BILL REQ. #: S-3237.2
State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2014 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/16/14. Referred to Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education.
AN ACT Relating to implementing the summer knowledge improvement pilot program; amending RCW 28A.150.392; adding new sections to chapter 28A.630 RCW; creating a new section; and providing an expiration date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2
(1) "Eligible school" means any school that provides instruction to
students in at least the grades kindergarten through five where at
least seventy-five percent of the enrolled students qualify for the
free and reduced-price lunch program.
(2) "Institute" means the Washington state institute for public
policy.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3
(2) The purpose of the pilot program is to implement an extended
school year to combat summer learning loss and provide an opportunity
to evaluate the effectiveness of an extended school year to improve
student achievement, close the educational opportunity gap, and provide
successful models for other districts to follow.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4
(2) The school district board of directors must solicit input on
the design of the plan from staff at the school, parents, and the
community, including at an open public meeting. The final plan must be
adopted by the school district board of directors at a subsequent open
public meeting before submitting the plan to the office of the
superintendent of public instruction.
(3) A plan must include, but is not limited to, the following
components:
(a) Proposed best practices and evidence-based strategies,
curriculum, and materials for improving student achievement and closing
the educational opportunity gap to be implemented over the extra twenty
days for all the students enrolled in the school. The best practices
and evidence-based strategies, curriculum, and materials must be
comparable or higher in academic rigor as is used during the regular
school year;
(b) Whether the additional twenty days will be provided only at the
beginning of the school year, only at the end of the school year, or in
some combination at both the beginning and end of the school year that
totals twenty;
(c) Identification of the measures that the school district will
use in assessing student achievement at the school;
(d) Evidence that at least seventy percent of the certificated and
classified school staff who work in the building at least two days per
week, and the principal of the school, agree to the plan; and
(e) An agreement to work with and provide information to the
evaluator of the pilot program identified under section 8 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5
(2) The selection criteria used must include, but are not limited
to, the following determinations:
(a) All of the required plan components are completed;
(b) The likelihood of the proposed best practices and evidence-based strategies, curriculum, and materials improving student
achievement and closing the educational opportunity gap; and
(c) Any additional criteria that the office of the superintendent
of public instruction deems to be necessary to ensure high quality
plans are approved.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6
(2) Nonstate-provided funds may also be used to support the pilot
program.
(3) Neither the summer knowledge improvement pilot program nor the
funding provided for the pilot program may be considered part of the
state's basic education obligation as set forth under Article IX of the
state Constitution.
Sec. 7 RCW 28A.150.392 and 2009 c 548 s 109 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) To the extent necessary, funds shall be made available for
safety net awards for districts with demonstrated needs for special
education funding beyond the amounts provided through the special
education funding formula under RCW 28A.150.390, including for the
summer knowledge improvement pilot program created in section 3 of this
act. If the federal safety net awards based on the federal eligibility
threshold exceed the federal appropriation in any fiscal year, then the
superintendent shall expend all available federal discretionary funds
necessary to meet this need. Safety net funds shall be awarded by the
state safety net oversight committee subject to the following
conditions and limitations:
(a) The committee shall consider additional funds for districts
that can convincingly demonstrate that all legitimate expenditures for
special education exceed all available revenues from state funding
formulas. In the determination of need, the committee shall also
consider additional available revenues from federal sources.
Differences in program costs attributable to district philosophy,
service delivery choice, or accounting practices are not a legitimate
basis for safety net awards. In the determination of need, the
committee shall require that districts demonstrate that they are
maximizing their eligibility for all state revenues related to services
for special education-eligible students and all federal revenues from
federal impact aid, medicaid, and the individuals with disabilities
education act-Part B and appropriate special projects. Awards
associated with (b) and (c) of this subsection shall not exceed the
total of a district's specific determination of need.
(b) The committee shall then consider the extraordinary high cost
needs of one or more individual special education students.
Differences in costs attributable to district philosophy, service
delivery choice, or accounting practices are not a legitimate basis for
safety net awards.
(c) Using criteria developed by the committee, the committee shall
then consider extraordinary costs associated with communities that draw
a larger number of families with children in need of special education
services, which may include consideration of proximity to group homes,
military bases, and regional hospitals. Safety net awards under this
subsection (1)(c) shall be adjusted to reflect amounts awarded under
(b) of this subsection.
(d) The maximum allowable indirect cost for calculating safety net
eligibility may not exceed the federal restricted indirect cost rate
for the district plus one percent.
(e) Safety net awards shall be adjusted based on the percent of
potential medicaid eligible students billed as calculated by the
superintendent of public instruction in accordance with chapter 318,
Laws of 1999.
(f) Safety net awards must be adjusted for any audit findings or
exceptions related to special education funding.
(2) The superintendent of public instruction may adopt such rules
and procedures as are necessary to administer the special education
funding and safety net award process. Before revising any standards,
procedures, or rules, the superintendent shall consult with the office
of financial management and the fiscal committees of the legislature.
In adopting and revising the rules, the superintendent shall ensure the
application process to access safety net funding is streamlined,
timelines for submission are not in conflict, feedback to school
districts is timely and provides sufficient information to allow school
districts to understand how to correct any deficiencies in a safety net
application, and that there is consistency between awards approved by
school district and by application period. The office of the
superintendent of public instruction shall also provide technical
assistance to school districts in preparing and submitting special
education safety net applications.
(3) On an annual basis, the superintendent shall survey districts
regarding their satisfaction with the safety net process and consider
feedback from districts to improve the safety net process. Each year
by December 1st, the superintendent shall prepare and submit a report
to the office of financial management and the appropriate policy and
fiscal committees of the legislature that summarizes the survey results
and those changes made to the safety net process as a result of the
school district feedback.
(4) The safety net oversight committee appointed by the
superintendent of public instruction shall consist of:
(a) One staff member from the office of the superintendent of
public instruction;
(b) Staff of the office of the state auditor who shall be nonvoting
members of the committee; and
(c) One or more representatives from school districts or
educational service districts knowledgeable of special education
programs and funding.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9
(a) Student academic progress as measured by the statewide
administered student assessments, if administered in the school, and
other student achievement measures, compared to similar students and
schools in school districts not participating in the program;
(b) Other student learning and benefits identified through random
surveys or interviews with teachers and parents; and
(c) The effectiveness over the entire school year in which the
pilot program takes place in combating summer learning loss, improving
student achievement, and closing the educational opportunity gap.
(2) The institute shall submit interim reports to the governor and
the appropriate committees of the legislature by December 1, 2016, and
December 1, 2017.
(3) Based on the effectiveness of the summer knowledge improvement
pilot program and a review of other programs or states that have
implemented extended school year programs, the institute shall
recommend whether the pilot program should be modified, continued, or
expanded to include other schools, including other elementary, middle,
and high schools. The institute shall submit the recommendations and
the final report on the pilot program to the governor and the
appropriate committees of the legislature by December 1, 2018.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 Sections 2 through 6, 8, and 9 of this act
are each added to chapter
NEW SECTION. Sec. 11 This act expires September 1, 2019.