BILL REQ. #:  S-1497.1 



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SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL 5180
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State of Washington63rd Legislature2013 Regular Session

By Senate Higher Education (originally sponsored by Senators Shin, Roach, Benton, Conway, Harper, Keiser, Sheldon, McAuliffe, Hill, Hatfield, Frockt, Schlicher, and Kline)

READ FIRST TIME 02/18/13.   



     AN ACT Relating to improving access to higher education for students with disabilities; creating new sections; and providing an expiration date.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 1   The legislature finds that postsecondary education helps individuals to become productive and contributing members of society, and that individuals with disabilities are equally benefited by obtaining postsecondary education. The legislature also finds that students with disabilities face a disproportionate number of challenges when transitioning to postsecondary education, and that people who have disabilities are less than half as likely to have a baccalaureate degree compared to people who do not have a disability. The legislature finds it is incumbent upon the state to address these challenges in order to provide all students in Washington state with an equal opportunity to pursue a successful future.
     In calling together a diverse group of experts from throughout the state, the legislature intends to develop recommendations that will directly increase the success rate for students with disabilities who are transitioning from secondary to postsecondary education, which are distinctively different parts of the educational system.

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 2   (1) A legislative task force on improving access to higher education for students with disabilities is established.
     (2) The task force must collaborate to carry out the following goals:
     (a) Make the transition from K-12 education to higher education more seamless and successful;
     (b) Select a statewide method of sharing best practices between and among K-12 education institutions and postsecondary education institutions;
     (c) Review documentation of disabilities at postsecondary education institutions, including developing resources for how school districts, in collaboration with students and their families, can get disability documentation applicable for postsecondary education institutions completed before a student's high school graduation; and
     (d) Create a plan for how school districts and postsecondary education institutions can improve outreach to students and their families regarding available options in higher education.
     (3) The task force must consist of not more than twenty-nine members and must include the following members:
     (a) Seven members appointed by the governor as follows:
     (i) Four private citizens with experience advocating and providing services for students with disabilities, at least one of whom must currently be or who in the past was a parent of a student with a disability, at least one of whom must be a current student at a postsecondary education institution in Washington, and at least one of whom must have experience advocating for veterans with disabilities; and
     (ii) Three representatives from nonprofit organizations focused on advocating for citizens with disabilities or providing services for citizens with disabilities, or both;
     (b) Eight members appointed by the office of the superintendent of public instruction as follows:
     (i) Two representatives from the office of the superintendent of public instruction;
     (ii) Two representatives from educational service districts; and
     (iii) Four representatives from local school districts that have high concentrations of students with disabilities enrolled in the district;
     (c) Four members appointed by the state board for community and technical colleges as follows:
     (i) One representative from the state board for community and technical colleges; and
     (ii) Three representatives from public community or technical colleges;
     (d) Four members appointed by the council of presidents, including one representative from the council and three representatives from a regional university as defined in RCW 28B.10.016;
     (e) One member appointed by the superintendent of the state school for the blind, from the state school for the blind;
     (f) One member appointed by the secretary of the department of social and health services, from the department of social and health services;
     (g) One member appointed by the executive secretary of the governor's committee on disability issues and employment, from the governor's committee on disability issues and employment;
     (h) One member appointed by the chair of the developmental disabilities council, from the developmental disabilities council;
     (i) One member appointed by the superintendent of the state school for the deaf, from the state school for the deaf; and
     (j) One member appointed by the workforce training and education coordinating board, from the workforce training and education coordinating board.
     (4) The purpose of the task force is to make recommendations to the legislature and to coordinate and implement the goals in subsection (2) of this section.
     (5)(a) When making the recommendations regarding subsection (2)(a) of this section, the task force must consider:
     (i) How to ensure students' interests, goals, and strengths guide the transition planning process;
     (ii) How to enable collaboration and communication between and among schools, institutions of higher education, and relevant state agencies to provide an effective transition;
     (iii) How assessment and disability documentation that is acceptable to postsecondary institutions should best be determined and obtained;
     (iv) How to identify the types of supports and accommodations that students will need in postsecondary environments;
     (v) How students can plan their high school coursework to sufficiently prepare for the higher education environment; and
     (vi) If a statewide database of student disability accommodation equipment, software, and resources owned by school districts and postsecondary education institutions should be created to assist students' educational transitions and, if created, what public entity is best suited to be responsible for the creation, maintenance, and the scope of that database.
     (b) When making recommendations regarding subsection (2)(c) of this section, the task force is encouraged to consider:
     (i) What should constitute a proper and complete documentation of a disability;
     (ii) How recently the documentation must have been completed; and
     (iii) Which testing information, if any, must be included in the documentation.
     (6) The student achievement council must provide staff support to the task force within existing funds. The task force is encouraged to use technology to expand access and limit costs.
     (7) The task force shall report its recommendations for each goal to the legislature by December 1, 2013, and annually each December 1st thereafter until expiration of the task force.
     (8) This section expires January 1, 2016.

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