sure information reaches the people responsible for protecting children before it’s too late.”
Both measures now advance to the Arizona House of Representatives for further consideration.
Ethan Faverino is a reporter for AZ Free News. You can send him news tips using this link.







