Bill Text: TX HB100 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Relating to public education and public school finance, including the rights, certification, and compensation of public school educators, contributions by a public school to the Teacher Retirement System of Texas, and an education savings account program for certain children.

Spectrum: Strong Partisan Bill (Republican 39-4)

Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2023-05-26 - Senate appoints conferees-reported [HB100 Detail]

Download: Texas-2023-HB100-Comm_Sub.html
 
 
  By: King of Hemphill, et al. H.B. No. 100
        (Senate Sponsor - Creighton)
         (In the Senate - Received from the House May 1, 2023;
  May 2, 2023, read first time and referred to Committee on
  Education; May 22, 2023, reported adversely, with favorable
  Committee Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 9, Nays 3;
  May 22, 2023, sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote
 
  COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR H.B. No. 100 By:  King
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
 
  relating to public education and public school finance, including
  the rights, certification, and compensation of public school
  educators, contributions by a public school to the Teacher
  Retirement System of Texas, and an education savings account
  program for certain children.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
  ARTICLE 1. CHANGES GENERALLY APPLICABLE TO PUBLIC SCHOOLS EFFECTIVE
  FOR 2023-2024 SCHOOL YEAR
         SECTION 1.01.  Section 12.104(b), Education Code, as amended
  by Chapters 542 (S.B. 168), 887 (S.B. 1697), 915 (H.B. 3607), 974
  (S.B. 2081), and 1046 (S.B. 1365), Acts of the 87th Legislature,
  Regular Session, 2021, is reenacted and amended to read as follows:
         (b)  An open-enrollment charter school is subject to:
               (1)  a provision of this title establishing a criminal
  offense;
               (2)  the provisions in Chapter 554, Government Code;
  and
               (3)  a prohibition, restriction, or requirement, as
  applicable, imposed by this title or a rule adopted under this
  title, relating to:
                     (A)  the Public Education Information Management
  System (PEIMS) to the extent necessary to monitor compliance with
  this subchapter as determined by the commissioner;
                     (B)  criminal history records under Subchapter C,
  Chapter 22;
                     (C)  reading instruments and accelerated reading
  instruction programs under Section 28.006;
                     (D)  accelerated instruction under Section
  28.0211;
                     (E)  high school graduation requirements under
  Section 28.025;
                     (F)  special education programs under Subchapter
  A, Chapter 29;
                     (G)  bilingual education under Subchapter B,
  Chapter 29;
                     (H)  prekindergarten programs under Subchapter E
  or E-1, Chapter 29, except class size limits for prekindergarten
  classes imposed under Section 25.112, which do not apply;
                     (I)  extracurricular activities under Section
  33.081;
                     (J)  discipline management practices or behavior
  management techniques under Section 37.0021;
                     (K)  health and safety under Chapter 38;
                     (L)  the provisions of Subchapter A, Chapter 39;
                     (M)  public school accountability and special
  investigations under Subchapters A, B, C, D, F, G, and J, Chapter
  39, and Chapter 39A;
                     (N)  the requirement under Section 21.006 to
  report an educator's misconduct;
                     (O)  intensive programs of instruction under
  Section 28.0213;
                     (P)  the right of a school employee to report a
  crime, as provided by Section 37.148;
                     (Q)  bullying prevention policies and procedures
  under Section 37.0832;
                     (R)  the right of a school under Section 37.0052
  to place a student who has engaged in certain bullying behavior in a
  disciplinary alternative education program or to expel the student;
                     (S)  the right under Section 37.0151 to report to
  local law enforcement certain conduct constituting assault or
  harassment;
                     (T)  a parent's right to information regarding the
  provision of assistance for learning difficulties to the parent's
  child as provided by Sections 26.004(b)(11) and 26.0081(c) and (d);
                     (U)  establishment of residency under Section
  25.001;
                     (V)  school safety requirements under Sections
  37.108, 37.1081, 37.1082, 37.109, 37.113, 37.114, 37.1141, 37.115,
  37.207, and 37.2071;
                     (W)  the early childhood literacy and mathematics
  proficiency plans under Section 11.185;
                     (X)  the college, career, and military readiness
  plans under Section 11.186; [and]
                     (Y) [(X)]  parental options to retain a student
  under Section 28.02124; and
                     (Z)  establishing a local school health advisory
  council in which members are appointed by the governing body of the
  school and health education instruction complies with Section
  28.004.
         SECTION 1.02.  Sections 12.106(a-2) and (d), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (a-2)  In addition to the funding provided by Subsection (a),
  a charter holder is entitled to receive for the open-enrollment
  charter school an allotment per student in average daily attendance
  in an amount equal to the difference between:
               (1)  the product of:
                     (A)  the quotient of:
                           (i)  the total amount of funding provided to
  eligible school districts under Section 48.101(b) or (c); and
                           (ii)  the total number of students in
  average daily attendance in school districts that receive an
  allotment under Section 48.101(b) or (c); and
                     (B)  the sum of one and the quotient of:
                           (i)  the total number of students in average
  daily attendance in school districts that receive an allotment
  under Section 48.101(b) or (c); and
                           (ii)  the total number of students in
  average daily attendance in school districts statewide; and
               (2)  $460 [$125].
         (d)  Subject to Subsection (e), in addition to other amounts
  provided by this section, a charter holder is entitled to receive,
  for the open-enrollment charter school, an annual allotment
  [funding] per student in average daily attendance [in an amount]
  equal to the basic allotment under Section 48.051 [guaranteed level
  of state and local funds per student per cent of tax effort under
  Section 46.032(a)] multiplied by 0.04 [the lesser of:
               [(1)  the state average interest and sinking fund tax
  rate imposed by school districts for the current year; or
               [(2)  a rate that would result in a total amount to
  which charter schools are entitled under this subsection for the
  current year equal to $60 million].
         SECTION 1.03.  Section 13.054, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (f) and adding Subsections (i-1), (i-2), (i-3),
  (i-4), and (i-5) to read as follows:
         (f)  For five years beginning with the school year in which
  the annexation occurs, a school district shall receive additional
  funding under this subsection or Subsection (h).  The amount of
  funding shall be determined by multiplying the lesser of the
  enlarged district's local fund assignment computed under Section
  48.256 or the enlarged district's total cost of tier one by a
  fraction, the numerator of which is the number of students residing
  in the territory annexed to the receiving district preceding the
  date of the annexation and the denominator of which is the number of
  students residing in the district as enlarged on the date of the
  annexation, and multiplying the resulting product by the quotient
  of the enlarged district's maximum compressed tax rate, as
  determined under Section 48.2551, for the current school year
  divided by the receiving district's maximum compressed tax rate, as
  determined under Section 48.2551, for the year in which the
  annexation occurred. The commissioner shall provide the funding
  under this subsection from funds appropriated for purposes of the
  Foundation School Program.  A determination by the commissioner
  under this subsection is final and may not be appealed.
         (i-1)  Notwithstanding any other law, a school district is
  entitled to funding under Subsection (f) for an annexation that
  occurs on or after June 1, 2013.
         (i-2)  For each school district entitled to funding under
  Subsection (f) as provided by Subsection (i-1) that, as of
  September 1, 2023, has not received the full amount of funding to
  which the district would have been entitled under Subsection (f) if
  Subsection (i-1) had been in effect since June 1, 2013, the
  commissioner shall:
               (1)  determine the difference between:
                     (A)  the amount of funding to which the district
  would have been entitled under Subsection (f) if Subsection (i-1)
  had been in effect since June 1, 2013; and
                     (B)  the amount of funding the district has
  received under Subsection (f); and
               (2)  provide the amount determined under Subdivision
  (1) to the district in the form of:
                     (A)  a lump sum; or
                     (B)  equal annual installments over a period not
  to exceed three years.
         (i-3)  In addition to the funding provided to a school
  district under Subsection (i-2), the commissioner may allocate
  money to the district from funds appropriated for purposes of the
  Foundation School Program to pay for facilities improvements the
  commissioner determines necessary as a result of the annexation.
         (i-4)  Each school district that receives funding under
  Subsection (f) as provided by Subsection (i-2) or under Subsection
  (i-3) for any year shall submit to the commissioner in the form and
  manner provided by commissioner rule a report on the district's use
  of the funding for that year.
         (i-5)  This subsection and Subsections (i-2), (i-3), and
  (i-4) expire September 1, 2027.
         SECTION 1.04.  Section 19.009(d-2), Education Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (d-2)  Beginning with the 2009-2010 school year, the
  district shall increase the [monthly] salary of each classroom
  teacher, full-time speech pathologist, full-time librarian,
  full-time school counselor certified under Subchapter B, Chapter
  21, and full-time school nurse employed by the district by the
  greater of:
               (1)  $80 per month; or
               (2)  the maximum uniform amount per month that, when
  combined with any resulting increases in the amount of
  contributions made by the district for social security coverage for
  the specified employees or by the district on behalf of the
  specified employees under Section 825.405, Government Code, may be
  provided using an amount equal to the product of $60 multiplied by
  the number of students in weighted average daily attendance in the
  district during the 2009-2010 school year.
         SECTION 1.05.  Subchapter A, Chapter 21, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 21.010 to read as follows:
         Sec. 21.010.  TEACHER POSITION DATA COLLECTION. The agency
  shall collect data from school districts and open-enrollment
  charter schools for the recruitment and retention of classroom
  teachers, including the classification, grade level, subject area,
  duration, and other relevant information regarding vacant teaching
  positions in a district or school. The data may be collected using
  the Public Education Information Management System (PEIMS) or
  another reporting mechanism specified by the agency.
         SECTION 1.06.  Subchapter B, Chapter 21, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 21.0411 to read as follows:
         Sec. 21.0411.  WAIVER OR PAYMENT OF CERTAIN EXAMINATION AND
  CERTIFICATION FEES. (a) Notwithstanding a rule adopted under
  Section 21.041(c), the board shall, for a person applying for a
  certification in special education, bilingual education, or
  another area specified by the General Appropriations Act, waive:
               (1)  a certification examination fee imposed by the
  board for the first administration of the examination to the
  person; and
               (2)  a fee associated with the application for
  certification by the person.
         (b)  The board shall pay to a vendor that administers a
  certification examination described by Subsection (a) a fee
  assessed by that vendor for the examination of a person applying for
  a certification described by Subsection (a) for the first
  administration of the examination to the person.
         SECTION 1.07.  Section 21.054, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a) and (i) and adding Subsection (i-1) to
  read as follows:
         (a)  The board shall propose rules establishing a process for
  identifying continuing education courses and programs that fulfill
  educators' continuing education requirements, including
  opportunities for educators to receive micro-credentials, as
  provided by Subsection (i), in:
               (1)  fields of study related to the educator's
  certification class; or
               (2)  digital teaching [as provided by Subsection (i)].
         (i)  The board shall propose rules establishing a program to
  issue micro-credentials in fields of study related to an educator's
  certification class or in digital teaching. The agency shall
  approve continuing education providers to offer micro-credential
  courses. A micro-credential received by an educator shall be
  recorded on the agency's Educator Certification Online System
  (ECOS) and included as part of the educator's public certification
  records.
         (i-1)  In proposing rules under Subsection (i) for
  micro-credentials related to digital teaching, the board shall
  engage relevant stakeholders. 
         SECTION 1.08.  Section 21.105, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsection (g) to read as
  follows:
         (c)  Subject to Subsections (e), [and] (f), and (g), on
  written complaint by the employing district, the State Board for
  Educator Certification may impose sanctions against a teacher
  employed under a probationary contract who:
               (1)  resigns;
               (2)  fails without good cause to comply with Subsection
  (a) or (b); and
               (3)  fails to perform the contract.
         (g)  The State Board for Educator Certification may not
  impose a sanction under Subsection (c) against a teacher who
  relinquishes a position under a probationary contract and leaves
  the employment of the district after the 45th day before the first
  day of instruction for the upcoming school year in violation of
  Subsection (a) and without the consent of the board of trustees
  under Subsection (b) if the teacher's failure to comply with
  Subsection (a) was due to:
               (1)  a serious illness or health condition of the
  teacher or a close family member of the teacher;
               (2)  the teacher's relocation because the teacher's
  spouse or a partner who resides with the teacher changes employers;
               (3)  a significant change in the needs of the teacher's
  family in a manner that requires the teacher to:
                     (A)  relocate; or 
                     (B)  forgo employment during a period of required
  employment under the teacher's contract; or
               (4)  the teacher's reasonable belief that the teacher
  had written permission from the school district's administration to
  resign.
         SECTION 1.09.  Section 21.160, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsection (g) to read as
  follows:
         (c)  Subject to Subsections (e), [and] (f), and (g), on
  written complaint by the employing district, the State Board for
  Educator Certification may impose sanctions against a teacher who
  is employed under a continuing contract that obligates the district
  to employ the person for the following school year and who:
               (1)  resigns;
               (2)  fails without good cause to comply with Subsection
  (a) or (b); and
               (3)  fails to perform the contract.
         (g)  The State Board for Educator Certification may not
  impose a sanction under Subsection (c) against a teacher who
  relinquishes a position under a continuing contract and leaves the
  employment of the district after the 45th day before the first day
  of instruction of the upcoming school year in violation of
  Subsection (a) and without the consent of the board of trustees
  under Subsection (b) if the teacher's failure to comply with
  Subsection (a) was due to:
               (1)  a serious illness or health condition of the
  teacher or a close family member of the teacher;
               (2)  the teacher's relocation because the teacher's
  spouse or a partner who resides with the teacher changes employers;
               (3)  a significant change in the needs of the teacher's
  family in a manner that requires the teacher to:
                     (A)  relocate; or 
                     (B)  forgo employment during a period of required
  employment under the teacher's contract; or
               (4)  the teacher's reasonable belief that the teacher
  had written permission from the school district's administration to
  resign.
         SECTION 1.10.  Section 21.210, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsection (g) to read as
  follows:
         (c)  Subject to Subsections (e), [and] (f), and (g), on
  written complaint by the employing district, the State Board for
  Educator Certification may impose sanctions against a teacher who
  is employed under a term contract that obligates the district to
  employ the person for the following school year and who:
               (1)  resigns;
               (2)  fails without good cause to comply with Subsection
  (a) or (b); and
               (3)  fails to perform the contract.
         (g)  The State Board for Educator Certification may not
  impose a sanction under Subsection (c) against a teacher who
  relinquishes a position under a term contract and leaves the
  employment of the district after the 45th day before the first day
  of instruction of the upcoming school year in violation of
  Subsection (a) and without the consent of the board of trustees
  under Subsection (b) if the teacher's failure to comply with
  Subsection (a) was due to:
               (1)  a serious illness or health condition of the
  teacher or a close family member of the teacher;
               (2)  the teacher's relocation because the teacher's
  spouse or a partner who resides with the teacher changes employers;
               (3)  a significant change in the needs of the teacher's
  family in a manner that requires the teacher to:
                     (A)  relocate; or 
                     (B)  forgo employment during a period of required
  employment under the teacher's contract; or
               (4)  the teacher's reasonable belief that the teacher
  had written permission from the school district's administration to
  resign.
         SECTION 1.11.  Section 21.257, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (f) to read as
  follows:
         (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (f), not [Not] later
  than the 60th day after the date on which the commissioner receives
  a teacher's written request for a hearing, the hearing examiner
  shall complete the hearing and make a written recommendation that:
               (1)  includes proposed findings of fact and conclusions
  of law; and
               (2)  may include a proposal for granting relief.
         (f)  The hearing examiner may dismiss a hearing before
  completing the hearing or making a written recommendation if:
               (1)  the teacher requests the dismissal;
               (2)  the school district withdraws the proposed
  decision that is the basis of the hearing; or
               (3)  the teacher and school district request the
  dismissal after reaching a settlement regarding the proposed
  decision that is the basis of the hearing.
         SECTION 1.12.  Sections 21.3521(a), (c), and (e), Education
  Code, are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  Subject to Subsection (b), a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school may designate a classroom teacher as
  a master, exemplary, [or] recognized, or acknowledged teacher for a
  five-year period based on the results from single year or multiyear
  appraisals that comply with Section 21.351 or 21.352.
         (c)  Notwithstanding performance standards established
  under Subsection (b), a classroom teacher that holds a National
  Board Certification issued by the National Board for Professional
  Teaching Standards may be designated as nationally board certified
  [recognized].
         (e)  The agency shall develop and provide technical
  assistance for school districts and open-enrollment charter
  schools that request assistance in implementing a local optional
  teacher designation system, including:
               (1)  providing assistance in prioritizing high needs
  campuses;
               (2)  providing examples or models of local optional
  teacher designation systems to reduce the time required for a
  district or school to implement a teacher designation system;
               (3)  establishing partnerships between districts and
  schools that request assistance and districts and schools that have
  implemented a teacher designation system;
               (4)  applying the performance and validity standards
  established by the commissioner under Subsection (b);
               (5)  providing centralized support for the analysis of
  the results of assessment instruments administered to district
  students; and
               (6)  facilitating effective communication on and
  promotion of local optional teacher designation systems.
         SECTION 1.13.  Subchapter H, Chapter 21, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 21.3522 to read as follows:
         Sec. 21.3522.  LOCAL OPTIONAL TEACHER DESIGNATION SYSTEM
  GRANT PROGRAM.  (a)  From funds appropriated or otherwise
  available for the purpose, the agency shall establish and
  administer a grant program to provide money and technical
  assistance to:
               (1)  expand implementation of local optional teacher
  designation systems under Section 21.3521; and
               (2)  increase the number of classroom teachers eligible
  for a designation under that section.
         (b)  A grant awarded under this section must:
               (1)  meet the needs of individual school districts; and
               (2)  enable regional leadership capacity.
         (c)  The commissioner may adopt rules to establish and
  administer the grant program under this section.
         SECTION 1.14.  Section 21.402, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a) and (g) and adding Subsections (a-1),
  (c-2), (i), (j), and (k) to read as follows:
         (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (c-2) [(e-1) or (f)], a
  school district must pay each employee who is employed as a
  classroom teacher, full-time librarian, full-time school counselor
  certified under Subchapter B, or full-time school nurse not less
  than the highest annual minimum [minimum monthly] salary described
  by the following schedule applicable to [, based on] the employee's
  certification, if any, and years [level] of experience:
               (1)  for an employee with less than five years of
  experience who:
                     (A)  holds no certification  $35,000;
                     (B)  holds a teacher intern, teacher trainee, or
  probationary certificate issued under Subchapter B  $37,000;
                     (C)  holds the base certificate required under
  Section 21.003(a) for employment in the employee's position other
  than a certificate described by Paragraph (B)  $40,000;
                     (D)  holds a designation under Section 21.3521  
  $43,000; or
                     (E)  holds a residency educator certificate or has
  successfully completed a residency partnership program under
  Subchapter R $43,000;
               (2)  for an employee with at least five years of
  experience who holds:
                     (A)  no certification  $45,000;
                     (B)  a teacher intern, teacher trainee, or
  probationary certificate issued under Subchapter B  $47,000;
                     (C)  the base certificate required under Section
  21.003(a) for employment in the employee's position other than a
  certificate described by Paragraph (B)  $50,000; or
                     (D)  a designation under Section 21.3521  
  $53,000; or
               (3)  for an employee with at least 10 years of
  experience who holds:
                     (A)  no certification  $55,000;
                     (B)  a teacher intern, teacher trainee, or
  probationary certificate issued under Subchapter B  $57,000;
                     (C)  the base certificate required under Section
  21.003(a) for employment in the employee's
  position . . .. $60,000; or
                     (D)  a designation under Section 21.3521
  $63,000 [in addition to other factors, as determined by
  commissioner rule, determined by the following formula:
  [MS = SF x FS
  [where:
         ["MS" is the minimum monthly salary;
         ["SF" is the applicable salary factor specified by Subsection
  (c); and
         ["FS" is the amount, as determined by the commissioner under
  Subsection (b), of the basic allotment as provided by Section
  48.051(a) or (b) for a school district with a maintenance and
  operations tax rate at least equal to the state maximum compressed
  tax rate, as defined by Section 48.051(a)].
         (a-1)  For purposes of Subsection (a), a full-time school
  nurse is considered to hold the base certificate required under
  Section 21.003(a) for employment as a school nurse, regardless of
  the other certifications held by the nurse.
         (c-2)  A school district is not required to pay an employee
  who is employed as a classroom teacher, full-time librarian,
  full-time school counselor certified under Subchapter B, or
  full-time school nurse the minimum salary required under Subsection
  (a) for the school year following a school year during which the
  district reviews the employee's performance and finds the
  employee's performance unsatisfactory.
         (g)  The commissioner may adopt rules to govern the
  application of this section, including rules that:
               (1)  require the payment of a minimum salary under this
  section to a person employed in more than one capacity for which a
  minimum salary is provided and whose combined employment in those
  capacities constitutes full-time employment; and
               (2)  specify the credentials a person must hold to be
  considered a [speech pathologist or] school nurse under this
  section.
         (i)  A school district that increases employee compensation
  in the 2023-2024 school year to comply with Subsection (a), as
  amended by H.B. 100, Acts of the 88th Legislature, Regular Session,
  2023, is providing compensation for services rendered
  independently of an existing employment contract applicable to that
  year and is not in violation of Section 53, Article III, Texas
  Constitution. A school district that does not meet the
  requirements of Subsection (a) in the 2023-2024 school year may
  satisfy the requirements of this section by providing an employee a
  one-time bonus payment during the 2024-2025 school year in an
  amount equal to the difference between the compensation earned by
  the employee during the 2023-2024 school year and the compensation
  the employee should have received during that school year if the
  district had complied with Subsection (a).
         (j)  Notwithstanding the minimum salary schedule under
  Subsection (a), a school district that increases the amount a
  classroom teacher, full-time librarian, full-time school counselor
  certified under Subchapter B, or full-time school nurse is
  compensated during the 2023-2024 school year by at least $8,000
  more than the amount the employee was compensated during the
  2022-2023 school year complies with the requirements of this
  section for the 2023-2024 school year.
         (k)  Subsections (i) and (j) and this subsection expire
  September 1, 2025.
         SECTION 1.15.  The heading to Section 21.403, Education
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 21.403.  DETERMINATION OF YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
  [PLACEMENT ON MINIMUM SALARY SCHEDULE].
         SECTION 1.16.  Sections 21.403(b) and (c), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (b)  For each year of work experience required for
  certification in a career or technological field, up to a maximum of
  two years, a certified career or technology education teacher is
  entitled to [salary step] credit as if the work experience were
  teaching experience.
         (c)  The commissioner shall adopt rules for determining the
  experience for which a teacher, librarian, school counselor, or
  nurse is to be given credit for purposes of the minimum salary
  schedule under Section 21.402(a) [in placing the teacher,
  librarian, school counselor, or nurse on the minimum salary
  schedule].  A district shall credit the teacher, librarian, school
  counselor, or nurse for each year of experience without regard to
  whether the years are consecutive.
         SECTION 1.17.  Subchapter I, Chapter 21, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 21.416 and 21.417 to read as follows:
         Sec. 21.416.  EMPLOYED RETIREE TEACHER REIMBURSEMENT GRANT
  PROGRAM. (a)  From funds appropriated or otherwise available, the
  commissioner shall establish and administer a grant program to
  award funds to reimburse a school district, an open-enrollment
  charter school, the Windham School District, the Texas School for
  the Deaf, or the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired
  that hires a teacher, including an educator who provides services
  related to special education, who retired before September 1, 2022,
  for the increased contributions to the Teacher Retirement System of
  Texas associated with hiring the retired teacher.
         (b)  In appropriating money for grants awarded under this
  section, the legislature may provide for, modify, or limit amounts
  appropriated for that purpose in the General Appropriations Act,
  including by: 
               (1)  providing, notwithstanding Subsection (a), a date
  or date range other than September 1, 2022, before which a teacher
  must have retired for a school district, an open-enrollment charter
  school, the Windham School District, the Texas School for the Deaf,
  or the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired that hires
  the teacher to be eligible; or
               (2)  limiting eligibility to a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school that hires a retired teacher:
                     (A)  who holds a certain certification;
                     (B)  to teach a certain subject or grade; 
                     (C)  in a certain geographical area; or
                     (D)  to provide instruction to certain students,
  including to students with disabilities.
         (c)  The commissioner shall proportionally reduce the amount
  of funds awarded to school districts, open-enrollment charter
  schools, the Windham School District, the Texas School for the
  Deaf, and the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired under
  this section if the number of grant applications by eligible
  districts or schools exceeds the number of grants the commissioner
  could award with the money appropriated or otherwise available for
  the purpose.
         (d)  A school district, an open-enrollment charter school,
  the Windham School District, the Texas School for the Deaf, or the
  Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired may use funds
  received under this section to make required payments under Section
  825.4092, Government Code.
         Sec. 21.417.  RESOURCES, INCLUDING LIABILITY INSURANCE, FOR
  CLASSROOM TEACHERS. (a)  From funds appropriated or otherwise
  available for the purpose, the agency shall contract with a third
  party to provide the following services for a classroom teacher
  employed under a probationary, continuing, or term contract:
               (1)  assistance in understanding the teacher's rights,
  duties, and benefits; and
               (2)  liability insurance to protect a teacher against
  liability to a third party based on conduct that the teacher
  allegedly engaged in during the course of the teacher's duties.
         (b)  A school district may not interfere with a classroom
  teacher's access to services provided under this section.
         (c)  A contract entered into by the agency to provide
  services under Subsection (a) must prohibit the entity with which
  the agency contracts from using funds received under the contract
  to engage in:
               (1)  conduct that a state agency using appropriated
  money is prohibited from engaging in under Chapter 556, Government
  Code; and
               (2)  political activities or advocate for issues
  regarding public schools, including for boards of trustees of
  school districts or school districts.
         (d)  This section may not be interpreted to interfere with a
  classroom teacher's or other school district employee's exercise of
  a right protected by the First Amendment to the United States
  Constitution.
         SECTION 1.18.  Section 21.4552(d), Education Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (d)  From funds appropriated for that purpose, a teacher who
  attends a literacy achievement academy is entitled to receive a
  stipend in the amount determined by the commissioner.  A stipend
  received under this subsection is not considered in determining
  whether a school district is paying the teacher the minimum
  [monthly] salary under Section 21.402.
         SECTION 1.19.  Section 21.4553(d), Education Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (d)  From funds appropriated for that purpose, a teacher who
  attends a mathematics achievement academy is entitled to receive a
  stipend in the amount determined by the commissioner.  A stipend
  received under this subsection is not considered in determining
  whether a district is paying the teacher the minimum [monthly]
  salary under Section 21.402.
         SECTION 1.20.  Section 21.4555(f), Education Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (f)  From funds available for that purpose, a teacher who
  attends a civics training program may receive a stipend in an amount
  determined by the commissioner.  A stipend received under this
  section is not included in determining whether a district is paying
  the teacher the minimum [monthly] salary under Section 21.402.
         SECTION 1.21.  Subchapter J, Chapter 21, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 21.466 and 21.467 to read as follows:
         Sec. 21.466.  TEACHER QUALITY ASSISTANCE. (a) From funds
  appropriated or otherwise available for the purpose, the agency
  shall develop training for and provide technical assistance to
  school districts and open-enrollment charter schools regarding:
               (1)  strategic compensation, staffing, and scheduling
  efforts that improve professional growth, teacher leadership
  opportunities, and staff retention;
               (2)  programs that encourage high school students or
  other members of the community in the area served by the district to
  become teachers, including available teacher apprenticeship
  programs; and
               (3)  programs or strategies that school leaders may use
  to establish clear and attainable behavior expectations while
  proactively supporting students.
         (b)  From funds appropriated or otherwise available, the
  agency shall provide grants to school districts and open-enrollment
  charter schools to implement initiatives developed under this
  section.
         Sec. 21.467.  TEACHER TIME STUDY. (a) From funds
  appropriated or otherwise available for the purpose, the agency
  shall develop and maintain a technical assistance program to
  support school districts and open-enrollment charter schools in:
               (1)  studying how the district's or school's staff and
  student schedules, required noninstructional duties for classroom
  teachers, and professional development requirements for educators
  are affecting the amount of time classroom teachers work each week;
  and
               (2)  refining the schedules for students or staff as
  necessary to ensure teachers have sufficient time during normal
  work hours to fulfill all job duties, including addressing the
  needs of students.
         (b)  The agency shall periodically make findings and
  recommendations for best practices publicly available using
  information from participating school districts and
  open-enrollment charter schools.
         SECTION 1.22.  Chapter 21, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subchapter R to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER R. TEXAS TEACHER RESIDENCY PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM
         Sec. 21.901.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
               (1)  "Board" means the State Board for Educator
  Certification.
               (2)  "Cooperating teacher" means a classroom teacher
  who:
                     (A)  has at least three full school years of
  teaching experience with a superior record of assisting students in
  achieving improvement in student performance;
                     (B)  is employed by a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school participating in a partnership
  program under this subchapter and paired with a partnership
  resident at the district or school; and
                     (C)  provides coaching to a partnership resident
  in the teacher's classroom.
               (3)  "Partnership program" means a Texas Teacher
  Residency Partnership Program established at a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school in accordance with this subchapter.
               (4)  "Partnership resident" means a person enrolled in
  a qualified educator preparation program participating in a
  partnership program as a candidate for educator certification.
               (5)  "Qualified educator preparation program" means an
  educator preparation program approved in accordance with rules
  proposed under Section 21.903.
         Sec. 21.902.  ESTABLISHMENT OF PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM. (a)
  The commissioner shall establish the Texas Teacher Residency
  Partnership Program to enable qualified educator preparation
  programs to form partnerships with school districts or
  open-enrollment charter schools to provide residency positions to
  partnership residents at the district or school.
         (b)  The partnership program must be designed to:
               (1)  allow partnership residents to receive
  field-based experience working with cooperating teachers in
  prekindergarten through grade 12 classrooms; and
               (2)  gradually increase the amount of time a
  partnership resident spends engaging in instructional
  responsibilities, including observation, co-teaching, and
  lead-teaching responsibilities.
         Sec. 21.903.  QUALIFIED EDUCATOR PREPARATION PROGRAMS. The
  board shall propose rules specifying the requirements for board
  approval of an educator preparation program as a qualified educator
  preparation program for purposes of this subchapter.  The rules
  must require an educator preparation program to:
               (1)  use research-based best practices for recruiting
  and admitting candidates into the educator preparation program to
  participate in the partnership program;
               (2)  integrate curriculum, classroom practice, and
  formal observation and feedback;
               (3)  use multiple assessments to measure a partnership
  resident's progress in the partnership program; and
               (4)  partner with a school district or open-enrollment
  charter school.
         Sec. 21.904.  REQUIREMENTS FOR PARTICIPATING DISTRICTS AND
  SCHOOLS. (a)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school
  participating in the partnership program shall:
               (1)  enter into a written agreement with a qualified
  educator preparation program to:
                     (A)  provide a partnership resident with at least
  one school year of clinical teaching in a residency position at the
  district or school in the subject area and grade level for which the
  resident seeks certification; and
                     (B)  pair the partnership resident with a
  cooperating teacher;
               (2)  specify the amount of money the district receives
  under Section 48.157 that the district will provide to the program;
               (3)  only use money received under Section 48.157 to:
                     (A)  implement the partnership program;
                     (B)  provide compensation to:
                           (i)  partnership residents in residency
  positions at the district or school; and
                           (ii)  cooperating teachers who are paired
  with partnership residents at the district or school; and
                     (C)  provide an amount equal to at least 10
  percent of the funding received by the district or school to the
  qualified educator preparation program with which the district or
  school partners;
               (4)  pay at least 50 percent of the compensation paid to
  partnership residents using money other than money received under
  Section 48.157; and
               (5)  provide any information required by the agency
  regarding the district's or school's implementation of the program.
         (b)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school may
  only pair a partnership resident with a cooperating teacher who
  agrees to participate in that role in a partnership program at the
  district or school partnership program.
         (c)  A partnership resident may not serve as a teacher of
  record, as that term is defined by Section 21.051.
         Sec. 21.905.  RESIDENCY EDUCATOR CERTIFICATE. The board
  shall propose rules specifying the requirements for the issuance of
  a residency educator certificate to a candidate who has
  successfully completed a qualified educator preparation program
  under Section 21.903.  The rules may not require the resident to
  pass a pedagogy examination unless the examination tests
  subject-specific content appropriate for the grade and subject area
  for which the candidate seeks certification.
         Sec. 21.906.  AGENCY SUPPORT. The agency shall provide
  technical assistance, planning, and support to school districts,
  open-enrollment charter schools, and qualified educator
  preparation programs, which must include:
               (1)  providing model forms and agreements a district,
  school, or educator preparation program may use to comply with the
  requirements of this subchapter; and
               (2)  support for district and school strategic staffing
  and compensation models to incentivize participation in a
  partnership program.
         Sec. 21.907.  AUTHORITY TO ACCEPT CERTAIN FUNDS. The
  commissioner may solicit and accept gifts, grants, and donations
  from public and private entities to use for the purposes of this
  subchapter.
         Sec. 21.908.  RULES. (a) The board shall propose rules
  necessary to implement this subchapter, including rules under
  Sections 21.903 and 21.905.
         (b)  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary to
  implement this subchapter using negotiated rulemaking procedures
  under Chapter 2008, Government Code.
         SECTION 1.23.  The heading to Section 22.001, Education
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 22.001.   SALARY DEDUCTIONS FOR PROFESSIONAL OR OTHER
  DUES.
         SECTION 1.24.  Sections 22.001(a) and (b), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  A school district employee is entitled to have an amount
  deducted from the employee's salary for membership fees or dues to a
  professional organization or an entity providing services to
  classroom teachers under Section 21.417.  The employee must:
               (1)  file with the district a signed written request
  identifying the organization or entity [and specifying the number
  of pay periods per year the deductions are to be made]; and
               (2)  inform the district of the total amount of the fees
  and dues for each year or have the organization or entity notify the
  district of the amount.
         (b)  The district shall deduct the total amount of the fees
  or dues for a year in equal amounts per pay period [for the number of
  periods specified by the employee].  The district shall notify the
  employee not later than the 45th day after the district receives a
  request under Subsection (a) of the number of pay periods annually
  from which the district will deduct the fees or dues.  The
  deductions shall be made until the employee requests in writing
  that the deductions be discontinued.
         SECTION 1.25.  Section 25.001(h), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (h)  In addition to the penalty provided by Section 37.10,
  Penal Code, a person who knowingly falsifies information on a form
  required for enrollment of a student in a school district is liable
  to the district if the student is not eligible for enrollment in the
  district but is enrolled on the basis of the false information.  The
  person is liable, for the period during which the ineligible
  student is enrolled, for [the greater of:
               [(1)  the maximum tuition fee the district may charge
  under Section 25.038; or
               [(2)]  the amount the district has budgeted for each
  student as maintenance and operating expenses.
         SECTION 1.26.  Section 25.036, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec.  25.036.  TRANSFER OF STUDENT.  (a)  Any child, other
  than a high school graduate, who is younger than 21 years of age and
  eligible for enrollment on September 1 of any school year may apply
  to transfer for in-person instruction annually from the child's
  school district of residence to another district in this state [if
  both the receiving district and the applicant parent or guardian or
  person having lawful control of the child jointly approve and
  timely agree in writing to the transfer].
         (b)  A transfer application approved [agreement] under this
  section shall be filed and preserved as a receiving district record
  for audit purposes of the agency.
         (c)  A school district may deny approval of a transfer under
  this section only if: 
               (1)  the district or a school in the district to which a
  student seeks to transfer is at full student capacity or has more
  requests for transfers than available positions after the district
  has filled available positions in accordance with Subsection (e)
  and has satisfied the requirement provided under Subsection (f);
               (2)  before the application deadline for the applicable
  school year, the district adopted a policy that provides for the
  exclusion of a student who has a documented history of a criminal
  offense, a juvenile court adjudication, or discipline problems
  under Subchapter A, Chapter 37, and the student meets the
  conditions for exclusion under the policy; or
               (3)  approving the transfer would supersede a
  court-ordered desegregation plan.
         (d)  For the purpose of determining whether a school in a
  school district is at full student capacity under Subsection
  (c)(1), the district may not consider equity as a factor in the
  district's decision-making process.
         (e)  A school district that has more applicants for transfer
  under this section than available positions must fill the available
  positions by lottery and must give priority to applicants in the
  following order:
               (1)  students who:
                     (A)  do not reside in the district but were
  enrolled in the district in the preceding school year; or
                     (B)  are dependents of an employee of the
  receiving district; and
               (2)  students:
                     (A)  receiving special education services under
  Subchapter A, Chapter 29;
                     (B)  who are dependents of military personnel;
                     (C)  who are dependents of law enforcement
  personnel;
                     (D)  in foster care;
                     (E)  who are the subject of court-ordered
  modification of an order establishing conservatorship or
  possession and access; or
                     (F)  who are siblings of a student who is enrolled
  in the receiving district at the time the student seeks to transfer.
         (f)  A school district may deny approval of a transfer under
  Subsection (c)(1) only if the district publishes and annually
  updates the district's full student capacity by campus.
         (g)  A receiving school district may, but is not required to,
  provide transportation to a student who transfers to the receiving
  district under this section.
         (h)  A receiving school district may revoke, at any time
  during the school year, the approval of the student's transfer only
  if:
               (1)  the student engages in conduct:
                     (A)  for which a student is required or permitted
  to be removed from class and placed in a disciplinary alternative
  education program under Section 37.006; or
                     (B)  for which a student is required or permitted
  to be expelled from school under Section 37.007; and
               (2)  before revoking approval of the student's
  transfer, the district ensures the student is afforded appropriate
  due process and complies with any requirements of state law or
  district policy relating to the expulsion of a student to the same
  extent as if the student were being expelled under Section 37.007.
         SECTION 1.27.  Section 25.038, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 25.038.  TUITION FEE FOR TRANSFER STUDENTS PAID BY
  SCHOOL DISTRICT.  (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b), a
  [The] receiving school district may charge a tuition fee to another
  school district, if the receiving district has contracted with the
  other district to educate the other district's students, to the
  extent that the district's actual expenditure per student in
  average daily attendance, as determined by its board of trustees,
  exceeds the sum the district benefits from state aid sources as
  provided by Section 25.037.  However, unless a tuition fee is
  prescribed and set out in a transfer agreement before its execution
  by the parties, an increase in tuition charge may not be made for
  the year of that transfer that exceeds the tuition charge, if any,
  of the preceding school year.
         (b)  A school district may not charge a tuition fee under
  this section for a student transfer authorized under Section
  25.036.
         SECTION 1.28.  Subchapter C, Chapter 25, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 25.0813 to read as follows:
         Sec. 25.0813.  FIVE-DAY SCHOOL WEEK SCHEDULE. (a) A school
  district must operate a school week of not fewer than five
  instructional days for at least two-thirds of the weeks the
  district operates during the school year.
         (b)  Subsection (a) does not apply to:
               (1)  a school district specifically authorized by other
  law to operate a school week of fewer than five instructional days;
  or
               (2)  a school district that before May 1, 2023, adopted
  for the 2023-2024 school year a four-day school week schedule.
         SECTION 1.29.  Section 29.153(b), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (b)  A child is eligible for enrollment in a prekindergarten
  class under this section if the child is at least three years of age
  and:
               (1)  is unable to speak and comprehend the English
  language;
               (2)  is educationally disadvantaged;
               (3)  is homeless, regardless of the residence of the
  child, of either parent of the child, or of the child's guardian or
  other person having lawful control of the child;
               (4)  is the child of an active duty member of the armed
  forces of the United States, including the state military forces or
  a reserve component of the armed forces, who is ordered to active
  duty by proper authority;
               (5)  is the child of a member of the armed forces of the
  United States, including the state military forces or a reserve
  component of the armed forces, who was injured or killed while
  serving on active duty;
               (6)  is or ever has been in:
                     (A)  the conservatorship of the Department of
  Family and Protective Services following an adversary hearing held
  as provided by Section 262.201, Family Code; or
                     (B)  foster care in another state or territory, if
  the child resides in this state; [or]
               (7)  is the child of a person eligible for the Star of
  Texas Award as:
                     (A)  a peace officer under Section 3106.002,
  Government Code;
                     (B)  a firefighter under Section 3106.003,
  Government Code; or
                     (C)  an emergency medical first responder under
  Section 3106.004, Government Code; or
               (8)  is the child of a person employed as a classroom
  teacher at a public primary or secondary school in the school
  district that offers a prekindergarten class under this section.
         SECTION 1.30.  Section 29.934(d), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (d)  To be designated as a resource campus, the campus must:
               (1)  implement a targeted improvement plan as described
  by Chapter 39A and establish a school community partnership team;
               (2)  adopt an accelerated campus excellence turnaround
  plan as provided by Section 39A.105(b) and ensure that from the date
  of the adoption of the plan, not less than 20 percent of the
  classroom teachers assigned to the campus who teach subjects
  included in the foundation curriculum under Section 28.002(a)(1)
  hold a current designation under Section 21.3521 [except that a
  classroom teacher who satisfies the requirements for demonstrated
  instructional effectiveness under Section 39A.105(b)(3) must also
  hold a current designation assigned under Section 21.3521];
               (3)  be in a school district that has adopted an
  approved local optional teacher designation system under Section
  21.3521;
               (4)  satisfy certain staff criteria by:
                     (A)  requiring a principal or teacher employed at
  the campus before the designation to apply for a position to
  continue at the campus;
                     (B)  for a subject in the foundation curriculum, 
  employing only teachers who have at least two [three] years of
  teaching experience;
                     (C)  employing at least one school counselor for
  every 300 students; and
                     (D)  employing at least one appropriately
  licensed professional to assist with the social and emotional needs
  of students and staff, who must be a:
                           (i)  family and community liaison;
                           (ii)  clinical social worker;
                           (iii)  specialist in school psychology; or
                           (iv)  professional counselor;
               (5)  implement a positive behavior program as provided
  by Section 37.0013;
               (6)  implement a family engagement plan as described by
  Section 29.168;
               (7)  develop and implement a plan to use high quality
  instructional materials;
               (8)  if the campus is an elementary campus, operate the
  campus for a school year that qualifies for funding under Section
  48.0051; and
               (9)  annually submit to the commissioner data and
  information required by the commissioner to assess fidelity of
  implementation.
         SECTION 1.31.  Section 30.003, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (b) and (f-1) and adding Subsection (b-1) to
  read as follows:
         (b)  If the student is admitted to the school for a full-time
  program for the equivalent of two long semesters, the district's
  share of the cost is an amount equal to the dollar amount of
  maintenance and debt service taxes imposed by the district for that
  year, subject to Subsection (b-1), divided by the district's
  average daily attendance for the preceding year.
         (b-1)  For purposes of Subsection (b), the commissioner
  shall reduce the dollar amount of maintenance and debt service
  taxes imposed by the district for a year by the amount, if any, by
  which the district is required to reduce the district's local
  revenue level under Section 48.257 for that year.
         (f-1)  The commissioner shall determine the total amount
  that the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired and the
  Texas School for the Deaf would have received from school districts
  in accordance with this section if the following provisions had not
  reduced the districts' share of the cost of providing education
  services:
               (1)  H.B. No. 1, Acts of the 79th Legislature, 3rd
  Called Session, 2006;
               (2)  Subsection (b-1) of this section;
               (3)  Section 45.0032;
               (4) [(3)]  Section 48.255; and
               (5) [(4)]  Section 48.2551.
         SECTION 1.32.  Section 30.102(b), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (b)  A classroom teacher, full-time librarian, full-time
  school counselor certified under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, or
  full-time school nurse employed by the department is entitled to
  receive as a minimum salary the [monthly] salary specified by
  Section 21.402. A classroom teacher, full-time librarian,
  full-time school counselor, or full-time school nurse may be paid,
  from funds appropriated to the department, a salary in excess of the
  minimum specified by that section, but the salary may not exceed the
  rate of pay for a similar position in the public schools of an
  adjacent school district.
         SECTION 1.33.  Section 33.009(h), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (h)  From funds appropriated for that purpose, a school
  counselor who attends the academy under this section is entitled to
  receive a stipend in the amount determined by the coordinating
  board. If funds are available after all eligible school counselors
  have received a stipend under this subsection, the coordinating
  board shall pay a stipend in the amount determined by the
  coordinating board to a teacher who attends the academy under this
  section. A stipend received under this subsection is not
  considered in determining whether a district is paying the school
  counselor or teacher the minimum [monthly] salary under Section
  21.402.
         SECTION 1.34.  Section 37.002, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (b), (c), and (d) and adding Subsections
  (b-2), (f), and (g) to read as follows:
         (b)  A teacher may remove from class a student who:
               (1)  interferes [who has been documented by the teacher
  to repeatedly interfere] with the teacher's ability to communicate
  effectively with the students in the class or with the ability of
  the student's classmates to learn; [or]
               (2)  demonstrates [whose] behavior that is unruly,
  disruptive, or abusive toward the teacher or another adult or
  another student; or
               (3)  engages in conduct that constitutes bullying, as
  defined by Section 37.0832 [determines is so unruly, disruptive, or
  abusive that it seriously interferes with the teacher's ability to
  communicate effectively with the students in the class or with the
  ability of the student's classmates to learn].
         (b-2)  A teacher, campus behavior coordinator, or other
  appropriate administrator shall notify a parent or person standing
  in parental relation to a student of the removal of a student under
  this section.
         (c)  If a teacher removes a student from class under
  Subsection (b), the principal may place the student into another
  appropriate classroom, into in-school suspension, or into a
  disciplinary alternative education program as provided by Section
  37.008.  The principal may not return the student to that teacher's
  class without the teacher's written consent unless the committee
  established under Section 37.003 determines that such placement is
  the best or only alternative available. The principal may not
  return the student to that teacher's class, regardless of the
  teacher's consent, until a return to class plan has been prepared
  for that student. The principal may only designate an employee of
  the school whose primary duties do not include classroom
  instruction to create a return to class plan. The terms of the
  removal may prohibit the student from attending or participating in
  school-sponsored or school-related activity.
         (d)  A teacher shall remove from class and send to the
  principal for placement in a disciplinary alternative education
  program or for expulsion, as appropriate, a student who engages in
  conduct described under Section 37.006 or 37.007. The student may
  not be returned to that teacher's class without the teacher's
  written consent unless the committee established under Section
  37.003 determines that such placement is the best or only
  alternative available.  If the teacher removed the student from
  class because the student has engaged in the elements of any offense
  listed in Section 37.006(a)(2)(B) or Section 37.007(a)(2)(A) or
  (b)(2)(C) against the teacher, the student may not be returned to
  the teacher's class without the teacher's consent. The teacher may
  not be coerced to consent.
         (f)  A student may appeal the student's removal from class
  under this section to: 
               (1)  the school's placement review committee
  established under Section 37.003; or
               (2)  the safe and supportive school team established
  under Section 37.115, in accordance with a district policy
  providing for such an appeal to be made to the team.
         (g)  Section 37.004 applies to the removal or placement under
  this section of a student with a disability who receives special
  education services.
         SECTION 1.35.  Sections 48.0051(a), (b), and (d), Education
  Code, are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  The [Subject to Subsection (a-1), the] commissioner
  shall adjust the average daily attendance of a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school under Section 48.005 in the manner
  provided by Subsection (b) if the district or school:
               (1)  provides the minimum number of minutes of
  operational and instructional time required under Section 25.081
  and commissioner rules adopted under that section over at least 175
  [180] days of instruction; and
               (2)  offers an additional 30 days of half-day
  instruction for students enrolled in prekindergarten through fifth
  grade.
         (b)  For a school district or open-enrollment charter school
  described by Subsection (a), the commissioner shall increase the
  average daily attendance of the district or school under Section
  48.005 by the amount that results from the quotient of the sum of
  attendance by students described by Subsection (a)(2) for each of
  the 30 additional instructional days of half-day instruction that
  are provided divided by 175 [180].
         (d)  This section does not prohibit a school district from
  providing the minimum number of minutes of operational and
  instructional time required under Section 25.081 and commissioner
  rules adopted under that section over fewer than 175 [180] days of
  instruction.
         SECTION 1.36.  Subchapter A, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 48.0055 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.0055.  ENROLLMENT-BASED FUNDING. The commissioner
  by rule shall establish the method for determining average
  enrollment for purposes of funding provided based on average
  enrollment under Chapter 46 and this chapter.
         SECTION 1.37.  Sections 48.011(a), (a-1), (d), and (e),
  Education Code, are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  Subject to Subsections (b) and (d), the commissioner may
  adjust the [a school district's] funding entitlement under this
  code for a school district, an open-enrollment charter school, the
  Windham School District, the Texas School for the Deaf, or the Texas
  School for the Blind and Visually Impaired [chapter] if the funding
  formulas used to determine the [district's] entitlement result in
  an unanticipated loss or gain [for a district].
         (a-1)  The commissioner may modify dates relating to the
  adoption of a school district's maintenance and operations tax rate
  and, if applicable, an election required for the district to adopt
  that rate as necessary to implement the changes to the Foundation
  School Program and requirements relating to school district tax
  rates made by the 88th [H.B. 3, 86th] Legislature, Regular Session,
  2023 [2019].
         (d)  Beginning with the 2026-2027 [2021-2022] school year,
  the commissioner may not make an adjustment under Subsection (a) or
  (a-1).
         (e)  This section expires September 1, 2027 [2023].
         SECTION 1.38.  Section 48.051, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a), (c), and (d) and adding Subsections
  (c-3), (c-4), (c-5), and (c-6) to read as follows:
         (a)  For each student in average daily attendance, not
  including the time students spend each day in special education
  programs in an instructional arrangement other than mainstream or
  career and technology education programs, for which an additional
  allotment is made under Subchapter C, a district is entitled to an
  allotment equal to [the lesser of $6,160 or] the amount that results
  from the following formula:
  A = B [$6,160] X TR/MCR
  where:
         "A" is the allotment to which a district is entitled;
         "B" is the base amount, which equals the greater of:
               (1)  $6,210;
               (2)  an amount equal to the district's base amount under
  this section for the preceding school year; or
               (3)  the amount appropriated under Subsection (b);
         "TR" is the district's tier one maintenance and operations
  tax rate, as provided by Section 45.0032; and
         "MCR" is the district's maximum compressed tax rate, as
  determined under Section 48.2551.
         (c)  During any school year for which the value of "A"
  determined [maximum amount of the basic allotment provided] under
  Subsection (a) or, if applicable, the sum of the value of "A" and
  the allotment under Section 48.101 to which the district is
  entitled, [or (b)] is greater than the value of "A" or, if
  applicable, the sum of the value of "A" and the allotment under
  Section 48.101 to which the district is entitled, [maximum amount
  provided] for the preceding school year, a school district must use
  at least 50 [30] percent of the amount[, if the amount is greater
  than zero,] that equals the product of the average daily attendance
  of the district multiplied by the amount of the difference between
  the district's funding under this chapter per student in average
  daily attendance, excluding the amounts described by Subsection
  (c-6), for the current school year and the preceding school year to
  increase the average total compensation per full-time classroom
  teacher [provide compensation increases to full-time district
  employees other than administrators as follows:
               [(1)  75 percent must be used to increase the
  compensation paid to classroom teachers, full-time librarians,
  full-time school counselors certified under Subchapter B, Chapter
  21, and full-time school nurses, prioritizing differentiated
  compensation for classroom teachers with more than five years of
  experience; and
               [(2)  25 percent may be used as determined by the
  district to increase compensation paid to full-time district
  employees].
         (c-3)  In calculating the average total compensation per
  full-time classroom teacher under Subsection (c), a school district
  may not consider compensation paid to a classroom teacher added by
  the district for the current school year that increases the ratio of
  classroom teachers to students enrolled in the district compared to
  the preceding school year.
         (c-4)  If a school district increases employee compensation
  in a school year to comply with Subsection (c), as amended by
  H.B. 100, Acts of the 88th Legislature, Regular Session, 2023, the
  district is providing compensation for services rendered
  independently of an existing employment contract applicable to that
  year and is not a violation of Section 53, Article III, Texas
  Constitution.
         (c-5)  A school district that does not meet the requirements
  of Subsection (c) during a school year may satisfy the requirements
  of this section by providing a full-time classroom teacher a
  one-time bonus payment during the following school year in an
  amount equal to the difference between the compensation earned by
  the teacher and the compensation the teacher should have received
  during the school year if the district had complied with Subsection
  (c).
         (c-6)  For purposes of determining the amount of a school
  district's funding under this chapter under Subsection (c), the
  commissioner shall exclude:
               (1)  funding under Section 13.054;
               (2)  incentive aid payments under Subchapter G, Chapter
  13;
               (3)  money received from the state instructional
  materials and technology fund under Section 31.021;
               (4)  the special education full individual and initial
  evaluation allotment under Section 48.1022;
               (5)  the college, career, and military readiness
  outcomes bonuses under Section 48.110;
               (6)  the school safety allotment under Section 48.115;
  and
               (7)  the allotments under Subchapter D, other than the
  allotments under Sections 48.153 and 48.154.
         (d)  In this section, "compensation" includes:
               (1)  benefits such as insurance premiums; and
               (2)  contributions to the Teacher Retirement System of
  Texas under Section 825.4035, Government Code.
         SECTION 1.39.  Section 48.101, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 48.101.  SMALL AND MID-SIZED DISTRICT ALLOTMENT.  (a)  
  Small and mid-sized districts are entitled to an annual allotment
  in accordance with this section.  In this section:
               (1)  "AA" is the district's annual allotment per
  student in average daily attendance;
               (2)  "ADA" is the number of students in average daily
  attendance for which the district is entitled to an allotment under
  Section 48.051, other than students who do not reside in the
  district enrolled in a full-time virtual program; and
               (3)  "BA" is the basic allotment determined under
  Section 48.051.
         (b)  A school district that has fewer than 1,600 students in
  average daily attendance is entitled to an annual allotment for
  each student in average daily attendance based on the following
  formula:
  AA = ((1,600 - ADA) X .00055 [.0004]) X BA
         (c)  A school district that offers a kindergarten through
  grade 12 program and has less than 5,000 students in average daily
  attendance is entitled to an annual allotment for each student in
  average daily attendance based on the formula, of the following
  formulas, that results in the greatest annual allotment:
               (1)  the formula in Subsection (b), if the district is
  eligible for that formula; or
               (2)  AA = ((5,000 - ADA) X .0000345 [.000025]) X BA.
         (d)  Instead of the allotment under Subsection (b) or (c)(1),
  a school district that has fewer than 300 students in average daily
  attendance and is the only school district located in and operating
  in a county is entitled to an annual allotment for each student in
  average daily attendance based on the following formula:
  AA = ((1,600 - ADA) X .00057 [.00047]) X BA
         SECTION 1.40.  Subchapter C, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 48.1022 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.1022.  SPECIAL EDUCATION FULL INDIVIDUAL AND INITIAL
  EVALUATION. For each student for whom a school district conducts a
  full individual and initial evaluation under Section 29.004 or 20
  U.S.C. Section 1414(a)(1), the district is entitled to an allotment
  of $500 or a greater amount provided by appropriation.
         SECTION 1.41.  Section 48.110(d), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (d)  For each annual graduate in a cohort described by
  Subsection (b) who demonstrates college, career, or military
  readiness as described by Subsection (f) in excess of the minimum
  number of students determined for the applicable district cohort
  under Subsection (c), a school district is entitled to an annual
  outcomes bonus of:
               (1)  if the annual graduate is educationally
  disadvantaged, $5,000;
               (2)  if the annual graduate is not educationally
  disadvantaged, $3,000; and
               (3)  if the annual graduate is enrolled in a special
  education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, $4,000 [$2,000],
  regardless of whether the annual graduate is educationally
  disadvantaged.
         SECTION 1.42.  Section 48.111(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  A [Except as provided by Subsection (c), a] school
  district is entitled to an annual allotment equal to the basic
  allotment multiplied by the applicable weight under Subsection
  (a-1) for each enrolled student equal to the difference, if the
  difference is greater than zero, that results from subtracting 250
  from the difference between the number of students enrolled in the
  district during the school year immediately preceding the current
  school year and the number of students enrolled in the district
  during the school year six years preceding the current school year.
         SECTION 1.43.  Sections 48.112(c) and (d), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (c)  For each classroom teacher with a teacher designation
  under Section 21.3521 employed by a school district, the school
  district is entitled to an allotment equal to the following
  applicable base amount increased by the high needs and rural factor
  as determined under Subsection (d):
               (1)  $12,000, or an increased amount not to exceed
  $36,000 [$32,000] as determined under Subsection (d), for each
  master teacher;
               (2)  $9,000 [$6,000], or an increased amount not to
  exceed $25,000 [$18,000] as determined under Subsection (d), for
  each exemplary teacher; [and]
               (3)  $5,000 [$3,000], or an increased amount not to
  exceed $15,000 [$9,000] as determined under Subsection (d), for
  each recognized teacher; and
               (4)  $3,000, or an increased amount not to exceed
  $9,000 as determined under Subsection (d), for each:
                     (A)  acknowledged teacher; or
                     (B)  teacher designated as nationally board
  certified.
         (d)  The high needs and rural factor is determined by
  multiplying the following applicable amounts by the average of the
  point value assigned to each student at a district campus under
  Subsection (e):
               (1)  $6,000 [$5,000] for each master teacher;
               (2)  $4,000 [$3,000] for each exemplary teacher; [and]
               (3)  $2,500 [$1,500] for each recognized teacher; and
               (4)  $1,500 for each:
                     (A)  acknowledged teacher; or
                     (B)  teacher designated as nationally board
  certified.
         SECTION 1.44.  Section 48.114, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (d) to read as
  follows:
         (a)  A school district [that has implemented a mentoring
  program for classroom teachers who have less than two years of
  teaching experience under Section 21.458] is entitled to an
  allotment [as determined under Subsection (b)] to fund a [the]
  mentoring program and to provide stipends for mentor teachers if:
               (1)  the district has implemented a mentoring program
  for classroom teachers under Section 21.458; and
               (2)  the mentor teachers assigned under that program
  complete a training program that is required or developed by the
  agency for mentor teachers.
         (d)  A school district is entitled to an allotment of $2,000
  for each classroom teacher with less than two years of experience
  who participates in a mentoring program described by Subsection
  (a).  A district may receive an allotment under this section for no
  more than 40 teachers during a school year unless an appropriation
  is made for the purposes of providing a greater number of allotments
  per district.
         SECTION 1.45.  Section 48.151(g), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (g)  A school district or county that provides special
  transportation services for eligible special education students is
  entitled to a state allocation at a [paid on a previous year's
  cost-per-mile basis. The] rate per mile equal to the sum of the
  rate per mile set under Subsection (c) and $0.13, or a greater
  amount provided [allowable shall be set] by appropriation [based on
  data gathered from the first year of each preceding biennium].
  Districts may use a portion of their support allocation to pay
  transportation costs, if necessary. The commissioner may grant an
  amount set by appropriation for private transportation to reimburse
  parents or their agents for transporting eligible special education
  students. The mileage allowed shall be computed along the shortest
  public road from the student's home to school and back, morning and
  afternoon. The need for this type of transportation shall be
  determined on an individual basis and shall be approved only in
  extreme hardship cases.
         SECTION 1.46.  Subchapter D, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 48.157 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.157.  RESIDENCY PARTNERSHIP ALLOTMENT. (a)  In this
  section, "partnership program" and "partnership resident" have the
  meanings assigned by Section 21.901.
         (b)  For each partnership resident employed at a school
  district in a residency position under Subchapter R, Chapter 21,
  the district is entitled to an allotment equal to a base amount of
  $22,000 increased by the high needs and rural factor, as determined
  under Subsection (c), to an amount not to exceed $42,000.
         (c)  The high needs and rural factor is determined by
  multiplying $5,000 by the lesser of:
               (1)  the average of the point value assigned to each
  student at a district campus under Sections 48.112(e) and (f); or
               (2)  4.0.
         (d)  In addition to the funding under Subsection (b), a
  district that qualifies for an allotment under this section is
  entitled to an additional $2,000 for each partnership resident
  employed in a residency position at the district who is a candidate
  for special education or bilingual education certification.
         (e)  The Texas School for the Deaf and the Texas School for
  the Blind and Visually Impaired are entitled to an allotment under
  this section.  If the commissioner determines that assigning point
  values under Subsection (c) to students enrolled in the Texas
  School for the Deaf or the Texas School for the Blind and Visually
  Impaired is impractical, the commissioner may use the average point
  value assigned for those students' home districts for purposes of
  calculating the high needs and rural factor.
         SECTION 1.47.  Subchapter D, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 48.160 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.160.  ALLOTMENT FOR ADVANCED MATHEMATICS PATHWAYS
  AND CERTAIN PROGRAMS OF STUDY. (a)  A school district is eligible
  to receive an allotment under this section if the district offers
  through in-person instruction, remote instruction, or a hybrid of
  in-person and remote instruction:
               (1)  an advanced mathematics pathway that begins with
  Algebra I in grade eight and continues through progressively more
  advanced mathematics courses in each grade from grade 9 through 12;
               (2)  a program of study in:
                     (A)  computer programming and software
  development; or
                     (B)  cybersecurity; and
               (3)  a program of study in a specialized skilled trade,
  such as:
                     (A)  plumbing and pipefitting;
                     (B)  electrical;
                     (C)  welding;
                     (D)  diesel and heavy equipment;
                     (E)  aviation maintenance; or
                     (F)  applied agricultural engineering.
         (b)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a), a school district is
  eligible for the allotment under this section for students enrolled
  in a high school in the district that does not offer a program of
  study described by Subsection (a)(2) or (3) if:
               (1)  high school students who reside in the attendance
  zone of the high school may participate in the program of study by
  enrolling in another high school:
                     (A)  that:
                           (i)  is in the same district or a neighboring
  school district;
                           (ii)  was assigned the same or a better
  campus overall performance rating under Section 39.054 as the high
  school in whose attendance zone the students reside; and
                           (iii)  offers the program of study; and
                     (B)  to and from which transportation is provided
  for those students; or
               (2)  students enrolled in the high school:
                     (A)  are offered instruction for the program of
  study at another location, such as another high school in the same
  district or a neighboring school district; and
                     (B)  receive transportation to and from the
  location described by Paragraph (A).
         (c)  An eligible school district is entitled to an annual
  allotment of $10 for each student enrolled at a high school in the
  district that offers a pathway or program of study from each
  subdivision described by Subsection (a) if:
               (1)  each student enrolled at the high school takes a
  progressively more advanced mathematics course each year of
  enrollment; and
               (2)  for each of those pathways or programs of study, at
  least one student enrolled at the high school completes a course in
  the pathway or program of study.
         (d)  A school district that receives an allotment under
  Subsection (c) and Section 48.101 is entitled to receive an
  additional allotment in an amount equal to the product of 0.1 and
  the allotment to which the district is entitled under Section
  48.101 for each student for which the district receives an
  allotment under Subsection (c).  An open-enrollment charter school
  is not eligible for an allotment under this subsection.
         (e)  The commissioner by rule may establish requirements to
  ensure students enrolled in a high school to which Subsection (b)
  applies have meaningful access to the programs of study described
  by Subsections (a)(2) and (3).
         (f)  The agency may reduce the amount of a school district's
  allotment under this section if the agency determines that the
  district has not complied with any provision of this section.
         SECTION 1.48.  Section 48.202(a-1), Education Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (a-1)  For purposes of Subsection (a), the dollar amount
  guaranteed level of state and local funds per weighted student per
  cent of tax effort ("GL") for a school district is:
               (1)  the greater of the amount of district tax revenue
  per weighted student per cent of tax effort available to a school
  district at the 96th percentile of wealth per weighted student or
  the amount that results from multiplying the maximum amount of the
  basic allotment provided under Section 48.051 for the applicable
  school year [6,160, or the greater amount provided under Section
  48.051(b), if applicable,] by 0.016, for the first eight cents by
  which the district's maintenance and operations tax rate exceeds
  the district's tier one tax rate; and
               (2)  subject to Subsection (f), the amount that results
  from multiplying the maximum amount of the basic allotment provided
  under Section 48.051 for the applicable school year [$6,160, or the
  greater amount provided under Section 48.051(b), if applicable,] by
  0.008, for the district's maintenance and operations tax effort
  that exceeds the amount of tax effort described by Subdivision (1).
         SECTION 1.49.  Section 48.257, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (b-1) and amending Subsection (c) to read as
  follows:
         (b-1)  If for any school year a school district receives an
  adjustment under Subsection (b) and, after that adjustment, is no
  longer subject to Subsection (a), the district is entitled to
  additional state aid for that school year in an amount equal to the
  lesser of:
               (1)  the difference, if the difference is greater than
  zero, between:
                     (A)  the amount to which the district is entitled
  under Subchapters B, C, and D less the district's distribution from
  the available school fund for that school year; and
                     (B)  the district's tier one maintenance and
  operations tax collections for that school year; or
               (2)  the sum of the district's allotments under
  Sections 48.0051 and 48.112 for that school year.
         (c)  For purposes of Subsection (a), state aid to which a
  district is entitled under Section 13.054 or this chapter that is
  not described by Section 48.266(a)(3) may offset the amount by
  which a district must reduce the district's revenue level under
  this section. Any amount of state aid used as an offset under this
  subsection shall reduce the amount of state aid to which the
  district is entitled.
         SECTION 1.50.  Subchapter F, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 48.280 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.280.  SALARY TRANSITION ALLOTMENT. (a) In the
  2023-2024, 2024-2025, and 2025-2026 school years, a school district
  is entitled to receive an annual salary transition allotment equal
  to the difference, if that amount is greater than zero, between:
               (1)  the amount calculated under Subsection (b); and 
               (2)  the amount calculated under Subsection (c).
         (b)  The agency shall calculate a school district's value for
  Subsection (a)(1) by determining the difference between:
               (1)  the amount the district must pay in compensation
  for the current school year for employees on the minimum salary
  schedule under Section 21.402, as amended by H.B. 100, Acts of the
  88th Legislature, Regular Session, 2023, divided by the total
  number of employees on the minimum salary schedule under that
  section for that school year; and
               (2)  the amount paid in compensation for the 2022-2023
  school year for employees on the minimum salary schedule under
  Section 21.402 divided by the total number of employees on the
  minimum salary schedule under that section for that school year.
         (c)  The agency shall calculate a school district's value for
  Subsection (a)(2) by determining the difference between:
               (1)  the total maintenance and operations revenue for
  the current school year divided by the total number of employees on
  the minimum salary schedule under Section 21.402 for that school
  year; and
               (2)  the total maintenance and operations revenue that
  would have been available to the district for the current school
  year using the basic allotment formula provided by Section 48.051
  and the small and mid-sized allotment formulas provided by Section
  48.101 as those sections existed on January 1, 2023, divided by the
  total number of employees on the minimum salary schedule under
  Section 21.402 for that school year.
         (d)  In calculating the values under Subsections (b) and (c)
  for a school district or open-enrollment charter school to which
  Section 21.402 does not apply, the agency shall include as
  employees on the minimum salary schedule under that section
  employees of the district or school who would have been on the
  minimum salary schedule under that section if the district or
  school were a school district to which that section applies.
         (e)  Before making a final determination of the amount of an
  allotment to which a school district is entitled under this
  section, the agency shall ensure each school district has an
  opportunity to review and submit revised information to the agency
  for purposes of calculating the values under Subsection (a).
         (f)  A school district is entitled to an allotment in an
  amount equal to:
               (1)  for the 2026-2027 school year, two-thirds of the
  value determined under Subsection (a); and
               (2)  for the 2027-2028 school year, one-third of the
  value determined under Subsection (a).
         (g)  A school district is not entitled to an allotment under
  this section in the 2028-2029 school year or a later school year.
         (h)  For purposes of this section, "compensation" includes
  contributions made to the Teacher Retirement System of Texas under
  Sections 825.4035 and 825.405, Government Code.
         (i)  This section expires September 1, 2029.
         SECTION 1.51.  Subchapter G, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 48.304 and 48.305 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.304.  DAY PLACEMENT PROGRAM FUNDING. (a) For each
  qualifying day placement program that a regional education service
  center makes available in partnership with a school district,
  open-enrollment charter school, or shared services arrangement,
  the center is entitled to an allotment of:
               (1)  $250,000 for the first year of the program's
  operation; and
               (2)  $150,000 for each year of the program's operation
  after the first year.
         (b)  A day placement program qualifies for purposes of
  Subsection (a) if:
               (1)  the program complies with commissioner rules
  adopted under Section 48.102(c);
               (2)  the program offers services to students who are
  enrolled at any school district or open-enrollment charter school
  in the county in which the program is offered, unless the
  commissioner by rule waives or modifies the requirement under this
  subdivision for the program to serve all students in a county; and
               (3)  the agency has designated the program for service
  in the county in which the program is offered and determined that,
  at the time of designation, the program increases the availability
  of day placement services in the county.
         Sec. 48.305.  PARENT-DIRECTED SERVICES FOR STUDENTS
  RECEIVING SPECIAL EDUCATION SERVICES GRANT. (a) A student to whom
  the agency awards a grant under Subchapter A-1, Chapter 29, is
  entitled to receive an amount of $1,500 or a greater amount provided
  by appropriation.
         (b)  The legislature shall include in the appropriations for
  the Foundation School Program state aid sufficient for the agency
  to award grants under Subchapter A-1, Chapter 29, in the amount
  provided by this section.
         (c)  A student may receive one grant under Subchapter A-1,
  Chapter 29, unless the legislature appropriates money for an
  additional grant in the General Appropriations Act.
         (d)  A determination of the commissioner under this section
  is final and may not be appealed.
         SECTION 1.52.  The following provisions are repealed:
               (1)  Section 21.042, Education Code;
               (2)  Sections 21.402(b), (c), (c-1), (f), and (h),
  Education Code;
               (3)  Sections 21.403(a) and (d), Education Code;
               (4)  Subchapter Q, Chapter 21, Education Code;
               (5)  Section 29.002, Education Code;
               (6)  Sections 29.026(n) and (o), Education Code;
               (7)  Section 29.027(i), Education Code;
               (8)  Section 29.050, Education Code;
               (9)  Section 37.002(e), Education Code;
               (10)  Sections 48.111(c), (c-1), and (c-2), Education
  Code;
               (11)  Section 48.114(b), Education Code; and
               (12)  Section 825.4092(f), Government Code, as added by
  Chapter 546 (S.B. 202), Acts of the 87th Legislature, Regular
  Session, 2021.
         SECTION 1.53.  (a)  The legislature finds that:
               (1)  the Windfall Elimination Provision was enacted in
  1983 to equalize the earned social security benefits of workers who
  spend part of their careers in exempt public service and workers who
  spend their entire careers participating in social security;
               (2)  the Windfall Elimination Provision reduces the
  social security benefits of public servants who have received a
  pension that is not subject to social security taxes, including
  thousands of teachers in Texas as well as the spouses and children
  of these public servants;
               (3)  the flawed application of the Windfall Elimination
  Provision diminishes Texans' retirement security and fails to
  recognize their rightfully earned social security and public
  pension benefits;
               (4)  for years, the United States Congress has failed
  to act to remove this detriment to many citizens of Texas, including
  teachers; and
               (5)  the United States Congress should take swift
  action to replace the Windfall Elimination Provision with a more
  fair and just formula that accurately reflects the contributions of
  all American workers to the social security system.
         (b)  As soon as practicable after the effective date of this
  Act, the secretary of the Senate shall forward official copies of
  the legislative findings under Subsection (a) of this section to
  the president of the United States, to the president of the Senate
  and the speaker of the House of Representatives of the United States
  Congress, and to all the members of the Texas delegation to
  Congress.
         SECTION 1.54.  Not later than September 1, 2024, the
  commissioner of education, with the assistance of the executive
  director of the Teacher Retirement System of Texas and the
  comptroller of public accounts, shall make recommendations to the
  legislature to improve and coordinate pension contribution
  appropriations for public school employees.
         SECTION 1.55.  Section 21.257(f), Education Code, as added
  by this article, applies only to a hearing before a hearing examiner
  commenced on or after the effective date of this article.
         SECTION 1.56.  Immediately following the effective date of
  this article, a school district or open-enrollment charter school
  shall redesignate a teacher who holds a designation made under
  Section 21.3521, Education Code, before the effective date of this
  article, to reflect the teacher's designation under Section
  21.3521, Education Code, as amended by this article.  Funding
  provided to a school district under Section 48.112, Education Code,
  for a teacher who held a designation made under Section 21.3521,
  Education Code, as that section existed immediately before the
  effective date of this article, shall be increased to reflect the
  teacher's redesignation under Section 21.3521, Education Code, as
  amended by this article.
         SECTION 1.57.  Notwithstanding Section 21.903, Education
  Code, as added by this article, until the State Board for Educator
  Certification adopts rules specifying the requirements for
  approval of an educator preparation program as a qualified educator
  preparation program as required by that section, the commissioner
  of education may approve a program as a qualified educator
  preparation program for purposes of Subchapter R, Chapter 21,
  Education Code, as added by this article, if the commissioner
  determines that the program meets the requirements under Section
  21.903, Education Code, as added by this article.  An educator
  preparation program's designation as a qualified educator
  preparation program by the commissioner under this section remains
  effective until the first anniversary of the earliest effective
  date of a rule adopted by the State Board for Educator Certification
  under Section 21.903, Education Code, as added by this article.
         SECTION 1.58.  To the extent of any conflict, this article
  prevails over another Act of the 88th Legislature, Regular Session,
  2023, relating to nonsubstantive additions to and corrections in
  enacted codes.
         SECTION 1.59.  (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) of
  this section or as otherwise provided by this article, this article
  takes effect immediately if this Act receives a vote of two-thirds
  of all the members elected to each house, as provided by Section 39,
  Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this Act does not receive the
  vote necessary for immediate effect, the entirety of this article
  takes effect September 1, 2023.
         (b)  Sections 12.106(a-2) and (d), 13.054, 30.003,
  48.0051(a), (b), and (d), 48.011(a), (a-1), (d), and (e), 48.051,
  48.101, 48.110(d), 48.111, 48.112(c) and (d), 48.114, 48.151(g),
  48.202(a-1), and 48.257, Education Code, as amended by this
  article, and Sections 48.0055, 48.1022, 48.157, 48.160, and 48.280,
  Education Code, as added by this article, take effect September 1,
  2023.
  ARTICLE 2. CHANGES GENERALLY APPLICABLE TO PUBLIC SCHOOLS EFFECTIVE
  FOR 2024-2025 SCHOOL YEAR
         SECTION 2.01.  Section 8.051(d), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (d)  Each regional education service center shall maintain
  core services for purchase by school districts and campuses. The
  core services are:
               (1)  training and assistance in:
                     (A)  teaching each subject area assessed under
  Section 39.023; and
                     (B)  providing instruction in personal financial
  literacy as required under Section 28.0021;
               (2)  training and assistance in providing each program
  that qualifies for a funding allotment under Section 48.102,
  48.1021, 48.104, 48.105, or 48.109;
               (3)  assistance specifically designed for a school
  district or campus assigned an unacceptable performance rating
  under Section 39.054;
               (4)  training and assistance to teachers,
  administrators, members of district boards of trustees, and members
  of site-based decision-making committees;
               (5)  assistance specifically designed for a school
  district that is considered out of compliance with state or federal
  special education requirements, based on the agency's most recent
  compliance review of the district's special education programs; and
               (6)  assistance in complying with state laws and rules.
         SECTION 2.02.  Section 11.1513, Education Code, is amended
  by adding Subsection (l) to read as follows:
         (l)  The employment policy must provide that:
               (1)  before the beginning of each school year, the
  district shall provide a duty calendar for certain professional
  staff as required by Section 11.15131; and
               (2)  for purposes of determining the amount of a
  reduction in the salary of a classroom teacher, full-time
  counselor, or full-time librarian for unpaid leave, the employee's
  daily rate of pay is computed by dividing the employee's annual
  salary by the number of days the employee is expected to work for
  that school year as provided by the district's duty calendar
  adopted under Section 11.15131.
         SECTION 2.03.  Subchapter D, Chapter 11, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 11.15131 to read as follows:
         Sec. 11.15131.  DUTY CALENDAR FOR CERTAIN PROFESSIONAL
  STAFF. (a)  In this section, "supplemental duty" means a duty other
  than a duty assigned under an employee's contract that is generally
  expected to be performed during an instructional day and which may
  be governed by an agreement, other than the employee's contract,
  between the district and the employee.
         (b)  Not later than the 15th day before the first
  instructional day of each school year, the board of trustees of a
  school district shall adopt and provide to each classroom teacher,
  full-time counselor, and full-time librarian employed by the
  district a calendar that specifies the days each employee is
  expected to work for that school year, including the days on which
  the employee is expected to perform supplemental duties for more
  than 30 minutes outside of the instructional day, and except for
  days on which the employee may be required to spend time on an
  unanticipated duty outside of the instructional day to comply with
  a state or federal law.
         SECTION 2.04.  Section 29.014(d), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (d)  The basic allotment for a student enrolled in a district
  to which this section applies is adjusted by the tier of intensity
  of service defined in accordance with [weight for a homebound
  student under] Section 48.102 and designated by commissioner rule
  for use under this section [48.102(a)].
         SECTION 2.05.  Section 29.018, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
         (g)  This section expires September 1, 2026.
         SECTION 2.06.  Sections 29.022(a), (a-1), (b), (c), (c-1),
  (d), (f), (h), (k), (l), (s), and (t), Education Code, are amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  In order to promote student safety, on receipt of a
  written request authorized under Subsection (a-1), a school
  district or open-enrollment charter school shall provide
  equipment, including a video camera, to the school or schools in the
  district or the charter school campus or campuses specified in the
  request.  A school or campus that receives equipment as provided by
  this subsection shall place, operate, and maintain one or more
  video cameras in special education [self-contained] classrooms and
  other special education settings [in which a majority of the
  students in regular attendance are provided special education and
  related services and are assigned to one or more self-contained
  classrooms or other special education settings for at least 50
  percent of the instructional day], provided that:
               (1)  a school or campus that receives equipment as a
  result of the request by a parent or staff member is required to
  place equipment only in classrooms or settings in which the
  parent's child is in regular attendance or to which the staff member
  is assigned, as applicable; and
               (2)  a school or campus that receives equipment as a
  result of the request by a board of trustees, governing body,
  principal, or assistant principal is required to place equipment
  only in classrooms or settings identified by the requestor, if the
  requestor limits the request to specific classrooms or settings
  subject to this subsection.
         (a-1)  For purposes of Subsection (a):
               (1)  a parent of a child who receives special education
  services in one or more special education [self-contained]
  classrooms or other special education settings may request in
  writing that equipment be provided to the school or campus at which
  the child receives those services;
               (2)  a board of trustees or governing body may request
  in writing that equipment be provided to one or more specified
  schools or campuses at which one or more children receive special
  education services in special education [self-contained]
  classrooms or other special education settings;
               (3)  the principal or assistant principal of a school
  or campus at which one or more children receive special education
  services in special education [self-contained] classrooms or other
  special education settings may request in writing that equipment be
  provided to the principal's or assistant principal's school or
  campus; and
               (4)  a staff member assigned to work with one or more
  children receiving special education services in special education
  [self-contained] classrooms or other special education settings
  may request in writing that equipment be provided to the school or
  campus at which the staff member works.
         (b)  A school or campus that places a video camera in a
  special education classroom or other special education setting in
  accordance with Subsection (a) shall operate and maintain the video
  camera in the classroom or setting, as long as the classroom or
  setting continues to satisfy the requirements under Subsection (a),
  for the remainder of the school year in which the school or campus
  received the request, unless the requestor withdraws the request in
  writing.  If for any reason a school or campus will discontinue
  operation of a video camera during a school year, not later than the
  fifth school day before the date the operation of the video camera
  will be discontinued, the school or campus must notify the parents
  of each student in regular attendance in the classroom or setting
  that operation of the video camera will not continue unless
  requested by a person eligible to make a request under Subsection
  (a-1).  Not later than the 10th school day before the end of each
  school year, the school or campus must notify the parents of each
  student in regular attendance in the classroom or setting that
  operation of the video camera will not continue during the
  following school year unless a person eligible to make a request for
  the next school year under Subsection (a-1) submits a new request.
         (c)  Except as provided by Subsection (c-1), video cameras
  placed under this section must be capable of:
               (1)  covering all areas of the special education
  classroom or other special education setting, including a room
  attached to the classroom or setting used for time-out; and
               (2)  recording audio from all areas of the special
  education classroom or other special education setting, including a
  room attached to the classroom or setting used for time-out.
         (c-1)  The inside of a bathroom or any area in the special
  education classroom or other special education setting in which a
  student's clothes are changed may not be visually monitored, except
  for incidental coverage of a minor portion of a bathroom or changing
  area because of the layout of the classroom or setting.
         (d)  Before a school or campus activates a video camera in a
  special education classroom or other special education setting
  under this section, the school or campus shall provide written
  notice of the placement to all school or campus staff and to the
  parents of each student attending class or engaging in school
  activities in the classroom or setting.
         (f)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school may
  solicit and accept gifts, grants, and donations from any person for
  use in placing video cameras in special education classrooms or
  other special education settings under this section.
         (h)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school may
  not:
               (1)  allow regular or continual monitoring of video
  recorded under this section; or
               (2)  use video recorded under this section for teacher
  evaluation or for any other purpose other than the promotion of
  safety of students receiving special education services in a
  special education [self-contained] classroom or other special
  education setting.
         (k)  The commissioner may adopt rules to implement and
  administer this section, including rules regarding the special
  education classrooms and other special education settings to which
  this section applies.
         (l)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school
  policy relating to the placement, operation, or maintenance of
  video cameras under this section must:
               (1)  include information on how a person may appeal an
  action by the district or school that the person believes to be in
  violation of this section or a policy adopted in accordance with
  this section, including the appeals process under Section 7.057;
               (2)  require that the district or school provide a
  response to a request made under this section not later than the
  seventh school business day after receipt of the request by the
  person to whom it must be submitted under Subsection (a-3) that
  authorizes the request or states the reason for denying the
  request;
               (3)  except as provided by Subdivision (5), require
  that a school or a campus begin operation of a video camera in
  compliance with this section not later than the 45th school
  business day, or the first school day after the 45th school business
  day if that day is not a school day, after the request is authorized
  unless the agency grants an extension of time;
               (4)  permit the parent of a student whose admission,
  review, and dismissal committee has determined that the student's
  placement for the following school year will be in a special
  education classroom or other special education setting in which a
  video camera may be placed under this section to make a request for
  the video camera by the later of:
                     (A)  the date on which the current school year
  ends; or
                     (B)  the 10th school business day after the date
  of the placement determination by the admission, review, and
  dismissal committee; and
               (5)  if a request is made by a parent in compliance with
  Subdivision (4), unless the agency grants an extension of time,
  require that a school or campus begin operation of a video camera in
  compliance with this section not later than the later of:
                     (A)  the 10th school day of the fall semester; or
                     (B)  the 45th school business day, or the first
  school day after the 45th school business day if that day is not a
  school day, after the date the request is made.
         (s)  This section applies to the placement, operation, and
  maintenance of a video camera in a special education
  [self-contained] classroom or other special education setting
  during the regular school year and extended school year services.
         (t)  A video camera placed under this section is not required
  to be in operation for the time during which students are not
  present in the special education classroom or other special
  education setting.
         SECTION 2.07.  Sections 29.022(u)(3) and (4), Education
  Code, are amended to read as follows:
               (3)  "Special education classroom or other special
  education setting" means a classroom or setting primarily used for
  delivering special education services to students who spend on
  average less than 50 percent of an instructional day in a general
  education classroom or setting ["Self-contained classroom" does
  not include a classroom that is a resource room instructional
  arrangement under Section 48.102].
               (4)  "Staff member" means a teacher, related service
  provider, paraprofessional, counselor, or educational aide
  assigned to work in a special education [self-contained] classroom
  or other special education setting.
         SECTION 2.08.  Section 29.316(c), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (c)  Not later than August 31 of each year, the agency, the
  division, and the center jointly shall prepare and post on the
  agency's, the division's, and the center's respective Internet
  websites a report on the language acquisition of children eight
  years of age or younger who are deaf or hard of hearing. The report
  must:
               (1)  include:
                     (A)  existing data reported in compliance with
  federal law regarding children with disabilities; and
                     (B)  information relating to the language
  acquisition of children who are deaf or hard of hearing and also
  have other disabilities;
               (2)  state for each child:
                     (A)  the percentage of the instructional day
  [arrangement used with the child, as described by Section 48.102,
  including the time] the child spends on average in a general
  education setting [mainstream instructional arrangement];
                     (B)  the specific language acquisition services
  provided to the child, including:
                           (i)  the time spent providing those
  services; and
                           (ii)  a description of any hearing
  amplification used in the delivery of those services, including:
                                 (a)  the type of hearing amplification
  used;
                                 (b)  the period of time in which the
  child has had access to the hearing amplification; and
                                 (c)  the average amount of time the
  child uses the hearing amplification each day;
                     (C)  the tools or assessments used to assess the
  child's language acquisition and the results obtained;
                     (D)  the preferred unique communication mode used
  by the child at home; and
                     (E)  the child's age, race, and gender, the age at
  which the child was identified as being deaf or hard of hearing, and
  any other relevant demographic information the commissioner
  determines to likely be correlated with or have an impact on the
  child's language acquisition;
               (3)  compare progress in English literacy made by
  children who are deaf or hard of hearing to progress in that subject
  made by children of the same age who are not deaf or hard of hearing,
  by appropriate age range; and
               (4)  be redacted as necessary to comply with state and
  federal law regarding the confidentiality of student medical or
  educational information.
         SECTION 2.09.  Section 48.051(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  For each student in average daily attendance, not
  including the time students spend each day in special education
  programs in a setting [an instructional arrangement] other than a
  general education setting [mainstream] or career and technology
  education programs, for which an additional allotment is made under
  Subchapter C, a district is entitled to an allotment equal to [the
  lesser of $6,160 or] the amount that results from the following
  formula:
  A = B [$6,160] X TR/MCR
  where:
         "A" is the allotment to which a district is entitled;
         "B" is the base amount, which equals the greater of:
               (1)  $6,210;
               (2)  an amount equal to the district's base amount under
  this section for the preceding school year; or
               (3)  the amount appropriated under Subsection (b);
         "TR" is the district's tier one maintenance and operations
  tax rate, as provided by Section 45.0032; and
         "MCR" is the district's maximum compressed tax rate, as
  determined under Section 48.2551.
         SECTION 2.10.  Section 48.102, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 48.102.  SPECIAL EDUCATION. (a) For each student in
  average daily attendance in a special education program under
  Subchapter A, Chapter 29, [in a mainstream instructional
  arrangement,] a school district is entitled to an annual allotment
  equal to the basic allotment, or, if applicable, the sum of the
  basic allotment and the allotment under Section 48.101 to which the
  district is entitled, multiplied by a weight in an amount set by the
  legislature in the General Appropriations Act for the highest tier
  of intensity of service for which the student qualifies [1.15].
  [For each full-time equivalent student in average daily attendance
  in a special education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, in an
  instructional arrangement other than a mainstream instructional
  arrangement, a district is entitled to an annual allotment equal to
  the basic allotment, or, if applicable, the sum of the basic
  allotment and the allotment under Section 48.101 to which the
  district is entitled, multiplied by a weight determined according
  to instructional arrangement as follows:
               [Homebound             5.0
               [Hospital class             3.0
               [Speech therapy             5.0
               [Resource room             3.0
               [Self-contained, mild and moderate,
               regular campus             3.0
               [Self-contained, severe, regular campus           3.0
               [Off home campus             2.7
               [Nonpublic day school             1.7
               [Vocational adjustment class             2.3]
         (a-1)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a), for the 2024-2025 and
  2025-2026 school years, the amount of an allotment under this
  section shall be determined in accordance with Section 48.1023.
  This subsection expires September 1, 2026.
         (b)  The commissioner by rule shall define seven tiers of
  intensity of service for use in determining funding under this
  section. The commissioner must include one tier specifically
  addressing students receiving special education services in
  residential placement [A special instructional arrangement for
  students with disabilities residing in care and treatment
  facilities, other than state schools, whose parents or guardians do
  not reside in the district providing education services shall be
  established by commissioner rule.  The funding weight for this
  arrangement shall be 4.0 for those students who receive their
  education service on a local school district campus.  A special
  instructional arrangement for students with disabilities residing
  in state schools shall be established by commissioner rule with a
  funding weight of 2.8].
         (c)  [For funding purposes, the number of contact hours
  credited per day for each student in the off home campus
  instructional arrangement may not exceed the contact hours credited
  per day for the multidistrict class instructional arrangement in
  the 1992-1993 school year.
         [(d)  For funding purposes the contact hours credited per day
  for each student in the resource room;  self-contained, mild and
  moderate; and self-contained, severe, instructional arrangements
  may not exceed the average of the statewide total contact hours
  credited per day for those three instructional arrangements in the
  1992-1993 school year.
         [(e)  The commissioner by rule shall prescribe the
  qualifications an instructional arrangement must meet in order to
  be funded as a particular instructional arrangement under this
  section.  In prescribing the qualifications that a mainstream
  instructional arrangement must meet, the commissioner shall
  establish requirements that students with disabilities and their
  teachers receive the direct, indirect, and support services that
  are necessary to enrich the regular classroom and enable student
  success.
         [(f)  In this section, "full-time equivalent student" means
  30 hours of contact a week between a special education student and
  special education program personnel.
         [(g)]  The commissioner shall adopt rules and procedures
  governing contracts for residential and day program placement of
  [special education] students receiving special education services.
         (d)  [The legislature shall provide by appropriation for the
  state's share of the costs of those placements.
         [(h)]  At least 55 percent of the funds allocated under this
  section must be used in the special education program under
  Subchapter A, Chapter 29.
         (e) [(i)]  The agency shall ensure [encourage] the placement
  of students in special education programs, including students in
  residential placement [instructional arrangements], in the least
  restrictive environment appropriate for their educational needs.
         (f) [(j)]  A school district that provides an extended year
  program required by federal law for special education students who
  may regress is entitled to receive funds in an amount equal to 75
  percent, or a lesser percentage determined by the commissioner, of
  the basic allotment, or, if applicable, the sum of the basic
  allotment and the allotment under Section 48.101 to which the
  district is entitled for each [full-time equivalent] student in
  average daily attendance, multiplied by the amount designated for
  the highest tier of intensity of service for which the student
  qualifies [student's instructional arrangement] under this
  section, for each day the program is provided divided by the number
  of days in the minimum school year. The total amount of state
  funding for extended year services under this section may not
  exceed $10 million per year.  A school district may use funds
  received under this section only in providing an extended year
  program.
         (g) [(k)]  From the total amount of funds appropriated for
  special education under this section, the commissioner shall
  withhold an amount specified in the General Appropriations Act, and
  distribute that amount to school districts for programs under
  Section 29.014.  The program established under that section is
  required only in school districts in which the program is financed
  by funds distributed under this subsection and any other funds
  available for the program.  After deducting the amount withheld
  under this subsection from the total amount appropriated for
  special education, the commissioner shall reduce each district's
  allotment proportionately and shall allocate funds to each district
  accordingly.
         (h)  Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,
  the commissioner shall submit to the Legislative Budget Board, for
  purposes of the allotment under this section, proposed weights for
  the tiers of intensity of service for the next state fiscal
  biennium.
         SECTION 2.11.  Subchapter C, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 48.1021 and 48.1023 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.1021.  SPECIAL EDUCATION SERVICE GROUP ALLOTMENT.
  (a)  For each six-week period in which a student in a special
  education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, receives eligible
  special education services, a school district is entitled to an
  allotment in an amount set by the legislature in the General
  Appropriations Act for the service group for which the student is
  eligible.
         (a-1)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a), for the 2024-2025 and
  2025-2026 school years, the amount of an allotment under this
  section shall be determined in accordance with Section 48.1023.
  This subsection expires September 1, 2026.
         (b)  The commissioner by rule shall establish four service
  groups for use in determining funding under this section. In
  establishing the groups, the commissioner must consider the level
  of services, equipment, and technology required to meet the needs
  of students receiving special education services.
         (c)  A school district is entitled to receive an allotment
  under this section for each service group for which a student is
  eligible.
         (d)  A school district is entitled to the full amount of an
  allotment under this section for a student receiving eligible
  special education services during any part of a six-week period.
         (e)  At least 55 percent of the funds allocated under this
  section must be used for a special education program under
  Subchapter A, Chapter 29.
         (f)  Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,
  the commissioner shall submit to the Legislative Budget Board, for
  purposes of the allotment under this section, proposed amounts of
  funding for the service groups for the next state fiscal biennium.
         Sec. 48.1023.  SPECIAL EDUCATION TRANSITION FUNDING. (a)  
  For the 2024-2025 and 2025-2026 school years, the commissioner may
  adjust weights or amounts provided under Section 48.102 or 48.1021
  as necessary to ensure compliance with requirements regarding
  maintenance of state financial support under 20 U.S.C. Section
  1412(a)(18) and maintenance of local financial support under
  applicable federal law.
         (b)  For the 2024-2025 and 2025-2026 school years, the
  commissioner shall determine the formulas through which school
  districts receive funding under Sections 48.102 and 48.1021. In
  determining the formulas, the commissioner may combine the methods
  of funding under those sections with the method of funding provided
  by Section 48.102, as it existed on January 1, 2023.
         (c)  For the 2026-2027 school year, the commissioner may
  adjust the weights or amounts set by the legislature in the General
  Appropriations Act for purposes of Section 48.102 or 48.1021.
  Before making an adjustment under this subsection, the commissioner
  shall notify and must receive approval from the Legislative Budget
  Board.
         (d)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,
  the sum of funding provided under Sections 48.102 and 48.1021 for
  the 2024-2025 or for the 2025-2026 school year as adjusted under
  this section may not exceed the sum of:
               (1)  funding that would have been provided under
  Section 48.102, as it existed on January 1, 2023; and
               (2)  the amount set by the legislature in the General
  Appropriations Act.
         (e)  Each school district and open-enrollment charter school
  shall report to the agency information necessary to implement this
  section.
         (f)  The agency shall provide technical assistance to school
  districts and open-enrollment charter schools to ensure a
  successful transition in funding formulas for special education.
         (g)  This section expires September 1, 2028.
         SECTION 2.12.  Section 48.103(c), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (c)  A school district may receive funding for a student
  under each provision of this section, [and] Section 48.102, and
  Section 48.1021 for which [if] the student qualifies [satisfies the
  requirements of both sections].
         SECTION 2.13.  Sections 48.104(a), (d), and (e), Education
  Code, are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  For each student who does not have a disability and
  resides in a residential placement facility in a district in which
  the student's parent or legal guardian does not reside, a district
  is entitled to an annual allotment equal to the basic allotment
  multiplied by 0.2 or, if the student is educationally
  disadvantaged, 0.28 [0.275]. For each full-time equivalent student
  who is in a remedial and support program under Section 29.081
  because the student is pregnant, a district is entitled to an annual
  allotment equal to the basic allotment multiplied by 2.41.
         (d)  The weights assigned to the five tiers of the index
  established under Subsection (c) are, from least to most severe
  economic disadvantage, 0.23 [0.225], 0.2425 [0.2375], 0.255
  [0.25], 0.2675 [0.2625], and 0.28 [0.275].
         (e)  If insufficient data is available for any school year to
  evaluate the level of economic disadvantage in a census block
  group, a school district is entitled to an annual allotment equal to
  the basic allotment multiplied by 0.23 [0.225] for each student who
  is educationally disadvantaged and resides in that census block
  group.
         SECTION 2.14.  Section 48.108(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  For each student in average daily attendance in
  prekindergarten [kindergarten] through third grade, a school
  district is entitled to an annual allotment equal to the basic
  allotment multiplied by 0.1 if the student is:
               (1)  educationally disadvantaged; or
               (2)  an emergent bilingual student, as defined by
  Section 29.052, and is in a bilingual education or special language
  program under Subchapter B, Chapter 29.
         SECTION 2.15.   Section 48.279(e), Education Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (e)  After the commissioner has replaced any withheld
  federal funds as provided by Subsection (d), the commissioner shall
  distribute the remaining amount, if any, of funds described by
  Subsection (a) to proportionately increase funding for the special
  education allotment under Section 48.102 and the special education
  service group allotment under Section 48.1021.
         SECTION 2.16.  This article takes effect September 1, 2024.
  ARTICLE 3.  EDUCATION SAVINGS ACCOUNT PROGRAM
         SECTION 3.01.  The purpose of this article is to:
               (1)  provide additional educational options to assist
  families in this state in exercising the right to direct the
  educational needs of their children; and
               (2)  achieve a general diffusion of knowledge.
         SECTION 3.02.  Chapter 29, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subchapter J to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER J. EDUCATION SAVINGS ACCOUNT PROGRAM
         Sec. 29.351.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
               (1)  "Account" means an education savings account
  established under the program.
               (2)  "Certified educational assistance organization"
  means an organization certified under Section 29.354 to support the
  administration of the program.
               (3)  "Child with a disability" means a child who is
  eligible to participate in a school district's special education
  program under Section 29.003.
               (4)  "Higher education provider" means an institution
  of higher education or a private or independent institution of
  higher education, as those terms are defined by Section 61.003.
               (5)  "Parent" means a resident of this state who is a
  natural or adoptive parent, managing or possessory conservator,
  legal guardian, custodian, or other person with legal authority to
  act on behalf of a child.
               (6)  "Program" means the program established under this
  subchapter.
               (7)  "Program participant" means a child and a parent
  of a child enrolled in the program.
         Sec. 29.352.  ESTABLISHMENT OF PROGRAM. The comptroller
  shall establish a program to provide funding for approved
  education-related expenses of children participating in the
  program.
         Sec. 29.353.  PROGRAM FUND. (a) The program fund is an
  account in the general revenue fund to be administered by the
  comptroller.
         (b)  The fund is composed of:
               (1)  general revenue transferred to the fund;
               (2)  money appropriated to the fund;
               (3)  gifts, grants, and donations received under
  Section 29.370; and
               (4)  any other money available for purposes of the
  program.
         (c)  Money in the fund may be appropriated only for the uses
  specified by this subchapter.
         Sec. 29.354.  SELECTION OF CERTIFIED EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE
  ORGANIZATIONS. (a) An organization may apply to the comptroller
  for certification as a certified educational assistance
  organization during an application period established by the
  comptroller.
         (b)  To be eligible for certification, an organization must:
               (1)  have the ability to perform the duties and
  functions required of a certified educational assistance
  organization under this subchapter;
               (2)  be in good standing with the state; and
               (3)  be able to assist the comptroller in administering
  the program, including the ability to:
                     (A)  accept, process, and track applications for
  the program;
                     (B)  assist prospective applicants, applicants,
  and program participants with finding preapproved education
  service providers and vendors of educational products;
                     (C)  accept and process payments for approved
  education-related expenses; and
                     (D)  verify that program funding is used only for
  approved education-related expenses.
         (c)  The comptroller may certify not more than five
  educational assistance organizations to support the administration
  of the program, including by:
               (1)  administering:
                     (A)  the application process under Section
  29.356; and
                     (B)  the program expenditures process under
  Section 29.360; and
               (2)  assisting prospective applicants, applicants, and
  program participants with understanding approved education-related
  expenses and finding preapproved education service providers and
  vendors of educational products.
         Sec. 29.355.  ELIGIBLE CHILD. (a) A child is eligible to
  participate in the program and may, subject to available funding
  and the requirements of this subchapter, initially enroll in the
  program for the school year following the school year in which the
  child's application is submitted under Section 29.356 if the child:
               (1)  is eligible to:
                     (A)  attend a public school under Section 25.001;
  or
                     (B)  enroll in a public school's prekindergarten
  program under Section 29.153; and
               (2)  either:
                     (A)  attended any public school in this state for
  at least 90 percent of the school year preceding the school year for
  which the child applies to enroll in the program; or
                     (B)  is enrolling in prekindergarten or
  kindergarten for the first time, including a child who was
  homeschooled before enrollment.
         (a-1)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a) and subject to Section
  29.356(b-1), a child is eligible to participate in the program if
  the child:
               (1)  meets the qualifications under Subsection (a)(1);
               (2)  attended private school on a full-time basis for
  the preceding school year; and
               (3)  is a member of a household with a total annual
  income that is at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty
  guidelines.
         (b)  A child who establishes eligibility under this section
  may, subject to available funding and the requirements of this
  subchapter, participate in the program until the earliest of the
  following dates:
               (1)  the date on which the child graduates from high
  school;
               (2)  the date on which the child is no longer eligible
  to attend a public school under Section 25.001;
               (3)  the date on which the child enrolls in a public
  school, including an open-enrollment charter school, in a manner in
  which the child will be counted toward the school's average daily
  attendance for purposes of the allocation of funding under the
  foundation school program; or
               (4)  the date on which the child is declared ineligible
  for the program by the comptroller under this subchapter.
         (c)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a) or (b), a child is not
  eligible to participate in the program during the period in which
  the child's parent or legal guardian is a state representative or
  state senator.
         Sec. 29.356.  APPLICATION TO PROGRAM. (a) A parent of an
  eligible child may apply to a certified educational assistance
  organization to enroll the child in the program for the following
  school year. The comptroller shall establish quarterly deadlines
  by which an applicant must complete and submit an application form
  to participate in the program.
         (b)  On receipt of more acceptable applications during an
  application period for admission under this section than available
  positions in the program due to insufficient funding, a certified
  educational assistance organization shall, at the direction of the
  comptroller:
               (1)  for not more than two-thirds of the available
  positions, prioritize applicants who would otherwise attend a
  campus with an overall performance rating under Section 39.054 of
  C, D, or F;
               (2)  fill the remaining available positions with
  applicants who would otherwise attend a campus with an overall
  performance rating under Section 39.054 of A or B; and
               (3)  subject to Subdivisions (1) and (2), consider
  applications in the order received.
         (b-1)  This subsection applies only to children who are
  eligible to participate in the program under Section 29.355(a-1).  
  Not more than 10 percent of available positions in the program may
  be provided to children to whom this subsection applies.  Each year,
  the comptroller shall notify each certified educational assistance
  organization regarding the number of children to whom this
  subsection applies that the organization may accept for
  participation in the program for that year.  In accepting children
  to whom this subsection applies to participate in the program, a
  certified educational assistance organization shall ensure, to the
  extent feasible, that the organization accepts an equivalent number
  of children from each region of this state.
         (c)  The comptroller shall create an application form for the
  program and each certified educational assistance organization
  shall make the application form readily available through various
  sources, including the organization's Internet website. The
  application form must state the quarterly application deadlines
  established by the comptroller under Subsection (a). Each
  organization shall ensure that the application form, including any
  required supporting document, is capable of being submitted to the
  organization electronically.
         (d)  A certified educational assistance organization shall
  post on the organization's Internet website an applicant and
  participant handbook with a description of the program, including:
               (1)  expenses allowed under the program under Section
  29.359;
               (2)  a list of preapproved education service providers
  and vendors of educational products under Section 29.358;
               (3)  a description of the application process under
  this section and the program expenditures process under Section
  29.360; and
               (4)  a description of the responsibilities of program
  participants.
         (e)  A certified educational assistance organization shall
  annually provide to the parent of each child participating in the
  program the information described by Subsection (d). The
  organization may provide the information electronically.
         (f)  A certified educational assistance organization:
               (1)  may require the parent of a child participating in
  the program to submit annual notice regarding the parent's intent
  for the child to continue participating in the program for the next
  school year; and
               (2)  may not require a program participant in good
  standing to annually resubmit an application for continued
  participation in the program.
         Sec. 29.357.  PARTICIPATION IN PROGRAM. To receive funding
  under the program, a parent of a child participating in the program
  must agree to:
               (1)  spend money received through the program only for
  expenses allowed under Section 29.359;
               (2)  share or authorize the administrator of an
  assessment instrument to share with the program participant's
  certified educational assistance organization the results of any
  assessment instrument required to be administered to the child
  under Section 29.358(b)(1)(B) or other law;
               (3)  refrain from selling an item purchased with
  program money; and
               (4)  notify the program participant's certified
  educational assistance organization not later than 30 business days
  after the date on which the child:
                     (A)  enrolls in a public school, including an
  open-enrollment charter school;
                     (B)  graduates from high school; or
                     (C)  is no longer eligible to either:
                           (i)  enroll in a public school under Section
  25.001; or
                           (ii)  enroll in a public school's
  prekindergarten program under Section 29.153.
         Sec. 29.358.  PREAPPROVED PROVIDERS. (a) The comptroller
  shall by rule establish a process for the preapproval of education
  service providers and vendors of educational products for
  participation in the program. The comptroller shall allow for the
  submission of applications on a rolling basis.
         (b)  The comptroller shall approve an education service
  provider or vendor of educational products for participation in the
  program if the provider or vendor:
               (1)  for a private school, demonstrates:
                     (A)  accreditation by an organization recognized
  by:
                           (i)  the Texas Private School Accreditation
  Commission; or
                           (ii)  the agency; and
                     (B)  annual administration of a nationally
  norm-referenced assessment instrument or the appropriate
  assessment instrument required under Subchapter B, Chapter 39;
               (2)  for a public school, demonstrates:
                     (A)  accreditation by the agency; and
                     (B)  the ability to provide services or products
  to children participating in the program in a manner in which the
  children are not counted toward the school's average daily
  attendance;
               (3)  for a private tutor, therapist, or teaching
  service:
                     (A)  demonstrates that the tutor or therapist or
  each employee of the teaching service who intends to provide
  educational services to a child participating in the program:
                           (i)  is an educator employed by or a retired
  educator formerly employed by a school accredited by the agency, an
  organization recognized by the agency, or an organization
  recognized by the Texas Private School Accreditation Commission;
                           (ii)  holds a relevant license or
  accreditation issued by a state, regional, or national
  certification or accreditation organization; or
                           (iii)  is employed in or retired from a
  teaching or tutoring capacity at a higher education provider;
                     (B)  the tutor or therapist or each employee of
  the teaching service who intends to provide educational services to
  a child participating in the program either:
                           (i)  completes a national criminal history
  record information review; or
                           (ii)  provides to the comptroller
  documentation indicating that the tutor, therapist, or employee, as
  applicable, has completed a national criminal history record
  information review within a period established by comptroller rule;
  and
                     (C)  the tutor or therapist or each employee of
  the teaching service who intends to provide educational services to
  a child participating in the program is not included in the registry
  under Section 22.092; or
               (4)  for a higher education provider, demonstrates
  nationally recognized postsecondary accreditation.
         (c)  The comptroller shall review the national criminal
  history record information or documentation for each private tutor,
  therapist, or teaching service employee who submits information or
  documentation under this section and verify that the individual is
  not included in the registry under Section 22.092. The tutor,
  therapist, or service must provide the comptroller with any
  information requested by the comptroller to enable the comptroller
  to complete the review.
         (d)  An education service provider or vendor of educational
  products shall provide information requested by the comptroller to
  verify the provider's or vendor's eligibility for preapproval under
  Subsection (b). The comptroller may not approve a provider or
  vendor if the comptroller cannot verify the provider's or vendor's
  eligibility for preapproval.
         (e)  An education service provider or vendor of educational
  products that no longer satisfies the requirements of this section
  must notify the comptroller not later than the 30th business day
  after the date that the provider or vendor no longer meets the
  requirements.
         (f)  This section may not be construed to allow a learning
  pod, as defined by Section 27.001, or a home school to qualify as an
  approved education service provider or vendor of educational
  products.
         Sec. 29.359.  APPROVED EDUCATION-RELATED EXPENSES. (a)
  Subject to Subsection (b), money received under the program may be
  used only for the following education-related expenses incurred by
  a child participating in the program at a preapproved education
  service provider or vendor of educational products:
               (1)  tuition and fees for a private school;
               (2)  the purchase of textbooks or other instructional
  materials or uniforms required by a school, higher education
  provider, or course in which the child is enrolled, including
  purchases made through a third-party vendor of educational
  products;
               (3)  costs related to academic assessments;
               (4)  fees for services provided by a private tutor or
  teaching service;
               (5)  fees for transportation provided by a
  fee-for-service transportation provider for the child to travel to
  and from a preapproved education service provider or vendor of
  educational products; and
               (6)  fees for educational therapies or services
  provided by a practitioner or provider, only for fees that are not
  covered by any federal, state, or local government benefits such as
  Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) or by
  any private insurance that the child is enrolled in at the time of
  receiving the therapies or services.
         (b)  Money received under the program may not be used to pay
  any person who is related to the program participant within the
  third degree by consanguinity or affinity, as determined under
  Chapter 573, Government Code.
         (c)  A finding that a program participant used money
  distributed under the program to pay for an expense not allowed
  under Subsection (a) does not affect the validity of any payment
  made by the participant for an approved education-related expense
  that is allowed under that subsection.
         Sec. 29.360.  PROGRAM EXPENDITURES. (a) The comptroller
  shall disburse from the program fund to each certified educational
  assistance organization the amount specified under Section
  29.361(a) for each child participating in the program served by the
  organization.
         (b)  To initiate payment to an education service provider or
  vendor of educational products for an education-related expense
  approved under Section 29.359, the parent of a child participating
  in the program must submit a request in a form prescribed by
  comptroller rule to the certified educational assistance
  organization that serves the child.
         (c)  Subject to Subsection (d) and Sections 29.362(h) and
  29.364, on receiving a request under Subsection (b), a certified
  educational assistance organization shall verify that the request
  is for an expense approved under Section 29.359 and, not later than
  the 15th business day after the date the organization verifies the
  request, send payment to the education service provider or vendor
  of educational products.
         (d)  A disbursement under this section may not exceed the
  applicable program participant's account balance.
         (e)  A certified educational assistance organization shall
  provide program participants with electronic access to:
               (1)  view the participant's current account balance;
               (2)  initiate the payment process under Subsection (b);
  and
               (3)  view a summary of the participant's past account
  activity, including payments from the account to education service
  providers and vendors of educational products.
         Sec. 29.361.  AMOUNT OF PAYMENT; FINANCING. (a) Regardless
  of the quarterly deadline by which the parent applies for
  enrollment in the program under Section 29.356(a), a parent of a
  child participating in the program shall receive each year that the
  child participates in the program payments from the state from
  funds available under Section 29.353 to the child's account equal
  to a total amount of $8,000.
         (b)  This subsection applies only to a school district with a
  student enrollment of less than 20,000. For the first five school
  years during which a child residing in the district participates in
  the program, a school district to which this subsection applies is
  entitled to receive $10,000 from money appropriated for purposes of
  this subchapter.
         (c)  Any money remaining in a child's account at the end of a
  fiscal year is carried forward to the next fiscal year unless
  another provision of this subchapter mandates the closure of the
  account.
         (d)  The parent of a child participating in the program may
  make payments for the expenses of educational programs, services,
  and products not covered by money in the child's account.
         (e)  A payment under Subsection (a) may not be financed using
  federal money or money from the available school fund or
  instructional materials fund.
         (f)  Payments received under this subchapter do not
  constitute taxable income to a parent of a child participating in
  the program, unless otherwise provided by federal law.
         (g)  Not later than May 1 of each year, the agency shall
  submit to the comptroller the data necessary to calculate the
  amount specified under Subsection (a).
         Sec. 29.362.  ADMINISTRATION OF ACCOUNTS. (a)  On receipt
  of money distributed by the comptroller for purposes of making
  payments to program participants, a certified educational
  assistance organization shall make quarterly payments to the
  account of each child participating in the program served by the
  organization in equal amounts on or before the first day of July,
  October, January, and April.
         (b)  Each year, the comptroller may deduct from the total
  amount of money appropriated for purposes of this subchapter an
  amount, not to exceed three percent of that total amount, to cover
  the comptroller's cost of administering the program.
         (c)  Not later than the first day of the month preceding the
  start of each quarter, each certified educational assistance
  organization shall submit to the comptroller in the form prescribed
  by comptroller rule an estimate of the organization's costs of
  administering the program for that quarter.
         (d)  Each quarter, the comptroller shall disburse from money
  appropriated for the program to each certified educational
  assistance organization the amount necessary to cover the
  organization's costs of administering the program for that quarter,
  calculated as provided by Subsection (e). The total amount
  disbursed to a certified educational assistance organization under
  this subsection for a state fiscal year may not exceed five percent
  of the amount distributed to the organization under the program for
  that fiscal year.
         (e)  The amount of a certified educational assistance
  organization's disbursement under Subsection (d) is the lesser of:
               (1)  the amount of the organization's estimate
  submitted under Subsection (c); 
               (2)  the product of the total amount to be disbursed and
  the average percentage of program participants served by the
  organization during the preceding quarter; or
               (3)  five percent of the amount distributed to the
  organization for purposes of making payments to program
  participants for that quarter.
         (f)  On or before the first day of October and February, a
  certified educational assistance organization shall:
               (1)  verify with the agency that each child
  participating in the program is not enrolled in a public school,
  including an open-enrollment charter school, in a manner in which
  the child is counted toward the school's average daily attendance
  for purposes of the allocation of state funding under the
  foundation school program; and
               (2)  notify the comptroller if the organization
  determines that a child participating in the program is enrolled in
  a public school, including an open-enrollment charter school, in a
  manner in which the child is counted toward the school's average
  daily attendance for purposes of the allocation of state funding
  under the foundation school program.
         (g)  The comptroller by rule shall establish a process by
  which a program participant may authorize the comptroller or a
  certified education assistance organization to make a payment
  directly from the participant's account to a preapproved education
  service provider or vendor of educational products for an expense
  allowed under Section 29.359.
         (h)  On the date on which a child who participated in the
  program is no longer eligible to participate in the program under
  Section 29.355 and payments for any education-related expenses
  allowed under Section 29.359 from the child's account have been
  completed, the child's account shall be closed and any remaining
  money returned to the comptroller for deposit in the program fund.
         (i)  Each quarter, any interest or other earnings
  attributable to money held by a certified education assistance
  organization for purposes of the program shall be remitted to the
  comptroller for deposit in the program fund.
         Sec. 29.363.  AUDITING. (a) The comptroller shall contract
  with a private entity to audit accounts and student eligibility
  data not less than once per year to ensure compliance with
  applicable law and program requirements.  The audit must include a
  review of:
               (1)  a certified educational assistance organization's
  internal controls over program transactions; and
               (2)  compliance by:
                     (A)  program participants with the requirements
  of Section 29.357; and
                     (B)  certified educational assistance
  organizations with the requirements of Section 29.354.
         (b)  In conducting an audit, the private entity may require a
  program participant or a certified educational assistance
  organization to provide information and documentation regarding
  any transaction occurring under the program. 
         (c)  The private entity shall report to the comptroller any
  violation of this subchapter or other relevant law, including any
  transactions the entity determines to be unusual or suspicious,
  found by the entity during an audit conducted under this section.  
  The comptroller shall report the violation or transaction to:
               (1)  the applicable certified educational assistance
  organization;
               (2)  the education service provider or vendor of
  educational products, as applicable; and
               (3)  the parent of each child participating in the
  program who is affected by the violation or transaction. 
         Sec. 29.364.  SUSPENSION OF ACCOUNT. (a) The comptroller
  shall suspend the account of a program participant who fails to
  remain in good standing by complying with applicable law or a
  requirement of the program.
         (b)  On suspension of an account under Subsection (a), the
  comptroller shall notify the program participant in writing that
  the account has been suspended and that no additional payments may
  be made from the account. The notification must specify the grounds
  for the suspension and state that the participant has 30 business
  days to respond and take any corrective action required by the
  comptroller.
         (c)  On the expiration of the 30-day period under Subsection
  (b), the comptroller shall:
               (1)  order closure of the suspended account;
               (2)  order temporary reinstatement of the account,
  conditioned on the performance of a specified action by the program
  participant; or
               (3)  order full reinstatement of the account.
         (d)  The comptroller may recover money distributed under the
  program that was used for expenses not allowed under Section 29.359
  or for a child who was not eligible to participate in the program at
  the time of the expenditure.  The money may be recovered from the
  program participant or the entity that received the money in
  accordance with Subtitles A and B, Title 2, Tax Code, or as provided
  by other law if the program participant's account is suspended or
  closed under this section. The comptroller shall deposit money
  recovered under this subsection to the credit of the program fund.
         Sec. 29.365.  TUITION AND FEES; REFUND PROHIBITED. (a) An
  education service provider or vendor of educational products may
  not charge a child participating in the program an amount greater
  than the standard amount charged for that service or product by the
  provider or vendor.
         (b)  An education service provider or vendor of educational
  products receiving money distributed under the program may not in
  any manner rebate, refund, or credit to or share with a program
  participant, or any person on behalf of a participant, any program
  money paid or owed by the participant to the provider or vendor.
         Sec. 29.366.  REFERRAL TO DISTRICT ATTORNEY. If the
  comptroller obtains evidence of fraudulent use of an account or
  money distributed under the program by a certified educational
  assistance organization or program participant, the comptroller
  shall notify the appropriate local county or district attorney with
  jurisdiction over the principal place of business of the certified
  educational assistance organization or the residence of the program
  participant, as applicable. 
         Sec. 29.367.  SPECIAL EDUCATION NOTICE. (a) A certified
  educational assistance organization shall post on the
  organization's Internet website and provide to each parent who
  submits an application for the program a notice that:
               (1)  states that a private school is not subject to
  federal and state laws regarding the provision of educational
  services to a child with a disability in the same manner as a public
  school; and
               (2)  provides information regarding rights to which a
  child with a disability is entitled under federal and state law if
  the child attends a public school, including:
                     (A)  rights provided under the Individuals with
  Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.); and
                     (B)  rights provided under Subchapter A.
         (b)  A private school in which a child with a disability who
  is a program participant enrolls shall provide to the child's
  parent a copy of the notice required under Subsection (a).
         Sec. 29.368.  PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, PROVIDER, AND VENDOR
  AUTONOMY. (a) An education service provider or vendor of
  educational products that receives money distributed under the
  program is not a recipient of federal financial assistance and may
  not be considered to be an agent of state government on the basis of
  receiving that money.
         (b)  A rule adopted or other governmental action taken
  related to the program may not impose requirements that are
  contrary to or limit the religious or institutional values or
  practices of an education service provider, vendor of educational
  products, or program participant, including by limiting the ability
  of the provider, vendor, or participant, as applicable, to:
               (1)  determine the methods of instruction or curriculum
  used to educate students;
               (2)  determine admissions and enrollment practices,
  policies, and standards;
               (3)  modify or refuse to modify the provider's,
  vendor's, or participant's religious or institutional values or
  practices, including operations, conduct, policies, standards,
  assessments, or employment practices that are based on the
  provider's, vendor's, or participant's religious or institutional
  values or practices; or
               (4)  exercise the provider's, vendor's, or
  participant's religious or institutional practices as determined
  by the provider, vendor, or participant.
         Sec. 29.369.  STUDENT RECORDS AND INFORMATION. (a) On
  request by the parent of a child participating or seeking to
  participate in the program, the school district or open-enrollment
  charter school that the child would otherwise attend shall provide
  a copy of the child's school records possessed by the district or
  school, if any, to the child's parent or, if applicable, the private
  school the child attends.
         (b)  As necessary to verify a child's eligibility for the
  program, the agency, a school district, or an open-enrollment
  charter school shall provide to a certified educational assistance
  organization any information available to the agency, district, or
  school requested by the organization regarding a child who
  participates or seeks to participate in the program, including
  information regarding the child's public school enrollment status
  and whether the child can be counted toward a public school's
  average daily attendance for purposes of the allocation of funding
  under the foundation school program. The organization may not
  retain information provided under this subsection beyond the period
  necessary to determine a child's eligibility to participate in the
  program.
         (c)  The certified educational assistance organization or an
  education service provider or vendor of educational products that
  obtains information regarding a child participating in the program:
               (1)  shall comply with state and federal law regarding
  the confidentiality of student educational information; and
               (2)  may not sell or otherwise distribute information
  regarding a child participating in the program.
         Sec. 29.370.  GIFTS, GRANTS, AND DONATIONS. The comptroller
  and a certified educational assistance organization may solicit and
  accept gifts, grants, and donations from any public or private
  source for any expenses related to the administration of the
  program, including establishing the program and contracting for the
  report required under Section 29.371.
         Sec. 29.371.  ANNUAL REPORT. (a)  The comptroller shall
  require that each certified educational assistance organization
  compile program data and produce an annual longitudinal report
  regarding:
               (1)  the number of program applications received,
  accepted, and waitlisted, disaggregated by age;
               (2)  program participant satisfaction; 
               (3)  the results of assessment instruments shared in
  accordance with Section 29.357(2);
               (4)  the effect of the program on public and private
  school capacity, availability, and quality;
               (5)  the amount of cost savings accruing to the state as
  a result of the program;
               (6)  in a report submitted in an even-numbered year
  only, an estimate of the total amount of funding required for the
  program for the next state fiscal biennium;
               (7)  the amount of gifts, grants, and donations
  received under Section 29.370; and
               (8)  based on surveys of former program participants or
  other sources available to an organization, the number and
  percentage of children participating in the program who, within one
  year after graduating from high school, are:
                     (A)  college ready, as indicated by earning a
  minimum of 12 non-remedial semester credit hours or the equivalent
  or an associate degree from a postsecondary educational
  institution;
                     (B)  career ready, as indicated by:
                           (i)  earning a credential of value included
  in the library of credentials established under Section 2308A.007,
  Government Code; or
                           (ii)  employment at or above the median wage
  in the child's region; or
                     (C)  military ready, as indicated by achieving a
  passing score set by the applicable military branch on the Armed
  Services Vocational Aptitude Battery and enlisting in the armed
  forces of the United States or the Texas National Guard.
         (b)  In producing the report, each certified educational
  assistance organization shall:
               (1)  use appropriate analytical and behavioral science
  methodologies to ensure public confidence in the report; and
               (2)  comply with the requirements regarding the
  confidentiality of student educational information under the
  Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (20 U.S.C.
  Section 1232g).
         (c)  The report must cover a period of not less than five
  years and include, subject to Subsection (b)(2), the data analyzed
  and methodology used.
         (d)  The comptroller and each certified educational
  assistance organization shall post the report on the comptroller's
  and organization's respective Internet websites.
         Sec. 29.372.  RULES; PROCEDURES. The comptroller shall
  adopt rules and procedures as necessary to implement, administer,
  and enforce this subchapter.
         Sec. 29.373.  APPEAL; JUDICIAL REVIEW. (a) A program
  participant may appeal to the comptroller an administrative
  decision made by the comptroller or a certified educational
  assistance organization under this subchapter, including a
  decision regarding eligibility, allowable expenses, or the
  participant's removal from the program.
         (b)  A program participant, education service provider, or
  vendor of educational products who is adversely affected or
  aggrieved by a decision made by the comptroller or a certified
  educational assistance organization under this subchapter may file
  a suit challenging the decision in a district court in the county in
  which the program participant resides or the provider or vendor has
  its principal place of business, as applicable.
         Sec. 29.374.  RIGHT TO INTERVENE IN CIVIL ACTION. (a) A
  program participant, education service provider, or vendor of
  educational products may intervene in any civil action challenging
  the constitutionality of the program.
         (b)  A court in which a civil action described by Subsection
  (a) is filed may require that all program participants, education
  service providers, and vendors of educational products wishing to
  intervene in the action file a joint brief. A program participant,
  education service provider, or vendor of educational products may
  not be required to join a brief filed on behalf of the state or a
  state agency.
         SECTION 3.03.  Section 22.092(d), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (d)  The agency shall provide equivalent access to the
  registry maintained under this section to:
               (1)  private schools;
               (2)  public schools; [and]
               (3)  nonprofit teacher organizations approved by the
  commissioner for the purpose of participating in the tutoring
  program established under Section 33.913; and
               (4)  the comptroller for the purpose of preapproving
  education service providers and vendors of educational products
  under Section 29.358 for participation in the program established
  under Subchapter J, Chapter 29.
         SECTION 3.04.  Section 411.109, Government Code, is amended
  by adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
         (c)  The comptroller is entitled to obtain criminal history
  record information maintained by the department about a person who
  is a private tutor, a therapist, or an employee of a teaching
  service or school who intends to provide educational services to a
  child participating in the program established under Subchapter J,
  Chapter 29, Education Code, and is seeking approval to receive
  money distributed under that program.
         SECTION 3.05.  Subchapter J, Chapter 29, Education Code, as
  added by this article, applies beginning with the 2024-2025 school
  year.
         SECTION 3.06.  (a)  Not later than February 15, 2024, the
  comptroller of public accounts shall adopt rules as provided by
  Section 29.372, Education Code, as added by this article.
         (b)  The comptroller of public accounts may identify rules
  required by the passage of Subchapter J, Chapter 29, Education
  Code, as added by this article, that must be adopted on an emergency
  basis for purposes of the 2024-2025 school year and may use the
  procedures established under Section 2001.034, Government Code,
  for adopting those rules.  The comptroller of public accounts is not
  required to make the finding described by Section 2001.034(a),
  Government Code, to adopt emergency rules under this subsection.
         SECTION 3.07.  (a) The constitutionality and other validity
  under the state or federal constitution of all or any part of
  Subchapter J, Chapter 29, Education Code, as added by this article,
  may be determined in an action for declaratory judgment under
  Chapter 37, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, in a district court in
  the county in which the violation is alleged to have occurred or
  where the plaintiff resides or has its principal place of business.
         (b)  An order, however characterized, of a trial court
  granting or denying a temporary or otherwise interlocutory
  injunction or a permanent injunction on the grounds of the
  constitutionality or unconstitutionality, or other validity or
  invalidity, under the state or federal constitution of all or any
  part of Subchapter J, Chapter 29, Education Code, as added by this
  article, may be reviewed only by direct appeal to the Texas Supreme
  Court filed not later than the 15th business day after the date on
  which the order was entered. The Texas Supreme Court shall give
  precedence to appeals under this section over other matters.
         (c)  The direct appeal is an accelerated appeal.
         (d)  This section exercises the authority granted by Section
  3-b, Article V, Texas Constitution.
         (e)  The filing of a direct appeal under this section will
  automatically stay any temporary or otherwise interlocutory
  injunction or permanent injunction granted in accordance with this
  section pending final determination by the Texas Supreme Court,
  unless the supreme court makes specific findings that the applicant
  seeking such injunctive relief has pleaded and proved that:
               (1)  the applicant has a probable right to the relief it
  seeks on final hearing;
               (2)  the applicant will suffer a probable injury that
  is imminent and irreparable, and that the applicant has no other
  adequate legal remedy; and
               (3)  maintaining the injunction is in the public
  interest.
         (f)  An appeal under this section, including an
  interlocutory, accelerated, or direct appeal, is governed, as
  applicable, by the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, including
  Rules 25.1(d)(6), 28.1, 32.1(g), 37.3(a)(1), 38.6(a) and (b),
  40.1(b), and 49.4.
         (g)  This section does not authorize an award of attorney's
  fees against this state, and Section 37.009, Civil Practice and
  Remedies Code, does not apply to an action filed under this section.
         (h)  This section does not authorize a taxpayer suit to
  contest the denial of a tax credit by the comptroller of public
  accounts.
         SECTION 3.08.  It is the intent of the legislature that every
  provision, section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase, or word
  in this article, and every application of the provisions in this
  article to each person or entity, is severable from each other. If
  any application of any provision in this article to any person,
  group of persons, or circumstances is found by a court to be invalid
  for any reason, the remaining applications of that provision to all
  other persons and circumstances shall be severed and may not be
  affected.
         SECTION 3.09.  This article takes effect September 1, 2023.
  ARTICLE 4.  SPECIAL EDUCATION
         SECTION 4.01.  Section 29.001, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.001.  IMPLEMENTATION OF SPECIAL EDUCATION
  LAW [STATEWIDE PLAN].  (a)  As the state education agency
  responsible for carrying out the purposes of Part B, Individuals
  with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) (20 U.S.C. Section 1411 et
  seq.), the [The] agency shall develop, and revise [modify] as
  necessary, a comprehensive system to ensure statewide and local
  compliance [design, consistent] with federal and state law related
  to special education[, for the delivery of services to children
  with disabilities in this state that includes rules for the
  administration and funding of the special education program so that
  a free appropriate public education is available to all of those
  children between the ages of three and 21].
         (b)  The comprehensive system [statewide design] shall
  include the provision of services primarily through school
  districts and shared services arrangements, supplemented by
  regional education service centers.
         (c)  The comprehensive system [agency] shall focus on
  maximizing student outcomes and include [also develop and implement
  a statewide plan with programmatic content that includes procedures
  designed to]:
               (1)  rulemaking, technical assistance, guidance
  documents, monitoring protocols, and other resources as necessary
  to implement and ensure compliance with federal and state law
  related to special education [ensure state compliance with
  requirements for supplemental federal funding for all
  state-administered programs involving the delivery of
  instructional or related services to students with disabilities];
               (2)  the facilitation of [facilitate] interagency
  coordination when other state agencies are involved in the delivery
  of instructional or related services to students with disabilities;
               (3)  the pursuit of [periodically assess statewide
  personnel needs in all areas of specialization related to special
  education and pursue] strategies to meet statewide special
  education and related services personnel [those] needs [through a
  consortium of representatives from regional education service
  centers, local education agencies, and institutions of higher
  education and through other available alternatives];
               (4)  ensuring [ensure] that regional education service
  centers throughout the state maintain a regional support function,
  which may include direct service delivery and a component designed
  to facilitate the placement of students with disabilities who
  cannot be appropriately served in their resident districts;
               (5)  [allow the agency to] effectively monitoring
  [monitor] and periodically conducting [conduct] site visits of all
  school districts to ensure that rules adopted under this subchapter
  [section] are applied in a consistent and uniform manner, to ensure
  that districts are complying with those rules, and to ensure that
  annual statistical reports filed by the districts and not otherwise
  available through the Public Education Information Management
  System under Sections 48.008 and 48.009 are accurate and complete;
  and
               (6)  the provision of training and technical assistance
  to ensure that:
                     (A)  appropriately trained personnel are involved
  in the diagnostic and evaluative procedures operating in all
  districts and that those personnel routinely serve on district
  admissions, review, and dismissal committees;
                     (B)  [(7)  ensure that] an individualized
  education program for each student with a disability is properly
  developed, implemented, and maintained in the least restrictive
  environment that is appropriate to meet the student's educational
  needs;
                     (C)  [(8)  ensure that,] when appropriate, each
  student with a disability is provided an opportunity to participate
  in career and technology and physical education classes[, in
  addition to participating in regular or special classes];
                     (D)  [(9)  ensure that] each student with a
  disability is provided necessary related services;
                     (E)  [(10)  ensure that] an individual assigned
  to act as a surrogate parent for a child with a disability, as
  provided by 20 U.S.C. Section 1415(b), is required to:
                           (i) [(A)]  complete a training program that
  complies with minimum standards established by agency rule;
                           (ii) [(B)]  visit the child and the child's
  school;
                           (iii) [(C)]  consult with persons involved
  in the child's education, including teachers, caseworkers,
  court-appointed volunteers, guardians ad litem, attorneys ad
  litem, foster parents, and caretakers;
                           (iv) [(D)]  review the child's educational
  records;
                           (v) [(E)]  attend meetings of the child's
  admission, review, and dismissal committee;
                           (vi) [(F)]  exercise independent judgment
  in pursuing the child's interests; and
                           (vii) [(G)]  exercise the child's due
  process rights under applicable state and federal law; and
                     (F)  [(11)  ensure that] each district develops a
  process to be used by a teacher who instructs a student with a
  disability in a regular classroom setting:
                           (i) [(A)]  to request a review of the
  student's individualized education program;
                           (ii) [(B)]  to provide input in the
  development of the student's individualized education program;
                           (iii) [(C)]  that provides for a timely
  district response to the teacher's request; and
                           (iv) [(D)]  that provides for notification
  to the student's parent or legal guardian of that response.
         SECTION 4.02.  Subchapter A, Chapter 29, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 29.0012 to read as follows:
         Sec. 29.0012.  ANNUAL MEETING ON SPECIAL EDUCATION. (a)  At
  least once each year, the board of trustees of a school district or
  the governing body of an open-enrollment charter school shall
  include during a public meeting a discussion of the performance of
  students receiving special education services at the district or
  school.
         (b)  The agency by rule shall adopt a set of performance
  indicators for measuring and evaluating the quality of learning and
  achievement for students receiving special education services at
  the school district or open-enrollment charter school to be
  considered at a meeting held under this section.  The indicators
  must include performance on the college, career, or military
  readiness outcomes described by Section 48.110.
         SECTION 4.03.  Section 29.003, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.003.  ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA.  (a)  The agency shall
  develop specific eligibility criteria based on the general
  classifications established by this section and in accordance with
  federal law [with reference to contemporary diagnostic or
  evaluative terminologies and techniques].  Eligible students with
  disabilities shall enjoy the right to a free appropriate public
  education, which may include instruction in the regular classroom,
  instruction through special teaching, or instruction through
  contracts approved under this subchapter.  Instruction shall be
  supplemented by the provision of related services when appropriate.
         (b)  A student is eligible to participate in a school
  district's special education program [if the student]:
               (1)  from birth through [is not more than] 21 years of
  age if the student [and] has a visual [or auditory] impairment or is
  deaf or hard of hearing and that disability prevents the student
  from being adequately or safely educated in public school without
  the provision of special education services; [or]
               (2)  from three years of age through five years of age
  if the student is experiencing developmental delays as described by
  20 U.S.C. Section 1401(3)(B) and defined by commissioner rule; or
               (3)  from 3 years of age through [is at least three but
  not more than] 21 years of age if the student [and] has one or more
  of the [following] disabilities described by 20 U.S.C. Section
  1401(3)(A) and that disability prevents the student from being
  adequately or safely educated in public school without the
  provision of special education services[:
                     [(A)  physical disability;
                     [(B)  intellectual or developmental disability;
                     [(C)  emotional disturbance;
                     [(D)  learning disability;
                     [(E)  autism;
                     [(F)  speech disability; or
                     [(G)  traumatic brain injury].
         SECTION 4.04.  Subchapter A, Chapter 29, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 29.0056 to read as follows:
         Sec. 29.0056.  INFORMATION REGARDING STATE SUPPORTED LIVING
  CENTERS. (a)  In this section, "state supported living center" has
  the meaning assigned by Section 531.002, Health and Safety Code.
         (b)  The Health and Human Services Commission, in
  collaboration with the agency and stakeholders who represent the
  full continuum of educational residential placement options, shall
  develop and provide to the agency materials regarding educational
  residential placement options for children who may qualify for
  placement in a state supported living center. The agency shall make
  the materials developed under this subsection available to school
  districts.
         (c)  At a meeting of a child's admission, review, and
  dismissal committee at which residential placement is discussed,
  the school district shall provide to the child's parent the
  materials developed under Subsection (b).
         SECTION 4.05.  Section 29.008, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsection (a-1) to
  read as follows:
         (a)  The commissioner shall establish a list of approved
  public or private facilities, institutions, or agencies inside or
  outside of this state that a [A] school district, shared services
  arrangement unit, or regional education service center may contract
  with [a public or private facility, institution, or agency inside
  or outside of this state] for the provision of services to students
  with disabilities in a residential placement.  The commissioner may
  approve either the whole or a part of a facility or program.
         (a-1)  Each contract described by this section [for
  residential placement] must be approved by the commissioner.  The
  commissioner may approve a [residential placement] contract under
  this section only after at least a programmatic evaluation of
  personnel qualifications, costs, adequacy of physical plant and
  equipment, and curriculum content.  [The commissioner may approve
  either the whole or a part of a facility or program.]
         (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (c), costs of an
  approved contract for residential placement may be paid from a
  combination of federal, state, and local funds.  The local share of
  the total contract cost for each student is that portion of the
  local tax effort that exceeds the district's local fund assignment
  under Section 48.256, divided by the average daily attendance in
  the district.  If the contract involves a private facility, the
  state share of the total contract cost is that amount remaining
  after subtracting the local share.  If the contract involves a
  public facility, the state share is that amount remaining after
  subtracting the local share from the portion of the contract that
  involves the costs of instructional and related services.  For
  purposes of this subsection, "local tax effort" means the total
  amount of money generated by taxes imposed for debt service and
  maintenance and operation less any amounts paid into a tax
  increment fund under Chapter 311, Tax Code.  This subsection
  expires September 1, 2027.
         SECTION 4.06.  The heading to Section 29.009, Education
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 29.009.  PUBLIC NOTICE CONCERNING EARLY CHILDHOOD
  SPECIAL EDUCATION [PRESCHOOL] PROGRAMS [FOR STUDENTS WITH
  DISABILITIES].
         SECTION 4.07.  Section 29.010, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.010.  GENERAL SUPERVISION AND COMPLIANCE.  (a)  The
  agency shall develop [adopt] and implement a comprehensive system
  for monitoring school district compliance with federal and state
  laws relating to special education.  The monitoring system must
  include a comprehensive cyclical process and a targeted risk-based
  process [provide for ongoing analysis of district special education
  data and of complaints filed with the agency concerning special
  education services and for inspections of school districts at
  district facilities].  The agency shall establish criteria and
  instruments for use in determining district compliance under this
  section [use the information obtained through analysis of district
  data and from the complaints management system to determine the
  appropriate schedule for and extent of the inspection].
         (b)  As part of the monitoring process [To complete the
  inspection], the agency must obtain information from parents and
  teachers of students in special education programs in the district.
         (c)  The agency shall develop and implement a system of
  interventions and sanctions for school districts the agency
  identifies as being in noncompliance with [whose most recent
  monitoring visit shows a failure to comply with major requirements
  of] the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C.
  Section 1400 et seq.), federal regulations, state statutes, or
  agency requirements necessary to carry out federal law or
  regulations or state law relating to special education.
         (d)  The agency shall establish a graduated process of
  sanctions to apply to [For] districts that remain in noncompliance
  for more than one year[, the first stage of sanctions shall begin
  with annual or more frequent monitoring visits]. The [Subsequent]
  sanctions shall [may] range in severity and may include [up to] the
  withholding of funds.  If funds are withheld, the agency may use the
  funds to provide, through alternative arrangements, services to
  students and staff members in the district from which the funds are
  withheld.
         (e)  The agency's complaint management division shall
  develop a system for expedited investigation and resolution of
  complaints concerning a district's failure to provide special
  education or related services to a student eligible to participate
  in the district's special education program.
         [(f)  This section does not create an obligation for or
  impose a requirement on a school district or open-enrollment
  charter school that is not also created or imposed under another
  state law or a federal law.]
         SECTION 4.08.  Section 29.018, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
         (g)  This section expires September 1, 2026.
         SECTION 4.09.  Section 29.026(i), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (i)  A program selected to receive a grant under this section
  is [The commissioner shall select programs and award grant funds to
  those programs beginning in the 2018-2019 school year. The
  selected programs are] to be funded for two years.
         SECTION 4.10.  Section 29.027(d), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (d)  A grant under this section is [The commissioner shall
  select grant recipients and award grant funds beginning in the
  2021-2022 school year. The grants are] to be awarded for two years.
         SECTION 4.11.  Subchapter A, Chapter 29, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 29.029 to read as follows:
         Sec. 29.029.  SUPPORTS FOR RECRUITING SPECIAL EDUCATION
  STAFF. (a) From funds appropriated or otherwise available for the
  purpose, the agency shall provide grants to school districts and
  open-enrollment charter schools to increase the number of qualified
  and appropriately credentialed special education staff, including
  special education teachers, special education paraprofessionals,
  evaluation personnel, ancillary instruction personnel, and related
  service personnel.
         (b)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school
  that receives a grant under this section shall require each person
  the district or school uses the grant money to assist in becoming
  licensed, certified, or otherwise credentialed as described by
  Subsection (a) to work at the district or school for a period
  established by commissioner rule.
         (c)  The commissioner shall adopt rules establishing the
  period of required employment described by Subsection (b) and any
  other rules necessary to implement this section.
         SECTION 4.12.  The heading to Subchapter A-1, Chapter 29,
  Education Code, is amended to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER A-1. PARENT-DIRECTED [SUPPLEMENTAL SPECIAL EDUCATION]
  SERVICES FOR STUDENTS RECEIVING SPECIAL EDUCATION SERVICES
  [PROGRAM]
         SECTION 4.13.  Sections 29.041(2) and (3), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
               (2)  "Supplemental [special education] instructional
  materials" includes textbooks, computer hardware or software,
  other technological devices, and other materials suitable for
  addressing an educational need of a student receiving special
  education services under Subchapter A.
               (3)  "Supplemental [special education] services" means
  an additive service that provides an educational benefit to a
  student receiving special education services under Subchapter A,
  including:
                     (A)  occupational therapy, physical therapy, and
  speech therapy; and
                     (B)  private tutoring and other supplemental
  private instruction or programs.
         SECTION 4.14.  Sections 29.042(a) and (c), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  The agency by rule shall establish and administer a
  parent-directed [supplemental special education services and
  instructional materials] program for students receiving special
  education services, through which a parent may direct supplemental
  services and supplemental instructional materials for the parent's
  student [students] who meets [meet] the eligibility requirements
  for participation in the program. Subject to Subsection (c), the
  agency shall provide each student approved as provided by this
  subchapter a grant in the amount provided under Section 48.305 [of
  not more than $1,500] to purchase supplemental [special education]
  services and supplemental [special education] instructional
  materials.
         (c)  A student may receive one grant under this subchapter
  unless the legislature appropriates money for an additional grant
  in the General Appropriations Act [The commissioner shall set aside
  an amount not to exceed $30 million from the total amount of funds
  appropriated for each state fiscal year to fund the program under
  this section. For each state fiscal year, the total amount provided
  for student grants under Subsection (a) may not exceed the amount
  set aside by the commissioner under this subsection].
         SECTION 4.15.  Section 29.045, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.045.  APPROVAL OF APPLICATION; ASSIGNMENT OF
  ACCOUNT. The [Subject to available funding the] agency shall
  approve each student who meets the program eligibility criteria
  established under Section 29.044 and assign to the student an
  account maintained under Section 29.042(b). The account may only
  be used by the student's parent to purchase supplemental [special
  education] services or supplemental [special education]
  instructional materials for the student, subject to Sections 29.046
  and 29.047.
         SECTION 4.16.  Sections 29.046(a) and (b), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  Money in an account assigned to a student under Section
  29.045 may be used only for supplemental [special education]
  services and supplemental [special education] instructional
  materials.
         (b)  Supplemental [special education] services must be
  provided by an agency-approved provider.
         SECTION 4.17.  Sections 29.047(a), (c), (d), and (e),
  Education Code, are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  The agency shall establish criteria necessary for
  agency approval for each category of provider of a professional
  service that is a supplemental [special education] service, as
  identified by the agency.
         (c)  The agency shall provide a procedure for providers of
  supplemental [special education] services to apply to the agency to
  become an agency-approved provider.
         (d)  The agency may establish criteria for agency approval of
  vendors for each category of supplemental [special education]
  instructional materials identified by the agency.
         (e)  If the agency establishes criteria for agency approval
  for a vendor of a category of supplemental [special education]
  instructional materials, the agency shall provide a procedure for
  vendors of that category to apply to the agency to become an
  agency-approved vendor.
         SECTION 4.18.  Subchapter A-1, Chapter 29, Education Code,
  is amended by adding Section 29.0475 to read as follows:
         Sec. 29.0475.  PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, PROVIDER, AND VENDOR
  AUTONOMY. (a) A provider of supplemental services or vendor of
  supplemental instructional materials that receives money
  distributed under the program is not a recipient of federal
  financial assistance on the basis of receiving that money.
         (b)  A rule adopted or action taken related to the program by
  an individual, governmental entity, court of law, or program
  administrator may not:
               (1)  consider the actions of a provider of supplemental
  services, vendor of supplemental instructional materials, or
  program participant to be the actions of an agent of state
  government;
               (2)  limit:
                     (A)  a provider of supplemental services' ability
  to determine the methods used to educate the provider's students or
  to exercise the provider's religious or institutional values; or
                     (B)  a program participant's ability to determine
  the participant's educational content or to exercise the
  participant's religious values;
               (3)  obligate a provider of supplemental services or
  program participant to act contrary to the provider's or
  participant's religious or institutional values, as applicable;
               (4)  impose any regulation on a provider of
  supplemental services, vendor of supplemental instructional
  materials, or program participant beyond those regulations
  necessary to enforce the requirements of the program; or
               (5)  require as a condition of receiving money
  distributed under the program:
                     (A)  a provider of supplemental services to modify
  the provider's creed, practices, admissions policies, curriculum,
  performance standards, employment policies, or assessments; or
                     (B)  a program participant to modify the
  participant's creed, practices, curriculum, performance standards,
  or assessments.
         (c)  In a proceeding challenging a rule adopted by a state
  agency or officer under this subchapter, the agency or officer has
  the burden of proof to establish by clear and convincing evidence
  that the rule:
               (1)  is necessary to implement or enforce the program
  as provided by this subchapter;
               (2)  does not violate this section;
               (3)  does not impose an undue burden on a program
  participant or a provider of supplemental services or vendor of
  supplemental instructional materials that participates or applies
  to participate in the program; and
               (4)  is the least restrictive means of accomplishing
  the purpose of the program while recognizing the independence of a
  provider of supplemental services to meet the educational needs of
  students in accordance with the provider's religious or
  institutional values.
         SECTION 4.19.  Section 29.048, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.048.  ADMISSION, REVIEW, AND DISMISSAL COMMITTEE
  DUTIES. (a) A student's admission, review, and dismissal
  committee shall develop a student's individualized education
  program under Section 29.005, in compliance with the Individuals
  with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.),
  without consideration of any supplemental [special education]
  services or supplemental instructional materials that may be
  provided under the program under this subchapter.
         (b)  Unless the district first verifies that an account has
  been assigned to the student under Section 29.045, the [The]
  admission, review, and dismissal committee of a student approved
  for participation in the program shall provide to the student's
  parent at an admission, review, and dismissal committee meeting for
  the student:
               (1)  information regarding the types of supplemental
  [special education] services or supplemental instructional
  materials available under the program and provided by
  agency-approved providers for which an account maintained under
  Section 29.042(b) for the student may be used; and
               (2)  instructions regarding accessing an account
  described by Subdivision (1).
         SECTION 4.20.  Subchapter A-1, Chapter 29, Education Code,
  is amended by adding Section 29.0485 to read as follows:
         Sec. 29.0485.  DETERMINATION OF COMMISSIONER FINAL.
  Notwithstanding Section 7.057, a determination of the commissioner
  under this subchapter is final and may not be appealed.
         SECTION 4.21.  Section 29.049, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.049.  RULES. The commissioner shall adopt rules as
  necessary to administer the supplemental [special education]
  services and supplemental instructional materials program under
  this subchapter.
         SECTION 4.22.  Section 29.315, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 29.315.  TEXAS SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF MEMORANDUM OF
  UNDERSTANDING. The Texas Education Agency and the Texas School for
  the Deaf shall develop[, agree to, and by commissioner rule adopt no
  later than September 1, 1998,] a memorandum of understanding to
  establish:
               (1)  the method for developing and reevaluating a set
  of indicators of the quality of learning at the Texas School for the
  Deaf;
               (2)  the process for the agency to conduct and report on
  an annual evaluation of the school's performance on the indicators;
               (3)  the requirements for the school's board to
  publish, discuss, and disseminate an annual report describing the
  educational performance of the school;
               (4)  the process for the agency to assign an
  accreditation status to the school, to reevaluate the status on an
  annual basis, and, if necessary, to conduct monitoring reviews; and
               (5)  the type of information the school shall be
  required to provide through the Public Education Information
  Management System (PEIMS).
         SECTION 4.23.  Section 30.001(b), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (b)  The commissioner, with the approval of the State Board
  of Education, shall develop and implement a plan for the
  coordination of services to children with disabilities in each
  region served by a regional education service center.  The plan
  must include procedures for:
               (1)  identifying existing public or private
  educational and related services for children with disabilities in
  each region;
               (2)  identifying and referring children with
  disabilities who cannot be appropriately served by the school
  district in which they reside to other appropriate programs;
               (3)  assisting school districts to individually or
  cooperatively develop programs to identify and provide appropriate
  services for children with disabilities;
               (4)  expanding and coordinating services provided by
  regional education service centers for children with disabilities;
  and
               (5)  providing for special education supports
  [services], including special seats, books, instructional media,
  and other supplemental supplies and services required for proper
  instruction.
         SECTION 4.24.  Section 30.002(g), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (g)  To facilitate implementation of this section, the
  commissioner shall develop a system to distribute from the
  foundation school fund to school districts or regional education
  service centers a special supplemental allowance for each student
  with a visual impairment and for each student with a serious visual
  disability and another medically diagnosed disability of a
  significantly limiting nature who is receiving special education
  services through any approved program.  The supplemental allowance
  may be spent only for special education services uniquely required
  by the nature of the student's disabilities and may not be used in
  lieu of educational funds otherwise available under this code or
  through state or local appropriations.
         SECTION 4.25.  Section 30.005, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 30.005.  TEXAS SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND AND VISUALLY
  IMPAIRED MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING.  The Texas Education Agency
  and the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired shall
  develop[, agree to, and by commissioner rule adopt] a memorandum of
  understanding to establish:
               (1)  the method for developing and reevaluating a set
  of indicators of the quality of learning at the Texas School for the
  Blind and Visually Impaired;
               (2)  the process for the agency to conduct and report on
  an annual evaluation of the school's performance on the indicators;
               (3)  the requirements for the school's board to
  publish, discuss, and disseminate an annual report describing the
  educational performance of the school;
               (4)  the process for the agency to:
                     (A)  assign an accreditation status to the school;
                     (B)  reevaluate the status on an annual basis; and
                     (C)  if necessary, conduct monitoring reviews;
  and
               (5)  the type of information the school shall be
  required to provide through the Public Education Information
  Management System (PEIMS).
         SECTION 4.26.  Section 37.146(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  A complaint alleging the commission of a school offense
  must, in addition to the requirements imposed by Article 45.019,
  Code of Criminal Procedure:
               (1)  be sworn to by a person who has personal knowledge
  of the underlying facts giving rise to probable cause to believe
  that an offense has been committed; and
               (2)  be accompanied by a statement from a school
  employee stating:
                     (A)  whether the child is eligible for or receives
  special education services under Subchapter A, Chapter 29; and
                     (B)  the graduated sanctions, if required under
  Section 37.144, that were imposed on the child before the complaint
  was filed.
         SECTION 4.27.  Section 48.265(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  If [Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if] the
  commissioner determines that the amount appropriated for the
  purposes of the Foundation School Program exceeds the amount to
  which school districts are entitled under this chapter, the
  commissioner may provide [by rule shall establish a grant program
  through which excess funds are awarded as] grants using the excess
  money for the purchase of video equipment, or for the reimbursement
  of costs for previously purchased video equipment, used for
  monitoring special education classrooms or other special education
  settings required under Section 29.022.
         SECTION 4.28.  This article takes effect immediately if it
  receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
  house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.
  If this article does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
  effect, this article takes effect September 1, 2023.
  ARTICLE 5. FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY
         SECTION 5.01.  (a) Notwithstanding any other section of
  this Act, in a state fiscal year, the Texas Education Agency or
  comptroller of public accounts is not required to implement a
  provision found in another section of this Act that is drafted as a
  mandatory provision imposing a duty on the agency to take an action
  unless money is specifically appropriated to the agency for that
  fiscal year to carry out that duty. The Texas Education Agency or
  comptroller of public accounts may implement the provision in that
  fiscal year to the extent other funding is available to the agency
  to do so.
         (b)  If, as authorized by Subsection (a) of this section, the
  Texas Education Agency or comptroller of public accounts does not
  implement the mandatory provision in a state fiscal year, the
  agency or comptroller of public accounts, as applicable, in its
  legislative budget request for the next state fiscal biennium,
  shall certify that fact to the Legislative Budget Board and include
  a written estimate of the costs of implementing the provision in
  each year of that next state fiscal biennium.
         (c)  This section and the suspension of the Texas Education
  Agency's or comptroller of public accounts' duty to implement a
  mandatory provision of this Act, as provided by Subsection (a) of
  this section, expires and the duty to implement the mandatory
  provision resumes on September 1, 2027.
 
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