SB 416, as amended, Huff. Public schools: elementary and secondary education.
Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state, and authorizes local educational agencies throughout the state to provide instruction to pupils.
This bill would revise and recast various provisions relating to elementary and secondary education, including, among others, repealing specified funding programs, revising the uniform complaint process, removing specified prohibitions on which funding programs a charter school can apply to, and expanding the financial assistance a school district can provide to pupils taking advanced placement and International Baccalaureate Diploma Program examinations and tests.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Article 9 (commencing with Section 1780) of
2Chapter 6 of Part 2 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code
3 is repealed.
Article 10 (commencing with Section 1790) of Chapter
56 of Part 2 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is
6repealed.
Article 4 (commencing with Section 8080) of Chapter
81 of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is
9repealed.
Chapter 5.1 (commencing with Section 8820) of Part
116 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is repealed.
Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 8980) of Part 6
13of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is repealed.
Part 10.7 (commencing with Section 17910) of
15Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is repealed.
Article 3.6 (commencing with Section 32228) of
17Chapter 2 of Part 19 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code
18 is repealed.
Section 35186 of the Education Code is amended to
20read:
(a) A school district shall use the uniform complaint
22process it has adopted as required by Chapter 5.1 (commencing
23with Section 4600) of Division 1 of Title 5 of the California Code
24of Regulations, with modifications, as necessary, to help identify
25and resolve any deficiencies related to instructional materials,
26emergency or urgent facilities conditions that pose a threat to the
27health and safety of pupils or staff, and teacher vacancy or
28misassignment.
29(1) A complaint may be filed anonymously. A complainant who
30identifies himself or herself is entitled to a response if he or she
31indicates that a response is requested. A complaint form shall
32include a space to mark to indicate whether a response is requested.
33If Section
48985 is otherwise applicable, the response, if requested,
34and report shall be written in English and the primary language in
35which the complaint was filed. All complaints and responses are
36public records.
P4 1(2) The complaint form shall specify the location for filing a
2complaint. A complainant may add as much text to explain the
3complaint as he or she wishes.
4(3) A complaint shall be filed with the principal of the school
5or his or her designee. A complaint about problems beyond the
6authority of the school principal shall be forwarded in a timely
7manner but not to exceed 10 working days to the appropriate school
8district official for resolution.
9(b) The principal or the designee of the district superintendent,
10as applicable, shall make all reasonable efforts to investigate any
11problem within his or her authority. The
principal or designee of
12the district superintendent shall remedy a valid complaint within
13a reasonable time period but not to exceed 30 working days from
14the date the complaint was received. The principal or designee of
15the district superintendent shall report to the complainant the
16resolution of the complaint within 45 working days of the initial
17filing. If the principal makes this report, the principal shall also
18report the same information in the same timeframe to the designee
19of the district superintendent.
20(c) A complainant not satisfied with the resolution of the
21principal or the designee of the district superintendent has the right
22to describe the complaint to the governing board of the school
23district at a regularly scheduled hearing of the governing board of
24the school district. As to complaints involving a condition of a
25facility that poses an emergency or urgent threat, as defined in
26paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section
17592.72, a complainant
27who is not satisfied with the resolution proffered by the principal
28or the designee of the district superintendent has the right to file
29an appeal to the Superintendent, who shall provide a written report
30to the state board describing the basis for the complaint and, as
31appropriate, a proposed remedy for the issue described in the
32complaint.
33(d) A school district shall report summarized data on the nature
34and resolution of all complaints on a quarterly basis to the county
35superintendent of schools and the governing board of the school
36district. The summaries shall be publicly reported on a quarterly
37basis at a regularly scheduled meeting of the governing board of
38the school district. The report shall include the number of
39complaints by general subject area with the number of resolved
P5 1and unresolved complaints. The complaints and written responses
2shall be available as public records.
3(e) The procedure required pursuant to this section is intended
4to address all of the following:
5(1) A complaint related to instructional materials as follows:
6(A) A pupil, including an English learner, does not have
7standards-aligned textbooks or instructional materials or
8state-adopted or district-adopted textbooks or other required
9instructional material to use in class.
10(B) A pupil does not have access to instructional materials to
11use at home or after school.
12(C) Textbooks or instructional materials are in poor or unusable
13condition, have missing pages, or are unreadable due to damage.
14(2) A complaint related to teacher
vacancy or misassignment
15as follows:
16(A) A semester begins and a teacher vacancy exists.
17(B) A teacher who lacks credentials or training to teach English
18learners is assigned to teach a class with more than 20 percent of
19English learner pupils in the class. This subparagraph does not
20relieve a school district from complying with state or federal law
21regarding teachers of English learners.
22(C) A teacher is assigned to teach a class for which the teacher
23lacks subject matter competency.
24(3) A complaint related to the condition of facilities that pose
25an emergency or urgent threat to the health or safety of pupils or
26staff as defined in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section
2717592.72 and any other emergency conditions the school district
28determines
appropriate and the requirements established pursuant
29to subdivision (a) of Section 35292.5.
30(f) In order to identify appropriate subjects of complaint, a notice
31shall be posted in each classroom in each school in the school
32district notifying parents, guardians, pupils, and teachers of the
33following:
34(1) There should be sufficient textbooks and instructional
35materials. For there to be sufficient textbooks and instructional
36materials each pupil, including English learners, must have a
37textbook or instructional materials, or both, to use in class and to
38take home.
39(2) School facilities must be clean, safe, and maintained in good
40repair.
P6 1(3) There should be no teacher vacancies or misassignments as
2defined in paragraphs (2) and (3) of subdivision (h).
3(4) The location at which to obtain a form to file a complaint
4in case of a shortage. Posting a notice downloadable from the
5Internet Web site of the department shall satisfy this requirement.
6(g) A local educational agency shall establish local policies and
7procedures, post notices, and implement this section.
8(h) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
9(1) “Good repair” has the same meaning as specified in
10subdivision (d) of Section 17002.
11(2) “Misassignment” means the placement of a certificated
12employee in a teaching or services position for which the employee
13does not hold a legally recognized certificate or credential or the
14placement of a certificated employee in
a teaching or services
15position that the employee is not otherwise authorized by statute
16to hold.
17(3) “Teacher vacancy” means a position to which a single
18designated certificated employee has not been assigned at the
19beginning of the year for an entire year or, if the position is for a
20one-semester course, a position to which a single designated
21certificated employee has not been assigned at the beginning of a
22semester for an entire semester.
Article 10.4 (commencing with Section 35294.10) of
24Chapter 2 of Part 21 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code
25 is repealed.
Article 4 (commencing with Section 37252) of
27Chapter 2 of Part 22 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code
28 is repealed.
Section 37611.5 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 39820 of the Education Code is amended to
31read:
Notwithstanding any other law, the governing board
33of a school district may provide for the transportation to and from
34public school of pupils who have attained the age of three years
35and nine months and are enrolled in classes established pursuant
36to Chapter 4.45 (commencing with Section 56440) of Part 30 of
37Division 4 whenever in the judgment of the governing board of a
38school district, transportation is advisable and good reasons exist.
39A governing board of a school district may allow for the
40transportation of parents of pupils enrolled in these classes for the
P7 1purpose of accompanying their children to and from the attendance
2center offering the early primary classes.
Section 41301.5 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 41422 of the Education Code is amended to
5read:
(a) A school district, county office of education, or
7charter school that is prevented from maintaining its schools during
8a fiscal year for at least 175 days or is required to operate sessions
9of shorter length than otherwise prescribed by law because of fire,
10flood, earthquake, or epidemic, or because of any order of any
11military officer of the United States or of the state to meet an
12emergency created by war, or of any civil officer of the United
13States, of the state, or of any county, city and county, or city
14authorized to issue that order to meet an emergency created by
15war, or because of other extraordinary conditions, or because of
16inability to secure or hold a teacher, or because of the illness of
17the teacher, which fact shall be shown to the satisfaction of the
18Superintendent by
the affidavits of the members of the governing
19board of the school district, the governing board of the county
20office of education, or the governing board of the charter school
21and of the county superintendent of schools, shall receive the same
22apportionment from the State School Fund as it would have
23received had it not been so prevented from maintaining school for
24at least 175 full-length days.
25(b) This section shall also apply to school districts county offices
26of education, or charter schools that, in the absence of one or more
27of the conditions prescribed by this section, would have qualified
28for funds pursuant to Sections 46200 to 46208, inclusive, or Section
2947612.5, as applicable.
Chapter 12 (commencing with Section 43001.5) of
31Part 24 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Article 7 (commencing with Section 44570) of
33Chapter 3 of Part 25 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code
34 is repealed.
Chapter 3.25 (commencing with Section 44695) of
36Part 25 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Chapter 3.34 (commencing with Section 44730) of
38Part 25 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Chapter 3.8 (commencing with Section 44740) of
40Part 25 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 44760) of
2Part 25 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 45023.1 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 45023.4 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 46392 of the Education Code is amended to
6read:
(a) If the average daily attendance of a school district,
8county office of education, or charter school during a fiscal year
9has been materially decreased during a fiscal year because of any
10of the following, the fact shall be established to the satisfaction of
11the Superintendent by affidavits of the members of the governing
12board of the school district, county office of education, or charter
13school and the county superintendent of schools:
14(1) Fire.
15(2) Flood.
16(3) Impassable roads.
17(4) Epidemic.
18(5) Earthquake.
19(6) The imminence of a major safety hazard as determined by
20the local law enforcement agency.
21(7) A strike involving transportation services to pupils provided
22by a nonschool entity.
23(8) An order provided for in Section 41422.
24(b) In the event a state of emergency is declared by the Governor
25in a county, a decrease in average daily attendance in the county
26below the approximate total average daily attendance that would
27have been credited to a school district, county office of education,
28or charter school had the state of emergency not occurred shall be
29deemed material. The Superintendent shall determine the length
30of the period during which average daily attendance has been
31
reduced by the state of emergency. This period that is determined
32by the Superintendent shall not extend into the next fiscal year
33following the declaration of the state of emergency by the
34Governor, except upon a showing by a school district, county office
35of education, or charter school, to the satisfaction of the
36Superintendent, that extending the period into the next fiscal year
37is essential to alleviate continued reductions in average daily
38attendance attributable to the state of emergency.
39(c) The average daily attendance of the district, county office
40of education, or charter school for the fiscal year shall be estimated
P9 1by the Superintendent in a manner that credits to the school district,
2county office of education, or charter school for determining the
3apportionments to be made to the school district, county office of
4education, or charter school from the State School Fund
5approximately the total average daily attendance that would
have
6been credited to the school district, county office of education, or
7charter school had the emergency not occurred or had the order
8not been issued.
9(d) This section applies to any average daily attendance that
10occurs during any part of a school year.
Section 47634.4 of the Education Code is amended
12to read:
(a) A charter school that elects to receive its funding
14directly, pursuant to Section 47651, may apply individually for
15federal and state categorical programs, not excluded in this section,
16but only to the extent it is eligible for funding and meets the
17provisions of the program. For purposes of determining eligibility
18for, and allocation of, state or federal categorical aid, a charter
19school that applies individually shall be deemed to be a school
20district, except as otherwise provided in this chapter.
21(b) A charter school that does not elect to receive its funding
22directly, pursuant to Section 47651, may apply, in cooperation
23with its chartering authority, for federal and state categorical
24programs not specified in this section, but only to the extent it is
25
eligible for funding and meets the provisions of the program.
26(c) Notwithstanding any other law, a charter school shall not
27apply directly for categorical programs for which services are
28exclusively or almost exclusively provided by a county office of
29education.
30(d) Consistent with subdivision (c), a charter school shall not
31receive direct funding for any of the following county-administered
32categorical programs:
33(1) American Indian Education Centers.
34(2) County Office Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance
35Team.
36(3) The K-12 High Speed Network.
37(e) A charter school may apply separately for district-level or
38school-level
grants associated with any of the categorical programs
39specified in subdivision (d).
Article 15 (commencing with Section 51870) of
2Chapter 5 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code
3 is repealed.
Article 1 (commencing with Section 52130) of
5Chapter 7 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code
6 is repealed.
Section 52240 of the Education Code is amended to
8read:
(a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
10following:
11(1) Advanced placement courses, for which school credit is
12awarded, provide rigorous academic coursework opportunities for
13high school pupils and help to improve the overall curriculum at
14schools where those courses are provided.
15(2) The successful completion of advanced placement courses
16and the subsequent advanced placement examinations, which are
17conducted by the College Entrance Examination Board and for
18which college credit is awarded, provide a cost-effective means
19for high school pupils to obtain college-level coursework
20experience.
21(3) To the extent economically
disadvantaged pupils are
22provided financial assistance to take advanced placement
23examinations, they will be provided with successful college-level
24experience and be encouraged to pursue postsecondary education
25opportunities.
26(b) The Superintendent shall annually update the information
27on advanced placement available on the department’s Internet Web
28site to include current information on the various means available
29to school districts to offer or access advanced placement courses,
30including online courses. The Superintendent shall annually
31communicate with high schools that offer advanced placement
32courses in fewer than five subjects, and inform them of the various
33options for making advanced placement courses and other rigorous
34courses available to pupils who may benefit from them.
Section 52241 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 52242 of the Education Code is amended to
37read:
A school district may help pay for all or part of the
39costs of one or more advanced placement examinations that are
40charged to economically disadvantaged pupils.
Section 52243 of the Education Code is repealed.
Article 2 (commencing with Section 52340) of
3Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code
4 is repealed.
Article 3 (commencing with Section 52350) of
6Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code
7 is repealed.
Article 5 (commencing with Section 52381) of
9Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code
10 is repealed.
begin insertSection 52384 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is repealed.end insert
Any program of summer career technical and technical
13education established pursuant to this article shall be subject to
14the prior approval of the State Department of Education, and no
15average daily attendance of pupils in such a program shall be
16credited to a district unless the program has been approved and is
17conducted pursuant to the rules, regulations, and standards
18prescribed by the department. School districts desiring to
19participate under the provisions of this article shall submit to the
20department applications which shall include plans for the
21establishment of a summer career technical and technical education
22program, and describing in detail its proposed content and
23operation.
begin insertSection 52386 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to
25read:end insert
begin deleteUpon approval by the department, theend deletebegin insert Theend insert governing
27board ofbegin delete anyend deletebegin insert aend insert school district may contract with and receive and
28expend funds from any other public or private agency, foundation,
29or corporation for the purposes of this article. The governing board
30ofbegin delete anyend deletebegin insert aend insert
school district may cooperate with public and private
31institutions of higher education in conducting programs pursuant
32to this article.
begin insertSection 52387 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is repealed.end insert
The governing board of a school district whose program
35has been approved by the department, may, no more than 10 weeks
36prior to the beginning of the program for the forthcoming summer,
37employ sufficient staff to perform the administrative tasks
38necessary to implement the program.
begin insertSection 52388 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is repealed.end insert
The department shall adopt rules and regulations that
2are necessary to implement the provisions of this article. The rules
3and regulations shall include standards for the career technical and
4technical education programs provided for under this article.
begin insertSection 52389 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is repealed.end insert
The department in cooperation with the school districts
7shall develop curriculums for purposes of this article.
begin insertSection 52391 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is repealed.end insert
From funds appropriated by the Legislature for the
10purposes of this article, a school district, upon the approval of the
11department, shall be reimbursed for the current expense actually
12incurred by the district per pupil in average daily attendance
13participating in the program during the preceding fiscal year that
14is in excess of the foundation program amount for the district
15during such year for such pupil, plus any other state funds or
16federal funds received, or to be received, for operation of the
17program.
Article 9 (commencing with Section 52485) of
20Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code
21 is repealed.
Section 52920 of the Education Code is amended to
24read:
(a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares that the
26International Baccalaureate Diploma Program is a comprehensive
27and rigorous two-year curriculum, leading to examinations for
28high school pupils. Its objectives are to provide pupils with a
29balanced education, to facilitate geographic and cultural mobility,
30and to promote international understanding through a shared
31academic experience. Successful International Baccalaureate
32Diploma candidates pursue a specific, intensive, balanced liberal
33arts course of study and must pass rigorous examinations in seven
34curricula areas. Successful International Baccalaureate Diploma
35candidates are typically granted substantial advanced placement
36credit at the finest colleges and universities in the nation. The
37academic content and rigor of the instruction and examinations in
38International
Baccalaureate Diploma Programs is governed and
39continuously monitored by the International Baccalaureate
40Organization in Geneva, Switzerland.
P13 1(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage high schools
2to offer the intensive, rigorous course of instruction leading to
3International Baccalaureate Diplomas and to encourage pupils in
4these schools to enroll in, attempt, and pass the rigorous
5International Baccalaureate Diploma course of study and the
6rigorous examinations leading to the International Baccalaureate
7Diploma.
8(c) The Superintendent shall annually update information on
9the International Baccalaureate Diploma Program available on the
10department’s Internet Web site. The Superintendent also shall
11provide support to high schools that offer International
12Baccalaureate (IB) courses to facilitate communication with the
13Academic Senate for the California Community Colleges,
the
14Academic Senate of the California State University, and the
15Academic Senate of the University of California about the rigor
16of those courses and to ensure that college credit is given to pupils
17who participate so that they benefit from successful efforts in IB
18programs.
Section 52921 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 52922 of the Education Code is amended to
23read:
A school district that offers an International
25Baccalaureate Diploma Program may help pay the test fees for
26pupils in need of financial assistance.
Chapter 17 (commencing with Section 53080) of Part
2928 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 54300) of Part
3229 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Chapter 3.1 (commencing with Section 58520) of
35Part 31 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 60118 of the Education Code is repealed.
CORRECTIONS:
Amended House--Page 1.
O
Corrected 8-17-15—See last page. 94