Overview
- Deputies Paul Vannier and Violette Spillebout will file the proposal by mid-December, with a debate and vote targeted for early 2026.
- The bill draws on about 30 of the inquiry’s 50 recommendations and is built around victim support, prevention, and reinforced controls.
- Measures under consideration include systematic checks every three years of staff criminal records and possible FIJAIS registration across public and private schools.
- A new monitoring committee bringing together victims’ groups, whistleblowers, researchers, teacher unions, and parent federations convened on 19 November to track follow‑through.
- The inquiry has transmitted 92 reports to prosecutors in 55 departments, while four related budget amendments—240 inspector posts and 5,000 medico‑social positions—passed committee but still await confirmation in the 2026 budget.