BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                            



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                                    THIRD READING


          Bill No:  AB 917
          Author:   Bradford (D)
          Amended:  As introduced
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE EDUCATION COMMITTEE  :  6-2, 6/5/13
          AYES:  Liu, Block, Hancock, Hueso, Monning, Torres
          NOES:  Wyland, Huff
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Correa

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  Senate Rule 28.8

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  53-23, 4/29/13 - See last page for vote


           SUBJECT  :    Charter schools:  authorization:  petition:   
          signatures

           SOURCE  :     Service Employees International Union


          DIGEST  :    This bill requires a charter school petition to  
          include signatures from at least 50% of the total number of  
          nonsupervisorial certificated and classified employees the  
          petitioner estimates that will be employed by the charter school  
          in the first year of operation; requires a conversion charter  
          school petition to include at least 50% of the total number of  
          nonsupervisorial certificated and classified employees currently  
          employed at the school that is to be converted to a charter  
          school; and, requires the signature petition to prominently  
          display a statement that the classified employee has a  
          meaningful interest in working at the charter school.
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           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law authorizes anyone to develop,  
          circulate, and submit a petition to establish a charter school.   
          Existing law requires charter developers to collect certain  
          signatures in support of the petition and requires petitions to  
          include a prominent statement that a signature means that the  
          person signing has a meaningful interest in teaching in or  
          having his or her children attend the school. 

          1. For petitions that propose to establish a new charter school,  
             the charter developers must obtain the signatures of either  
             the parents of at least half of the pupils expected to enroll  
             at the school or half of the teachers expected to be employed  
             at the school during its first year of operation. 

          2. For petitions that propose to convert an existing public  
             school to a charter school, the charter developer must  
             collect the signatures of not less than 50% of the permanent  
             status teachers at the school to be converted.  

          This bill:  

          1. Adds the following condition that a petition proposing to  
             establish a new charter school can meet:  the petition is  
             signed by a number of nonsupervisorial certificated staff and  
             classified employees that combined is equivalent to at least  
             one-half of the total number of nonsupervisorial certificated  
             staff and classified employees that the charter school  
             estimates will be employed at the school during its first  
             year of operation. 

          2. Requires a petition to convert an existing public school to a  
             charter school be signed by a number of permanent status  
             nonsupervisorial certificated staff and permanent classified  
             employees that combined is equivalent to at least one-half of  
             the total number of permanent status nonsupervisorial  
             certificated staff and permanent classified employees  
             currently employed at the public school to be converted to a  
             charter school. 

          3. Requires a petition to include a prominent statement that the  
             signatures on the petition has one of the following meanings:

             A.    In the case of a parent's or legal guardian's  

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                signature, that the parent or legal guardian is  
                meaningfully interested in having his or her child or  
                ward attend the charter school.

             B.    In the case of a teacher's signature, that the  
                teacher is meaningfully interested in teaching at the  
                charter school. 

             C.    In the case of a classified employee's signature,  
                that the classified employee is meaningfully interested  
                in working at the charter school.  

          4. Requires the proposed charter to be attached to the petition.

           Comments
           
           Classified employees  .  Employees in positions that do not  
          require certification are considered "classified" staff, which  
          may include paraprofessionals (teaching assistants, teacher  
          aids, pupil services aides, and library aides), clerical staff  
          and those that have administrative support duties, bus drivers,  
          custodians, and cafeteria workers.  The number of permanent  
          classified staff at any individual school varies depending on  
          the type and size of the school, district resources, and the  
          needs of students.  In many schools, the number of classified  
          staff is about half of the number of teachers, and many  
          classified staff are not full-time.  

           Charter schools  .  Charter schools are public schools that  
          provide instruction in any combination of grades, kindergarten  
          through grade 12.  Except where specifically noted otherwise,  
          California law exempts charter schools from many of the statutes  
          and regulations that apply to schools and school districts.   
          There are over 900 charter schools operating in the state.

          Parents, teachers, or community members may initiate a charter  
          petition, which is typically presented to and approved by a  
          local school district governing board.  The law also allows,  
          under certain circumstances, for county boards of education and  
          the State Board of Education to authorize charter schools.  The  
          specific goals and operating procedures for a charter school are  
          detailed in the agreement (charter) between the authorizing  
          entity and the charter developer.


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           Related/Prior Legislation  
            
          AB 86 (Mendoza, 2011) similar to this bill, would have expanded  
          existing signature requirements for charter school petitions to  
          include classified employees and required the signature  
          petitions to prominently display a statement that classified  
          employees signing the petition have a meaningful interest in  
          working at the charter school.  The bill was vetoed by Governor  
          Brown in October 2011, whose veto message read: 

             Charter schools are a small but important part of the  
             California public school system. They vary by size,  
             mission, governing structure and educational philosophy.  
             Their purpose is to allow parents, teachers and other  
             interested citizens to form public schools outside the  
             more detailed regulatory framework of the regular school  
             system.

             They are profoundly difficult to establish and even more  
             difficult to maintain and grow in excellence. Having  
             started two myself, I know whereof I speak.

             Notwithstanding the important contributions classified  
             staff make to the operation of a school, this bill would  
             unnecessarily complicate an already difficult charter  
             school petition process.

             I believe the existing law is tough enough.

           FISCAL EFFECT :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  No

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  6/27/13) 

          Service Employees International Union (source)
          California Charter Schools Association Advocates 
          California Federation of Teachers
          California Labor Federation
          California School Employees Association

           OPPOSITION  :    (Verified  6/27/13) 

          Charter Schools Development Center


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           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    The sponsor of this bill, Service  
          Employees International Union, maintains that although  
          classified employees play an important role in the operation of  
          a school, they are generally not represented in the petition  
          process and do not have a formal voice in decisions that may  
          impact their employment.  Proponents maintain that while current  
          law provides classified employees certain rights to be  
          reassigned to other positions in the district; they are often at  
          risk of losing their jobs during a charter school conversion, a  
          risk that has increased in recent years due to the fiscal  
          constraints and layoffs many districts have experienced.  The  
          stated intent of this bill is to provide parity for classified  
          employees by entitling them to participate in a charter school  
          petition process in the same manner as permanent status  
          teachers.

           ARGUMENTS IN OPPOSITION  :    In opposition the Charter Schools  
          Development Center writes, "The bill uses terms and concepts  
          that have no clear meaning in the charter school context.   
          Moreover, the changes proposed here would add unnecessary  
          complexity to what is already a complex charter petition  
          process.

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  53-23, 4/29/13
          AYES:  Alejo, Ammiano, Bloom, Blumenfield, Bocanegra, Bonilla,  
            Bonta, Bradford, Brown, Buchanan, Ian Calderon, Campos, Chau,  
            Ch�vez, Chesbro, Cooley, Daly, Dickinson, Eggman, Fong,  
            Frazier, Garcia, Gatto, Gomez, Gordon, Gray, Hall, Roger  
            Hern�ndez, Holden, Jones-Sawyer, Levine, Lowenthal, Medina,  
            Mitchell, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, Pan, Perea, V. Manuel  
            P�rez, Quirk, Quirk-Silva, Rendon, Salas, Skinner, Stone,  
            Ting, Torres, Weber, Wieckowski, Williams, Yamada, John A.  
            P�rez
          NOES:  Achadjian, Allen, Bigelow, Conway, Dahle, Donnelly, Beth  
            Gaines, Grove, Hagman, Harkey, Jones, Linder, Logue,  
            Maienschein, Mansoor, Melendez, Morrell, Nestande, Olsen,  
            Patterson, Wagner, Waldron, Wilk
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Atkins, Fox, Gorell, Vacancy


          PQ:d  6/28/13   Senate Floor Analyses 

                           SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE


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