PROPOSED RULES
PUBLIC INSTRUCTION
Original Notice.
Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 10-16-010.
Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: Chapter 392-141 WAC, Transportation--State allocation for operations.
Hearing Location(s): Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI), Brouillet Conference Room, 600 Washington Street S.E., Olympia, WA 98504, on December 8, 2010, at 10:00 a.m.
Date of Intended Adoption: January 14, 2011.
Submit Written Comments to: Allan J. Jones, Director, P.O. Box 47200, Olympia, WA 98504, e-mail allan.jones@k12.wa.us, fax (360) 586-6124, by December 3, 2010.
Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact Wanda Griffin by December 3, 2010, TTY (360) 664-3631 or (360) 725-6132.
Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: A complete revision of chapter 392-141 WAC is required in order to implement the new student transportation funding system implemented through EHB 2261 (2009).
The 2010 legislature through EHB 2776 modified the implementation date to September 1, 2011, and required OSPI to report on the language of the rule by December 1, 2010.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 28A.150.290.
Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.
Agency Comments or Recommendations, if any, as to Statutory Language, Implementation, Enforcement, and Fiscal Matters: See Purpose above.
Name of Proponent: [OSPI], governmental.
Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting: Catherine Slagle, OSPI, (360) 725-6136; Implementation: Shawn Lewis, OSPI, (360) 725-6292; and Enforcement: Allan J. Jones, OSPI, (360) 725-6120.
No small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW.
A cost-benefit analysis is not required under RCW 34.05.328.
October 26, 2010
Randy Dorn
State Superintendent
OTS-3732.1
NEW SECTION
WAC 392-141-300
Authority and purpose.
The authority
for this chapter is RCW 28A.150.290 which authorizes the
superintendent of public instruction to adopt rules and
regulations for the administration of chapter 28A.150 RCW,
which includes student transportation programs, RCW 28A.160.030, which includes individual and in lieu
transportation arrangements, RCW 28A.160.160 which includes
hazardous walking conditions, and RCW 28A.160.1921 which
includes the transportation reporting requirements. The
purpose of this chapter is to establish the method for the
allocation of funding for the operation of public school
district student transportation programs.
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(1) "Superintendent" means the superintendent of public instruction.
(2) "District" means either a school district or an educational service district.
(3) The definition of "school" includes learning centers or other agencies where educational services are provided.
(4) "Eligible student" means any student served by a district transportation program either by bus, district car, or individual arrangements meeting one or more of the following criteria:
(a) A student whose route stop is outside the walk area of the student's enrollment school site; or
(b) A student whose disability is defined by RCW 28A.155.020 and who is either not ambulatory or not capable of protecting his or her own welfare while traveling to or from school.
Districts determine which students are provided with transportation services; however, only eligible students qualify for funding under the operations allocation.
(5) "To and from transportation" means all transportation between route stops and schools both before and after the school day. To and from transportation includes transportation between home and school and transportation between schools, commonly referred to as shuttles. Transportation not authorized for state allocations under this definition includes, but is not limited to, transportation for students participating in nonacademic extended day programs, field trips, and extracurricular activities.
(6) "Home to school transportation" means all student transportation between route stops and schools both before and after the school day. Home to school transportation does not include transportation between schools.
(7) "Basic program transportation" means students transported between home and school for their basic education. Basic program transportation includes those students who qualify under RCW 28A.155.020 for special services and are capable of protecting his or her own welfare while traveling to or from school and those students who are qualified for gifted programs or bilingual programs or homeless students that do not require specialized transportation. Also included in basic program transportation is transportation required to comply with the school choice provisions of the Elementary Secondary Education Act.
(8) "Special program transportation" means home to school transportation for one of the following specialized programs:
(a) Special education programs provided for by chapter 28A.155 RCW and where transportation as a related service is included on the student's individual education plan or where transportation is required under the provisions of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973; or
(b) Students who require special transportation to a bilingual program in a centralized location; or
(c) Students who require special transportation to a gifted program in a centralized location; or
(d) Students who require special transportation to their school of origin as required by the provisions of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act; or
(e) Students who require special transportation to a district operated head start, early childhood education assistance program, or other early education program.
(9) "Kindergarten route" means a school bus providing home to school transportation for basic education kindergarten students operated between the beginning and end of the school day.
(10) "Private party contract" means the provision of home to school transportation service using a private provider (not in a school bus). Private party contracts shall require criminal background checks of drivers and other adults with unsupervised access to students and assurances that any students transported be provided with child safety restraint systems that are age and weight appropriate. Vehicles used must meet school bus specifications established in chapter 392-143 WAC if they have a manufacturer's design capacity of greater than ten passengers, including the driver. However, a vehicle manufactured to meet the federal specifications of a multifunction school activity bus may be used.
(11) "In lieu transportation" means a contract to provide home to school transportation with a parent, guardian or adult student, including transportation on rural roads to access a school bus stop.
(12) "Count period" is the three-day window used for establishing the reported student count on home to school routes.
(13) The school year is divided into three "report periods," as follows: September - October, November - January, and February - April. These report periods are also referred to respectively as the fall, winter and spring reports.
(14) "Combined student count" is the total number of basic program or special program eligible student riders reported during each report period. The combined student count for the determination of funding consists of the prorated counts from the prior year's spring report and the current year's fall and winter reports. The prior school year's fall, winter and spring student counts are used for the determination of the efficiency rating. The combined student count is prorated based on the number of months in the respective report period.
(15) "Average distance to school" means the average of the distances from each school bus stop measured by the shortest road path to the assigned student's school of enrollment.
(16) "Prorated average distance" is calculated by taking the average distance to school weighted by the number of months in the corresponding report period. The prorated average distance used in calculating district allocation consists of the prorated average distance from the prior year's spring report and the current year's fall and winter reports. The prior school year's fall, winter and spring average distances are used for the determination of the efficiency rating. The average distance is prorated based on the number of months in the respective report period.
(17) "Walk area" is defined as the area around a school where the shortest safe walking route to school is less than one mile.
(18) "District car route" means home to school transportation where a district motor pool vehicle (not a school bus) is used to transport an eligible student or students. Any regularly scheduled home to school transportation in a district car is required to be driven by an authorized school bus driver.
(19) "District car allocation" is calculated by multiplying the total annual district car route mileage by the rate of reimbursement per mile that is authorized for state employees for the use of private motor vehicles in connection with state business in effect on September 1st of each year.
(20) "Alternate funding system" means an additional funding system as provided in RCW 28A.160.191, defined by OSPI to adjust the allocation for low enrollment school districts, nonhigh school districts, school districts participating in interdistrict transportation cooperatives, and educational service districts operating special transportation services.
(21) "Local characteristics factor" means a percentage increase added to the calculated student transportation allocation to account for site characteristics not identified in the regression analysis defined in WAC 392-141-360.
(22) "Expected allocation" means the initial amount of funding resulting from the regression analysis calculation including the local characteristics factor.
(23) "Adjusted allocation" means the expected allocation plus any adjustments.
(24) "Actual allocation" means the lesser of the previous year's actual reported transportation expenditures plus indirects or the adjusted allocation.
(25) "Efficiency evaluation" refers to the statistical evaluation of efficiency of a district's transportation operation using linear programming of the data required by the funding formula and the number of buses used on home-to-school routes. Each district is separately compared to an individualized statistical model of a district having similar site characteristics. The efficiency evaluation is expressed as a percentage efficiency rating.
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(2) In each report period, districts shall report such operational data and descriptions, as required by the superintendent to determine the operations allocation for each district, including:
(a) School bus route information;
(b) Student count information; and
(c) An update to the estimated total car mileage for the current school year.
(3) For the fall report, districts shall report to the superintendent as required:
(a) An annual school bus mileage report including the total to and from school bus miles for the previous school year, and other categories as requested;
(b) An annual report of each type of fuel purchased for student transportation service for the previous school year, including quantity and cost; and
(c) An annual report of the number of students transported to their school of origin as required by the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act for the previous school year, and the total mileage and cost of such transportation.
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(2) The process will identify preferred walking routes from each neighborhood to each elementary school as required by WAC 392-151-025. Walk areas and walking routes will be reviewed as conditions change or every two years.
(3) School districts are allowed to provide transportation service within the walk area, but basic program students who are provided transportation from school bus stops within the walk area are not eligible for funding. It is the responsibility of each school district to ensure that noneligible students who are provided with transportation service within the walk area are correctly reported during the count period.
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(1) A district shall contract with the custodial parent, parents, guardian(s), person(s) in loco parentis, or adult student(s) to pay the lesser of the following in lieu of transportation by the district:
(a) Mileage and tolls for home to school transportation (in whole or part) for not more than two necessary round trips per school day; or
(b) Mileage and tolls for home to school transportation for not more than five round trips per school year, plus room and board.
(2) The in lieu of transportation mileage, tolls and board and room rates of reimbursement which a district is hereby authorized to pay shall be computed as follows:
(a) Mileage reimbursement shall be computed by multiplying the actual road distance from home to school (or other location specified in the contract) with any type of transportation vehicle that is operated for the purpose of carrying one or more students by the maximum rate of reimbursement per mile that is authorized by law for state employees for the use of private motor vehicles in connection with state business;
(b) Toll reimbursement shall be computed by adding the actual fees paid as a condition to the passage of a transportation vehicle and its student passengers or its operator, or both, across a bridge or upon a ferry, and similar fees imposed as a condition to the passage, ingress, or egress of such vehicle and its student passengers or its operator, or both, while traveling to and from school; and
(c) Board and room reimbursement shall be computed at the rates established by the department of social and health services (inclusive of the basic rates and, in the case of disabled students, the additional amounts for students with special needs, but exclusive of any rates or amounts for clothing and supplies).
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(a) The combined student count of basic program students;
(b) The combined student count of special program students;
(c) The district's prorated average distance;
(d) The district's total land area;
(e) The district's total number of roadway miles;
(f) The district's number of destinations served by home to school routes;
(g) The district's number of kindergarten routes operated during ten consecutive school days that include the count period and are all within the report period; and
(h) If the school district is a nonhigh district, the answer to the following question: Does the district provide transportation service for the high school students residing in the district?
For each district, an expected allocation is determined using the coefficients resulting from a regression analysis of (a) through (h) of this subsection, evaluated statewide against the prior school year's total to and from transportation expenditures and including the local characteristics factor.
(2) The adjusted allocation is the result of modifying the expected allocation by adding any district car mileage reimbursement, adding any adjustment resulting from the alternate funding systems identified in WAC 392-141-380, and making any adjustment resulting from an alternate school year calendar approved by the state board of education under the provisions of RCW 28A.305.141.
(3) Each district's actual allocation for student transportation operations is the lesser of the prior school year's total allowable student transportation expenditures or the adjusted allocation.
(4) The funding assumption for the transportation operation allocation is that kindergarten through twelfth grade (K-12) school transportation services are provided by the district five days per week, to and from school, before and after the regular school day and operating one hundred eighty days per school year. K-12 service being provided on any other basis is subject to corresponding proration of the operation allocation.
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(2) For the 2011-12 through the 2013-14 school years, each district's student transportation operations allocation shall be no less than the previous year's transportation operations allocation but not more than the total of allowable transportation expenditures plus district indirect expenses using the process identified in WAC 392-141-410.
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(1) The allocation calculated under WAC 392-141-360 is compared with the prior year's total approved transportation expenditures for each school district;
(2) The average percentage increase for all districts above the previous year's allocation is calculated; and
(3) The district's allocation shall be either the calculated allocation or the previous year's allocation increased by the average determined in subsection (2) of this section, whichever is greater, but not more than the prior year's transportation expenditures.
No later than the first business day of June of each year, the superintendent will specify the adjustment process to be used in the coming school year.
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(2) Completed regional transportation coordinator reports will be provided to the legislature prior to December 1st of each year. Districts will be provided an opportunity to respond to the conclusions of the regional coordinator evaluation and such comments will be included in the report to the legislature. Also included in the report are any actions identified by a district in response to the regional transportation coordinator evaluation.
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(1) Determine the district's state allocation for student transportation operations for the school year.
(2) Determine the district's allowable student transportation costs as follows:
(a) Sum the following amounts:
(i) The district's direct expenditures for general fund program 99 pupil transportation, and for educational service district student transportation operations expenditures in program 70 transportation excluding expenditures associated with the regional coordinator and bus driver training grants;
(ii) Allowable indirect charges equal to expenditures calculated pursuant to (a)(i) of this subsection times the percentage calculated pursuant to subsection (4) of this section;
(b) Subtract the district's revenues for the school year for revenue account 7199 (transportation revenues from other districts).
(3) If the allowable program costs are less than the state allocation, OSPI shall recover the difference.
(4) Allowable indirect charges for student transportation are nine percent for educational service districts and for school districts the percentage calculated from the district's annual financial statement (Report F-196) for two school years prior as follows:
(a) Divide direct expenditures for program 97 district-wide support by total general fund direct expenditures for all programs minus direct expenditures for program 97 district-wide support; and
(b) Round to three decimal places.
Funds may not be transferred from program 99 into the transportation vehicle fund.
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(1) All school bus route logs and school bus driver daily logs including those required in WAC 392-141-330. If student lists are maintained for each school bus route, a copy (electronic or paper) of the list in effect for each count period;
(2) All documentation used to verify the number of students boarding the bus at bus stops within the walk area of their school of enrollment;
(3) All documentation used to report and verify the location of school bus stops used in home to school transportation, including school destinations and transfer points;
(4) All documentation used to develop the annual school bus mileage report;
(5) All documentation used to develop the annual fuel report;
(6) All documentation used to develop the annual report of McKinney-Vento Homeless Act transportation;
(7) All documentation used to develop the district car mileage report;
(8) Copies of any and all correspondence, publications, news articles, or campaign materials which encourage ridership during count period that is beyond the normal activity experienced during the school year. Districts shall not utilize incentive programs that provide tangible gifts to reward increases in ridership counts; and
(9) Other operational data and descriptions, as required by the superintendent to determine the operation allocation requirements for each district.
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The following sections of the Washington Administrative Code are repealed:
WAC 392-141-105 | Authority. |
WAC 392-141-110 | Purpose. |
WAC 392-141-115 | Definition -- Eligible student. |
WAC 392-141-120 | Definition -- To and from school. |
WAC 392-141-130 | Definition -- Standard student mile allocation rate. |
WAC 392-141-135 | Definition -- Prorated bus. |
WAC 392-141-140 | Definition -- Radius mile. |
WAC 392-141-146 | Definition -- Basic transportation. |
WAC 392-141-147 | Definition -- Basic shuttle transportation. |
WAC 392-141-148 | Definition -- Special transportation. |
WAC 392-141-150 | Definition -- Midday transportation. |
WAC 392-141-152 | Definition -- Combined transportation route. |
WAC 392-141-155 | Definition -- Weighted student unit. |
WAC 392-141-156 | Definition -- District car allocation rate. |
WAC 392-141-157 | Definition -- District. |
WAC 392-141-158 | Definition -- Minimum load factor. |
WAC 392-141-159 | Definition -- Choice program transportation. |
WAC 392-141-160 | District reporting and recordkeeping requirements. |
WAC 392-141-165 | Adjustment of state allocation during year. |
WAC 392-141-170 | Factors used to determine allocation. |
WAC 392-141-180 | Limitations on the allocation for transportation between schools and learning centers. |
WAC 392-141-185 | Operation allocation computation. |
WAC 392-141-190 | Authorization and limitation on district payments for individual and in-lieu transportation arrangements. |
WAC 392-141-195 | Allocation schedule for state payments. |
WAC 392-141-200 | Recovery of transportation funds. |