09/23/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/23/2025 17:30
Washington, DC - Today, Congresswoman Julia Brownley (D-CA) introduced Katie Meyer's Law, legislation to ensure students at higher education institutions have the right to select an independent adviser to help them navigate disciplinary proceedings and create new reporting requirements for campus suicide incidents. The bill was inspired by the life of Katie Meyer, whose tragic passing underscored the urgent need for greater protections and support for students.
Katie Meyer, a young woman from California's 26th Congressional District, was a standout goalkeeper who led Stanford University to the 2019 NCAA women's soccer championship. Katie was a gifted student, resident advisor, and a future law student awaiting her acceptance to Stanford Law. However, in late February 2022, less than four months before her graduation and unbeknownst to her parents, Katie received a five-page email with criminalistic language from Stanford stating she was facing a disciplinary action that put her degree on hold. The charge letter not only threatened to withhold her degree, but the charge from Stanford officials could also result in her complete expulsion from the university. Cruelly, this charge letter was sent at night after over three months of near silence from the Office of Community Standards. Distressed by the potential disciplinary action and inability to graduate, Katie suffered an acute crisis stress reaction. Stanford failed to provide any supportive action or to respond in any way to her expression of being distraught and distressed. Shortly after, she took her own life on March 1, 2022, at only 22 years old.
"College should be a place where students can learn, grow, and prepare for their futures, not a place where they are left to navigate intimidating and high-stakes disciplinary processes alone," said Congresswoman Brownley. "By ensuring students have a trusted advisor by their side and by requiring greater transparency about suicide on our campuses, my bill seeks to put student well-being and mental health front and center. We owe it to Katie, her family, and countless other young people to make sure no student feels alone in their greatest moments of need."
In the wake of this devastating loss, Katie's parents have worked tirelessly to honor her memory and save others from this heartbreaking tragedy. Their advocacy led to the passage of a new California state law guaranteeing students the right to an adviser during disciplinary proceedings - a policy they believe could have saved Katie's life.
"We are grateful to Congresswoman Brownley for recognizing the importance of Katie Meyer's Law and introducing it on a federal level," said Gina and Steve Meyer, parents of Katie Meyer. "The law now has the ability to have the vast and necessary impact on not only protecting and supporting California students, but students in our universities across the country."
"Katie Meyer's Law provides a supportive framework for students facing allegations of violations of a university policy that is often missing from administrative proceedings. It serves as a 'front end safety net' for our students, whereby the adviser of the student's choice would be informed on day one of an administrative allegations, get educated on the resources and processes the student must go through - and updated biweekly on the status of an appropriate resolution.
"We truly believe this law could have saved Katie's life. We miss her endlessly and while it will not bring her back, it will save lives and protect students and their campus communities going forward. We know Katie, an incessantly loving, loyal and protective person, would have wanted that for everyone," Gina and Steve Meyer added.
Background
Currently, federal law does not require higher education institutions to allow students to have an adviser during disciplinary hearings for academic or athletic code of conduct violations. Even on campuses where advisers are permitted, those advisers often lack training in the institution's procedures, leaving students isolated and unprepared in stressful proceedings.
Katie Meyer's Law was inspired by the tragic loss of Katie Meyer and her family's advocacy, and it would expand California's new state law to a federal scale, so students across the country can benefit from these needed protections.
The bill would require higher education institutions that receive federal funding to:
The bill also sets requirements for the adviser leading up to and throughout the disciplinary proceedings, including:
In addition, the legislation would strengthen campus transparency requirements related to suicide incidents. Current law requires colleges and universities that receive federal funding to publish an Annual Security Report (ASR) with crime statistics and safety measures. Katie Meyer's Law would require incidents of death by suicide to be included in the ASR, ensuring students and faculty have necessary transparency surrounding this serious mental health concern.
Katie Meyer's Law is endorsed by The Trevor Project and SEAT (Students Engaged in Advancing Texas).
Read the text of the bill here.
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Issues: 119th Congress, Education, Healthcare