Bill Text: FL S1124 | 2014 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Charter Schools
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)
Status: (Failed) 2014-05-02 - Died in Education [S1124 Detail]
Download: Florida-2014-S1124-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2014 SB 1124 By Senator Montford 3-01193-14 20141124__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to charter schools; amending s. 3 1002.33, F.S.; revising the contents of the annual 4 report submitted by the sponsor of a charter school; 5 revising the requirements of the contents of a charter 6 school application and a charter to include a 7 requirement that a governing board demonstrate that it 8 is independent of a management company; requiring that 9 at least one member of the governing board of a 10 charter school be a parent of a student enrolled in 11 the school; providing for the voluntary withdrawal of 12 a student from a charter school; providing an 13 exception; providing for the transfer of funds if a 14 student voluntarily withdraws from a charter school; 15 providing procedures for the withdrawal of a student 16 from a charter school if the withdrawal is initiated 17 by the school; providing for the transfer of funds; 18 prohibiting a student from being dismissed or 19 requested to withdraw from a charter school under 20 certain circumstances; requiring a charter school to 21 post a specified bond; providing requirements for such 22 bond; revising terminology; prohibiting specified 23 conflicts of interest on the part of members of a 24 charter school board of directors or specified 25 contracts; providing an exception; authorizing 26 specified persons to file a complaint with the 27 Department of Education under certain circumstances; 28 providing procedures for investigation of such a 29 complaint; creating s. 1002.346, F.S.; providing 30 procedures and requirements for audits and 31 investigations of charter schools; providing for 32 oversight of a charter school by the district school 33 board; amending s. 1002.451, F.S.; deleting provisions 34 relating to performance contracts for innovation 35 schools of technology; requiring a district school 36 board to notify the department of the establishment of 37 an innovation school of technology; providing 38 requirements for such notification; deleting 39 provisions limiting the number of innovation schools 40 of technology a district school board may operate; 41 amending s. 1002.331, F.S.; conforming a cross 42 reference; providing an effective date. 43 44 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 45 46 Section 1. Paragraph (b) of subsection (5), paragraph (a) 47 of subsection (6), paragraph (a) of subsection (7), subsection 48 (10), and paragraph (a) of subsection (21) of section 1002.33, 49 Florida Statutes, are amended, paragraph (g) is added to 50 subsection (17) of that section, present subsection (27) of that 51 section is redesignated as subsection (29), and a new subsection 52 (27) and subsection (28) are added to that section, to read: 53 1002.33 Charter schools.— 54 (5) SPONSOR; DUTIES.— 55 (b) Sponsor duties.— 56 1.a. The sponsor shall monitor and review the charter 57 school in its progress toward the goals established in the 58 charter. 59 b. The sponsor shall monitor the revenues and expenditures 60 of the charter school and perform the duties provided in s. 61 1002.345. 62 c. The sponsor may approve a charter for a charter school 63 before the applicant has identified space, equipment, or 64 personnel,if the applicant indicates approval is necessary for 65 it to raise working funds. 66 d. The sponsor mayshallnot apply its policies to a 67 charter school unless mutually agreed to by both the sponsor and 68 the charter school. If the sponsor subsequently amends any 69 agreed-upon sponsor policy, the version of the policy in effect 70 at the time of the execution of the charter, or any subsequent 71 modification thereof, mustshallremain in effect and the 72 sponsor may not hold the charter school responsible for any 73 provision of a newly revised policy until the revised policy is 74 mutually agreed upon. 75 e. The sponsor shall ensure that the charter is innovative 76 and consistent with the state education goals established by s. 77 1000.03(5). 78 f. The sponsor shall ensure that the charter school 79 participates in the state’s education accountability system. If 80 a charter school falls short of performance measures included in 81 the approved charter, the sponsor shall report such shortcomings 82 to the Department of Education. 83 g. The sponsor isshallnotbeliable for civil damages 84 under state law for personal injury, property damage, or death 85 resulting from an act or omission of an officer, employee, 86 agent, or governing body of the charter school. 87 h. The sponsor isshallnotbeliable for civil damages 88 under state law for any employment actions taken by an officer, 89 employee, agent, or governing body of the charter school. 90 i. The sponsor’s duties to monitor the charter school do 91shallnot constitute the basis for a private cause of action. 92 j. The sponsor mayshallnot impose additional reporting 93 requirements on a charter school without providing reasonable 94 and specific justification in writing to the charter school. 95 k. The sponsor shall submit an annual report to the 96 Department of Education in a web-based format to be determined 97 by the department. 98 (I) The report mustshallinclude the following 99 information: 100 (A) The number of draft applications received on or before 101 May 1 and each applicant’s contact information. 102 (B) The number of final applications received on or before 103 August 1 and each applicant’s contact information. 104 (C) The date each application was approved, denied, or 105 withdrawn. 106 (D) The date each final contract was executed. 107 (E) The number of students who have voluntarily or 108 involuntarily withdrawn from a charter school, the names of the 109 charter schools attended by such students, the reason for the 110 voluntary or involuntary withdrawal of such students, and the 111 amount of pro rata funds transferred to the district school 112 board pursuant to the requirements of paragraphs (10)(h) and 113 (i). 114 (II) Beginning August 31, 2013, and each year thereafter, 115 the sponsor shall submit to the department the information for 116 the applications submitted the previous year. 117 (III) The department shall compile an annual report, by 118 district, and post the report on its website by November 1 of 119 each year. 120 2. Immunity for the sponsor of a charter school under 121 subparagraph 1. applies only with respect to acts or omissions 122 not under the sponsor’s direct authority as described in this 123 section. 124 3. This paragraph does not waive a district school board’s 125 sovereign immunity. 126 4. A Florida College System institution may work with the 127 school district or school districts in its designated service 128 area to develop charter schools that offer secondary education. 129 These charter schools must include an option for students to 130 receive an associate degree upon high school graduation. If a 131 Florida College System institution operates an approved teacher 132 preparation program under s. 1004.04 or s. 1004.85, the 133 institution may operate no more than one charter school that 134 serves students in kindergarten through grade 12. In 135 kindergarten through grade 8, the charter school shall implement 136 innovative blended learning instructional models in which, for a 137 given course, a student learns in part through online delivery 138 of content and instruction with some element of student control 139 over time, place, path, or pace and in part at a supervised 140 brick-and-mortar location away from home. A student in a blended 141 learning course must be a full-time student of the charter 142 school and receive the online instruction in a classroom setting 143 at the charter school. District school boards shall cooperate 144 with and assist the Florida College System institution on the 145 charter application. Florida College System institution 146 applications for charter schools are not subject to the time 147 deadlines outlined in subsection (6) and may be approved by the 148 district school board at any time during the year. Florida 149 College System institutions may not report FTE for any students 150 who receive FTE funding through the Florida Education Finance 151 Program. 152 5. A school district may enter into nonexclusive interlocal 153 agreements with federal and state agencies, counties, 154 municipalities, and other governmental entities that operate 155 within the geographical borders of the school district to act on 156 behalf of such governmental entities in the inspection, 157 issuance, and other necessary activities for all necessary 158 permits, licenses, and other permissions that a charter school 159 needs in order for development, construction, or operation. A 160 charter school may use, but may not be required to use, a school 161 district for these services. The interlocal agreement must 162 include, but need not be limited to, the identification of fees 163 that charter schools will be charged for such services. The fees 164 must consist of the governmental entity’s fees plus a fee for 165 the school district to recover no more than actual costs for 166 providing such services. These services and fees are not 167 included within the services to be provided pursuant to 168 subsection (20). 169 (6) APPLICATION PROCESS AND REVIEW.—Charter school 170 applications are subject to the following requirements: 171 (a) A person or entity wishing to open a charter school 172 shall prepare and submit an application on a model application 173 form prepared by the Department of Education which: 174 1. Demonstrates how the school will use the guiding 175 principles and meet the statutorily defined purpose of a charter 176 school. 177 2. Provides a detailed curriculum plan that illustrates how 178 students will be provided services to attain the Sunshine State 179 Standards. 180 3. Contains goals and objectives for improving student 181 learning and measuring that improvement. These goals and 182 objectives must indicate how much academic improvement students 183 are expected to show each year, how success will be evaluated, 184 and the specific results to be attained through instruction. 185 4. Describes the reading curriculum and differentiated 186 strategies that will be used for students reading at grade level 187 or higher and a separate curriculum and strategies for students 188 who are reading below grade level. A sponsor shall deny a 189 charter if the school does not propose a reading curriculum that 190 is consistent with effective teaching strategies that are 191 grounded in scientifically based reading research. 192 5. Contains an annual financial plan for each year 193 requested by the charter for operation of the school for up to 5 194 years. This plan must contain anticipated fund balances based on 195 revenue projections, a spending plan based on projected revenues 196 and expenses, and a description of controls that will safeguard 197 finances and projected enrollment trends. 198 6. Demonstrates and provides documentation showing that the 199 governing board is independent of any management company and has 200 the ability to terminate the contract with the management 201 company at any time and in the sole discretion of the governing 202 boardDocuments that the applicant has participated in the203training required in subparagraph (f)2.A sponsor may require an204applicant to provide additional information as an addendum to205the charter school application described in this paragraph.206 7. For the establishment of a virtual charter school, 207 documents that the applicant has contracted with a provider of 208 virtual instruction services pursuant to s. 1002.45(1)(d). 209 (7) CHARTER.—The major issues involving the operation of a 210 charter school shall be considered in advance and written into 211 the charter. The charter shall be signed by the governing board 212 of the charter school and the sponsor, following a public 213 hearing to ensure community input. 214 (a) The charter mustshalladdress and criteria for 215 approval of the charter mustshallbe based on: 216 1. The school’s mission, the students to be served, and the 217 ages and grades to be included. 218 2. The focus of the curriculum, the instructional methods 219 to be used, any distinctive instructional techniques to be 220 employed, and identification and acquisition of appropriate 221 technologies needed to improve educational and administrative 222 performance which include a means for promoting safe, ethical, 223 and appropriate uses of technology which comply with legal and 224 professional standards. 225 a. The charter shall ensure that reading is a primary focus 226 of the curriculum and that resources are provided to identify 227 and provide specialized instruction for students who are reading 228 below grade level. The curriculum and instructional strategies 229 for reading must be consistent with the Next Generation Sunshine 230 State Standards and grounded in scientifically based reading 231 research. 232 b. In order to provide students with access to diverse 233 instructional delivery models, to facilitate the integration of 234 technology within traditional classroom instruction, and to 235 provide students with the skills they need to compete in the 236 21st century economy, the Legislature encourages instructional 237 methods for blended learning courses consisting of both 238 traditional classroom and online instructional techniques. 239 Charter schools may implement blended learning courses which 240 combine traditional classroom instruction and virtual 241 instruction. Students in a blended learning course must be full 242 time students of the charter school and receive the online 243 instruction in a classroom setting at the charter school. 244 Instructional personnel certified pursuant to s. 1012.55 who 245 provide virtual instruction for blended learning courses may be 246 employees of the charter school or may be under contract to 247 provide instructional services to charter school students. At a 248 minimum, such instructional personnel must hold an active state 249 or school district adjunct certification under s. 1012.57 for 250 the subject area of the blended learning course. The funding and 251 performance accountability requirements for blended learning 252 courses are the same as those for traditional courses. 253 3. The current incoming baseline standard of student 254 academic achievement, the outcomes to be achieved, and the 255 method of measurement that will be used. The criteria listed in 256 this subparagraph mustshallinclude a detailed description of: 257 a. How the baseline student academic achievement levels and 258 prior rates of academic progress will be established. 259 b. How these baseline rates will be compared to rates of 260 academic progress achieved by these same students while 261 attending the charter school. 262 c. To the extent possible, how these rates of progress will 263 be evaluated and compared with rates of progress of other 264 closely comparable student populations. 265 266 The district school board is required to provide academic 267 student performance data to charter schools for each of their 268 students coming from the district school system, as well as 269 rates of academic progress of comparable student populations in 270 the district school system. 271 4. The methods used to identify the educational strengths 272 and needs of students and how well educational goals and 273 performance standards are met by students attending the charter 274 school. The methods mustshallprovide a means for the charter 275 school to ensure accountability to its constituents by analyzing 276 student performance data and by evaluating the effectiveness and 277 efficiency of its major educational programs. Students in 278 charter schools shall, at a minimum, participate in the 279 statewide assessment program created under s. 1008.22. 280 5. In secondary charter schools, a method for determining 281 that a student has satisfied the requirements for graduation in 282 s. 1003.428 or s. 1003.4282. 283 6. A method for resolving conflicts between the governing 284 board of the charter school and the sponsor. 285 7. The admissions procedures and dismissal procedures, 286 including the school’s code of student conduct. 287 8. The ways by which the school will achieve a 288 racial/ethnic balance reflective of the community it serves or 289 within the racial/ethnic range of other public schools in the 290 same school district. 291 9. The financial and administrative management of the 292 school, including a reasonable demonstration of the professional 293 experience or competence of those individuals or organizations 294 applying to operate the charter school or those hired or 295 retained to perform such professional services and the 296 description of clearly delineated responsibilities and the 297 policies and practices needed to effectively manage the charter 298 school. A description of internal audit procedures and 299 establishment of controls to ensure that financial resources are 300 properly managed must be included. Both public sector and 301 private sector professional experience areshall beequally 302 valid in such a consideration. The charter must demonstrate and 303 include documentation that the governing board is independent of 304 any management company and has the ability to terminate the 305 contract with the management company at any time and at the sole 306 discretion of the governing board. 307 10. The asset and liability projections required in the 308 application which are incorporated into the charter and must 309shallbe compared with information provided in the annual report 310 of the charter school. 311 11. A description of procedures that identify various risks 312 and provide for a comprehensive approach to reduce the impact of 313 losses; plans to ensure the safety and security of students and 314 staff; plans to identify, minimize, and protect others from 315 violent or disruptive student behavior; and the manner in which 316 the school will be insured, including whether or not the school 317 will be required to have liability insurance, and, if so, the 318 terms and conditions thereof and the amounts of coverage. 319 12. The term of the charter, which mustshallprovide for 320 cancellation of the charter if insufficient progress has been 321 made in attaining the student achievement objectives of the 322 charter and if it is not likely that such objectives can be 323 achieved before expiration of the charter. The initial term of a 324 charter mustshallbe for 4 or 5 years. In order to facilitate 325 access to long-term financial resources for charter school 326 construction, charter schools that are operated by a 327 municipality or other public entity as provided by law are 328 eligible for up to a 15-year charter, subject to approval by the 329 district school board. A charter lab school is eligible for a 330 charter for a term of up to 15 years. In addition, to facilitate 331 access to long-term financial resources for charter school 332 construction, charter schools that are operated by a private, 333 not-for-profit, s. 501(c)(3) status corporation are eligible for 334 up to a 15-year charter, subject to approval by the district 335 school board. Such long-term charters remain subject to annual 336 review and may be terminated during the term of the charter, but 337 only according to the provisions set forth in subsection (8). 338 13. The facilities to be used and their location. The 339 sponsor may not require a charter school to have a certificate 340 of occupancy or a temporary certificate of occupancy for such a 341 facility earlier than 15 calendar days before the first day of 342 school. 343 14. The qualifications to be required of the teachers and 344 the potential strategies used to recruit, hire, train, and 345 retain qualified staff to achieve best value. 346 15. The governance structure of the school, including the 347 status of the charter school as a public or private employer as 348 required in paragraph (12)(i). At least one member of the 349 charter school governing board shall be the parent of a student 350 enrolled in that school. 351 16. A timetable for implementing the charter which 352 addresses the implementation of each element thereof and the 353 date by which the charter mustshallbe awarded in order to meet 354 this timetable. 355 17. In the case of an existing public school that is being 356 converted to charter status, alternative arrangements for 357 current students who choose not to attend the charter school and 358 for current teachers who choose not to teach in the charter 359 school after conversion in accordance with the existing 360 collective bargaining agreement or district school board rule in 361 the absence of a collective bargaining agreement. However, 362 alternative arrangements mayshallnot be required for current 363 teachers who choose not to teach in a charter lab school, except 364 as authorized by the employment policies of the state university 365 which grants the charter to the lab school. 366 18. Full disclosure of the identity of all relatives 367 employed by the charter school who are related to the charter 368 school owner, president, chairperson of the governing board of 369 directors, superintendent, governing board member, principal, 370 assistant principal, or any other person employed by the charter 371 school who has equivalent decisionmaking authority. For the 372 purpose of this subparagraph, the term “relative” means father, 373 mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, first 374 cousin, nephew, niece, husband, wife, father-in-law, mother-in 375 law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, 376 stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother, 377 stepsister, half brother, or half sister. 378 19. Implementation of the activities authorized under s. 379 1002.331 by the charter school when it satisfies the eligibility 380 requirements for a high-performing charter school. A high 381 performing charter school shall notify its sponsor in writing by 382 March 1 if it intends to increase enrollment or expand grade 383 levels the following school year. The written notice mustshall384 specify the amount of the enrollment increase and the grade 385 levels that will be added, as applicable. 386 (10) ELIGIBLE STUDENTS.— 387 (a) A charter school shall be open to any student covered 388 in an interdistrict agreement or residing in the school district 389 in which the charter school is located; however, in the case of 390 a charter lab school, the charter lab school shall be open to 391 any student eligible to attend the lab school as provided in s. 392 1002.32 or who resides in the school district in which the 393 charter lab school is located. Any eligible student shall be 394 allowed interdistrict transfer to attend a charter school when 395 based on good cause. Good cause includesshall include, but is 396 not limited to, geographic proximity to a charter school in a 397 neighboring school district. 398 (b) The charter school shall enroll an eligible student who 399 submits a timely application, unless the number of applications 400 exceeds the capacity of a program, class, grade level, or 401 building. In such case, all applicants shall have an equal 402 chance of being admitted through a random selection process. 403 (c)1. For purposes of continuity of educational choice, 404 placement of a student in a charter school shall remain in force 405 until the student voluntarily withdraws from the charter school 406 or successfully completes the highest grade offered in the 407 charter school. A charter school student who voluntarily enrolls 408 in a different charter school, a district-operated public 409 school, a private school, a virtual education program, a home 410 education program, or another education program approved by law 411 is considered to have withdrawn from the charter school for the 412 purpose of determining the end of the student’s enrollment. 413 However, if a student enters a Department of Juvenile Justice 414 detention center for less than 21 days, the student is not 415 considered to have withdrawn from the charter school. 416 2. Before a student is voluntarily withdrawn from a charter 417 school, the parent and charter school personnel must sign a 418 document stating that the student is being voluntarily withdrawn 419 and that charter school personnel have not prohibited, 420 discouraged, or attempted to discourage the student from 421 continued enrollment in the charter school. 422 (d)(c)When a public school converts to charter status, 423 enrollment preference mustshallbe given to students who would 424 have otherwise attended that public school. The district school 425 board shall consult and negotiate with the conversion charter 426 school every 3 years to determine whether realignment of the 427 conversion charter school’s attendance zone is appropriate in 428 order to ensure that students residing closest to the charter 429 school are provided with an enrollment preference. 430 (e)(d)A charter school may give enrollment preference to 431 the following student populations: 432 1. Students who are siblings of a student enrolled in the 433 charter school. 434 2. Students who are the children of a member of the 435 governing board of the charter school. 436 3. Students who are the children of an employee of the 437 charter school. 438 4. Students who are the children of: 439 a. An employee of the business partner of a charter school 440 in-the-workplace established under paragraph (15)(b) or a 441 resident of the municipality in which such charter school is 442 located; or 443 b. A resident of a municipality that operates a charter 444 school-in-a-municipality pursuant to paragraph (15)(c). 445 5. Students who have successfully completed a voluntary 446 prekindergarten education program under ss. 1002.51-1002.79 447 provided by the charter school or the charter school’s governing 448 board during the previous year. 449 6. Students who are the children of an active duty member 450 of any branch of the United States Armed Forces. 451 (f)(e)A charter school may limit the enrollment process 452 only to target the following student populations: 453 1. Students within specific age groups or grade levels. 454 2. Students considered at risk of dropping out of school or 455 academic failure, including. Such students shall include456 exceptional education students. 457 3. Students enrolling in a charter school-in-the-workplace 458 or charter school-in-a-municipality established pursuant to 459 subsection (15). 460 4. Students residing within a reasonable distance of the 461 charter school, as described in paragraph (20)(c). Such students 462 shall be subject to a random lottery and to the racial/ethnic 463 balance provisions described in subparagraph (7)(a)8. or any 464 federal provisions that require a school to achieve a 465 racial/ethnic balance reflective of the community it serves or 466 within the racial/ethnic range of other public schools in the 467 same school district. 468 5. Students who meet reasonable academic, artistic, or 469 other eligibility standards established by the charter school 470 and included in the charter school application and charter or, 471 in the case of existing charter schools, standards that are 472 consistent with the school’s mission and purpose. Such standards 473 mustshallbe in accordance with current state law and practice 474 in public schools and may not discriminate against otherwise 475 qualified individuals. 476 6. Students articulating from one charter school to another 477 pursuant to an articulation agreement between the charter 478 schools that has been approved by the sponsor. 479 7. Students living in a development in which a business 480 entity provides the school facility and related property having 481 an appraised value of at least $10 million to be used as a 482 charter school for the development. Students living in the 483 development shall be entitled to 50 percent of the student 484 stations in the charter school. The students who are eligible 485 for enrollment are subject to a random lottery, the 486 racial/ethnic balance provisions, or any federal provisions, as 487 described in subparagraph 4. The remainder of the student 488 stations shall be filled in accordance with subparagraph 4. 489 (g)(f)Students with disabilities and students served in 490 English for Speakers of Other Languages programs shall have an 491 equal opportunity of being selected for enrollment in a charter 492 school. 493 (h)(g)A student may voluntarily withdraw from a charter 494 school at any time and enroll in another public school as 495 determined by district school board rule. The charter school 496 from which a student voluntarily withdraws shall transfer a pro 497 rata share of the full-time equivalent student funding for that 498 student to the district school board that governs the school in 499 which the student subsequently enrolls. The transfer of funds is 500 required within 15 days of withdrawal of the student from the 501 charter school. If the charter school does not timely transfer 502 the funds, the district school board in which the charter school 503 is located shall withhold the funds from the next payment due to 504 the charter school. 505 (i) If the withdrawal of a student from a charter school 506 and his or her transfer to another public school is initiated by 507 the charter school as a result of the student’s commission of an 508 expellable offense, as that term is defined by district school 509 board rule, the charter school shall submit a recommendation to 510 the district school board immediately upon suspending the 511 student from the charter school detailing the reasons for 512 recommending expulsion. The charter school shall follow the 513 expulsion process of the district school board. If the district 514 school board grants the expulsion, the student shall be expelled 515 from all public education for the duration of the expulsion 516 period. If the district school board rejects the expulsion, the 517 student shall return to the charter school. If the district 518 school board recommends reassignment of the student to a 519 district alternative placement appropriate to the expellable 520 offense reported by the charter school, the charter school shall 521 transfer a pro rata share of funding for that student to the 522 district school board that governs the school in which the 523 student is subsequently placed. Such funding must be sufficient 524 to pay for the per student cost of actually delivering services 525 to the student in the alternative setting for the balance of the 526 fiscal year or until the student is counted by the district in 527 its FTE funding survey. The transfer of funds is required within 528 15 days after the entry of the district school board decision on 529 the recommendation of expulsion from the charter school. If the 530 charter school does not timely transfer the funds, the district 531 school board in which the charter school is located shall 532 withhold the funds from the next payment due to the charter 533 school. 534 (j) A charter school student may not be dismissed or 535 requested to withdraw from the charter school because of actual 536 or anticipated poor academic performance, because of actual or 537 anticipated poor performance on statewide assessments, or due to 538 issues related to student behavior unless such behavior is 539 alleged to be an expellable offense as that term is defined by 540 district school board rule. 541 (k)(h)The capacity of the charter school shall be 542 determined annually by the governing board, in conjunction with 543 the sponsor, of the charter school in consideration of the 544 factors identified in this subsection unless the charter school 545 is designated as a high-performing charter school pursuant to s. 546 1002.331. A sponsor may not require a charter school to waive 547 the provisions of s. 1002.331 or require a student enrollment 548 cap that prohibits a high-performing charter school from 549 increasing enrollment in accordance with s. 1002.331(2) as a 550 condition of approval or renewal of a charter. 551 (l)(i)The capacity of a high-performing charter school 552 identified pursuant to s. 1002.331 shall be determined annually 553 by the governing board of the charter school. The governing 554 board shall notify the sponsor of any increase in enrollment by 555 March 1 of the school year preceding the increase. A sponsor may 556 not require a charter school to identify the names of students 557 to be enrolled or to enroll those students before the start of 558 the school year as a condition of approval or renewal of a 559 charter. 560 (17) FUNDING.—Students enrolled in a charter school, 561 regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded as if they are in 562 a basic program or a special program, the same as students 563 enrolled in other public schools in the school district. Funding 564 for a charter lab school shall be as provided in s. 1002.32. 565 (g) Notwithstanding any provision in this section, a 566 charter school is required to post a performance bond with the 567 district school board named as the recipient at the beginning of 568 each school year in an amount equal to one-half of the projected 569 operating funds as defined in paragraph (b). Such bond shall be 570 annually renewed and shall be invoked if the charter school 571 defaults on meeting any of its financial obligations with the 572 sponsor. 573 (21) PUBLIC INFORMATION ON CHARTER SCHOOLS.— 574 (a) The Department of Education shall provide information 575 to the public, directly and through sponsors, on how to form and 576 operate a charter school and how to enroll in a charter school 577 once it is created. This information mustshallinclude a model 578 application form, modelstandardcharter contract, standard 579 evaluation instrument, and modelstandardcharter renewal 580 contract, which mustshallinclude the information specified in 581 subsection (7) and shall be developed by consulting and 582 negotiating with both school districts and charter schools 583 before implementation. The charter and charter renewal contracts 584 mayshallbe used by charter school sponsors. 585 (27) CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND ETHICS.— 586 (a) An individual may not serve as a member of the charter 587 school board of directors if the individual or an immediate 588 family member receives a pension or any compensation from the 589 charter school, or if the individual’s partner is an owner or 590 principal with an entity or independent contractor with whom the 591 charter school does business or contracts, directly or 592 indirectly, for professional services, goods, or facilities. An 593 individual may not serve as a board member if an immediate 594 family member is an employee of the school. A violation of this 595 prohibition renders a contract voidable at the option of the 596 sponsor or the charter school board of directors. A member of a 597 charter school board of directors who violates this prohibition 598 is individually liable to the charter school for any damage 599 caused by the violation. 600 (b) A member of the board of directors or an employee, 601 officer, or agent of a charter school may not participate in 602 selecting, awarding, or administering a contract if a conflict 603 of interest exists. A conflict of interest exists if: 604 1. The board member, employee, officer, or agent; 605 2. The immediate family of the board member, employee, 606 officer, or agent; 607 3. The partner of the board member, employee, officer, or 608 agent; or 609 4. An organization that employs, or is about to employ, any 610 individual listed in subparagraphs 1.-3., 611 612 has a financial or other interest in the entity with which the 613 charter school is contracting. A violation of this paragraph 614 renders the contract void. 615 (c) An employee or board member of the sponsor who 616 participates in the initial review and approval, ongoing 617 oversight and evaluation, or renewal or nonrenewal of the 618 charter may not serve on the board of directors of a school 619 chartered by that sponsor. 620 (d) An individual may serve as a member of the board of 621 directors if no conflict of interest under paragraph (a) exists. 622 (e) This subsection does not apply to compensation paid to 623 a teacher employed in that capacity by the charter school. 624 (28) UNLAWFUL ACTS.—A parent, other individual, or group 625 who believes that a charter school has violated or is violating 626 any state or federal law or regulation may file a complaint 627 directly with the Department of Education. If the department 628 determines that the complaint demonstrates reasonable cause to 629 suspect that an unlawful act has been committed, the department 630 shall conduct an investigation and produce a fact-finding report 631 within 90 days after receiving the complaint. The department 632 shall provide the district school superintendent of the 633 complainant’s district and the complainant with a copy of the 634 fact-finding report, which is admissible in any subsequent or 635 related administrative or judicial review. 636 (29)(27)RULEMAKING.—The Department of Education, after 637 consultation with school districts and charter school directors, 638 shall recommend that the State Board of Education adopt rules to 639 implement specific subsections of this section. Such rules must 640shallrequire minimum paperwork and mayshallnot limit charter 641 school flexibility authorized by statute. The State Board of 642 Education shall adopt rules, pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 643 120.54, to implement a charter model application form, standard 644 evaluation instrument, and modelstandardcharter and model 645 charter renewal contracts in accordance with this section. 646 Section 2. Section 1002.346, Florida Statutes, is created 647 to read: 648 1002.346 Charter school audits and investigations.— 649 (1) A charter school is subject to the audits, audit 650 procedures, and audit requirements established in the charter 651 and may be audited or investigated by the Auditor General, the 652 Department of Education’s Office of Inspector General, and the 653 district school board, at their discretion. Such procedures and 654 requirements must be consistent with generally accepted audit 655 standards. The school and its governing board shall allow the 656 sponsor and state officials full access to its financial and 657 educational records, reports, files, and documents of any kind. 658 (2) During the course of audits and investigations, the 659 state and sponsor may access, review, and audit records of other 660 entities that do business with the charter school if a member of 661 the school’s governing board or a director, an officer, a 662 principal, an assistant principal, or any other person employed 663 by the charter school who has equivalent decisionmaking 664 authority also serves as a member, director, or officer of such 665 other entities. 666 (3) The district school board shall oversee each charter 667 school it has approved and may visit, examine, enter into, and 668 inspect the charter school, including the records of such 669 school, under its oversight. Oversight by the district school 670 board must be sufficient to ensure that the charter school is in 671 compliance with all applicable laws, rules, and charter 672 provisions. 673 (4) The Department of Education’s Office of Inspector 674 General or the district school board may conduct reviews, 675 pursuant to a complaint received or on its own initiative, to 676 ensure compliance with applicable laws, rules, and charter 677 provisions. The charter school and the specific individuals 678 involved shall cooperate to the fullest extent with such review. 679 (5) A party who believes that his or her complaint has not 680 been adequately addressed by the charter school’s governing 681 board or the district school board may submit the complaint in 682 writing to the Department of Education’s Office of Inspector 683 General, which shall investigate such complaint and provide a 684 written response within 90 days after receipt of the complaint. 685 Section 3. Subsections (3) and (6) of section 1002.451, 686 Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 687 1002.451 District innovation school of technology program.— 688 (3) TERM OF OPERATIONPERFORMANCE CONTRACT.—An innovation 689 school of technology may operatepursuant to a performance690contract with the State Board of Educationfor a period of 5 691 years. 692(a) Before expiration of the performance contract, the693school’s performance shall be evaluated against the eligibility694criteria, purpose, guiding principles, and compliance with the695contract to determine whether the contract may be renewed. The696contract may be renewed every 5 years.697(b)The innovation school of technology shall be terminated 698performance contract shall be terminated by the State Board of699Educationif: 700 (a)1.The school receives a grade of “F” as an innovation 701 school of technology for 2 consecutive years; 702 (b)2.The school or district fails to comply with the 703 criteria in this section; 704 (c)3.The schoolor districtdoes not comply with district 705 school board rules thatterms of the contract whichspecify that 706 a violation results in termination; or 707 (d)4.Other good cause is shown. 708 (6) NOTIFICATION TO THE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION 709APPLICATION PROCESS AND PERFORMANCE CONTRACT.— 710 (a) A district school board shall notifymay applytothe 711 State Board of Education of the establishment offoran 712 innovation school of technology if the district: 713 1. Has at least 20 percent of its total enrollment in 714 public school choice programs or at least 5 percent of its total 715 enrollment in charter schools; 716 2. Has no material weaknesses or instances of material 717 noncompliance noted in the annual financial audit conducted 718 pursuant to s. 218.39; and 719 3. Has received a district grade of “A,”or“B,” or “C” in 720 each of the past 3 years. 721(b) A district school board may operate one innovation722school of technology upon an application being approved by the723State Board of Education.7241. A district school board may apply to the State Board of725Education to establish additional schools of technology if each726existing innovation school of technology in the district:727a. Meets all requirements in this section and in the728performance contract;729b. Has a grade of “A” or “B”; and730c. Has at least 50 percent of its students exceed the state731average on the statewide assessment program pursuant to s.7321008.22. This comparison may take student subgroups, as defined733in the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), 20734U.S.C. s. 6311(b)(2)(C)(v)(II), into specific consideration so735that at least 50 percent of students in each student subgroup736meet or exceed the statewide average performance, rounded to the737nearest whole number, of that particular subgroup.7382. Notwithstanding subparagraph 1., the number of schools739of technology in a school district may not exceed:740a. Seven in a school district that has 100,000 or more741students.742b. Five in a school district that has 50,000 to 99,999743students.744c. Three in a school district that has fewer than 50,000745students.746 (b)(c)A school district that meets the eligibility 747 requirements of paragraph (a) mayapply to the State Board of748Education at any time to enter into a performance contractto749 operate an innovation school of technology. The notification to 750 the State Board of Educationapplicationmust, at a minimum: 751 1. Demonstrate how the school district meets and will 752 continue to meet the requirements of this section; 753 2. Identify how the school will accomplish the purposes and 754 guiding principles of this section; 7553. Identify the statutes or rules from which the district756is seeking a waiver for the school;7574. Identify and provide supporting documentation for the758purpose and impact of each waiver, how each waiver would enable759the school to achieve the purpose and guiding principles of this760section, and how the school would not be able to achieve the761purpose and guiding principles of this section without each762waiver;and 763 3.5.Confirm that the school board remains responsible for 764 the operation, control, and supervision of the school in 765 accordance with all applicable laws, rules, and district 766 procedures not waived pursuant to this section or waived 767 pursuant to other applicable law. 768(d) The State Board of Education shall approve or deny the769application within 90 days or, with the agreement of the school770district, at a later date.771(e) The performance contract must address the terms under772which the State Board of Education may cancel the contract and,773at a minimum, the methods by which:7741. Upon execution of the performance contract, the school775district will plan the program during the first year, begin at776least partial implementation of the program during the second777year, and fully implement the program by the third year. A778district may implement the program sooner than specified in this779subparagraph if authorized in the performance contract.7802. The school will integrate industry-leading technology781into instruction, assessment, and professional development. The782school may also restructure the school day or school year in a783way that allows it to best accomplish its goals.7843. The school and district will monitor performance785progress based on skills that help students succeed in college786and careers, including problem solving, research,787interpretation, and communication.7884. The school will incorporate industry certifications and789similar recognitions into performance expectations.790 5. The school and district will comply with this section791and the performance contract.792 (c)(f)Three or more contiguous school districts may apply 793 to enter into a joint performance contract as a Region of 794 Technology, subject to terms and conditions contained in this 795 section for a single school district. 796 (d)(g)The State Board of Education shall monitor schools 797 of technology to ensure that the respective school district is 798 in compliance with this sectionand the performance contract. 799(h) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules pursuant800to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to implement this section,801including, but not limited to, an application, evaluation802instrument, and renewal evaluation instrument.803 (e)(i)This section does not supersedethe provisions ofs. 804 768.28. 805 Section 4. Paragraph (e) of subsection (2) of section 806 1002.331, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 807 1002.331 High-performing charter schools.— 808 (2) A high-performing charter school is authorized to: 809 (e) Receive a modification of its charter to a term of 15 810 years or a 15-year charter renewal. The charter may be modified 811 or renewed for a shorter term at the option of the high 812 performing charter school. The charter must be consistent with 813 s. 1002.33(7)(a)19. and (10)(k)(10)(h)and (l)(i), is subject 814 to annual review by the sponsor, and may be terminated during 815 its term pursuant to s. 1002.33(8). 816 817 A high-performing charter school shall notify its sponsor in 818 writing by March 1 if it intends to increase enrollment or 819 expand grade levels the following school year. The written 820 notice shall specify the amount of the enrollment increase and 821 the grade levels that will be added, as applicable. If a charter 822 school notifies the sponsor of its intent to expand, the sponsor 823 shall modify the charter within 90 days to include the new 824 enrollment maximum and may not make any other changes. The 825 sponsor may deny a request to increase the enrollment of a high 826 performing charter school if the commissioner has declassified 827 the charter school as high-performing. If a high-performing 828 charter school requests to consolidate multiple charters, the 829 sponsor shall have 40 days after receipt of that request to 830 provide an initial draft charter to the charter school. The 831 sponsor and charter school shall have 50 days thereafter to 832 negotiate and notice the charter contract for final approval by 833 the sponsor. 834 Section 5. This act shall take effect July 1, 2014.