West Virginia Code § 18-2-5c

Birth certificate required upon admission to public school; required
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
notice to local law-enforcement agency of missing children.
(a) No pupil shall be admitted for the first time to any public school in this state unless the
person enrolling the pupil presents a copy of the pupil's original birth record certified by the
state registrar of vital statistics confirming the pupil's identity, age, and state file number of
the original birth record. If a certified copy of the pupil's birth record cannoet be obtained,
the person so enrolling the pupil shall submit an affidavit explaining the inability to produce
a certified copy of the birth record: Provided, That if any person submitrting such affidavit is
in U.S. military service and is in transit due to military orders, a three-week extension shall
be granted to such person for providing the birth records.
(b) Upon the failure of any person enrolling a pupil to furnisth a certified copy of the pupil's
birth record in conformance with subsection (a) above, the principal of the school in which
the pupil is being enrolled or his designee shall immediately notify the local law-enforcement
agency. The notice to the local law-enforcement agency shall include copies of the submitted
proof of the pupil's identity and age and the affidavit explaining the inability to produce a
certified copy of the birth record. s
(c) Within fourteen days after enrolling a transferred pupil, the principal of the school in
which the pupil has been enrolled org his designee shall request that the principal or his
designee of the school in which the pupil was previously enrolled transfer a certified copy of
the pupil's birth record. e
(d) Principals and their designees shall be immune from any civil or criminal liability in
connection with any notice to a local law-enforcement agency of a pupil lacking a birth
certificate or failure to give such notice as required by this section.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.