Impact of porn on kids downplayed during coverage
GUEST COLUMN, Ursula Billings, Kansas Informer
A new law requiring age verification for pornography web sites which Governor Laura Kelly allowed on the books on Friday without her signature was criticized for its potential to infringe on Kansas internet users constitutional rights, but the impacts of pornography on children and teens was never explored outside committee hearings or in Kansas media reports of the bill.
Kelly allowed Senate Bill 394 to become law without her signature, saying in a statement the bill was well intended but was vague and would likely encourage litigation. The bill was sent to the governor March 26th, and became law after the 10-day statutory limit for the governor’s action expired. It requires in-state internet users to verify that they are at least 18 years of age before accessing websites that contain “material[s]…harmful to minors” that appear on “25 percent or more of the web pages viewed on such website,” according to the bill brief. Age verification will be conducted through a viable, “commercially available database.”


