An 11-year-old boy named Jake Ross completely upstaged Gov. Mark Dayton when he signed the new state antibullying legislation into law last spring.
In a calm, unwavering voice, Ross told the hundreds of people gathered there how he was brutally bullied as a 7-year-old and how the abuse led him to transfer schools. He ended his speech by directly addressing students who had been bullied.
"I wish you freedom from your pain," Ross told the crowd gathered at the Capitol, many of whom were moved to tears.
Now the Forest Lake boy is among three student representatives on the state council overseeing the implementation of Minnesota's new antibullying law, which gives schools across the state new tools to combat student harassment.
As members of the School Safety Technical Assistance Council, Ross, Zeam Porter and Michael Reinhardt are in a powerful position to influence how the law is implemented.
Each brings their own perspective to the group. Porter identifies as transgender queer and attends a metro-area private school. Reinhardt, a Bloomington Jefferson High School senior, leads his school's Gay Straight Alliance. At 12, Ross is by far the youngest person on the council, which also consists of teachers, principals, law enforcement officers and representatives from state agencies.
It is somewhat unusual for students to serve as voting members on state councils that shape education policy, but supporters of Minnesota's new bullying law thought it was important that young people be included on the 23-person group. It also is a dramatic turn for the youngest leaders of an effort that gripped the Capitol for a couple of years with no guarantee it would ever become law.
"Students really had an incredible voice in moving this legislation forward," said Rep. Jim Davnie, DFL-Minneapolis, one of the law's cosponsors. "Even in the face of opposition, students fought really hard to make sure Minnesota schools had a safe climate. So we really needed to honor that commitment they made."