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H.R. 1454 (101st): Student Right-to-Know and Campus Security Act


To require institutions of higher education receiving Federal financial assistance to provide certain information with respect to the graduation rates of student-athletes at such institutions.

The bill’s titles are written by its sponsor.

Sponsor and status

Introduced
Mar 15, 1989
101st Congress (1989–1990)
Status
Enacted Via Other Measures

Provisions of this bill were incorporated into other bills which were enacted.

Sponsor

Edolphus “Ed” Towns

Representative for New York's 11th congressional district

Democrat

Cosponsors

113 Cosponsors (102 Democrats, 11 Republicans)

Source

History

Mar 15, 1989
 
Introduced

Bills and resolutions are referred to committees which debate the bill before possibly sending it on to the whole chamber.

May 22, 1990
 
Ordered Reported

A committee has voted to issue a report to the full chamber recommending that the bill be considered further. Only about 1 in 4 bills are reported out of committee.

Jun 5, 1990
 
Passed House (Senate next)

The bill was passed in a vote in the House. It goes to the Senate next. The vote was by voice vote so no record of individual votes was made.

H.R. 1454 (101st) was a bill in the United States Congress.

A bill must be passed by both the House and Senate in identical form and then be signed by the President to become law.

Bills numbers restart every two years. That means there are other bills with the number H.R. 1454. This is the one from the 101st Congress.

This bill was introduced in the 101st Congress, which met from Jan 3, 1989 to Oct 28, 1990. Legislation not passed by the end of a Congress is cleared from the books.

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“H.R. 1454 — 101st Congress: Student Right-to-Know and Campus Security Act.” www.GovTrack.us. 1989. May 30, 2023 <https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/101/hr1454>

Where is this information from?

GovTrack automatically collects legislative information from a variety of governmental and non-governmental sources. This page is sourced primarily from Congress.gov, the official portal of the United States Congress. Congress.gov is generally updated one day after events occur, and so legislative activity shown here may be one day behind. Data via the congress project.