2023 -- H 5322 | |
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LC000823 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2023 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX | |
RELIEF ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives O'Brien, J. Brien, Caldwell, Dawson, Slater, Hull, Vella- | |
Date Introduced: February 01, 2023 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 16-7.2-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-7.2 entitled "The |
2 | Education Equity and Property Tax Relief Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 16-7.2-6. Categorical programs, state funded expenses. |
4 | In addition to the foundation education aid provided pursuant to § 16-7.2-3, the permanent |
5 | foundation education-aid program shall provide direct state funding for: |
6 | (a) Excess costs associated with special education students. Excess costs are defined when |
7 | an individual special education student’s cost shall be deemed to be “extraordinary.” Extraordinary |
8 | costs are those educational costs that exceed the state-approved threshold based on an amount |
9 | above five times the core foundation amount (total of core-instruction amount plus student success |
10 | amount). The department of elementary and secondary education shall prorate the funds available |
11 | for distribution among those eligible school districts if the total approved costs for which school |
12 | districts are seeking reimbursement exceed the amount of funding appropriated in any fiscal year |
13 | are over three (3) times the average statewide special education cost; and the department of |
14 | elementary and secondary education shall also collect data on those educational costs that exceed |
15 | the state-approved threshold based on an amount above two (2), three (3), and four (4) times the |
16 | core-foundation amount; |
17 | (b) Career and technical education costs to help meet initial investment requirements |
18 | needed to transform existing, or create new, comprehensive, career and technical education |
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1 | programs and career pathways in critical and emerging industries and to help offset the higher- |
2 | than-average costs associated with facilities, equipment maintenance and repair, and supplies |
3 | necessary for maintaining the quality of highly specialized programs that are a priority for the state. |
4 | The department shall develop criteria for the purpose of allocating any and all career and technical |
5 | education funds as may be determined by the general assembly on an annual basis. The department |
6 | of elementary and secondary education shall prorate the funds available for distribution among |
7 | those eligible school districts if the total approved costs for which school districts are seeking |
8 | reimbursement exceed the amount of funding available in any fiscal year; |
9 | (c) Programs to increase access to voluntary, free, high-quality pre-kindergarten programs. |
10 | The department shall recommend criteria for the purpose of allocating any and all early childhood |
11 | program funds as may be determined by the general assembly; |
12 | (d) Central Falls, Davies, and the Met Center Stabilization Fund is established to ensure |
13 | that appropriate funding is available to support their students. Additional support for Central Falls |
14 | is needed due to concerns regarding the city’s capacity to meet the local share of education costs. |
15 | This fund requires that education aid calculated pursuant to § 16-7.2-3 and funding for costs outside |
16 | the permanent foundation education-aid formula, including, but not limited to, transportation, |
17 | facility maintenance, and retiree health benefits shall be shared between the state and the city of |
18 | Central Falls. The fund shall be annually reviewed to determine the amount of the state and city |
19 | appropriation. The state’s share of this fund may be supported through a reallocation of current |
20 | state appropriations to the Central Falls school district. At the end of the transition period defined |
21 | in § 16-7.2-7, the municipality will continue its contribution pursuant to § 16-7-24. Additional |
22 | support for the Davies and the Met Center is needed due to the costs associated with running a |
23 | stand-alone high school offering both academic and career and technical coursework. The |
24 | department shall recommend criteria for the purpose of allocating any and all stabilization funds as |
25 | may be determined by the general assembly; |
26 | (e) Excess costs associated with transporting students to out-of-district non-public schools. |
27 | This fund will provide state funding for the costs associated with transporting students to out-of- |
28 | district non-public schools, pursuant to chapter 21.1 of this title. The state will assume the costs of |
29 | non-public out-of-district transportation for those districts participating in the statewide system. |
30 | The department of elementary and secondary education shall prorate the funds available for |
31 | distribution among those eligible school districts if the total approved costs for which school |
32 | districts are seeking reimbursement exceed the amount of funding available in any fiscal year; |
33 | (f) Excess costs associated with transporting students within regional school districts. This |
34 | fund will provide direct state funding for the excess costs associated with transporting students |
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1 | within regional school districts, established pursuant to chapter 3 of this title. This fund requires |
2 | that the state and regional school district share equally the student transportation costs net any |
3 | federal sources of revenue for these expenditures. The department of elementary and secondary |
4 | education shall prorate the funds available for distribution among those eligible school districts if |
5 | the total approved costs for which school districts are seeking reimbursement exceed the amount |
6 | of funding available in any fiscal year; |
7 | (g) Public school districts that are regionalized shall be eligible for a regionalization bonus |
8 | as set forth below: |
9 | (1) As used herein, the term “regionalized” shall be deemed to refer to a regional school |
10 | district established under the provisions of chapter 3 of this title, including the Chariho Regional |
11 | School district; |
12 | (2) For those districts that are regionalized as of July 1, 2010, the regionalization bonus |
13 | shall commence in FY 2012. For those districts that regionalize after July 1, 2010, the |
14 | regionalization bonus shall commence in the first fiscal year following the establishment of a |
15 | regionalized school district as set forth in chapter 3 of this title, including the Chariho Regional |
16 | School District; |
17 | (3) The regionalization bonus in the first fiscal year shall be two percent (2.0%) of the |
18 | state’s share of the foundation education aid for the regionalized district as calculated pursuant to |
19 | §§ 16-7.2-3 and 16-7.2-4 in that fiscal year; |
20 | (4) The regionalization bonus in the second fiscal year shall be one percent (1.0%) of the |
21 | state’s share of the foundation education aid for the regionalized district as calculated pursuant to |
22 | §§ 16-7.2-3 and 16-7.2-4 in that fiscal year; |
23 | (5) The regionalization bonus shall cease in the third fiscal year; |
24 | (6) The regionalization bonus for the Chariho regional school district shall be applied to |
25 | the state share of the permanent foundation education aid for the member towns; and |
26 | (7) The department of elementary and secondary education shall prorate the funds available |
27 | for distribution among those eligible regionalized school districts if the total, approved costs for |
28 | which regionalized school districts are seeking a regionalization bonus exceed the amount of |
29 | funding appropriated in any fiscal year; |
30 | (h) Additional state support for English learners (EL). The amount to support EL students |
31 | shall be determined by multiplying an EL factor of ten percent (10%) by the core-instruction per- |
32 | pupil amount defined in § 16-7.2-3(a)(1) and applying that amount of additional state support to |
33 | EL students identified using widely adopted, independent standards and assessments identified by |
34 | the commissioner. All categorical funds distributed pursuant to this subsection must be used to |
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1 | provide high-quality, research-based services to EL students and managed in accordance with |
2 | requirements set forth by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education. The |
3 | department of elementary and secondary education shall collect performance reports from districts |
4 | and approve the use of funds prior to expenditure. The department of elementary and secondary |
5 | education shall ensure the funds are aligned to activities that are innovative and expansive and not |
6 | utilized for activities the district is currently funding. The department of elementary and secondary |
7 | education shall prorate the funds available for distribution among eligible recipients if the total |
8 | calculated costs exceed the amount of funding available in any fiscal year; |
9 | (i) State support for school resource officers. For purposes of this subsection, a school |
10 | resource officer (SRO) shall be defined as a career law enforcement officer with sworn authority |
11 | who is deployed by an employing police department or agency in a community-oriented policing |
12 | assignment to work in collaboration with one or more schools. School resource officers should have |
13 | completed at least forty (40) hours of specialized training in school policing, administered by an |
14 | accredited agency, before being assigned. Beginning in FY 2019, for a period of three (3) years, |
15 | school districts or municipalities that choose to employ school resource officers shall receive direct |
16 | state support for costs associated with employing such officers at public middle and high schools. |
17 | Districts or municipalities shall be reimbursed an amount equal to one-half (½) of the cost of |
18 | salaries and benefits for the qualifying positions. Funding will be provided for school resource |
19 | officer positions established on or after July 1, 2018, provided that: |
20 | (1) Each school resource officer shall be assigned to one school: |
21 | (i) Schools with enrollments below one thousand twelve hundred (1,200) students shall |
22 | require one school resource officer; |
23 | (ii) Schools with enrollments of one thousand twelve hundred (1,200) or more students |
24 | shall require two school resource officers; |
25 | (2) School resource officers hired in excess of the requirement noted above shall not be |
26 | eligible for reimbursement; and |
27 | (3) Schools that eliminate existing school resource officer positions and create new |
28 | positions under this provision shall not be eligible for reimbursement; and |
29 | (j) Categorical programs defined in subsections (a) through (g) shall be funded pursuant to |
30 | the transition plan in § 16-7.2-7. |
31 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX | |
RELIEF ACT | |
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1 | This act would amend the definition of the term "extraordinary costs" for the purposes of |
2 | excess costs associated with special education students. The new definition of extraordinary costs |
3 | would be educational costs that are over three (3) times the average statewide special education |
4 | cost. |
5 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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