84R11276 JSL-F
 
  By: Walle H.B. No. 3671
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the public school finance system.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Section 29.918(a), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (a)  Notwithstanding Section [39.234 or] 42.152, a school
  district or open-enrollment charter school with a high dropout
  rate, as determined by the commissioner, must submit a plan to the
  commissioner describing the manner in which the district or charter
  school intends to use the compensatory education allotment under
  Section 42.152 [and the high school allotment under Section 42.160]
  for developing and implementing research-based strategies for
  dropout prevention.  The district or charter school shall submit
  the plan not later than December 1 of each school year preceding the
  school year in which the district or charter school will receive the
  compensatory education allotment or high school allotment to which
  the plan applies.
         SECTION 2.  Section 39.0233(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  The agency, in coordination with the Texas Higher
  Education Coordinating Board, shall adopt a series of questions to
  be included in an end-of-course assessment instrument administered
  under Section 39.023(c) to be used for purposes of Section 51.3062.  
  The questions adopted under this subsection must be developed in a
  manner consistent with any college readiness standards adopted
  under Section [Sections 39.233 and] 51.3062.
         SECTION 3.  Section 41.002(a), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (a)  A school district may not have a wealth per student that
  exceeds:
               (1)  the wealth per student that generates the amount
  of maintenance and operations tax revenue per weighted student
  available to a district with maintenance and operations tax revenue
  per cent of tax effort equal to the maximum amount provided per cent
  under Section 42.101(a) or (b), for the district's maintenance and
  operations tax effort equal to or less than the rate equal to the
  product of the state compression percentage, as determined under
  Section 42.2516, multiplied by the maintenance and operations tax
  rate adopted by the district for the 2005 tax year;
               (2)  the wealth per student that generates the amount
  of maintenance and operations tax revenue per weighted student
  available to the Austin Independent School District, as determined
  by the commissioner in cooperation with the Legislative Budget
  Board, for the first six cents by which the district's maintenance
  and operations tax rate exceeds the rate equal to the product of the
  state compression percentage, as determined under Section 42.2516,
  multiplied by the maintenance and operations tax rate adopted by
  the district for the 2005 tax year, subject to Section 41.093(b-1);
  or
               (3)  $544,000 for the 2015-2016 school year and
  $584,000 for the 2016-2017 and subsequent school years [$319,500],
  for the district's maintenance and operations tax effort that
  exceeds the first six cents by which the district's maintenance and
  operations tax effort exceeds the rate equal to the product of the
  state compression percentage, as determined under Section 42.2516,
  multiplied by the maintenance and operations tax rate adopted by
  the district for the 2005 tax year.
         SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 42, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 42.010 and 42.013 to read as follows:
         Sec. 42.010.  COMPREHENSIVE REVIEW OF PUBLIC SCHOOL FINANCE
  WEIGHTS, ALLOTMENTS, AND ADJUSTMENTS. (a) The agency shall
  conduct a comprehensive review of weights, allotments, and
  adjustments under the public school finance system, including all
  current weights, allotments, and adjustments provided under this
  chapter and any additional weights, allotments, and adjustments
  that the agency determines may be appropriate.  The review must
  determine the effectiveness of existing weights, allotments, and
  adjustments in fulfilling the mission of the public education
  system stated in Section 4.001(a) and furthering the state policy
  stated in Section 42.001. At a minimum, the review must determine
  how closely and appropriately each of the following elements
  reflects and provides financing for costs beyond the control of
  school districts:
               (1)  adjustments for costs related to the geographic
  variation in known resource costs and costs of education,
  controlling for the impact of unequalized wealth and hold-harmless
  provisions, and properly reflecting the impact of high
  concentrations of poverty on the compensation that school districts
  must pay to attract and retain teachers of comparable or
  appropriate quality;
               (2)  adjustments for costs related to the size and
  diseconomies of scale of school districts;
               (3)  adjustments for costs related to the varying
  instructional needs and characteristics of students and the extent
  to which the adjustments provide each student with access to
  programs and services that are appropriate to the student's
  educational needs;
               (4)  other factors, in addition to economic status,
  that correlate to at-risk status and the need for compensatory
  education, and the degree to which those factors correspond to
  additional educational costs; and
               (5)  the manner in which the cost adjustments are
  applied to and affect the overall school finance system.
         (b)  The review of the adjustments described in Subsection
  (a)(1) must:
               (1)  address all uncontrollable costs that can
  reasonably be quantified;
               (2)  consider the qualifications, experience, and
  turnover rate of personnel and the impact of those factors on
  student achievement in considering the adequacy and comparability
  of salaries;
               (3)  properly address the impact of factors that have a
  large impact on certain types of school districts, such as extreme
  isolation, regardless of general state impact;
               (4)  include only factors for which a rational economic
  argument can be made;
               (5)  be carefully constructed to make sure that a cost
  factor does not significantly affect more than one variable; and
               (6)  not be artificially adjusted to meet predetermined
  outcomes and must not use arbitrary limits.
         (c)  In determining whether any additional weights,
  allotments, and adjustments are appropriate under the public school
  finance system, as required by Subsection (a), the agency shall
  include consideration of an additional weight for educational
  services provided to students in prekindergarten on a half-day
  basis and on a full-day basis.
         (d)  The agency may contract with one or more consultants if
  necessary to enable the agency to perform its duties under this
  section.
         (e)  The Legislative Budget Board, the comptroller, the
  state auditor, and any other state agency, official, or personnel
  shall cooperate with the agency in carrying out its duties under
  this section.
         (f)  Not later than December 1, 2016, the agency shall
  provide a report that:
               (1)  states the findings of the review conducted under
  this section; and
               (2)  includes recommendations for updated weights,
  allotments, and adjustments and any other statutory changes
  considered appropriate by the agency.
         (g)  This section expires January 1, 2017.
         Sec. 42.013.  STUDY OF LEGISLATION ON SCHOOL FUNDING. (a)
  After each legislative session, the commissioner shall conduct a
  study assessing the manner in which any statute enacted or amended
  during that legislative session affects the equalized wealth level
  of a school district under Chapter 41 or the foundation school
  program under this chapter and whether the standard of neutrality
  described under Section 42.001(b) is maintained. 
         (b)  The study under this section must:
               (1)  include an analysis of the effects of legislation
  on each school district in the state; and
               (2)  indicate how a school district compares to other
  districts with respect to:
                     (A)  property wealth per weighted student;
                     (B)  revenue per weighted student; 
                     (C)  tax effort; and
                     (D)  revenue per cent of tax effort.
         (c)  The commissioner shall issue a report on the study's
  findings to the governor, the lieutenant governor, the speaker of
  the house of representatives, and the legislature.  The
  commissioner shall make the report available to the public on the
  agency's Internet website.
         SECTION 5.  Section 42.101, Education Code, as effective
  September 1, 2015, is amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding
  Subsection (c) to read as follows:
         (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (c), for [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 $5,440 [$4,765] or the amount that results
  from the following formula:
  A = $5,440 [$4,765] X (DCR/MCR)
  where:
         "A" is the allotment to which a district is entitled;
         "DCR" is the district's compressed tax rate, which is the
  product of the state compression percentage, as determined under
  Section 42.2516, multiplied by the maintenance and operations tax
  rate adopted by the district for the 2005 tax year; and
         "MCR" is the state maximum compressed tax rate, which is the
  product of the state compression percentage, as determined under
  Section 42.2516, multiplied by $1.50.
         (c)  For a school district that would be entitled under this
  section to a basic allotment of more than $6,500 for each student in
  average daily attendance, the commissioner shall adjust the
  district's basic allotment by a factor of 0.9239.
         SECTION 6.  Effective September 1, 2016, Section 42.101(a),
  Education Code, as effective September 1, 2015, is amended to read
  as follows:
         (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (c), for [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 $5,840 [$4,765] or the amount that results
  from the following formula:
  A = $5,840 [$4,765] X (DCR/MCR)
  where:
         "A" is the allotment to which a district is entitled;
         "DCR" is the district's compressed tax rate, which is the
  product of the state compression percentage, as determined under
  Section 42.2516, multiplied by the maintenance and operations tax
  rate adopted by the district for the 2005 tax year; and
         "MCR" is the state maximum compressed tax rate, which is the
  product of the state compression percentage, as determined under
  Section 42.2516, multiplied by $1.50.
         SECTION 7.  Sections 42.152(a) and (c), Education Code, are
  amended to read as follows:
         (a)  For each student who is educationally disadvantaged or
  who is a 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 adjusted basic allotment
  multiplied by 0.25 [0.2], and by 2.41 for each full-time equivalent
  student who is in a compensatory, intensive, or accelerated 
  [remedial and support] program under Section 29.081 because the
  student is pregnant.
         (c)  Funds allocated under this section shall be used to fund
  supplemental programs and services designed to eliminate any
  disparity in performance on assessment instruments administered
  under Subchapter B, Chapter 39, or disparity in the rates of high
  school completion between students at risk of dropping out of
  school, as defined by Section 29.081, and all other
  students.  Specifically, the funds, other than an indirect cost
  allotment established under State Board of Education rule, which
  may not exceed 25 [45] percent, may be used to meet the costs of
  providing a compensatory, intensive, or accelerated instruction
  program under Section 29.081 or a disciplinary alternative
  education program established under Section 37.008, to pay the
  costs associated with placing students in a juvenile justice
  alternative education program established under Section 37.011, or
  to support a program eligible under Title I of the Elementary and
  Secondary Education Act of 1965, as provided by Pub. L. No. 103-382
  and its subsequent amendments, and by federal regulations
  implementing that Act, at a campus at which at least 40 percent of
  the students are educationally disadvantaged.  In meeting the
  costs of providing a compensatory, intensive, or accelerated
  instruction program under Section 29.081, a district's
  compensatory education allotment shall be used for costs
  supplementary to the regular education program, such as costs for
  program and student evaluation, instructional materials and
  equipment and other supplies required for quality instruction,
  supplemental staff expenses, salary for teachers of at-risk
  students, smaller class size, and individualized instruction.  A
  home-rule school district or an open-enrollment charter school must
  use funds allocated under Subsection (a) for a purpose authorized
  in this subsection but is not otherwise subject to Subchapter C,
  Chapter 29.  For purposes of this subsection, a program
  specifically designed to serve students at risk of dropping out of
  school, as defined by Section 29.081, is considered to be a program
  supplemental to the regular education program, and a district may
  use its compensatory education allotment for such a program.
         SECTION 8.  Section 42.153(a), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (a)  For each student in average daily attendance in a
  bilingual education or special language program under Subchapter B,
  Chapter 29, a district is entitled to an annual allotment equal to
  the adjusted basic allotment multiplied by 0.25 [0.1].
         SECTION 9.  Sections 42.2516(b) and (i), Education Code, as
  effective until September 1, 2017, are amended to read as follows:
         (b)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, a
  school district that imposes a maintenance and operations tax at a
  rate at least equal to the product of the state compression
  percentage multiplied by the maintenance and operations tax rate
  adopted by the district for the 2005 tax year is entitled to at
  least the amount of state revenue necessary to provide the district
  with the sum of:
               (1)  the percentage specified by Subsection (i) of the
  amount, as calculated under Subsection (e), of state and local
  revenue per student in weighted average daily attendance for
  maintenance and operations that the district would have received
  during the 2009-2010 school year under Chapter 41 and this chapter,
  as those chapters existed on January 1, 2009, at a maintenance and
  operations tax rate equal to the product of the state compression
  percentage for that year multiplied by the maintenance and
  operations tax rate adopted by the district for the 2005 tax year;
  and
               (2)  [the percentage specified by Subsection (i) of an
  amount equal to the product of $120 multiplied by the number of
  students in weighted average daily attendance in the district; and
               [(3)]  any amount to which the district is entitled
  under Section 42.106.
         (i)  The percentage to be applied for purposes of Subsection
  [Subsections] (b)(1) [and (2)] and Subsection (d)(1) is 92.35
  [100.00] percent for the 2015-2016 [2011-2012] school year and
  84.70 [92.35] percent for the 2016-2017 [2012-2013] school
  year.  [For the 2013-2014 school year and each subsequent school
  year, the legislature by appropriation shall establish the
  percentage reduction to be applied.]
         SECTION 10.  Sections 42.302(a) and (a-1), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  Each school district is guaranteed a specified amount
  per weighted student in state and local funds for each cent of tax
  effort over that required for the district's local fund assignment
  up to the maximum level specified in this subchapter.  The amount
  of state support, subject only to the maximum amount under Section
  42.303, is determined by the formula:
  GYA = (GL X WADA X DTR X 100) - LR
  where:
         "GYA" is the guaranteed yield amount of state funds to be
  allocated to the district;
         "GL" is the dollar amount guaranteed level of state and local
  funds per weighted student per cent of tax effort, which is an
  amount described by Subsection (a-1) or a greater amount for any
  year provided by appropriation;
         "WADA" is the number of students in weighted average daily
  attendance, which is calculated by dividing the sum of the school
  district's allotments under Subchapters B and C, less any allotment
  to the district for transportation, any allotment under Section
  42.158 [or 42.160], and 50 percent of the adjustment under Section
  42.102, by the basic allotment for the applicable year;
         "DTR" is the district enrichment tax rate of the school
  district, which is determined by subtracting the amounts specified
  by Subsection (b) from the total amount of maintenance and
  operations taxes collected by the school district for the
  applicable school year and dividing the difference by the quotient
  of the district's taxable value of property as determined under
  Subchapter M, Chapter 403, Government Code, or, if applicable,
  under Section 42.2521, divided by 100; and
         "LR" is the local revenue, which is determined by multiplying
  "DTR" by the quotient of the district's taxable value of property as
  determined under Subchapter M, Chapter 403, Government Code, or, if
  applicable, under Section 42.2521, divided by 100.
         (a-1)  [In this section, "wealth per student" has the meaning
  assigned by Section 41.001.]  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 that would be
  available to the Austin Independent School District, as determined
  by the commissioner in cooperation with the Legislative Budget
  Board, if the reduction of the limitation on tax increases as
  provided by Section 11.26(a-1), (a-2), or (a-3), Tax Code, did not
  apply, [or the amount of district tax revenue per weighted student
  per cent of tax effort used for purposes of this subdivision in the
  preceding school year,] for the first six cents by which the
  district's maintenance and operations tax rate exceeds the rate
  equal to the product of the state compression percentage, as
  determined under Section 42.2516, multiplied by the maintenance and
  operations tax rate adopted by the district for the 2005 tax year;
  and
               (2)  $54.40 for the 2015-2016 school year and $58.40
  for the 2016-2017 and subsequent school years [$31.95], for the
  district's maintenance and operations tax effort that exceeds the
  amount of tax effort described by Subdivision (1).
         SECTION 11.  The following provisions of the Education Code
  are repealed:
               (1)  Section 29.097(g);
               (2)  Section 29.098(e);
               (3)  Section 39.233;
               (4)  Section 39.234; and
               (5)  Section 42.160.
         SECTION 12.  Except as otherwise provided by this Act, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2015.