Featured

Ted Cruz Seeks to Support Military Homeschool Families

Senator Ted Cruz (R) has introduced legislation to help military families who homeschool their children by allowing them to continue following their home state's homeschooling laws after being reassigned to a new duty station.

What is the COMPASS Act?

Sen. Ted Cruz, joined by Sens Ted Budd (R-NC) and Ashley Moody (R-FL), introduced the Continuity of Military Parents' Academic Schooling and State Standards (COMPASS) Act.

The legislation would allow military families to continue following the homeschooling laws of their legal home state when they relocate under the Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders, rather than immediately complying with the homeschooling regulations of a new state.

Supporters say the bill would reduce administrative burdens and provide educational stability for military children who frequently move due to military assignments.

Why is the legislation being proposed?

According to Cruz, military families homeschool at roughly twice the rate of civilian families, making educational continuity a significant concern during frequent relocations.

Currently, military families may be required to comply with different homeschooling regulations each time they cross state lines under military orders.

What Cruz is saying

Sen. Ted Cruz: "Military families homeschool their children at roughly twice the rate of civilian families."

Sen. Cruz continued: "This bill will provide military homeschool families with the stability and flexibility they deserve."

How would the bill work?

The COMPASS Act would amend the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) to allow military homeschool families to continue operating under the homeschooling laws of the servicemember's legal state of residence after a PCS move.

Supporters compare the proposal to existing SCRA protections that allow military families to maintain legal residency for purposes such as:

  • Taxes
  • Voting
  • Driver's licenses

Under the legislation, military families would not be forced to immediately adapt to a new state's homeschooling requirements simply because of military relocation orders.

The Bottom Line

The COMPASS Act would allow military homeschool families to continue following their home state's homeschooling laws after PCS moves, reducing regulatory changes and paperwork associated with military relocations.

Raeylee Barefield

Raeylee Barefield is a Legislative Correspondent based in Austin, Texas, specializing in state government and public policy. With one year of reporting under her belt, she covers legislative developments, committee hearings, and policy debates. She has been cited by Texas Politics and Big Energy for her coverage and analysis of legislative and regulatory issues. Her reporting typically focuses on Public policy, Stare government, environmental policy, and energy regulation. To contact her, please reach out at Raeylee@dnm.news

Recent Posts

Ken Paxton Joins Lawsuit Against WPATH Over Pediatric Gender Transition Treatments

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) has joined the Federal Trade Commission and several states…

26 minutes ago

Oil Prices Drop Below $80 Per Barrel, Following the Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz

President Trump signed an Iran peace memorandum Thursday, reopening the Strait of Hormuz and dropping…

48 minutes ago

John Cornyn's PAID OFF Act Advances Targeting Foreign Influence

A Senate committee has advanced legislation led by Sen. John Cornyn (R) that would tighten…

1 hour ago

LONESTAR — 6.18.2026 — Paxton Targets Talarico Over DEI — Roy Criticizes MLB Over Pride Month — and More...

Ken Paxton Targets James Talarico Over Alleged DEI Ties Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's U.S.…

5 hours ago

Ted Cruz, Ron Wyden Team Up to Target Government Pressure on Online Speech

United States Senators Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Ron Wyden (D-OR) are combating government violations of…

6 hours ago

House of Representatives Votes to Fast-Track Union Contracts

The House of Representatives is advocating for faster first-time labor contracts, voting 230-193 for a…

6 hours ago