House Bill 0137e1

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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1                      A bill to be entitled

  2         An act relating to education; amending s.

  3         230.03, F.S., relating to management of the

  4         district school system; providing authority for

  5         rules, procedures, and policies; correcting a

  6         cross reference; repealing s. 230.105(9), F.S.,

  7         relating to ballot proposition wording for

  8         single-member representation for district

  9         school boards; amending s. 230.22, F.S.;

10         revising provisions relating to general powers

11         of school boards; amending s. 230.23, F.S.;

12         revising provisions relating to powers and

13         duties of school boards; amending s. 230.2301,

14         F.S.; revising provisions relating to parent

15         meetings with school district personnel;

16         amending s. 230.2305, F.S.; revising provisions

17         relating to the prekindergarten early

18         intervention program; repealing s. 230.23135,

19         F.S., relating to the Florida Council on

20         Student Services; amending s. 230.2316, F.S.;

21         revising provisions relating to dropout

22         prevention; deleting definitions, certain

23         program criteria, and provisions requiring

24         program plans and staff development; amending

25         s. 230.23161, F.S.; correcting a cross

26         reference; amending s. 230.2317, F.S.; revising

27         provisions relating to multiagency services for

28         students with severe emotional disturbance;

29         amending s. 230.2318, F.S.; authorizing school

30         resource officer programs; deleting program

31         purposes and plan requirements; amending s.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         230.303, F.S.; deleting obsolete language;

  2         amending s. 230.33, F.S.; revising provisions

  3         relating to duties and responsibilities of

  4         superintendents; amending s. 230.331, F.S.,

  5         relating to reproduction and destruction of

  6         district school records; amending s. 230.35,

  7         F.S., relating to schools under the control of

  8         the school board and superintendent; repealing

  9         ss. 230.59, 230.655, and 230.71, F.S., relating

10         to educational communications systems,

11         education programs in correctional facilities,

12         and intergenerational school volunteer

13         programs; amending s. 232.01, F.S., and

14         repealing ss. 232.04 and 232.045, F.S.;

15         combining provisions relating to school

16         attendance requirements; amending s. 232.021,

17         F.S.; conforming provisions; amending s.

18         232.0225, F.S.; revising provisions relating to

19         absence for religious instruction or holidays;

20         repealing s. 232.023, F.S., relating to

21         falsification of attendance records; amending

22         s. 232.03, F.S.; correcting cross references;

23         repealing s. 232.032(2) and 232.034, F.S.,

24         relating to an investigation of tuberculosis

25         incidence and a medical exemption for

26         transporting students; amending s. 232.06,

27         F.S.; revising provisions relating to school

28         attendance certificates of exemption; amending

29         s. 232.09, F.S.; correcting a cross reference;

30         repealing ss. 232.10, 232.13, and 232.165,

31         F.S., relating to explanation of student


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         absence, reports of exceptional children, and

  2         nonissuance or suspension of driver's license

  3         based on student enrollment; amending s.

  4         232.17, F.S.; revising provisions relating to

  5         enforcement of school attendance; deleting

  6         reference to attendance assistants; amending s.

  7         232.19, F.S.; conforming provisions; repealing

  8         ss. 232.245(2) and (3) and 232.2452, F.S.,

  9         relating to requirements for school district

10         programs for pupil progression and report

11         cards; repealing s. 232.2461, F.S., relating to

12         model curriculum standards; amending s.

13         232.2462, F.S.; deleting attendance

14         requirements for receipt of high school credit;

15         amending s. 232.2468, F.S., and repealing

16         subsections (2) and (3), relating to

17         graduation, habitual truancy, and dropout

18         rates; repealing ss. 232.257 and 232.258, F.S.,

19         relating to the School Safety Program and

20         school and community resource grants; amending

21         s. 232.271, F.S.; conforming provisions;

22         repealing ss. 232.276, 232.3015, 232.303, and

23         232.304, F.S., relating to parenting workshops,

24         outreach programs, interagency student

25         services, and multiagency coordinating

26         councils; repealing s. 233.011, F.S., relating

27         to accountability in curriculum, instructional

28         materials, and testing; amending s. 233.061,

29         F.S.; revising provisions relating to required

30         instruction; creating s. 233.0612, F.S.;

31         providing authorized instruction; repealing ss.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         233.0615, 233.06411, 233.0645, 233.065,

  2         233.0661, 233.0662, 233.0663(2), (3), (4), (5),

  3         (6), and (7), 233.067, 233.0671, and 233.068(3)

  4         and (4), F.S., relating to a character

  5         development and law education program, a free

  6         enterprise and consumer education program,

  7         voting instruction, patriotic programs, certain

  8         requirements of the drug abuse and resistance

  9         education program, comprehensive health

10         education and substance abuse prevention,

11         courses of study in the care of nursing home

12         patients, instruction in acquired immune

13         deficiency syndrome, and planning and

14         implementation of a career development and

15         applied technology program; amending s. 233.07,

16         F.S.; deleting obsolete language; renumbering

17         s. 234.041, F.S., relating to school buses;

18         repealing s. 234.0515, F.S., relating to

19         transportation of students by private

20         transportation companies; repealing ss. 234.061

21         and 234.091, F.S., relating to designation of

22         routes and school bus driver qualifications, to

23         conform; amending and renumbering s. 234.302,

24         F.S., relating to school crossing guards;

25         amending ss. 24.121, 39.01, 228.053, 228.061,

26         229.0535, 229.565, 229.58, 229.592, 229.594,

27         229.8055, 231.085, 231.095, 231.1725, 236.013,

28         236.081, 236.0811, 236.0812, 236.1228, 239.101,

29         239.229, 397.405, 402.22, 415.5015, 450.121,

30         493.6102, and 561.025, F.S.; correcting cross

31         references, conforming language, and deleting


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         obsolete language; amending s. 236.24, F.S.;

  2         clarifying language relating to school board

  3         securities transactions; repealing s. 236.0842,

  4         F.S., relating to approval for dropout

  5         prevention programs, to conform; providing an

  6         effective date.

  7

  8  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:

  9

10         Section 1.  Subsections (2) and (4) of section 230.03,

11  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:

12         230.03  Management, control, operation, administration,

13  and supervision.--The district school system shall be managed,

14  controlled, operated, administered, and supervised as follows:

15         (2)  SCHOOL BOARD.--In accordance with the provisions

16  of s. 4(b) of Art. IX of the State Constitution, district

17  school boards shall operate, control, and supervise all free

18  public schools in their respective districts and may exercise

19  any power except as expressly prohibited by the State

20  Constitution or general law. This shall constitute specific

21  authority for rules, procedures, and policies pursuant to this

22  subsection.

23         (4)  PRINCIPAL OR HEAD OF SCHOOL.--Responsibility for

24  the administration of any school or schools at a given school

25  center, for the supervision of instruction therein, and for

26  providing leadership in the development or revision and

27  implementation of a school improvement plan required pursuant

28  to s. 230.23(16)(18) shall be delegated to the principal or

29  head of the school or schools as hereinafter set forth and in

30  accordance with rules established by the school board.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 2.  Subsection (9) of section 230.105, Florida

  2  Statutes, is hereby repealed.

  3         Section 3.  Section 230.22, Florida Statutes, is

  4  amended to read:

  5         230.22  General powers of school board.--The school

  6  board, after considering recommendations submitted by the

  7  superintendent, shall exercise the following general powers:

  8         (1)  DETERMINE POLICIES AND PROGRAMS.--The school board

  9  shall Determine and adopt such policies and programs as are

10  deemed necessary by it for the efficient operation and general

11  improvement of the district school system.

12         (2)  ADOPT RULES AND REGULATIONS.--The school board

13  shall Adopt such rules and regulations to supplement those

14  prescribed by the state board as in its opinion will

15  contribute to the more orderly and efficient operation of the

16  district school system.

17         (3)  PRESCRIBE MINIMUM STANDARDS.--Prescribe and The

18  school board shall adopt such minimum standards as are

19  considered desirable by it for improving the district school

20  system.

21         (4)  CONTRACT, SUE, AND BE SUED.--Contract, sue, and be

22  sued.  The school board shall constitute the contracting agent

23  for the district school system.  It may, when acting as a

24  body, make contracts, also sue and be sued in the name of the

25  school board; provided, that in any suit, a change in

26  personnel of the school board shall not abate the suit, which

27  shall proceed as if such change had not taken place.

28         (5)  PERFORM DUTIES AND EXERCISE RESPONSIBILITY.--The

29  school board may Perform those duties and exercise those

30  responsibilities which are assigned to it by law or by rules

31  regulations of the state board and, in addition thereto, those


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  which it may find to be necessary for the improvement of the

  2  district school system in carrying out the purposes and

  3  objectives of the school code.  The Legislature recognizes the

  4  necessity for well informed school board members and the

  5  benefits to education that may be obtained through board

  6  member participation in professional development and training

  7  seminars and related activities at the district, state, and

  8  national levels.

  9         (6)  ASSIGNMENT OF STUDENTS TO SCHOOLS.--Assign The

10  school board shall provide for the proper assignment of

11  students to schools and other educational programs

12  administered by the school district or by another agency or

13  private provider through contract with the school board,

14  taking into consideration control of students at school,

15  student safety, placement of students in an appropriate

16  educational program, and maintenance of an educational

17  environment conducive to learning.

18         Section 4.  Section 230.23, Florida Statutes, 1996

19  Supplement, is amended to read:

20         230.23  Powers and duties of school board.--The school

21  board, acting as a board, shall exercise all powers and

22  perform all duties listed below:

23         (1)  REQUIRE MINUTES AND RECORDS TO BE KEPT.--Require

24  the superintendent, as secretary, to keep such minutes and

25  records as are necessary to set forth clearly all actions and

26  proceedings of the school board.

27         (a)  Minutes, recording.--The typed minutes of each

28  meeting shall be reviewed, corrected if necessary, and

29  approved at the next regular meeting; provided, that this

30  action may be taken at an intervening special meeting if the

31  board desires.  The minutes shall be signed by the chair and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  superintendent after approval and shall be kept as a public

  2  record in a permanent location, bound book in the

  3  superintendent's office.

  4         (b)  Minutes, contents.--The minutes shall show the

  5  vote of each member present on all matters on which the board

  6  takes action.  It shall be the duty of each member to see to

  7  it that both the matter and his or her vote thereon are

  8  properly recorded in the minutes.  Unless otherwise shown by

  9  the minutes, it shall be presumed that the vote of each member

10  present supported any action taken by the board in either the

11  exercise of, violation of, or neglect of the powers and duties

12  imposed upon the board by law or legal regulation, whether

13  such action is recorded in the minutes or is otherwise

14  established.  It shall also be presumed that the policies,

15  appointments, programs, and expenditures not recorded in the

16  minutes but made and actually in effect in the district school

17  system were made and put into effect at the direction of the

18  school board, unless it can be shown that they were done

19  without the actual or constructive knowledge of the members of

20  the board.

21         (2)  CONTROL PROPERTY.--Subject to rules regulations of

22  the state board, control retain possession of all property to

23  which title is now held by the school board and to obtain

24  possession of and accept and hold under proper title as a body

25  corporate by the name of "The School Board of .... County,

26  Florida," all property which may at any time be acquired by

27  the school board for educational purposes in the district;

28  manage and dispose of such property to the best interests of

29  education; contract, sue, receive, purchase, acquire by the

30  institution of condemnation proceedings if necessary, lease,

31  sell, hold, transmit, and convey the title to real and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  personal property, all contracts to be based on resolutions

  2  previously adopted and spread upon the minutes of the school

  3  board; receive, hold in trust, and administer for the purpose

  4  designated, money, real and personal property, or other things

  5  of value granted, conveyed, devised, or bequeathed for the

  6  benefit of the schools of the district or of any one of them.

  7         (3)  ADOPT SCHOOL PROGRAM.--Adopt a school program for

  8  the entire school district Authorize the assembling of all

  9  data and the making of school surveys essential to the

10  development of a school program for the entire district and to

11  adopt such a program as the basis for operating the schools,

12  one phase of the program to be a 5-year program and another

13  phase to constitute the annual program.

14         (4)  ESTABLISHMENT, ORGANIZATION, AND OPERATION OF

15  SCHOOLS.--Adopt and provide for the execution of plans for the

16  establishment, organization, and operation of the schools of

17  the district, including, but not limited to, the following as

18  follows:

19         (a)  Schools and enrollment plans attendance

20  areas.--Establish schools and adopt enrollment plans that may

21  include school attendance areas and open enrollment provisions

22  After considering recommendations of the superintendent, to

23  authorize schools to be located and maintained in those

24  communities in the district where they are needed to

25  accommodate, as far as practicable and without unnecessary

26  expense, all the youths who should be entitled to the

27  facilities of such schools and to approve the area from which

28  children are to attend each such school.

29         (b)  Elimination of school centers and consolidation of

30  schools.--Provide for the elimination of school centers within

31  the district and for the consolidation of schools whenever the


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  needs of pupils can better and more economically be served at

  2  other school centers than those which they have been

  3  attending.

  4         (c)  Adequate educational facilities for all children

  5  without tuition.--Provide See that adequate educational

  6  facilities are provided through the uniform system of schools

  7  for all children without payment of tuition of school age in

  8  the district, these facilities to be provided with due regard

  9  to the needs of the children on the one hand and to economy on

10  the other.

11         (d)  Cooperate with boards of adjoining districts in

12  maintaining schools.--Approve plans for cooperating with

13  school boards of adjoining districts in this state or in

14  adjoining states for establishing school attendance areas

15  composed of territory lying within the districts and for the

16  joint maintenance of district-line schools or other schools

17  which are to serve those attendance areas.  The conditions of

18  such cooperation shall be as follows:

19         1.  Establishment.--The establishment of a school to

20  serve attendance areas lying in more than one district and the

21  plans for maintaining the school and providing educational

22  services to pupils shall be effected by annual resolutions

23  spread upon the minutes of each school board concerned, which

24  resolutions shall set out the territorial limits of the areas

25  from which children are to attend the school and the plan to

26  be followed in maintaining and operating the school.

27         2.  Control.--Control of the school or schools involved

28  shall be vested in the school board of the district in which

29  the school or schools are located unless otherwise agreed by

30  the school boards.

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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         3.  Settlement of disagreements.--In the event an

  2  agreement cannot be reached relating to such attendance areas

  3  or to the school or schools therein, the matter may be

  4  referred jointly by the cooperating school boards or by either

  5  school board to the Department of Education for decision under

  6  regulations of the state board, and its decision shall be

  7  binding on both school boards.

  8         (e)  Classification and standardization of

  9  schools.--Provide for the classification and standardization

10  of schools Adopt plans and regulations for determining those

11  school centers at which work is to be restricted to the

12  elementary grades, school centers at which work is to be

13  offered only in the high school grades, and school centers at

14  which work is to be offered in any or all grades, and in

15  accordance with such plans and regulations to determine the

16  grade or grades in which work is to be offered at each school

17  center; approve standards and regulations for classifying and

18  standardizing the various schools of the district on such

19  basis as to furnish incentive for the improvement of all

20  schools.

21         (f)  Opening and closing of schools; fixing uniform

22  date.--Adopt policies Fix, insofar as possible, a uniform date

23  each year for the opening and closing of all schools and fix

24  uniform dates. under its control, on which date, unless

25  otherwise authorized by the school board, all schools shall

26  open, in order that the keeping of records, the making of

27  reports, the payment of salaries, and the supervision of

28  instruction may be facilitated; and fix the closing date for

29  all schools in the district, these dates to be so determined

30  as to assure, as far as practicable, uniform terms for all

31  schools in the district; adopt rules for the closing of


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  schools during an emergency and to provide for the payment of

  2  salaries to the members of the instructional staff on such

  3  occasions. However, notwithstanding any of the foregoing, any

  4  school board may in its discretion operate any or all of the

  5  district schools on an extended term basis, provided the board

  6  notifies the Commissioner of Education of its plans for an

  7  extended school year on or before January 1 preceding the

  8  extended school term.  However, notwithstanding any of the

  9  foregoing, any school board may, in its discretion, operate

10  any of the district schools on a quarterly basis; provided

11  that:

12         1.  All educational requirements required by law are

13  complied with.

14         2.  Any school board so instituting a 12-month school

15  program shall have full authority in the assignment of pupils

16  to equalize the number of pupils attending the schools during

17  any student attendance period, in order to utilize school

18  facilities to the maximum extent on a year-round basis, and

19  shall also have full authority to enter into contracts with

20  principals, teachers, and other school personnel for

21  employment on a 12-month basis at the same rate of monthly

22  compensation.

23         3.  Such school board, when classroom facilities and

24  teacher availability permit, may allow the parents or guardian

25  of any child the choice of such child attending all or any

26  particular three out of the four quarters during the year or,

27  if a quinmester plan is operational, all or any four out of

28  five quinmesters.

29         4.  Any school board planning a 12-month school program

30  shall notify the Department of Education of such plans on or

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  before January 1 preceding the school year in which the plan

  2  is to become operative.

  3         (g)  Observance of school holidays and vacation

  4  periods.--Approve and Designate the observance of school

  5  holidays to be observed during the year, except for

  6  emergencies, and approve and designate the school vacation

  7  periods.

  8         (h)  Vocational classes and schools.--Provide for the

  9  establishment and maintenance of vocational schools,

10  departments, or classes, giving instruction in career

11  education as defined by regulations of the state board, and

12  use any moneys raised by public taxation in the same manner as

13  moneys for other school purposes are used for the maintenance

14  and support of public schools or classes.

15         (i)  School boards authorized to establish public

16  evening schools.--Have the authority to The school boards in

17  the state may establish and maintain, in the respective

18  districts, public evening schools, elementary or high, as a

19  branch of the public school system of the district; and such

20  evening schools, when so maintained, shall be available to all

21  residents of the state, native or foreign-born, who, for any

22  satisfactory cause, have been unable to attend any day public

23  school of the district; and all evening schools so maintained

24  shall be under the direction and control of the school board

25  and the superintendent and shall be subject to the same laws,

26  rules, and regulations prescribed for the conduct of day

27  schools in the district in which such evening schools are

28  maintained; and the expense thereof shall be paid out of the

29  district school fund.

30         (j)  Cooperate with other agencies in joint

31  projects.--Cooperate with other agencies in joint projects.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  Adopt plans for cooperating with school boards of other

  2  districts in this state or in adjoining states or with other

  3  governmental agencies or with nonprofit corporations as

  4  provided in this act for such joint projects or activities as

  5  may be authorized by regulations of the state board. The

  6  conditions of such cooperation shall be as follows:

  7         1.  Establishment.--The project or activity shall be

  8  initiated by resolutions spread upon the minutes of each

  9  school board concerned.

10         2.  Control.--The control and ownership of any physical

11  property and the control and administration of any project or

12  activity engaged in under the provisions of this section shall

13  be vested in the school board of the district of location

14  unless otherwise agreed by the school boards or unless the

15  project or activity is undertaken as authorized in

16  subparagraph 3.

17         3.  Other agencies.--The school board may, by rule,

18  engage in a contractual relationship with other school

19  districts, with governmental agencies, with other agencies

20  that provide services to youth involved in the juvenile

21  justice system pursuant to chapter 39, or with nonprofit

22  corporations which have been formed and incorporated for the

23  purpose of providing a cooperative educational service to the

24  districts.

25         4.  Settlement of disagreements.--In the event an

26  agreement cannot be reached relating to any phase of the

27  project or activity, the matter may be referred jointly by the

28  cooperating school boards, or by any individual school board

29  of the cooperating districts, to the Department of Education

30  for decision under regulations of the state board, and its

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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  decision shall be binding on all school boards of the

  2  cooperating districts.

  3         (k)  Planning time for teachers.--The board may adopt

  4  plans and regulations which will make provisions for teachers

  5  to have time for lunch and some planning time when they will

  6  not be directly responsible for the children; provided that

  7  some adult supervision will be furnished for the students

  8  during such periods.

  9         (l)  Comprehensive program of staff

10  development.--Establish Develop a comprehensive program of

11  staff development.  Such program shall include all services

12  provided under the direction of the board and shall make

13  adequate provision for the proper funding of such program.

14  Such program shall make adequate provision for personnel

15  exchange programs to encourage staff in technical and

16  vocational programs to periodically update their skills

17  through employment experience in government and industry.  The

18  salary and benefits of district and state personnel

19  participating in an exchange program shall be continued during

20  the period of time they participate in the exchange program.

21  Such personnel shall have no break in creditable or continuous

22  state service or employment during the period of time in which

23  they participate in an exchange program.  The salary and

24  benefits of all persons participating in such exchange

25  programs who are not employed by the district shall be paid by

26  the originating employers of those participants.  The duties

27  and responsibilities of a person participating in an exchange

28  program shall be the same as those of the person he or she

29  replaces.

30         (m)  Exceptional students.--Provide for an appropriate

31  program of special instruction, facilities, and services for


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  exceptional students as prescribed by the state board as

  2  acceptable, including provisions that:

  3         1.  The school board provide the necessary professional

  4  services for diagnosis and evaluation of exceptional students.

  5         2.  The school board provide the special instruction,

  6  classes, and services, either within the district school

  7  system, in cooperation with other district school systems, or

  8  through contractual arrangements with approved nonpublic

  9  schools or community facilities which meet standards

10  established by the state board.

11         3.  The school board annually provide information

12  describing the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind and

13  all other programs and methods of instruction available to the

14  parent or guardian of a sensory-impaired student.

15         4.  The school board, once every 3 years, submit to the

16  department its proposed procedures for the provision of

17  special instruction and services for exceptional students.

18         5.  No student be given special instruction or services

19  as an exceptional student until after he or she has been

20  properly evaluated, classified, and placed in the manner

21  prescribed by rules of the state board. The parent or guardian

22  of an exceptional student evaluated and placed or denied

23  placement in a program of special education shall be notified

24  of each such evaluation and placement or denial. Such notice

25  shall contain a statement informing the parent or guardian

26  that he or she is entitled to a due process hearing on the

27  identification, evaluation, and placement, or lack thereof.

28  Such hearings shall be exempt from the provisions of ss.

29  120.569, 120.57, and 286.011, and any records created as a

30  result of such hearings shall be confidential and exempt from

31  the provisions of s. 119.07(1), to the extent that the state


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  board adopts rules establishing other procedures. The hearing

  2  shall be conducted by an administrative law judge from the

  3  Division of Administrative Hearings of the Department of

  4  Management Services. The decision of the administrative law

  5  judge shall be final, except that any party aggrieved by the

  6  finding and decision rendered by the administrative law judge

  7  shall have the right to bring a civil action in the circuit

  8  court. In such an action, the court shall receive the records

  9  of the administrative hearing and shall hear additional

10  evidence at the request of either party. In the alternative,

11  any party aggrieved by the finding and decision rendered by

12  the administrative law judge shall have the right to request

13  an impartial review of the administrative law judge's order by

14  the district court of appeal as provided by s. 120.68.

15  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, during the pendency

16  of any proceeding conducted pursuant to this section, unless

17  the district school board and the parents or guardian

18  otherwise agree, the child shall remain in his or her

19  then-current educational assignment or, if applying for

20  initial admission to a public school, shall be assigned, with

21  the consent of the parents or guardian, in the public school

22  program until all such proceedings have been completed.

23         6.  In providing for the education of exceptional

24  students, the superintendent, principals, and teachers shall

25  utilize the regular school facilities and adapt them to the

26  needs of exceptional students to the maximum extent

27  appropriate. Segregation of exceptional students shall occur

28  only if the nature or severity of the exceptionality is such

29  that education in regular classes with the use of

30  supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved

31  satisfactorily.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         7.  The principal of the school in which the student is

  2  taught shall keep a written record of the case history of each

  3  exceptional student showing the reason for the student's

  4  withdrawal from the regular class in the public school and his

  5  or her enrollment in or withdrawal from a special class for

  6  exceptional students. This record shall be available for

  7  inspection by school officials at any time.

  8         8.  The district school board shall establish the

  9  amount to be paid by the district school board for each

10  individual exceptional student contract with a nonpublic

11  school.

12         (n)  Alternative education programs for students in

13  residential care facilities.--Provide educational programs

14  according to rules of the state board to students who reside

15  in residential care facilities operated by the Department of

16  Health and Rehabilitative Services., to include:

17         1.  An appropriate program of instruction and special

18  education services by the district school board of the county

19  in which the residential care facility is located.  The

20  district school board shall make provision for each student to

21  participate in basic, vocational, and exceptional student

22  programs as appropriate.  Each program shall be conducted

23  according to applicable statutes providing for the operation

24  of public schools and rules of the state board. Special

25  programs for exceptional students shall be governed by the

26  school board under the provisions of paragraph (m).

27         2.  Cooperative planning by the district school board

28  and the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services for

29  the facilities to house these programs.

30         a.  All facilities and furnishings within Department of

31  Health and Rehabilitative Services residential care facilities


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  used for education programs for school-age students during the

  2  1978-1979 fiscal year shall be made available to the district

  3  school board for housing programs of instruction and special

  4  education services.

  5         1.  The district school board shall not be charged any

  6  rent, maintenance, utilities, or overhead on such facilities.

  7  Maintenance, repairs, and remodeling of existing facilities

  8  shall be provided by the Department of Health and

  9  Rehabilitative Services.

10         2.b.  If additional facilities are required, the

11  district school board and the Department of Health and

12  Rehabilitative Services shall agree on the appropriate site

13  based on the instructional needs of the students.  When the

14  most appropriate site for instruction is on district school

15  board property, a special capital outlay request shall be made

16  by the commissioner in accordance with s. 235.41. When the

17  most appropriate site is on state property, state capital

18  outlay funds shall be requested by the Department of Health

19  and Rehabilitative Services as provided by s. 216.043 and

20  shall be submitted as specified by s. 216.023.  Any

21  instructional facility to be built on state property shall

22  have educational specifications jointly developed by the

23  school district and the Department of Health and

24  Rehabilitative Services and approved by the Department of

25  Education.  The size of space and occupant design capacity

26  criteria as provided by state board rules shall be used for

27  remodeling or new construction whether facilities are provided

28  on state property or district school board property.

29         c.  The planning of such additional facilities shall

30  incorporate current Department of Health and Rehabilitative

31  Services deinstitutionalization plans.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         3.  The school board shall have full and complete

  2  authority of each such school board in the matter of the

  3  assignment and placement of such students in educational

  4  programs. The parent or guardian of exceptional students shall

  5  have the due process rights provided for in subparagraph

  6  (m)54.

  7         4.  The school board shall have a written agreement

  8  with between the district school board and the Department of

  9  Health and Rehabilitative Services outlining the respective

10  duties and responsibilities of each party.

11

12  Notwithstanding the provisions herein, the educational

13  programs at the Arthur Dozier School for Boys, the Marianna

14  Sunland Center in Jackson County, and the Florida School for

15  Boys at Okeechobee in Okeechobee County shall be operated by

16  the Department of Education, either directly or through grants

17  or contractual agreements with other public or duly accredited

18  educational agencies approved by the Department of Education.

19         (o)  Early childhood and basic skills

20  development.--Provide for early childhood and an

21  individualized diagnostic approach to instruction in the

22  primary grades, kindergarten, and grades one through three

23  which shall permit every child to achieve that level of

24  mastery of the basic skills development, including, but not

25  limited to, reading, writing, language arts, arithmetic,

26  measurement, and problem solving, which the child's physical,

27  mental, and emotional capacities permit.

28         (p)  Teacher aides.--Appoint teacher aides to assist

29  members of the instructional staff in the primary grades,

30  kindergarten, and grades one through three, to the extent

31  feasible as determined by the school board.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (q)  Full school utilization program monitoring and

  2  evaluation.--Monitor and evaluate full school utilization

  3  programs. Each district receiving state funding for a full

  4  school utilization program shall submit an annual report to

  5  the Department of Education by July 1 following implementation

  6  of the program, documenting the extent to which the program

  7  meets outcome objectives.

  8         (5)  PERSONNEL.--Designate positions to be filled,

  9  prescribe qualifications for those positions, and provide for

10  the appointment, compensation, promotion, suspension, and

11  dismissal of employees as follows, subject to the requirements

12  of chapter 231:

13         (a)  Positions, qualifications, and appointments.--Act

14  upon written recommendations submitted by the superintendent

15  for positions to be filled and for minimum qualifications for

16  personnel for the various positions and act upon written

17  nominations of persons to fill such positions. The school

18  board may reject for good cause any employee nominated. If the

19  third nomination by the superintendent for any position is

20  rejected for good cause, if the superintendent fails to submit

21  a nomination for initial employment within a reasonable time

22  as prescribed by the school board, or if the superintendent

23  fails to submit a nomination for reemployment within the time

24  prescribed by law, the school board may proceed on its own

25  motion to fill such position. The school board's decision to

26  reject a person's nomination does not give that person a right

27  of action to sue over the rejection and may not be used as a

28  cause of action by the nominated employee.

29         (b)  Action on nominations.--Act not later than 3 weeks

30  after the end of the regular legislative session on the

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  nominations by the superintendent of supervisors, principals,

  2  and members of the instructional staff.

  3         (c)  Compensation and salary schedules.--Adopt a salary

  4  schedule or salary schedules to be used as a basis for paying

  5  all school employees, such schedules to be arranged, insofar

  6  as practicable, so as to furnish incentive for improvement in

  7  training and for continued and efficient service and fix and

  8  authorize the compensation of school employees on the basis of

  9  such schedules.  A district school board, in determining the

10  salary schedule for instructional personnel, shall consider

11  the prior teaching experience of a person who has been

12  designated state teacher of the year by any state in the

13  United States.

14         (d)  Contracts and terms of service.--Provide written

15  contracts for all regular members of the instructional staff.

16  All contracts with members of the instructional staff shall be

17  in accordance with the salary schedule adopted by the school

18  board, shall be in writing for definite amounts and for

19  definite terms of service, and shall specify the number of

20  monthly payments to be made.  All such contracts shall be

21  executed in duplicate, and a true signed copy shall be

22  retained by the board in the office of the superintendent.

23  The school board is prohibited from paying any salary to any

24  member of the instructional staff, except when this provision

25  has been observed.

26         (e)  Transfer and promotion.--Act on recommendations of

27  the superintendent regarding transfer and promotion of any

28  employee.

29         (f)  Suspension and dismissal and return to annual

30  contract status.--Suspend, dismiss, or return to annual

31  contract members of the instructional staff and other school


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  employees; however, no administrative assistant, supervisor,

  2  principal, teacher, or other member of the instructional staff

  3  may be discharged, removed, or returned to annual contract

  4  except as provided in chapter 231.

  5         (g)  Awards and incentives.--Provide for recognition of

  6  district employees, students, school volunteers, or advisory

  7  committee members who have contributed outstanding and

  8  meritorious service in their fields or service areas.  After

  9  considering recommendations of the superintendent, the board

10  shall adopt rules establishing and regulating the meritorious

11  service awards necessary for the efficient operation of the

12  program. Monetary awards shall be limited to persons who

13  propose procedures or ideas which are adopted by the board and

14  which will result in eliminating or reducing school board

15  expenditures or improving district or school center

16  operations.  Nonmonetary awards shall include, but need not be

17  limited to, certificates, plaques, medals, ribbons, and

18  photographs.  The school board is authorized to expend funds

19  for such recognition and awards.  No award granted under the

20  provisions of this paragraph shall exceed $2,000 or 10 percent

21  of the first year's gross savings, whichever is greater.

22         (h)  Recruitment of instructional personnel.--Establish

23  policies for the effective recruitment of quality

24  instructional personnel. Such policies may provide for

25  appropriate expenses related thereto and may include, but are

26  not limited to, moving expenses for teachers in areas of

27  critical need as determined by action of the school board.

28         (6)  CHILD WELFARE.--Provide for the proper accounting

29  for all children of school age, for the attendance and control

30  of pupils at school, and for proper attention to health,

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  safety, and other matters relating to the welfare of children

  2  in the following fields, as prescribed in chapter 232.

  3         (a)  Admission, classification, promotion, and

  4  graduation of pupils.--Adopt rules and regulations for

  5  admitting, classifying, promoting, and graduating pupils to or

  6  from the various schools of the district.  Such rules shall

  7  provide for the verification of a student's prior attendance

  8  and grade level, within or without this state, at the time of

  9  admission to a school in this state.  Such verification is

10  required prior to a student's progression to the next grade

11  level. In the absence of any verification, the child shall be

12  administered the standard test used in the district to

13  determine at what grade level the child is functioning; and

14  the child shall be placed in the appropriate program as

15  indicated by the test results.  In addition, each school board

16  shall adopt policies relating to the assessment and reporting

17  of students' classroom performance.  These policies shall

18  clearly assign initial and primary authority for such

19  assessment and reporting to the classroom teacher.  The

20  review, modification, or appeal of a classroom teacher's

21  assessment and reporting of a student's classroom performance

22  can be effected only through established policies of the

23  school board.

24         (b)  Enforcement of attendance laws.--Provide for the

25  enforcement of all laws and regulations relating to the

26  attendance of pupils at school and for employing such

27  assistants to the superintendent as may be needed to enforce

28  these laws effectively.  Each school district shall establish

29  policies and procedures designed to assist students in

30  improving their attendance and attaining a high school

31  diploma.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (c)  Control of pupils.--

  2         1.  Adopt rules and regulations for the control,

  3  discipline, in-school suspension, suspension, and expulsion of

  4  pupils and decide all cases recommended for expulsion.  Such

  5  rules shall clearly specify disciplinary action that shall be

  6  imposed if a student possesses alcoholic beverages or

  7  electronic telephone pagers or is involved in the illegal use,

  8  sale, or possession of controlled substances, as defined in

  9  chapter 893, on school property or while attending a school

10  function.  School boards are encouraged to include in these

11  provisions alternatives to expulsion and suspension such as

12  in-school suspension, assignment to second chance schools, and

13  guidelines on identification and referral of students to

14  alcohol and substance abuse treatment agencies. To the extent

15  that funding is available, it is the intent of the Legislature

16  that all persons of compulsory school age who have not

17  received a high school diploma be placed in an appropriate

18  program which may include, but not be limited to, traditional

19  schools, second chance schools jointly provided by the

20  district school board and the Department of Juvenile Justice,

21  disciplinary schools, and other alternatives to expulsion

22  programs. Suspension hearings are exempted from the provisions

23  of chapter 120. Expulsion hearings shall be governed by ss.

24  120.569 and 120.57(2) and are exempt from s. 286.011. However,

25  the pupil's parent or legal guardian must be given notice of

26  the provisions of s. 286.011 and may elect to have the hearing

27  held in compliance with that section.  The school board shall

28  have the authority to prohibit the use of corporal punishment,

29  provided that the school board adopts or has adopted a written

30  program of alternative control or discipline, which may

31  include, but is not limited to, timeout rooms, in-school


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  suspension, student peer review, parental involvement, and

  2  other forms of positive reinforcement, such as classes on

  3  appropriate classroom behavior.

  4         2.  Have the authority as the school board of a

  5  receiving school district to honor the final order of

  6  expulsion or dismissal of a student by any in-state or

  7  out-of-state public school board or private school, or

  8  developmental research school, for an act which would have

  9  been grounds for expulsion according to the receiving school

10  district's code of student conduct, in accordance with the

11  following procedures:

12         a.  A final order of expulsion shall be recorded in the

13  records of the receiving school district.

14         b.  The expelled student applying for admission to the

15  receiving school district shall be advised of the final order

16  of expulsion.

17         c.  The superintendent of schools of the receiving

18  school district may recommend to the school board that the

19  final order of expulsion be waived and the student be admitted

20  to the school district, or that the final order of expulsion

21  be honored and the student not be admitted to the school

22  district. If the student is admitted by the school board, with

23  or without the recommendation of the superintendent, the

24  student may be placed in an appropriate educational program at

25  the direction of the school board.

26         (d)  Code of student conduct.--Adopt a code of student

27  conduct for elementary schools and a code of student conduct

28  for secondary schools and distribute the appropriate code to

29  all teachers, school personnel, students, and parents or

30  guardians, at the beginning of every school year. A district

31  may compile the code of student conduct for elementary schools


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  and the code of student conduct for secondary schools in one

  2  publication and distribute the combined codes to all teachers,

  3  school personnel, students, and parents or guardians at the

  4  beginning of every school year. Each code of student conduct

  5  shall be developed by the school board; elementary or

  6  secondary school teachers and other school personnel,

  7  including school administrators; students; and parents or

  8  guardians. The code of student conduct for elementary schools

  9  shall parallel the code for secondary schools. Each code shall

10  be organized and written in language which is understandable

11  to students and parents and shall be discussed at the

12  beginning of every school year in student classes, school

13  advisory councils, and parent and teacher associations. Each

14  code shall be based on the rules governing student conduct and

15  discipline adopted by the school board and be made available

16  in the student handbook or similar publication. Each code

17  shall include, but not be limited to:

18         1.  Consistent policies and specific grounds for

19  disciplinary action, including in-school suspension,

20  out-of-school suspension, expulsion, any disciplinary action

21  that may be imposed for the possession or use of alcohol on

22  school property or while attending a school function or for

23  the illegal use, sale, or possession of controlled substances

24  as defined in chapter 893.

25         2.  Procedures to be followed for acts requiring

26  discipline, including corporal punishment.

27         3.  An explanation of the responsibilities and rights

28  of students with regard to attendance, respect for persons and

29  property, knowledge and observation of rules of conduct, the

30  right to learn, free speech and student publications,

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  assembly, privacy, and participation in school programs and

  2  activities.

  3         4.  Notice that illegal use, possession, or sale of

  4  controlled substances, as defined in chapter 893, or

  5  possession of electronic telephone pagers, by any student

  6  while such student is upon school property or in attendance at

  7  a school function is grounds for in-school suspension,

  8  out-of-school suspension, expulsion, or imposition of other

  9  disciplinary action by the school and may also result in

10  criminal penalties being imposed.

11         5.  Notice that the possession of a firearm, a knife, a

12  weapon, or an item which can be used as a weapon by any

13  student while the student is on school property or in

14  attendance at a school function is grounds for disciplinary

15  action and may also result in criminal prosecution.

16         6.  Notice that violence against any school district

17  personnel by a student is grounds for in-school suspension,

18  out-of-school suspension, expulsion, or imposition of other

19  disciplinary action by the school and may also result in

20  criminal penalties being imposed.

21         7.  Notice that violation of school board

22  transportation policies, including disruptive behavior on a

23  school bus or at a school bus stop, by a student is grounds

24  for suspension of the student's privilege of riding on a

25  school bus and may be grounds for in-school suspension,

26  out-of-school suspension, expulsion, or imposition of other

27  disciplinary action by the school and may also result in

28  criminal penalties being imposed.

29         8.  Notice that violation of the school board's sexual

30  harassment policy by a student is grounds for in-school

31  suspension, out-of-school suspension, expulsion, or imposition


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  of other disciplinary action by the school and may also result

  2  in criminal penalties being imposed.

  3         9.  Policies to be followed for the assignment of

  4  violent or disruptive students to an alternative educational

  5  program.

  6         10.  Notice that any student who is determined to have

  7  brought a firearm, as defined in 18 U.S.C. s. 921, to school,

  8  any school function, or on any school-sponsored transportation

  9  will be expelled, with or without continuing educational

10  services, from the student's regular school for a period of

11  not less than 1 full year and referred for criminal

12  prosecution. School boards may assign the student to a

13  disciplinary program or second chance school for the purpose

14  of continuing educational services during the period of

15  expulsion. Superintendents may consider the 1-year expulsion

16  requirement on a case-by-case basis and request the school

17  board to modify the requirement if determined to be in the

18  best interest of the student and the school system.

19         (e)  Student crime watch program.--By resolution of the

20  school board, implement a student crime watch program to

21  promote responsibility among students and to assist in the

22  control of criminal behavior within the schools.

23         (7)  COURSES OF STUDY AND OTHER INSTRUCTIONAL

24  AIDS.--Provide adequate instructional aids for all children as

25  follows and in accordance with the requirements of chapter

26  233.

27         (a)  Courses of study; adoption.--Adopt courses of

28  study for use in the schools of the district; provided, that

29  such courses shall comprise materials needed to supplement

30  minimum courses of study prescribed by the state board for all

31  schools.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (b)  Textbooks.--Provide for proper requisitioning,

  2  distribution, accounting, storage, care, and use of all

  3  textbooks and other books furnished by the state and furnish

  4  such other textbooks and library books as may be needed. The

  5  school board is responsible for assuring that instructional

  6  materials used in the district are consistent with the

  7  district goals and objectives and the curriculum frameworks

  8  approved by the State Board of Education, as well as with the

  9  state and district performance standards provided for in ss.

10  229.565 and 232.2454.

11         (c)  Other instructional aids.--Provide such other

12  teaching accessories and aids as are needed to carry out the

13  program.

14         (d)  School library media services; establishment and

15  maintenance.--Establish and maintain school library media

16  centers, or school library media centers open to the public,

17  and, in addition thereto, such traveling or circulating

18  libraries as may be needed for the proper operation of the

19  district school system. Establish and maintain a program of

20  school library media services for all public schools school

21  students which shall be designed to ensure effective use of

22  available resources and to avoid unnecessary duplication and

23  shall include, but not be limited to, basic skills

24  development, instructional design, media collection

25  development, media program management, media production, staff

26  development, and consultation and information services.

27         (8)  TRANSPORTATION OF PUPILS.--After considering

28  recommendations of the superintendent, make provision for the

29  transportation of pupils to the public schools or school

30  activities they are required or expected to attend; authorize

31  transportation routes arranged efficiently and economically;


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  provide the necessary transportation facilities, and, when

  2  authorized under regulations of the state board and if more

  3  economical to do so, provide limited subsistence in lieu

  4  thereof; and adopt the necessary rules and regulations to

  5  ensure safety, economy, and efficiency in the operation of all

  6  buses, as prescribed in chapter 234.

  7         (9)  SCHOOL PLANT.--Approve plans for locating,

  8  planning, constructing, sanitating, insuring, maintaining,

  9  protecting, and condemning school property as prescribed in

10  chapter 235 and as follows:

11         (a)  School building program.--Approve and adopt a

12  districtwide school building program, indicating the centers

13  at which school work is to be offered on the various levels;

14  the type, size, and location of schools to be established; and

15  the steps to be taken to carry out the program. This program

16  shall be a part of the 5-year program for the district and,

17  insofar as practicable, shall be based on the recommendations

18  of a survey made or approved under the direction of the

19  Department of Education.

20         (b)  Sites, buildings, and equipment.--

21         1.  Select and purchase school sites, playgrounds, and

22  recreational areas located at centers at which schools are to

23  be constructed, of adequate size to meet the needs of

24  projected pupils to be accommodated.;

25         2.  Approve the proposed purchase of any site,

26  playground, or recreational area for which district funds are

27  to be used.;

28         3.  Expand existing sites.;

29         4.  Rent buildings when necessary.;

30         5.  Enter into leases or lease-purchase arrangements,

31  in accordance with the requirements and conditions provided in


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  s. 235.056(2), with private individuals or corporations for

  2  the rental of necessary grounds and educational facilities for

  3  school purposes or of educational facilities to be erected for

  4  school purposes.  Current or other funds authorized by law may

  5  be used to make payments under a lease-purchase agreement.

  6  Notwithstanding any other statutes, if the rental is to be

  7  paid from funds received from ad valorem taxation and the

  8  agreement is for a period greater than 12 months, an approving

  9  referendum must be held.  The provisions of such contracts,

10  including building plans, shall be subject to approval by the

11  Department of Education, and no such contract shall be entered

12  into without such approval. As used in this section,

13  "educational facilities" means the buildings and equipment

14  which are built, installed, or established to serve

15  educational purposes and which may lawfully be used.  The

16  State Board of Education is authorized to promulgate such

17  rules as it deems necessary to implement the provisions

18  hereof.;

19         6.  Provide for the proper supervision of

20  construction.;

21         7.  Make or contract for additions, alterations, and

22  repairs on buildings and other school properties.;

23         8.  Ensure that all plans and specifications for

24  buildings provide adequately for the safety and well-being of

25  pupils, as well as for economy of construction by having such

26  plans and specifications submitted to the Department of

27  Education for approval; and

28         9.  Provide furniture, books, apparatus, and other

29  equipment necessary for the proper conduct of the work of the

30  schools.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (c)  Maintenance and upkeep of school plant.--Provide

  2  adequately for the proper maintenance and upkeep of school

  3  plants, so that children may attend school without sanitary or

  4  physical hazards, and provide for the necessary heat, lights,

  5  water, power, and other supplies and utilities necessary for

  6  the operation of the schools.

  7         (d)  Insurance of school property.--Carry insurance on

  8  every school building in all school plants including contents,

  9  boilers, and machinery, except buildings of three classrooms

10  or less which are of frame construction and located in a tenth

11  class public protection zone as defined by the Florida

12  Inspection and Rating Bureau, and on all school buses and

13  other property under the control of the school board or title

14  to which is vested in the school board, except as exceptions

15  may be authorized under regulations of the state board.

16         (e)  Condemnation of buildings.--Condemn and prohibit

17  the use for public school purposes of any building which can

18  be shown for sanitary or other reasons to be no longer

19  suitable for such use and, when any building is condemned by

20  any state or other government agency as authorized in chapter

21  235, see that it is no longer used for school purposes.

22         (10)  FINANCE.--Take steps to assure children adequate

23  educational facilities through the financial procedure

24  authorized in chapters 236 and 237 and as prescribed below:

25         (a)  Provide for all schools to operate at least 180

26  days.--Provide for the operation of all public schools, both

27  elementary and secondary, as free schools for a term of at

28  least 180 days or the equivalent on an hourly basis as

29  specified by regulations of the State Board of Education;

30  determine district school funds necessary in addition to state

31  funds to operate all schools for such minimum term; arrange


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  for the levying of district school taxes necessary to provide

  2  the amount needed from district sources.

  3         (b)  Annual budget.--Cause to be prepared, adopt, and

  4  have submitted to the Department of Education as required by

  5  law and by regulations of the state board, the annual school

  6  budget, such budget to be so prepared and executed as to

  7  promote the improvement of the district school system.

  8         (c)  Tax levies.--Adopt and spread on its minutes a

  9  resolution fixing the district school tax levy, provided for

10  under s. 9, Art. VII of the State Constitution, necessary to

11  carry on the school program adopted for the district for the

12  next ensuing fiscal year as required by law, and fixing the

13  district bond interest and sinking fund tax levy necessary for

14  districts against which bonds are outstanding; adopt and

15  spread on its minutes a resolution suggesting the tax levy

16  provided for in s. 9, Art. VII of the State Constitution,

17  found necessary to carry on the school program adopted for the

18  district for the next ensuing fiscal year.

19         (d)  School funds.--Require that an accurate account is

20  kept of all funds which should be transmitted to the school

21  board for school purposes at various periods during the year

22  from all sources and, if any funds are not transmitted

23  promptly, take the necessary steps to have such funds made

24  available.

25         (e)  Borrow money.--Borrow money, as prescribed in ss.

26  237.141-237.171, when necessary in anticipation of funds

27  reasonably to be expected during the year as shown by the

28  budget.

29         (f)  Financial records and accounts.--Provide for

30  keeping of accurate records of all financial transactions,

31  including records of school and student activity funds, and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  school lunch programs, and have these records kept under the

  2  various classifications commonly used in school financial

  3  accounting; authorize and compensate such trained assistants

  4  to the superintendent as may be needed to maintain adequate

  5  records.

  6         (g)  Approval and payment of accounts.--Implement a

  7  system of accounting and budgetary control to ensure that

  8  payments do not exceed amounts budgeted, as required by law;

  9  make available all records for proper audit by state

10  officials; and have prepared required periodic statements

11  showing receipts, balances, and expenditures to date and

12  require a copy of each such statement to be filed with the

13  Department of Education as provided by rules of the state

14  board.

15         (h)  Bonds of employees.--Fix and prescribe the bonds,

16  and pay the premium on all such bonds, of all school employees

17  who are responsible for school funds in order to provide

18  reasonable safeguards for all such funds or property.

19         (i)  Contracts for materials, supplies, and

20  services.--Contract for materials, supplies, and services

21  needed for the district school system.  No contract for

22  supplying these needs shall be made with any member of the

23  school board, with the superintendent, or with any business

24  organization in which any school board member or the

25  superintendent has any financial interest whatsoever.

26         (j)  Purchasing regulations to be secured from

27  Department of Management Services.--Secure purchasing

28  regulations and amendments and changes thereto from the

29  Division of Purchasing of the Department of Management

30  Services and prior to any purchase have reported to it by its

31  staff, and give consideration to the lowest price available to


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  it under such regulations, provided a regulation applicable to

  2  the item or items being purchased has been adopted by the

  3  Division of Purchasing. The Division of Purchasing should meet

  4  with educational administrators to expand the inventory of

  5  standard items for common usage in all schools and higher

  6  education institutions.

  7         (k)  Investment policies.--

  8         1.  Adopt policies pertaining to the investment of

  9  school funds not needed for immediate expenditures, after

10  considering the recommendations of the superintendent.  The

11  adopted policies shall make provisions for investing or

12  placing on deposit all such funds in order to earn the maximum

13  possible yield under the circumstances from such investments

14  or deposits.  The method of determining the maximum yield on

15  investments or deposits shall include, but not necessarily be

16  limited to, bids from qualified depositories, yields from

17  certificates of deposit, yields from time deposits, yields

18  from securities guaranteed by the Government of the United

19  States, or other forms of investments authorized by law.

20         2.  Part of the funds available for investment may be

21  set aside to invest in time deposits or savings accounts in

22  banks or savings and loan associations on the federal list of

23  minority financial institutions designated as authorized

24  depositories.  The investment of such funds must be

25  competitively bid among such minority financial institutions

26  located within the school district boundaries and must be in

27  compliance with s. 236.24 and chapter 280.  The amount of

28  funds designated for such investment shall be determined by

29  the school board and may be based on the percentage of

30  minorities within the population of the school district.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (l)  Protection against loss.--Provide for adequate

  2  protection against any loss or damage to school property or

  3  loss resulting from any liability for which the board or its

  4  officers, agents, or employees may be responsible under law.

  5  In fulfilling this responsibility, the board is authorized and

  6  empowered to purchase insurance, to be self-insured, to enter

  7  into risk management programs managed by district school

  8  boards, school-related associations, or insurance companies,

  9  or to have any combination thereof in any area to the extent

10  the board is either authorized or required by law to contract

11  for insurance.  Any risk management program entered into

12  pursuant to this subsection shall provide for strict

13  accountability of all funds to the member school boards and an

14  annual audit by an independent certified public accountant of

15  all receipts and disbursements.

16         (11)  RECORDS AND REPORTS.--Provide for the keeping of

17  all necessary records and the making of all needed or required

18  reports, as follows:

19         (a)  Forms, blanks, and reports.--Require all employees

20  to keep accurately all records and to make promptly in the

21  proper form all reports required by law or by regulations of

22  the state board.

23         (b)  Reports to the department.--Require that the

24  superintendent prepare all reports to the Department of

25  Education that may be required by law or regulations of the

26  state board; see that all such reports are promptly

27  transmitted to the department; withhold the further payment of

28  salary to the superintendent or employee when notified by the

29  department that he or she has failed to file any report within

30  the time or in the manner prescribed; and continue to withhold

31  the salary until the school board is notified by the


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  department that such report has been received and accepted;

  2  provided, that when any report has not been received by the

  3  date due and after due notice has been given to the school

  4  board of that fact, the department, if it deems necessary, may

  5  require the report to be prepared by a member of its staff,

  6  and the school board shall pay all expenses connected

  7  therewith.  Any member of the school board who is responsible

  8  for the violation of this provision is subject to suspension

  9  and removal.

10         (c)  Reports to parents.--At regular intervals reports

11  shall be made by principals or teachers in public schools to

12  parents or those having parental authority over the children

13  enrolled and in attendance upon their schools, apprising them

14  of the progress being made by the pupils in their studies and

15  giving other needful information.

16         (12)  COOPERATION WITH OTHER DISTRICT SCHOOL

17  BOARDS.--May establish and participate in educational

18  consortia which are designed to provide joint programs and

19  services to cooperating school districts, consistent with the

20  provisions of s. 4(b), Art. IX of the State Constitution. The

21  State Board of Education shall adopt rules providing for the

22  establishment, funding, administration, and operation of such

23  consortia.

24         (13)  COOPERATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES.--

25         (a)  Cooperate with federal, state, county, and

26  municipal agencies in all matters relating to education and

27  child welfare. District superintendents and school boards may

28  initiate policy meetings with such agencies to promote joint

29  planning and provide effective programs in matters relating to

30  discipline, truancy, and dropouts.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (b)  Cooperate with public and private community

  2  agencies and with the local service district of the Department

  3  of Health and Rehabilitative Services to achieve the first

  4  state education goal, readiness to start school.

  5         (c)  Cooperate with the Department of Education in

  6  identifying each child in the school district who is a

  7  migratory child as defined in Pub. L. No. 95-561 and cooperate

  8  with the department in providing such other information as the

  9  department deems necessary.

10         (13)(14)  ENFORCEMENT OF LAW AND RULES AND

11  REGULATIONS.--Require that all laws and rules and regulations

12  of the state board or of the school board are properly

13  enforced.

14         (15)  COOPERATE WITH SUPERINTENDENT.--Cooperate with

15  the superintendent at all times to the end that the district

16  school system may constantly be improved.

17         (14)(16)  SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAM.--Assume such

18  responsibilities and exercise such powers and perform such

19  duties as may be assigned to it by law or as may be required

20  by regulations of the state board or as in the opinion of the

21  school board are necessary to assure school lunch services,

22  consistent with needs of pupils; effective and efficient

23  operation of the program; and the proper articulation of the

24  school lunch program with other phases of education in the

25  district.

26         (15)(17)  PUBLIC INFORMATION PROGRAM.--Adopt procedures

27  whereby the general public can be adequately informed of the

28  educational programs, needs, and objectives of public

29  education within the district.

30         (16)(18)  IMPLEMENT SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT AND

31  ACCOUNTABILITY.--Maintain a system of school improvement and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  education accountability as provided by statute and State

  2  Board of Education rule. This system of school improvement and

  3  education accountability shall be consistent with, and

  4  implemented through, the district's continuing system of

  5  planning and budgeting required by this section and ss.

  6  229.555 and 237.041. This system of school improvement and

  7  education accountability shall include, but not be limited to,

  8  the following:

  9         (a)  School improvement plans.--Annually approve and

10  require implementation of a new, amended, or continuation

11  school improvement plan for each school in the district.  Such

12  plan shall be designed to achieve the state education goals

13  and student performance standards pursuant to ss. 229.591(3)

14  and 229.592, shall be based on a needs assessment, and shall

15  include school progress, goals, indicators of student

16  progress, strategies, and evaluation procedures, including

17  adequate measures of individual student performance.  Each

18  school shall develop its initial individual school improvement

19  plan to be submitted for approval during the 1992-1993 school

20  year and shall implement the initial plan as approved

21  beginning with the 1993-1994 school year.

22         (b)  Approval process.--Develop a process for approval

23  of a school improvement plan presented by an individual school

24  and its advisory council.  In the event a board does not

25  approve a school improvement plan after exhausting this

26  process, the Florida Commission on Education Reform and

27  Accountability shall be notified of the need for assistance.

28         (c)  Assistance and intervention.--Develop a 3-year

29  plan of increasing individualized assistance and intervention

30  for each school that does not meet or make adequate progress,

31  based upon the recommendations of the commission, as defined


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  pursuant to statute and State Board of Education rule, toward

  2  meeting the goals and standards of its approved school

  3  improvement plan.

  4         (d)  After 3 years.--Notify the Florida Commission on

  5  Education Reform and Accountability and the State Board of

  6  Education in the event any school does not make adequate

  7  progress toward meeting the goals and standards of a school

  8  improvement plan by the end of 3 consecutive years of district

  9  assistance and intervention and proceed according to

10  guidelines developed pursuant to statute and State Board of

11  Education rule.

12         (e)  Public disclosure.--Provide information regarding

13  performance of students and educational programs as required

14  pursuant to s. 229.555, and, beginning with the 1994-1995

15  school year, implement a new system of school reports as

16  required by statute and State Board of Education rule.

17         (f)  School improvement funds.--Provide funds to

18  schools for developing and implementing school improvement

19  plans. Such funds shall include those funds appropriated for

20  the purpose of school improvement pursuant to s. 24.121(5)(c).

21         (g)  Feedback report.--Develop a "feedback report" on

22  the progress of implementing and maintaining a system of

23  school improvement and education accountability established in

24  s. 229.592(2).  The report shall be submitted to the Florida

25  Commission on Education Reform and Accountability by July 1,

26  1992, and annually thereafter.  The report shall include, but

27  not be limited to, information pertaining to the accuracy of

28  data collection and analysis, the ability of the Department of

29  Education to assist school boards in emphasizing reporting on

30  individual school improvement and progress while minimizing

31  comparisons between schools, the effectiveness of training and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  technical assistance provided by the Department of Education,

  2  and the effectiveness of the waiver process established in s.

  3  229.592(6); and recommendation for improvement.

  4         Section 5.  Section 230.2301, Florida Statutes, is

  5  amended to read:

  6         230.2301  Parents may be accompanied.--At any meeting

  7  with school district personnel regarding the assignment of

  8  staff to an exceptional student or at a conference regarding

  9  the discipline of a student, a the student's parent or

10  guardian may be accompanied by another adult of his or her

11  choice to assist the parent or guardian in communicating with

12  school district personnel.

13         Section 6.  Section 230.2305, Florida Statutes, 1996

14  Supplement, is amended to read:

15         230.2305  Prekindergarten early intervention program.--

16         (1)  LEGISLATIVE INTENT; PURPOSE.--The Legislature

17  recognizes that high-quality prekindergarten education

18  programs increase children's chances of achieving future

19  educational success and becoming productive members of

20  society.  It is the intent of the Legislature that such

21  programs be developmental, serve as preventive measures for

22  children at risk of future school failure, enhance the

23  educational readiness of all children, and support family

24  education and the involvement of parents in their child's

25  educational progress.  Each prekindergarten early intervention

26  program shall provide the elements necessary to prepare

27  children for school, including health screening and referral

28  and a developmentally appropriate educational program and

29  opportunities for parental involvement in the program. It is

30  the legislative intent that the prekindergarten early

31  intervention program not exist as an isolated program, but


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  build upon existing services and work in cooperation with

  2  other programs for young children.  It is intended that

  3  procedures such as, but not limited to, contracting,

  4  collocation, mainstreaming, and cooperative funding be used to

  5  coordinate the program with Head Start, public and private

  6  providers of child care, preschool programs for children with

  7  disabilities, programs for migrant children, Chapter I,

  8  subsidized child care, adult literacy programs, and other

  9  services. It is further the intent of the Legislature that the

10  Commissioner of Education seek the advice of the Secretary of

11  Health and Rehabilitative Services in the development and

12  implementation of the prekindergarten early intervention

13  program and the coordination of services to young children.

14  The purpose of the prekindergarten early intervention program

15  is to assist local communities in implementing programs that

16  will enable all the families and children in the school

17  district to be prepared for the children's success in school.

18         (2)  ELIGIBILITY.--There is hereby created the

19  prekindergarten early intervention program for children who

20  are 3 and 4 years of age.  A prekindergarten early

21  intervention program shall be administered by a district

22  school board and shall receive state funds pursuant to

23  subsection (5)(9). Each public school district shall make

24  reasonable efforts to accommodate the needs of children for

25  extended-day and extended-year services without compromising

26  the quality of the 6-hour, 180-day program.  The school

27  district shall report on such efforts. Prekindergarten early

28  intervention programs shall be implemented and conducted by

29  school districts pursuant to a plan developed and approved as

30  provided in this section.  School district participation in

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  the prekindergarten early intervention program shall be at the

  2  discretion of each school district.

  3         (a)  At least 75 percent of the children projected to

  4  be served by the district program shall be economically

  5  disadvantaged 4-year-old children of working parents,

  6  including migrant children or children whose parents

  7  participate in the WAGES Program. Other children projected to

  8  be served by the district program may include any of the

  9  following up to a maximum of 25 percent of the total number of

10  children served:

11         1.  Three-year-old and four-year-old children who are

12  referred to the school system who may not be economically

13  disadvantaged but who are abused, prenatally exposed to

14  alcohol or harmful drugs, or from foster homes, or who are

15  marginal in terms of Exceptional Student Education placement.

16         2.  Three-year-old children and four-year-old children

17  who may not be economically disadvantaged but who are eligible

18  students with disabilities and served in a specific part-time

19  or combination of part-time exceptional student education

20  programs with required special services, aids, or equipment

21  and who are reported for funding part-time in the Florida

22  Education Finance Program as exceptional students.  These

23  students may be funded from prekindergarten early intervention

24  program funds the portion of the time not funded by the

25  Florida Education Finance Program for the actual instructional

26  time or one full-time equivalent student membership, whichever

27  is the lesser.  These part-time students with disabilities

28  shall be counted toward the 25-percent student limit based on

29  full-time equivalent student membership funded part-time by

30  prekindergarten early intervention program funds.  Also,

31  3-year-old or 4-year-old eligible students with disabilities


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  who are reported for funding in the Florida Education Finance

  2  Program in a full-time or an authorized combination of

  3  full-time and part-time exceptional student programs as

  4  provided in s. 236.081(1)(c) may be mainstreamed in the

  5  prekindergarten early intervention program if such programming

  6  is reflected in the student's individual educational plan; if

  7  required special services, aids, or equipment are provided;

  8  and if there is no operational cost to prekindergarten early

  9  intervention program funds.  These full-time exceptional

10  students shall not count against the 75-percent or 25-percent

11  student limit as stated in this paragraph.

12         3.  Economically disadvantaged 3-year-old children.

13         4.  Economically disadvantaged children, children with

14  disabilities, and children at risk of future school failure,

15  from birth to age four, who are served at home through home

16  visitor programs and intensive parent education programs such

17  as the Florida First Start Program.

18         5.  Children who meet federal and state requirements

19  for eligibility for the migrant preschool program but who do

20  not meet the criteria of "economically disadvantaged" as

21  defined in paragraph (b), who shall not pay a fee.

22         6.  After the groups listed in subparagraphs 1., 2.,

23  3., and 4. have been served, 3-year-old and 4-year-old

24  children who are not economically disadvantaged and for whom a

25  fee is paid for the children's participation.

26         (b)  An "economically disadvantaged" child shall be

27  defined as a child eligible to participate in the free lunch

28  program.  Notwithstanding any change in a family's economic

29  status or in the federal eligibility requirements for free

30  lunch, a child who meets the eligibility requirements upon

31  initial registration for the program shall be considered


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  eligible until the child reaches kindergarten age.  In order

  2  to assist the school district in establishing the priority in

  3  which children shall be served, and to increase the efficiency

  4  in the provision of child care services in each district, the

  5  district shall enter into a written collaborative agreement

  6  with other publicly funded early education and child care

  7  programs within the district. Such agreement shall be

  8  facilitated by the interagency coordinating council and shall

  9  set forth, among other provisions, the measures to be

10  undertaken to ensure the programs' achievement and compliance

11  with the performance standards established in subsection (3)

12  and for maximizing the public resources available to each

13  program.  In addition, the central agency for state-subsidized

14  child care or the local service district of the Department of

15  Health and Rehabilitative Services shall provide the school

16  district with an updated list of 3-year-old and 4-year-old

17  children residing in the school district who are on the

18  waiting list for state-subsidized child care.

19         (3)  STANDARDS.--

20         (a)  Publicly supported preschool programs, including

21  prekindergarten early intervention, subsidized child care,

22  teen parent programs, Head Start, migrant programs, and

23  Chapter I programs shall employ a simplified point of entry to

24  the child care services system in every community.  These

25  programs shall share the waiting lists for unserved children

26  in the community so that a count of eligible children is

27  maintained without duplications.

28         (b)  The Department of Education and the Department of

29  Health and Rehabilitative Services, in consultation with the

30  Legislature, shall develop a minimum set of performance

31  standards for publicly funded early education and child care


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  programs and a method for measuring the progress of local

  2  school districts and central agencies in meeting a desired set

  3  of outcomes based on these performance measures.  The defined

  4  outcomes must be consistent with the state's first education

  5  goal, readiness to start school, and must also consider

  6  efficiency measures such as the employment of a simplified

  7  point of entry to the child care services system, coordinated

  8  staff development programs, and other efforts within the state

  9  to increase the opportunity for welfare recipients to become

10  self-sufficient.  Performance standards shall be developed for

11  all levels of administration of the programs, including

12  individual programs and providers, and must incorporate

13  appropriate expectations for the type of program and the

14  setting in which care is provided.

15         (4)  PLANS.--Each district school board that chooses to

16  participate in the prekindergarten early intervention program

17  shall, in consultation with the interagency coordinating

18  council, submit to the Commissioner of Education a plan for

19  implementing and conducting a prekindergarten early

20  intervention program for approval.  A district school board

21  shall submit a plan or amended plan for planning and

22  evaluating prekindergarten programs, implementing new

23  services, enhancing existing early childhood, prekindergarten,

24  or child care programs provided by public or nonpublic

25  entities, or contracting for the provision of services or

26  facilities.  The plans shall include an explanation of the

27  role of the prekindergarten early intervention program in the

28  school district's effort to meet the first state education

29  goal, readiness to start school, and the plan must include the

30  utilization of public and private programs already in

31  existence in the district, business-education partnerships,


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  and preschool programs operated by vocational-technical

  2  schools, community colleges, and universities.  A plan shall

  3  identify the locations where services will be provided and may

  4  include public school property or other sites that meet state

  5  and local licensing requirements for child care facilities or

  6  State Board of Education rules, except that sites shall be

  7  located to the maximum extent practicable so as to provide

  8  easy access by parents, especially working parents of

  9  economically disadvantaged children. When a district uses

10  nonschool facilities or nonschool facility staff for the

11  provision of services, a contract is required; when a district

12  uses nonschool facilities and provides district instructional

13  staff, a cooperative agreement is required.

14         (5)  PLAN APPROVAL.--To be considered for approval,

15  each plan, or amendment to a plan, must be prepared according

16  to instructions issued by the Commissioner of Education and

17  must include, without limitation:

18         (c)(a)  A description of the program curriculum and

19  assurances that The program curriculum must will be

20  developmentally appropriate according to current nationally

21  recognized recommendations for high-quality prekindergarten

22  programs.

23         (b)  The estimated number of children who will

24  participate in the program based upon a needs assessment that

25  considers existing services and unmet needs.

26         (c)  The projected percentage of children who will

27  participate in the program and who are economically

28  disadvantaged.

29         (d)  School districts may The criteria used by the

30  district to establish a sliding fee scale for participants who

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  are not economically disadvantaged, and a description of the

  2  sliding scale.

  3         (e)  A description of the program's administrative and

  4  supervisory structure.

  5         (e)(f)  The ratio of direct instructional staff to

  6  children. The ratio must be 1 adult to 10 children, or a lower

  7  ratio. Upon written request from a school district, the

  8  commissioner may grant permission for a ratio of up to 1 adult

  9  to 15 children for individual schools or centers for which a

10  1-to-10 ratio would not be feasible.

11         (f)(g)  Information on the training and qualifications

12  of program staff, including an assurance that All staff must

13  meet will have met the following minimum requirements:

14         1.  The minimum level of training is to be the

15  completion of a 30-clock-hour training course planned jointly

16  by the Department of Education and the Department of Health

17  and Rehabilitative Services to include the following areas:

18  state and local rules that govern child care, health, safety,

19  and nutrition; identification and report of child abuse and

20  neglect; child growth and development; use of developmentally

21  appropriate early childhood curricula; and avoidance of

22  income-based, race-based, and gender-based stereotyping.

23         2.  When individual classrooms are staffed by certified

24  teachers, those teachers must be certified for the appropriate

25  grade levels under s. 231.17 and State Board of Education

26  rules.  Teachers who are not certified for the appropriate

27  grade levels must obtain proper certification within 2 years.

28  However, the commissioner may make an exception on an

29  individual basis when the requirements are not met because of

30  serious illness, injury, or other extraordinary, extenuating

31  circumstance.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         3.  When individual classrooms are staffed by

  2  noncertified teachers, there must be a program director or

  3  lead teacher who is eligible for certification or certified

  4  for the appropriate grade levels pursuant to s. 231.17 and

  5  State Board of Education rules in regularly scheduled direct

  6  contact with each classroom. Notwithstanding s. 231.15, such

  7  classrooms must be staffed by at least one person who has, at

  8  a minimum, a child development associate credential (CDA) or

  9  an amount of training determined by the commissioner to be

10  equivalent to or to exceed the minimum, such as an associate

11  in science degree in the area of early childhood education.

12         4.  Beginning October 1, 1994, principals and other

13  school district administrative and supervisory personnel with

14  direct responsibility for the program must demonstrate

15  knowledge of prekindergarten education programs that increase

16  children's chances of achieving future educational success and

17  becoming productive members of society in a manner established

18  by the State Board of Education by rule.

19         5.  To be eligible for state funding, all program plans

20  must include a requirement that All personnel who are not

21  certified under s. 231.17 must comply with screening

22  requirements under ss. 231.02 and 231.1713.

23         (h)  A description of proposed staff development

24  activities, including arrangements for staff access to

25  training in child growth and development and developmentally

26  appropriate early childhood curriculum and integration with

27  district master inservice plans required under s. 236.0811.

28         (i)  A description of the number and location of all

29  program sites and how each site is considered easily

30  accessible to the population to be served and to coordinated

31  services.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (j)  A description of the arrangements for transporting

  2  children to and from the program sites and their homes, if

  3  appropriate.

  4         (g)(k)  A requirement that Student participation must

  5  be contingent upon parental involvement., and a description of

  6  The parental involvement activities integral to the program,

  7  which must include program site-based parental activities

  8  designed to fully involve parents in the program and which may

  9  include parenting education, home visitor activities, family

10  support services coordination, and other activities.

11         (l)  A description of the interagency coordinating

12  council and efforts made to coordinate and maximize use of

13  existing funds and community facilities, equipment, medical,

14  educational, and social services, including coordination with

15  adult literacy and vocational programs.

16         (h)(m)  Identification of the days and hours when

17  Services are to be provided during, including a school day and

18  school year equal to or exceeding the requirements for

19  kindergarten under ss. 228.041 and 236.013. and Strategies to

20  provide care before school, after school, and 12 months a

21  year, when needed,. The strategies specified by this paragraph

22  must be developed by the school district in cooperation with

23  the central agency for state-subsidized child care or the

24  local service district of the Department of Health and

25  Rehabilitative Services and must be approved by the district

26  interagency coordinating council established under subsection

27  (11).  Programs may be provided on Saturdays and through other

28  innovative scheduling arrangements.

29         (n)  A description of the developmental and health

30  screening and referral services to be provided each child in

31  the program and assurances that needed developmental and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  health services will be provided through interagency

  2  coordination to the extent possible.

  3         (i)(o)  A written description of the role of the

  4  program in The school district must make efforts district's

  5  effort to meet the first state education goal, readiness to

  6  start school, including the involvement of a description of

  7  the plan to involve nonpublic schools, public and private

  8  providers of day care and early education, and other community

  9  agencies that provide services to young children.  This may

10  include private child care programs, subsidized child care

11  programs, and Head Start programs. A written description of

12  these efforts must be provided to the district interagency

13  coordinating council on early childhood services. The written

14  description of the plan to involve the groups listed above

15  must be submitted annually.

16         (p)  A description of how the program will be

17  coordinated with the district program for grades K through 3

18  and with district preschool programs for children with

19  disabilities and migrant children, the teen parent program,

20  and Chapter I programs.

21         (q)  A tentative budget.

22         (j)(r)  Parents must be provided an Strategies to allow

23  for parental option regarding a child's participation at a

24  school-based site or among contracted sites, when such an

25  option is appropriate and within the school district.  The

26  school district may consider availability of sites,

27  transportation, staffing ratios, costs, and other factors in

28  determining the assignment and setting district guidelines.

29  Parents may request and be assigned a site other than one

30  first assigned by the district, provided the parents pay the

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  cost of transporting the child to the site of the parents'

  2  choice.

  3         (k)(s)  The Strategies for school district must

  4  coordinate coordination with the central agency for

  5  state-subsidized child care or the local service district of

  6  the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services to verify

  7  family participation in the WAGES Program, thus ensuring

  8  accurate reporting and full utilization of federal funds

  9  available through the Family Support Act, and for the agency's

10  or service district's sharing of the waiting list for

11  state-subsidized child care under paragraph (3)(a).

12         (6)  PLAN APPROVAL.--The Commissioner of Education has

13  the final authority to approve or disapprove plans and amended

14  plans.

15         (4)(7)  EVALUATION.--Each school district shall conduct

16  an evaluation of the effectiveness of the prekindergarten

17  early intervention program.  This evaluation shall include

18  measures of the following:

19         (a)  The children's achievement as measured by

20  assessments upon entry into the program and upon completion of

21  the program; and

22         (b)  The children's readiness for kindergarten as

23  measured by the instrument the district uses to assess the

24  school readiness of all children entering kindergarten. The

25  results of this evaluation must be maintained by the school

26  district and made available to the public upon request.

27         (8)  MONITORING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.--Pursuant to

28  s. 229.565(5), the Commissioner of Education shall monitor

29  each district prekindergarten early intervention program at

30  least annually to determine compliance with the district plan

31  and the provisions of this section.  If a program is not


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  brought into compliance within 3 months after the

  2  commissioner's evaluation citing specific deficiencies, the

  3  commissioner must withhold such funds as have been allocated

  4  to the school board for its prekindergarten early intervention

  5  program and which have not yet been released.  The department

  6  shall develop manuals and guidelines for the development of

  7  district plans and shall provide ongoing technical assistance

  8  to ensure that each district program maintains high standards

  9  of quality and effectiveness.

10         (5)(9)  ANNUAL REPORT.--Each prekindergarten early

11  intervention program under this section shall, through the

12  district interagency coordinating council on early childhood

13  services, submit an annual report of its program to the

14  district interagency coordinating council on early childhood

15  services Commissioner of Education. The report must describe

16  the overall program operations; activities of the district

17  interagency coordinating council on early childhood services;

18  expenditures; the number of students served; ratio of staff to

19  children; staff qualifications; evaluation findings, including

20  identification of program components that were most

21  successful; and other information required by the council

22  Commissioner of Education or the state advisory council.

23         (6)(10)  FUNDING.--

24         (a)  This section shall be implemented only to the

25  extent that funding is available.  State funds appropriated

26  for the prekindergarten early intervention program may only be

27  used pursuant to the plan developed in consultation with the

28  interagency coordinating council on early childhood services

29  and may not be used for the construction of new facilities,

30  the transportation of students, or the purchase of buses, but

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  may be used for educational field trips which enhance the

  2  curriculum.

  3         1.  At least 70 percent of the total funds allocated to

  4  each school district under this section must be used for

  5  implementing and conducting a prekindergarten early

  6  intervention program or contracting with other public or

  7  nonpublic entities for programs to serve eligible children.

  8  The maximum amount to be spent per child for this purpose is

  9  to be designated annually in the General Appropriations Act.

10         2.  No more than 30 percent of the funds allocated to

11  each school district pursuant to this section may be used to

12  enhance existing public and nonpublic programs for eligible

13  children, to provide before-school and after-school care for

14  children served under this section, to remodel or renovate

15  existing facilities under chapter 235, to lease or

16  lease-purchase facilities in accordance with subsection (4) of

17  this section, to purchase classroom equipment to allow the

18  implementation of the prekindergarten early intervention

19  program, and to provide training for program teachers and

20  administrative personnel employed by the school district and

21  by agencies with which the school district contracts for the

22  provision of prekindergarten services.

23         3.  Funds may also be used pursuant to subparagraphs 1.

24  and 2. to provide the prekindergarten early intervention

25  program for more than 180 school days.

26         (b)  A minimum grant for each district is to be

27  determined annually in the General Appropriations Act.  The

28  funds remaining after allocating the minimum grants must be

29  prorated based on an allocation factor for each district and

30  must be added to each district's minimum grant. The allocation

31  factor is to be calculated as follows:


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1

  2  District percentage            District percentage

  3  of state 3-year-old  x  1/4 +  of state total free  x  3/4

  4  and 4-year-old                 lunches served

  5  children

  6

  7  The calculation of each district's allocation factor is to be

  8  based upon the official estimate of the total number of

  9  3-year-old and 4-year-old children by school district and the

10  official record of the Department of Education for K-12

11  student total free lunches served by school district for the

12  prior fiscal year.

13         (7)(11)  DISTRICT INTERAGENCY COORDINATING COUNCILS.--

14         (a)  To be eligible for a prekindergarten early

15  intervention program, each school district must develop,

16  implement, and evaluate its prekindergarten program in

17  cooperation with a district interagency coordinating council

18  on early childhood services.

19         (b)  Each district coordinating council must consist of

20  at least 12 members to be appointed by the district school

21  board, the county commission for the county in which

22  participating schools are located, and the Department of

23  Health and Rehabilitative Services' district administrator and

24  must include at least the following:

25         1.  One member who is a parent of a child enrolled in,

26  or intending to enroll in, the public school prekindergarten

27  program, appointed by the school board.

28         2.  One member who is a director or designated director

29  of a prekindergarten program in the district, appointed by the

30  school board.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         3.  One member who is a member of a district school

  2  board, appointed by the school board.

  3         4.  One member who is a representative of an agency

  4  serving children with disabilities, appointed by the

  5  Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services' district

  6  administrator.

  7         5.  Four members who are representatives of

  8  organizations providing prekindergarten educational services,

  9  one of whom is a representative of a Head Start Program,

10  appointed by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative

11  Services' district administrator; one of whom is a

12  representative of a Title XX subsidized child day care

13  program, if such programs exist within the county, appointed

14  by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services'

15  district administrator; and two of whom are private providers

16  of preschool care and education to 3-year-old and 4-year-old

17  children, one appointed by the county commission and one

18  appointed by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative

19  Services' district administrator. If there is no Head Start

20  Program or Title XX program operating within the county, these

21  two members must represent community interests in

22  prekindergarten education.

23         6.  Two members who are representatives of agencies

24  responsible for providing social, medical, dental, adult

25  literacy, or transportation services, one of whom represents

26  the county public health unit, both appointed by the county

27  commission.

28         7.  One member to represent a local child advocacy

29  organization, appointed by the Department of Health and

30  Rehabilitative Services' district administrator.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         8.  One member to represent the district K-3 program,

  2  appointed by the school board.

  3         (c)  Each district interagency coordinating council

  4  shall:

  5         1.  Assist district school boards in developing a plan

  6  or an amended plan to implement a prekindergarten early

  7  intervention program.  The plan and all amendments must be

  8  signed by the council chair, the chair of the district school

  9  board, and the district school superintendent before being

10  submitted to the Commissioner of Education for approval.

11         2.  Coordinate the delivery of educational, social,

12  medical, child care, and other services.

13         Section 7.  Section 230.23135, Florida Statutes, as

14  amended by chapters 94-232 and 95-147, Laws of Florida, is

15  hereby repealed.

16         Section 8.  Section 230.2316, Florida Statutes, 1996

17  Supplement, is amended to read:

18         230.2316  Dropout prevention.--

19         (1)  SHORT TITLE.--This act may be cited as the

20  "Dropout Prevention Act."

21         (2)  INTENT.--The Legislature recognizes that a growing

22  proportion of young people are not making successful

23  transitions to productive adult lives. The Legislature further

24  recognizes that traditional education programs which do not

25  meet certain students' educational needs and interests may

26  cause these students to become unmotivated, fail, be truant,

27  be disruptive, or drop out of school. The Legislature finds

28  that a child who does not complete his or her education is

29  greatly limited in obtaining gainful employment, achieving his

30  or her full potential, and becoming a productive member of

31  society. Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  authorize and encourage district school boards throughout the

  2  state to establish comprehensive dropout prevention programs.

  3  These programs shall be designed to meet the needs of students

  4  who are not effectively served by conventional education

  5  programs in the public school system. It is further the intent

  6  of the Legislature that cooperative agreements be developed

  7  among school districts, other governmental and private

  8  agencies, and community resources in order to implement

  9  innovative exemplary programs aimed at reducing the number of

10  students who do not complete their education and increasing

11  the number of students who have a positive experience in

12  school and obtain a high school diploma.

13         (3)  DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section, the term:

14         (a)  "Educational alternatives programs" means

15  educational programs which are designed to offer variations of

16  traditional instructional programs and strategies for the

17  purpose of increasing the likelihood that grade 4 through

18  grade 12 students who are unmotivated, or deemed habitually

19  truant as defined in s. 228.041(28), or unsuccessful in

20  traditional programs, remain in school and enroll in a program

21  of study that leads to a high school diploma or its

22  equivalent.

23         (b)  "Substance abuse programs" means agency-based or

24  school-based educational programs which are designed to meet

25  the needs of students with drug or alcohol-related problems.

26         (c)  "Disciplinary programs" means programs designed to

27  provide a safe learning environment for the general school

28  population, increase the safety of the school and the

29  community, and provide positive intervention for students who

30  are disruptive in the traditional school environment.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (d)  "Youth services programs" means educational

  2  programs, including conflict resolution training, provided by

  3  the school district to students participating in Department of

  4  Health and Rehabilitative Services or other state or community

  5  youth residential or day services programs.

  6         (e)  "Second chance schools" means school district

  7  programs provided through cooperative agreements between the

  8  Department of Juvenile Justice, private providers, state or

  9  local law enforcement agencies, or other state agencies for

10  students deemed habitual truants as defined in s. 228.041(28),

11  or for students who have been disruptive or violent or who

12  have committed serious offenses.  As partnership programs,

13  second chance schools are eligible for waivers from the

14  Commissioner of Education to chapters 230-235 and 239 and

15  State Board of Education rules that prevent the provision of

16  appropriate educational services to violent, severely

17  disruptive, and delinquent students in small nontraditional

18  settings and in court-adjudicated settings.

19         (3)(4)  STUDENT ELIGIBILITY AND PROGRAM CRITERIA.--All

20  programs funded pursuant to the provisions of this section

21  shall be positive and shall reflect strong parental and

22  community involvement. In addition, specific programs shall

23  meet the following criteria:

24         (a)  Educational alternatives programs.--

25         (a)1.  Dropout prevention programs shall differ The

26  program differs from traditional education programs and

27  schools in scheduling, administrative structure, philosophy,

28  curriculum, or setting and shall employ employs alternative

29  teaching methodologies, curricula, learning activities, or

30  diagnostic and assessment procedures in order to meet the

31  needs, interests, abilities, and talents of eligible students.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  The educational program shall provide curricula and related

  2  services which support the program goals and lead to

  3  completion of a high school diploma. Student participation in

  4  such programs shall be voluntary. Districts may, however,

  5  assign students to a program for disruptive students. The

  6  minimum period of time during which the student participates

  7  in the program shall be equivalent to two instructional

  8  periods per day unless the program utilizes a student support

  9  and assistance component rather than regularly scheduled

10  courses.

11         (b)2.  Students in grades 4-12 shall be eligible for

12  drop-out prevention programs. Eligible dropout prevention

13  students shall be reported for dropout prevention full-time

14  equivalent student membership in the Florida Education Finance

15  Program in standard dropout prevention classes or A student

16  support and assistance components which component may be used

17  to provide academic assistance and coordination of support

18  services to students enrolled full time in a regular classroom

19  who are eligible for educational alternative programs. The

20  student support and assistance This component shall include

21  auxiliary services provided to students or teachers, or both.

22  Students participating in this model shall generate funding

23  only for the time that they receive extra services or

24  auxiliary help.

25         (c)3.  A The student shall be has been identified as

26  being a potential dropout based upon one of the following

27  criteria:

28         1.a.  The student has shown a lack of motivation in

29  school through grades which are not commensurate with

30  documented ability levels or high absenteeism or habitual

31  truancy as defined in s. 228.041(28).;


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         2.b.  The student has not been successful in school as

  2  determined by retentions, failing grades, or low achievement

  3  test scores and has needs and interests that cannot be met

  4  through traditional programs.;

  5         3.c.  The student has been identified as a potential

  6  school dropout by student services personnel using district

  7  criteria. District criteria that are used as a basis for

  8  student referral to an educational alternatives program shall

  9  identify specific student performance indicators that the

10  educational alternative program seeks to address.;

11         d.  The student has performed successfully in the

12  educational alternatives program and wishes to remain enrolled

13  in such program.

14         4.  The remedial compensatory program must be

15  coordinated in a manner which permits the exclusion of

16  instructional staff members employed through the use of funds

17  in this program from the comparability requirements of the

18  Federal Compensatory Education Program.

19         (b)  Substance abuse programs.--

20         1.  The program shall provide basic educational

21  instruction for students participating in non-school-based

22  residential or day substance abuse treatment programs. Such

23  educational programs shall provide curricula and related

24  services which support the program goals and lead to

25  completion of a high school diploma or its equivalent; or

26         4.2.  The student has The program shall provide

27  school-based programs which serve students who have documented

28  drug-related or alcohol-related problems, or has students

29  whose immediate family members with have documented

30  drug-related or alcohol-related problems that adversely affect

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  the student's performance in school, and shall include

  2  instruction designed to prevent substance abuse.

  3         (c)  Disciplinary programs.--

  4         5.1.  The student has a history of disruptive behavior

  5  in school or has committed an offense that warrants

  6  out-of-school suspension or expulsion from school according to

  7  the district code of student conduct. For the purposes of this

  8  program, "disruptive behavior" is behavior that:

  9         a.  Interferes with the student's own learning or the

10  educational process of others and requires attention and

11  assistance beyond that which the traditional program can

12  provide or results in frequent conflicts of a disruptive

13  nature while the student is under the jurisdiction of the

14  school either in or out of the classroom; or

15         b.  Severely threatens the general welfare of students

16  or others with whom the student comes into contact.

17         6.  The student is assigned to a program provided

18  pursuant to chapter 39 which is sponsored by a state-based or

19  community-based agency or is operated or contracted for by the

20  Department of Children and Family Services.

21         2.  The program includes but is not necessarily limited

22  to in-school suspension, alternatives to expulsion, counseling

23  centers, and crisis intervention centers. The program may be

24  planned and operated in collaboration with local law

25  enforcement or other community agencies.

26         3.  In-school suspension programs shall provide

27  instruction and counseling leading to improved student

28  behavior and the development of more effective interpersonal

29  skills. Such programs shall be positive alternatives to

30  out-of-school suspension programs and shall emphasize, but not

31  be limited to, the following: enhancement of student


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  self-esteem; improved attendance; prevention of behavior that

  2  might cause a student to enter a juvenile delinquency program;

  3  reduction in the number of discipline referrals; reduction in

  4  the number of student dropouts; and reduction in the number of

  5  out-of-school suspensions. After providing assistance, school

  6  boards shall disapprove school-based, in-school suspension

  7  programs that continually fail to directly reduce the school's

  8  expulsion or out-of-school suspension rate. The principal of

  9  each school shall prepare an annual report which delineates

10  the number of students suspended in in-school and

11  out-of-school suspension, the proportionate populations

12  represented by such students, and the bases for such

13  suspensions. The report shall include an analysis of such data

14  and recommendations for increasing student success through the

15  program. The report shall be distributed to all members of the

16  school advisory council for consideration in the annual school

17  improvement plan.

18         4.  A student who has been placed in detention or a

19  court-adjudicated commitment program shall be evaluated by

20  school district personnel upon completion of such program

21  prior to placement of the student in an educational program.

22  Such student shall not be automatically assigned to a

23  disciplinary program upon reentering the school system.

24         5.  Prior to assigning a student to a disciplinary

25  program of more than 10 days' duration, the district shall

26  attempt a variety of education and student services to

27  identify the causes of the disruptive behavior, to modify the

28  behavior, or to provide more appropriate educational services

29  to the student; however, a student who has committed an

30  offense that warrants expulsion according to the district code

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  of student conduct may be assigned to a disciplinary program

  2  without attempting a variety of services.

  3         6.  In-school suspension programs shall be funded at

  4  the dropout prevention program weight pursuant to s.

  5  236.081(1)(c) if the school district program provides the

  6  following in addition to the academic component:

  7         a.  Individual and group counseling as a daily

  8  activity.

  9         b.  A parent conference while a student is in the

10  in-school suspension program for all suspensions of 4 days or

11  longer or whenever a student incurs a second or subsequent

12  suspension in the same school year.

13         c.  Reports regarding the specific misconduct for each

14  student placed in in-school suspension.

15

16  If such criteria are not met, in-school suspension programs

17  shall be funded at the basic program weight for the grade

18  level at which the program is provided pursuant to s. 236.081.

19         (d)  Educational services in Department of Health and

20  Rehabilitative Services programs.--

21         1.  The student is assigned to a rehabilitation program

22  provided pursuant to chapter 39 which is sponsored by a state

23  or community-based agency or is operated or contracted for by

24  the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services.

25         2.  Programs shall provide intensive counseling,

26  behavior modification, and therapy in order to meet the

27  student's individual needs. Programs may be residential or

28  nonresidential.

29         3.  Any student served in a Department of Health and

30  Rehabilitative Services program shall be provided the

31  equivalent of instruction provided for the definition of a


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  "school day" pursuant to s. 228.041. However, the educational

  2  services may be provided at times of the day most appropriate

  3  for the program.

  4         4.  A program is provided which shall consist of

  5  appropriate basic academic, vocational, or exceptional

  6  curricula and related services which support the

  7  rehabilitation program goals and which may lead to completion

  8  of the requirements for receipt of a high school diploma or

  9  its equivalent, provided that the educational component of

10  youth services programs of less than 40 days' duration which

11  take place in a park or wilderness setting may be limited to

12  tutorial activities and vocational employability skills.

13         5.  Participation in the program by students of

14  compulsory school attendance age as provided for in s. 232.01

15  shall be mandatory.

16         6.  Districts are encouraged to implement programs that

17  assist students in the transition between dismissal from

18  Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services programs and

19  school reentry.

20         7.  A school district may contract with a private

21  nonprofit entity or a state or local government agency for the

22  provision of educational programs to clients of the Department

23  of Health and Rehabilitative Services and may generate state

24  funding through the Florida Education Finance Program for such

25  students.

26         (d)1.  "Second chance schools" means school district

27  programs provided through cooperative agreements between the

28  Department of Juvenile Justice, private providers, state or

29  local law enforcement agencies, or other state agencies for

30  students who have been disruptive or violent or who have

31  committed serious offenses.  As partnership programs, second


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  chance schools are eligible for waivers by the Commissioner of

  2  Education from chapters 230-235 and 239 and State Board of

  3  Education rules that prevent the provision of appropriate

  4  educational services to violent, severely disruptive, or

  5  delinquent students in small nontraditional settings or in

  6  court-adjudicated settings.

  7         (e)  Second chance schools.--

  8         2.1.  A student enrolled in a sixth, seventh, eighth,

  9  ninth, or tenth grade class may be assigned to a second chance

10  school if the student meets the following criteria:

11         a.  The student is a habitual truant as defined in s.

12  228.041(28).

13         b.  The student's excessive absences have detrimentally

14  affected the student's academic progress and the student may

15  have unique needs that a traditional school setting may not

16  meet.

17         c.  The student's high incidences of truancy have been

18  directly linked to a lack of motivation.

19         d.  The student has been identified as at risk of

20  dropping out of school.

21         3.2.  A student who is habitually truant may be

22  assigned to a second chance school only if the case staffing

23  committee, established pursuant to s. 39.426, determines that

24  such placement could be beneficial to the student and the

25  criteria included in subparagraph 2. 1. are met.

26         4.3.  A student may shall be assigned to a second

27  chance school if the school district in which the student

28  resides has a second chance school and if the student meets

29  one of the following criteria:

30

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         a.  The student habitually exhibits disruptive behavior

  2  in violation of the code of student conduct adopted by the

  3  school board.

  4         b.  The student interferes with the student's own

  5  learning or the educational process of others and requires

  6  attention and assistance beyond that which the traditional

  7  program can provide, or, while the student is under the

  8  jurisdiction of the school either in or out of the classroom,

  9  frequent conflicts of a disruptive nature occur.

10         c.  The student has committed a serious offense which

11  warrants suspension or expulsion from school according to the

12  district code of student conduct.  For the purposes of this

13  program, "serious offense" is behavior which:

14         (I)  Threatens the general welfare of students or

15  others with whom the student comes into contact;

16         (II)  Includes violence;

17         (III)  Includes possession of weapons or drugs; or

18         (IV)  Is harassment or verbal abuse of school personnel

19  or other students.

20         5.4.  Prior to assignment of students to second chance

21  schools, school boards are encouraged to use alternative

22  programs, such as in-school suspension, which provide

23  instruction and counseling leading to improved student

24  behavior, a reduction in the incidence of truancy, and the

25  development of more effective interpersonal skills.

26         6.5.  Students assigned to second chance schools must

27  be evaluated by the school's local child study team before

28  placement in a second chance school.  The study team shall

29  ensure that students are not eligible for placement in a

30  program for emotionally disturbed children.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         7.6.  Students who exhibit academic and social progress

  2  and who wish to return to a traditional school shall be

  3  evaluated by school district personnel prior to reentering a

  4  traditional school.

  5         8.7.  Second chance schools shall be funded at the

  6  dropout prevention program weight pursuant to s. 236.081 and

  7  may receive school safety funds or other funds as appropriate.

  8         (4)(5)  PROGRAM PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION.--

  9         (a)  Each district may establish one or more

10  alternative programs for dropout prevention at the elementary,

11  middle, junior high school, or high school level.  Programs

12  designed to eliminate habitual truancy shall emphasize

13  academic performance and may provide specific instruction in

14  the areas of vocational education, preemployment training, and

15  behavioral management. Such programs shall utilize

16  instructional teaching methods appropriate to the specific

17  needs of the student.

18         (b)  Any school district desiring to receive state

19  funding for a dropout prevention program pursuant to the

20  provisions of s. 236.081(1)(c) shall develop a comprehensive

21  dropout prevention program plan which describes all of the

22  programs and services which the district will make available

23  to students pursuant to subsection (4).

24         (c)  For each program to be provided by the district

25  pursuant to subsection (4), the following information shall be

26  provided in the program plan:

27         1.  Student eligibility criteria.

28         2.  Student admission procedures.

29         3.  Operating procedures.

30         4.  Program goals and outcome objectives. Measurable

31  outcome objectives shall provide a framework for the


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  evaluation of each dropout prevention program, which shall

  2  specify, at a minimum, the outcome to be produced, the time

  3  period during which the outcome will be produced, and to what

  4  degree the outcome will be produced.

  5         5.  Qualifications of program personnel.

  6         6.  A schedule for staff development activities.

  7         7.  Evaluation procedures which describe how outcome

  8  objectives will be achieved and measured.

  9         (d)  Beginning with the 1994-1995 school year, district

10  plans or amended plans may be submitted to the Department of

11  Education dropout prevention regional offices for technical

12  assistance and review prior to approval by the local school

13  board.

14         (e)  The Department of Education shall provide

15  technical assistance upon request of the school or school

16  district.

17         (b)(f)  Each school that establishes or continues a

18  dropout prevention program at that school site shall reflect

19  that program in the school improvement plan as required under

20  s. 230.23(16)(18).

21         (c)(g)  Districts may modify courses listed in the

22  State Course Code Directory for the purpose of providing

23  dropout prevention programs pursuant to the provisions of this

24  section. Such modifications must be approved by the

25  commissioner and may include lengthening or shortening of the

26  time allocated for in-class study, alternate methods of

27  assessment of student performance, the integration of

28  curriculum frameworks or student performance standards to

29  produce interdisciplinary units of instruction, and activities

30  conducted within the student support and assistance component

31  of education alternatives.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (5)(6)  EVALUATION.--The Department of Education shall

  2  establish a set of minimum objective criteria for each program

  3  type under this section. In establishing the criteria, the

  4  department shall solicit school district input. Each school

  5  district receiving state funding for dropout prevention

  6  programs through the Florida Education Finance Program as

  7  provided for in subsection (5) shall submit information

  8  through an annual report to the Department of Education's

  9  database Education documenting the extent to which each of the

10  district's dropout prevention programs has been successful in

11  meeting the outcome objectives established by the district for

12  the program. At a minimum, school districts shall develop

13  outcome objectives for each objective criteria established by

14  the Department of Education. Such outcome objectives shall be

15  included in the annual report required under this subsection.

16  The department shall develop specific review measures,

17  pursuant to s. 229.555, to ensure that district program

18  outcome objectives are measurable and include the number and

19  proportion of students in dropout prevention programs who

20  later drop out of high school, thereby assuring that these

21  objectives will provide an accurate basis for evaluating the

22  effectiveness of dropout prevention programs. This information

23  shall be reported to parents pursuant to s. 230.23(18). The

24  department shall compile this information into an annual

25  report which shall be submitted to the presiding officers of

26  the Legislature by February 15.

27         (7)  STAFF DEVELOPMENT.--

28         (a)  Each school district shall establish procedures

29  for ensuring that teachers assigned to dropout prevention

30  programs possess the affective, pedagogical, and

31  content-related skills necessary to meet the needs of at-risk


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  students. Each school board shall also ensure that adequate

  2  staff development activities are available for dropout

  3  prevention staff and that dropout prevention staff participate

  4  in these activities.

  5         (b)  The district school boards and the department may

  6  establish a summer inservice training program for teachers and

  7  administrators which may be provided by district school boards

  8  or individual schools and which shall include, but not be

  9  limited to, instruction focusing on treating students with

10  respect and enhancing student self-esteem, developing positive

11  in-school intervention methods for misbehaving students,

12  establishing strategies to involve students in classroom and

13  school management and in reducing student misconduct,

14  conducting student and parent conferences, and creating

15  "student-friendly" environments at schools. Instructional

16  personnel may use successful participation in a summer

17  inservice training program established pursuant to this

18  paragraph for certification extension or for adding a new

19  certification area if the district has an approved add-on

20  certification program, pursuant to State Board of Education

21  rules. 

22         (6)(8)  RECORDS.--Each district providing a program for

23  dropout prevention pursuant to the provisions of this section

24  shall maintain for each participating student for whom funding

25  is generated through the Florida Education Finance Program

26  records documenting the student's eligibility, the length of

27  participation, the type of program to which the student was

28  assigned, and an evaluation of the student's academic and

29  behavioral performance while in the program. The parents or

30  guardians of a student assigned to such a dropout prevention

31  program shall be notified in writing and entitled to an


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  administrative review of any action by school personnel

  2  relating to such placement pursuant to the provisions of

  3  chapter 120. However, for educational alternatives of choice,

  4  which are voluntary and for which a student's parent or

  5  guardian has requested participation, such notification of

  6  administrative review shall not be required.

  7         (7)(9)  COORDINATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES.--School

  8  district dropout prevention programs shall be coordinated with

  9  social service, law enforcement, prosecutorial, and juvenile

10  justice agencies in the school district. School districts

11  shall inventory community services and programs relevant to

12  implementation of their comprehensive dropout prevention

13  program plans. Notwithstanding the provisions of s. 228.093,

14  these agencies are authorized to exchange information

15  contained in student records and juvenile justice records.

16  Such information is confidential and exempt from the

17  provisions of s. 119.07(1). School districts and other

18  agencies receiving such information shall use the information

19  only for official purposes connected with the certification of

20  students for admission to and for the administration of the

21  dropout prevention program, and shall maintain the

22  confidentiality of such information unless otherwise provided

23  by law or rule.

24         (8)(10)  RULES.--The Department of Education shall have

25  the authority to adopt any rules necessary to implement the

26  provisions of this section; such rules shall require the

27  minimum amount of paperwork and reporting necessary to comply

28  with this act. By January 1, 1995, current rules regarding

29  this section shall be revised.

30         Section 9.  Subsection (15) of section 230.23161,

31  Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, is amended to read:


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         230.23161  Educational services in Department of

  2  Juvenile Justice programs.--

  3         (15)  Department of Juvenile Justice detention and

  4  commitment programs may be designated as second chance schools

  5  pursuant to s. 230.2316(3)(d)(e). Admission to such programs

  6  shall be governed by part II of chapter 39.

  7         Section 10.  Section 230.2317, Florida Statutes, is

  8  amended to read:

  9         230.2317  Educational multiagency services for students

10  with severe emotional disturbance severely emotionally

11  disturbed students.--

12         (1)(a)  To enable severely emotionally disturbed

13  students with severe emotional disturbance to develop

14  appropriate behaviors and demonstrate academic and vocational

15  skills, the Legislature finds that it is necessary to have an

16  intensive, integrated educational program; a continuum of

17  mental health treatment services; and, when needed,

18  residential services. The Legislature finds further that the

19  small incidence of severe emotional disturbance in the total

20  school population requires multiagency programs to provide

21  access to appropriate services for all severely emotionally

22  disturbed students with severe emotional disturbance to

23  appropriate services, that local school boards should provide

24  educational programs, and that state departments and agencies

25  administering children's mental health funds the Department of

26  Health and Rehabilitative Services should provide mental

27  health treatment and residential services when needed.

28  Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature that by

29  1985-1986 there be a multiagency network to provide education;

30  mental health treatment; and, when needed, residential

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  services for severely emotionally disturbed students with

  2  severe emotional disturbance.

  3         (b)  The program goals for each component of the

  4  network are to enable severely emotionally disturbed students

  5  with severe emotional disturbance to learn appropriate

  6  behaviors, reduce dependency, and fully participate in all

  7  aspects of school and community living; to develop individual

  8  programs for severely emotionally disturbed students with

  9  severe emotional disturbance, which programs include necessary

10  educational, residential, and mental health treatment

11  services; to provide programs and services as close as

12  possible to the child's home in the least restrictive manner

13  consistent with the child's needs; and to integrate a wide

14  range of services which are necessary to support severely

15  emotionally disturbed students with severe emotional

16  disturbance and their families.

17         (2)(a)  The Commissioner of Education, and the

18  Secretary of Children and Family Services, and the Secretary

19  of Juvenile Justice the Department of Health and

20  Rehabilitative Services shall appoint an equal number of

21  members to the Advisory Board for the Multiagency Service

22  Network for Severely Emotionally Disturbed Students with

23  Severe Emotional Disturbance. The duties and responsibilities

24  of the advisory board shall include oversight of the

25  multiagency service network to provide a continuum of

26  education, mental health treatment, and, when needed,

27  residential services for severely emotionally disturbed

28  students with severe emotional disturbance and to assess the

29  impact of regional projects.

30         (b)  The terms of the present members shall be extended

31  as follows: positions 8, 10, 11, 16, and 20 shall be extended


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  through June 30, 1995; positions 3, 9, 15, 18, and 19 shall be

  2  extended through June 30, 1996; positions 2, 5, 7, 13, and 17

  3  shall be extended through June 30, 1997; and positions 1, 4,

  4  6, 12, and 14 shall be extended through June 30, 1998.

  5  Following expiration of the extended terms, the Commissioner

  6  of Education and the secretary of the Department of Health and

  7  Rehabilitative Services shall appoint members to 4-year terms

  8  which shall run from July 1 through June 30. Appointments

  9  shall be made by June 1 preceding commencement of the term.  A

10  vacancy shall be filled for the remainder of the unexpired

11  term in the same manner as an initial appointment.  Such

12  appointments shall be made within 60 days after creation of

13  the vacancy.

14         (c)  By December 31 of each year beginning in 1992, the

15  advisory board shall prepare and submit to the Commissioner of

16  Education, the secretary of the Department of Health and

17  Rehabilitative Services, and the appropriate standing

18  committees in the Senate and the House of Representatives a

19  report detailing its findings and making specific program,

20  legislative, and funding recommendations, and any other

21  recommendations it deems appropriate.

22         (3)  The Department of Education is authorized to award

23  grants to district school boards to develop in a rural

24  district and in an urban district a pilot multiagency network

25  component for severely emotionally disturbed students.  The

26  pilot grants shall allow for further statewide planning and

27  development of a complete multiagency network for severely

28  emotionally disturbed students with severe emotional

29  disturbance in the state. The educational services shall be

30  provided in a manner consistent with the requirements of ss.

31  230.23(4)(m) and 402.22.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (4)  State departments and agencies are The Department

  2  of Health and Rehabilitative Services is authorized to use

  3  appropriate community mental health service funds for the

  4  pilot multiagency network components for severely emotionally

  5  disturbed students with severe emotional disturbance.  The

  6  mental health treatment services and residential services

  7  shall be provided in a manner that is consistent with chapter

  8  394 and s. 402.22.

  9         (5)  The network components for severely emotionally

10  disturbed students shall be funded from the Florida Education

11  Finance Program, Department of Health and Rehabilitative

12  Services funds for the emotionally disturbed, and the pilot

13  grant program from the Department of Education.

14         (6)  A written agreement between the district school

15  board or boards and the Department of Health and

16  Rehabilitative Services outlining the respective duties and

17  responsibilities of each party shall be developed for

18  implementation of a component of the multiagency network for

19  severely emotionally disturbed students.

20         (7)  The State Board of Education and the Department of

21  Health and Rehabilitative Services are authorized to adopt

22  rules to carry out the intent of this section.

23         Section 11.  Section 230.2318, Florida Statutes, 1996

24  Supplement, is amended to read:

25         230.2318  School resource officer program.--

26         (1)  SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER PROGRAM.--School boards

27  may establish school resource officer programs, through a

28  cooperative agreement with law enforcement agencies or in

29  accordance with s. 230.23175. There is hereby created a

30  statewide school resource officer program.  It is the intent

31  of the Legislature in establishing this program that the state


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  provide assistance to local school boards in the form of

  2  matching grants for the establishment, continuation, or

  3  expansion of cooperative programs with law enforcement and

  4  community agencies for the following purposes:

  5         (a)  To perform law enforcement functions within the

  6  school setting.

  7         (b)  To identify and prevent, through counseling and

  8  referral, delinquent behavior, including substance abuse.

  9         (c)  To foster a better understanding of the law

10  enforcement function.

11         (d)  To develop positive concepts of law enforcement.

12         (e)  To develop a better appreciation of citizen

13  rights, obligations, and responsibilities.

14         (f)  To provide information about crime prevention, and

15  to promote student crime watch programs in the schools.

16         (g)  To provide assistance and support for crime

17  victims identified within the school setting, including abused

18  children.

19         (h)  To promote positive relations between students and

20  law enforcement officers.

21         (i)  To enhance knowledge of the fundamental concepts

22  and structure of law.

23         (2)  LOCAL SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER PROGRAM PLANS;

24  APPROVAL BY COMMISSIONER; CRITERIA AND RESTRICTIONS.--

25         (a)  Each school district desiring to establish a local

26  school resource officer program, in conjunction with one or

27  more law enforcement and community agencies, shall submit a

28  proposed school resource officer program plan to the

29  Commissioner of Education for review. Two or more districts

30  may submit a joint plan to maximize benefits as desirable.

31  Each plan shall contain a detailed description of the proposed


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  local school resource officer program, including, but not

  2  limited to, the following:

  3         1.  An agreement between the school board and each

  4  participating law enforcement and community agency specifying

  5  the financial and other responsibilities of each party.

  6         2.  Program objectives and guidelines.

  7         3.  A provision for and description of a preservice

  8  training program for school resource officers. Each preservice

  9  training program shall be either modeled after a program

10  jointly designed by the department, district school personnel,

11  and law enforcement agencies, or an alternate approved by the

12  department.

13         4.  The criteria used by the employing law enforcement

14  agency and the district in the selection of school resource

15  officers.

16         5.  Any other information required by the commissioner.

17         6.  An agreement between the school board and the law

18  enforcement agency regarding the school resource officer's

19  uniform.

20         (b)  The commissioner shall review all proposed local

21  school resource officer program plans and shall approve those

22  plans which meet the purposes, intent, and requirements of

23  this section and the rules adopted by the State Board of

24  Education pursuant to this section.

25         (c)  If a plan is approved, the commissioner shall

26  provide one-third of the funds for its operation from those

27  funds appropriated by the Legislature for the operation of

28  this program.

29         (d)  The State Board of Education shall have the

30  authority to promulgate rules to implement the statewide

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  school resource officer program as established in this

  2  section.

  3         (e)  The Department of Education shall provide

  4  technical assistance to school boards desiring to establish

  5  local school resource officer programs.

  6         (2)(3)  SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER CERTIFICATION; DUTIES

  7  AND RESPONSIBILITIES.--

  8         (a)  School resource officers shall be certified law

  9  enforcement officers, as defined in s. 943.10(1), who are

10  employed by a law enforcement agency as defined in s.

11  943.10(4).  The powers and duties of a law enforcement officer

12  shall continue throughout the employee's tenure as a school

13  resource officer.

14         (b)  School resource officers shall abide by school

15  board policies and shall consult with and coordinate

16  activities through the school principal, but shall be

17  responsible to the law enforcement agency in all matters

18  relating to employment, subject to agreements between a school

19  board and a law enforcement agency pursuant to subparagraph

20  (2)(a)1. Activities conducted by the school resource officer

21  which are part of the regular instructional program of the

22  school shall be under the direction of the principal.

23         (3)(4)  APPLICATION FOR FEDERAL FUNDS.--The Department

24  of Education is authorized to apply for funds from, and to

25  submit all necessary forms to, any federal agency which may

26  provide assistance to programs similar to the school resource

27  officer program.

28         Section 12.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (5) of section

29  230.303, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

30         230.303  Superintendent of schools.--

31         (5)


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (b)  In order to qualify for the special qualification

  2  salary provided by paragraph (a), the superintendent must

  3  complete the requirements established by the Department of

  4  Education within 6 years after first taking office, except

  5  that those superintendents holding office on July 1, 1980,

  6  shall have until July 1, 1986, to complete such requirements.

  7         Section 13.  Section 230.33, Florida Statutes, 1996

  8  Supplement, is amended to read:

  9         230.33  Duties and responsibilities of

10  superintendent.--The superintendent shall exercise all powers

11  and perform all duties listed below and elsewhere in the law;

12  provided, that in so doing he or she shall advise and counsel

13  with the school board. The superintendent shall perform all

14  tasks necessary to make sound recommendations, nominations,

15  proposals, and reports required by law to be acted upon by and

16  rule to be made to the school board.  All such

17  recommendations, nominations, proposals, and reports by the

18  superintendent shall be either recorded in the minutes or

19  shall be made in writing, noted in the minutes, and filed in

20  the public records of the board.  It shall be presumed that,

21  in the absence of the record required in this paragraph, the

22  recommendations, nominations, and proposals required of the

23  superintendent were not contrary to the action taken by the

24  school board in such matters.

25         (1)  ASSIST IN ORGANIZATION OF BOARD.--Preside at the

26  organization meeting of the school board and transmit to the

27  Department of Education, within 2 weeks following such

28  meeting, a certified copy of the proceedings of organization,

29  including the schedule of regular meetings, and the names and

30  addresses of district school officials.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (2)  REGULAR AND SPECIAL MEETINGS OF THE BOARD.--Attend

  2  all regular meetings of the school board, call special

  3  meetings when emergencies arise, and advise, but not vote, on

  4  questions under consideration.

  5         (3)  RECORDS FOR THE BOARD.--Keep minutes of all

  6  official actions and proceedings of the school board and keep

  7  such other records, including records of property held or

  8  disposed of by the school board, as may be necessary to

  9  provide complete information regarding the district school

10  system.

11         (4)  SCHOOL PROPERTY.--Act for the school board as

12  custodian of school property.

13         (a)  Recommend purchase and plans for

14  control.--Recommend to the school board plans for contracting,

15  receiving, purchasing, acquiring by the institution of

16  condemnation proceedings if necessary, leasing, selling,

17  holding, transmitting, and conveying title to real and

18  personal property.

19         (b)  Property held in trust.--Recommend to the school

20  board plans for holding in trust and administering property,

21  real and personal, money, or other things of value, granted,

22  conveyed, devised, or bequeathed for the benefit of the

23  schools of the district or of any one of them.

24         (5)  SCHOOL PROGRAM; PREPARE 5-YEAR AND ANNUAL PLANS

25  FOR.--Supervise the assembling of data and sponsor studies and

26  surveys essential to the development of a planned school

27  program for the entire district and prepare and recommend such

28  a program to the school board as the basis for operating the

29  district school system.

30         (6)  ESTABLISHMENT, ORGANIZATION, AND OPERATION OF

31  SCHOOLS, CLASSES, AND SERVICES.--Recommend the establishment,


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  organization, and operation of such schools, classes, and

  2  services as are needed to provide adequate educational

  3  opportunities for all children in the district., including:

  4         (a)  Schools and attendance areas.--Recommend the

  5  location of schools needed to accommodate the pupils of the

  6  district and the area from which children should attend each

  7  school.

  8         (b)  Recommend adequate facilities for all

  9  children.--Recommend plans and procedures necessary to provide

10  adequate educational facilities for all children of the

11  district.

12         (c)  Elimination of school centers and consolidation of

13  schools.--Determine when the needs of pupils can better be

14  served by eliminating school centers and by consolidating

15  schools; recommend to the school board plans for the

16  elimination of such school centers as should be eliminated and

17  for the consolidation of such schools as should be

18  consolidated.

19         (d)  Cooperation with other districts in maintaining

20  schools.--Recommend plans and procedures for cooperating with

21  school boards of adjoining districts, in this state or in

22  bordering states, in establishing school attendance areas

23  composed of territory lying within the districts and for the

24  joint maintenance of district line or other schools which

25  should serve such attendance areas, and carry out such plans

26  and administer such schools for which his or her district is

27  to be responsible under any agreement which is effected.

28         (e)  Classification and standardization of

29  schools.--Recommend plans and regulations for determining

30  those school centers at which work should be restricted to the

31  elementary grades, school centers at which work should be


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  offered only in the high school grades, and school centers at

  2  which work should be offered in any or in all grades;

  3  recommend the grade or grades in which work should be offered

  4  at each school center; recommend bases for classifying and

  5  standardizing the various schools of the district in order to

  6  provide proper incentive for the improvement of all schools.

  7         (f)  Opening and closing dates of schools.--Recommend

  8  and arrange for a uniform date each year for the opening of

  9  all schools in the district, unless other dates shall be found

10  necessary and desirable; recommend and arrange the closing

11  dates for all schools in the district, these dates to be so

12  determined as to assure, as far as practicable, uniform terms

13  for all schools in the district.  Recommend regulations for

14  the closing of any or all schools during an emergency and when

15  emergencies arise to close any or all schools in the district

16  and immediately notify the school board of the action taken

17  and the reason therefor.

18         (g)  School holidays and vacation periods.--Recommend

19  school holidays to be observed and the manner of such

20  observance by the schools and see that such holidays as are

21  approved by the school board are properly observed; also

22  recommend school vacation periods.

23         (h)  Vocational classes and schools.--Recommend plans

24  for the establishment and maintenance of vocational schools,

25  departments, or classes, giving instruction in career

26  education as defined in regulations of the state board, and

27  administer and supervise instruction in such schools,

28  departments, or classes as are established by the school

29  board.

30         (i)  Cooperation with other districts in special

31  projects or activities.--Recommend plans and procedures for


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  cooperating with other district school boards or with other

  2  agencies, in this state or in bordering states, in special

  3  projects or activities which can be more economically or

  4  advantageously provided by such cooperation.

  5         (j)  School lunches.--Recommend plans for the

  6  establishment, maintenance, and operation of a school lunch

  7  program consistent with state laws and regulations of the

  8  state board, and to administer and supervise such services.

  9         (k)  Exceptional education.--Recommend plans for the

10  provision of special education classes, instruction,

11  facilities, equipment, and related services for exceptional

12  children.

13         (7)  PERSONNEL.--Be responsible, as required herein,

14  for directing the work of the personnel, subject to the

15  requirements of chapter 231, and in addition the

16  superintendent shall have the following duties:

17         (a)  Positions, qualifications, and

18  nominations.--Recommend to the school board duties and

19  responsibilities which need to be performed and positions

20  which need to be filled to make possible the development of an

21  adequate school program in the district; recommend minimum

22  qualifications of personnel for these various positions; and

23  nominate in writing persons to fill such positions.  All

24  nominations for reappointment of supervisors and principals

25  shall be submitted to the school board not later than 1 week

26  after the end of the regular legislative session.  All

27  nominations for reappointment of members of the instructional

28  staff shall be made after conferring with the principals and

29  shall be submitted in writing to the school board not later

30  than 1 week after the end of the regular legislative session.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (b)  Compensation and salary schedules.--Prepare and

  2  recommend to the school board for adoption a salary schedule

  3  or salary schedules to be used as the basis for paying school

  4  employees, arranging such schedules, insofar as practicable,

  5  so as to furnish incentive for improvement in training and for

  6  continued and efficient service.

  7         (c)  Contracts and terms of service.--Recommend to the

  8  school board terms for contracting with employees and prepare

  9  such contracts as are approved.  Contracts with the members of

10  the instructional staff are to be prepared, recommended, and

11  executed as hereinbefore prescribed. Authority is given to

12  make appointments to approved positions and to approve

13  compensation therefor at the rate provided in the currently

14  established salary schedule, pending action by the local board

15  at its next regular or special meeting.

16         (d)  Transfer and promotions.--Recommend employees for

17  transfer and transfer any employee during any emergency and

18  report the transfer to the school board at its next regular

19  meeting.

20         (e)  Suspension and dismissal.--Suspend members of the

21  instructional staff and other school employees during

22  emergencies for a period extending to and including the day of

23  the next regular or special meeting of the school board and

24  notify the school board immediately of such suspension. When

25  authorized to do so, serve notice on the suspended member of

26  the instructional staff of charges made against him or her and

27  of the date of hearing. Recommend employees for dismissal

28  under the terms prescribed herein.

29         (f)  Direct work of employees and supervise

30  instruction.--Direct or arrange for the proper direction and

31  improvement, under regulations of the school board, of the


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  1  work of all members of the instructional staff and other

  2  employees of the district school system and supervise or

  3  arrange under rules of the school board for the supervision of

  4  instruction in the district and take such steps as are

  5  necessary to bring about continuous improvement.

  6         (8)  CHILD WELFARE.--Recommend plans to the school

  7  board for the proper accounting for all children of school

  8  age, for the attendance and control of pupils at school, for

  9  the proper attention to health, safety, and other matters

10  which will best promote the welfare of children in the

11  following fields, as prescribed in chapter 232.:

12         (a)  Admission, classification, promotion, and

13  graduation of pupils.--Recommend rules and regulations for

14  admitting, classifying, promoting, and graduating pupils to or

15  from the various schools of the district.

16         (b)  Enforcement of attendance laws.--Recommend plans

17  and procedures for the enforcement of all laws and regulations

18  relating to the attendance of pupils at school and for the

19  employment of such qualified assistants as may be needed by

20  the superintendent to enforce effectively those laws.

21         (c)  Control of pupils.--Propose rules and regulations

22  for the control, discipline, in-school suspension, suspension,

23  and expulsion of pupils and review and modify recommendations

24  for suspension and expulsion of pupils and transmit to the

25  school board for action recommendations for expulsion of

26  pupils. When the superintendent makes a recommendation for

27  expulsion to the school board, he or she shall give written

28  notice to the pupil and the pupil's parent or guardian of the

29  recommendation, setting forth the charges against the pupil

30  and advising the pupil and his or her parent or guardian of

31  the pupil's right to due process as prescribed by ss. 120.569


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  and 120.57(2). When school board action on a recommendation

  2  for the expulsion of a pupil is pending, the superintendent

  3  may extend the suspension assigned by the principal beyond 10

  4  school days if such suspension period expires before the next

  5  regular or special meeting of the school board.

  6         (9)  COURSES OF STUDY AND OTHER INSTRUCTIONAL

  7  AIDS.--Recommend such plans for improving, providing,

  8  distributing, accounting for, and caring for textbooks and

  9  other instructional aids as will result in general improvement

10  of the district school system, as prescribed in chapter 233.

11  and including the following:

12         (a)  Courses of study.--Prepare and recommend for

13  adoption, after consultation with teachers and principals and

14  after considering any suggestions which may have been

15  submitted by patrons of the schools, courses of study for use

16  in the schools of the district needed to supplement those

17  prescribed by the state board.

18         (b)  Textbooks.--Require that all textbooks and library

19  books furnished by the state and needed in the district are

20  properly requisitioned, distributed, accounted for, stored,

21  cared for, and used; and recommend such additional textbooks

22  or library books as may be needed.

23         (c)  Other instructional aids.--Recommend plans for

24  providing and facilitate the provision and proper use of such

25  other teaching accessories and aids as are needed.

26         (d)  School library media services; establishment and

27  maintenance.--Recommend plans for establishing and maintaining

28  school library media centers, or school library media centers

29  open to the public, and, in addition thereto, such circulating

30  or traveling libraries as are needed for the proper operation

31  of the district school system.  Recommend plans for the


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  1  establishment and maintenance of a program of school library

  2  media services for all public school students.  The school

  3  library media services program shall be designed to ensure

  4  effective use of available resources and to avoid unnecessary

  5  duplication and shall include, but not be limited to, basic

  6  skills development, instructional design, media collection

  7  development, media program management, media production, staff

  8  development, and consultation and information services.

  9         (10)  TRANSPORTATION OF PUPILS.--Ascertain which pupils

10  should be transported to school or to school activities,

11  determine the most effective arrangement of transportation

12  routes to accommodate these pupils; recommend such routing to

13  the school board; recommend plans and procedures for providing

14  facilities for the economical and safe transportation of

15  pupils; recommend such rules and regulations as may be

16  necessary and see that all rules and regulations relating to

17  the transportation of pupils approved by the school board, as

18  well as regulations of the state board, are properly carried

19  into effect, as prescribed in chapter 234.

20         (11)  SCHOOL PLANT.--Recommend plans, and execute such

21  plans as are approved, regarding all phases of the school

22  plant program, as prescribed in chapter 235., including the

23  following:

24         (a)  School building program.--Recommend plans and

25  procedures for having a survey made under the direction of the

26  department, or by some agency approved by the department, as a

27  basis for developing a districtwide school building program as

28  a phase of the 5-year program for the district and recommend

29  such program when sufficient evidence is available, specifying

30  the centers at which school work should be offered on the

31  various levels; the type, size, and location of schools to be


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  established; and the steps to be taken to carry out the

  2  program.

  3         (b)  Sites, buildings, and equipment.--Recommend the

  4  purchasing of school sites, playgrounds, and recreational

  5  areas located at centers at which schools are to be

  6  constructed and of adequate size to meet the need of pupils to

  7  be accommodated; or of additions to existing sites when

  8  needed; recommend the rental of buildings when necessary;

  9  recommend the erection of buildings; recommend additions,

10  alterations, and repairs to buildings and other school

11  properties; ensure that all plans and specifications for

12  buildings provide adequately for the safety of pupils as well

13  as for economy of construction by submitting such plans and

14  specifications to the Department of Education for approval;

15  recommend the purchasing of furniture, books, apparatus, and

16  other equipment necessary for the proper conduct of the work

17  of the schools.

18         (c)  Maintenance and upkeep of the school

19  plant.--Propose plans for assuring proper maintenance and

20  upkeep of the school plant and for the provision of the

21  utilities and supplies for the operation of the schools; and

22  when the plans are approved by the school board, take such

23  steps as are necessary to see that buildings are kept in

24  proper sanitary and physical condition and that heat, lights,

25  water, and power and other supplies and utilities are

26  adequate.

27         (d)  Insurance of school property.--Propose plans and

28  procedures for insuring economically every plant and its

29  contents, boilers and machinery as well as school buses and

30  other property, under the control of the school board and see

31  that the proper records are kept of such insurance.


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  1         (e)  Condemnation of buildings.--Inspect periodically

  2  all school buildings and surroundings to determine whether

  3  there are any unsanitary conditions or whether there are

  4  physical hazards which are likely to jeopardize the health or

  5  life of the pupils or instructional staff; request competent

  6  assistance from the state or other authorized agency, if

  7  necessary, to determine whether buildings found to be

  8  defective should be condemned and to recommend to the school

  9  board condemnation of buildings which should be abandoned.

10         (12)  FINANCE.--Recommend measures to the school board

11  to assure adequate educational facilities throughout the

12  district, in accordance with the financial procedure

13  authorized in chapters 236 and 237 and as prescribed below:

14         (a)  Plan for operating all schools for minimum

15  term.--Determine and recommend district funds necessary in

16  addition to state funds to provide for at least a 180-day

17  school term or the equivalent on an hourly basis as specified

18  by rules which shall be adopted by the State Board of

19  Education and recommend plans for ensuring the operation of

20  all schools for the term authorized by the school board.

21         (b)  Annual budget.--Prepare the annual school budget

22  to be submitted to the school board for adoption according to

23  law and submit this budget, when adopted by the school board,

24  to the Department of Education on or before the date required

25  by rules of the state board.

26         (c)  Tax levies.--Recommend to the school board, on the

27  basis of the needs shown by the budget, the amount of district

28  school tax levy necessary to provide the district school funds

29  needed for the maintenance of the public schools; recommend to

30  the school board the tax levy required on the basis of the

31  needs shown in the budget for the district bond interest and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  sinking fund of each district; and recommend to the school

  2  board to be included on the ballot at each district millage

  3  election the school district tax levies necessary to carry on

  4  the school program.

  5         (d)  School funds.--Keep an accurate account of all

  6  funds which should be transmitted to the school board for

  7  school purposes at various periods during the year and see,

  8  insofar as possible, that these funds are transmitted

  9  promptly; report promptly to the school board any

10  delinquencies or delays that occur in making available any

11  funds that should be made available for school purposes.

12         (e)  Borrowing money.--Recommend when necessary the

13  borrowing of money as prescribed by law.

14         (f)  Financial records and accounting.--Keep or have

15  kept accurate records of all financial transactions.

16         (g)  Payrolls and accounts.--Maintain accurate and

17  current statements of accounts due to be paid by the school

18  board; certify these statements as correct; liquidate board

19  obligations in accordance with the official budget and rules

20  of the school board; and prepare periodic reports as required

21  by rules of the state board, showing receipts, balances, and

22  disbursements to date, and file copies of such periodic

23  reports with the Department of Education.

24         (h)  Bonds for employees.--Recommend the bonds of all

25  school employees who should be bonded in order to provide

26  reasonable safeguards for all school funds or property.

27         (i)  Contracts.--After study of the feasibility of

28  contractual services with industry, recommend to the school

29  board the desirable terms, conditions, and specifications for

30  contracts for supplies, materials, or services to be rendered

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  and see that materials, supplies, or services are provided

  2  according to contract.

  3         (j)  Investment policies.--The superintendent shall,

  4  after careful examination, recommend policies to the school

  5  board which will provide for the investment or deposit of

  6  school funds not needed for immediate expenditures which shall

  7  earn the maximum possible yield under the circumstances on

  8  such investments or deposits. The superintendent shall cause

  9  to be invested at all times all school moneys not immediately

10  needed for expenditures pursuant to the policies of the school

11  board.

12         (k)  Protection against loss.--Recommend programs and

13  procedures to the school board necessary to protect the school

14  system adequately against loss or damage to school property or

15  against loss resulting from any liability for which the board

16  or its officers, agents, or employees may be responsible under

17  law.

18         (l)  Millage elections.--Recommend plans and procedures

19  for holding and supervising all school district millage

20  elections.

21         (m)  Budgets and expenditures.--Prepare, after

22  consulting with the principals of the various schools,

23  tentative annual budgets for the expenditure of district funds

24  for the benefit of public school pupils of the district.

25         (n)  Bonds.--Recommend the amounts of bonds to be

26  issued in the district and assist in the preparation of the

27  necessary papers for an election to determine whether the

28  proposed bond issue will be approved by the electors; if such

29  bond issue be approved by the electors, recommend plans for

30  the sale of bonds and for the proper expenditure of the funds

31  derived therefrom.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (13)  RECORDS AND REPORTS.--Recommend such records as

  2  should be kept in addition to those prescribed by rules of the

  3  state board or by the department; prepare forms for keeping

  4  such records as are approved by the school board; see that

  5  such records are properly kept; and make all reports that are

  6  needed or required, as follows:

  7         (a)  Forms, blanks, and reports.--Require that all

  8  employees keep accurately all records and make promptly in

  9  proper form all reports required by the school code or by

10  rules of the state board; recommend the keeping of such

11  additional records and the making of such additional reports

12  as may be deemed necessary to provide data essential for the

13  operation of the school system; and prepare such forms and

14  blanks as may be required and see that these records and

15  reports are properly prepared.

16         (b)  Reports to the department.--Prepare, for the

17  approval of the school board, all reports that may be required

18  by law or rules of the state board to be made to the

19  department and transmit promptly all such reports, when

20  approved, to the department, as required by law.  If any such

21  reports are not transmitted at the time and in the manner

22  prescribed by law or by state board rules, the salary of the

23  superintendent shall be withheld until such report has been

24  properly submitted.  Unless otherwise provided by regulations

25  of the state board, the annual report on attendance and

26  personnel shall be due on or before July 1, and the annual

27  school budget and the report on finance shall be due on the

28  date prescribed by the state board.

29         (c)  Failure to make reports; penalty.--Any

30  superintendent who knowingly signs and transmits to any state

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  official a false or incorrect report shall forfeit his or her

  2  right to any salary for the period of 1 year from that date.

  3         (14)  COOPERATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES.--

  4         (a)  Cooperation with governmental agencies in

  5  enforcement of laws and rules.--Recommend plans for

  6  cooperating with, and, on the basis of approved plans,

  7  cooperate with federal, state, county, and municipal agencies

  8  in the enforcement of laws and rules pertaining to all matters

  9  relating to education and child welfare.

10         (b)  Cooperation with other local administrators to

11  achieve the first state education goal.--Cooperate with the

12  district administrator of the Department of Health and

13  Rehabilitative Services and with administrators of other local

14  public and private agencies to achieve the first state

15  education goal, readiness to start school.

16         (c)  Identifying and reporting names of migratory

17  children, other information.--Recommend plans for identifying

18  and reporting to the Department of Education the name of each

19  child in the school district who qualifies according to the

20  definition of a migratory child, based on Pub. L. No. 95-561,

21  and for reporting such other information as may be prescribed

22  by the department.

23         (15)  ENFORCEMENT OF LAWS AND RULES.--Require that all

24  laws and rules of the state board, as well as supplementary

25  rules of the school board, are properly observed and report to

26  the school board any violation which the superintendent does

27  not succeed in having corrected.

28         (16)  COOPERATE WITH SCHOOL BOARD.--Cooperate with the

29  school board in every manner practicable to the end that the

30  district school system may continuously be improved.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (17)  VISITATION OF SCHOOLS.--Visit the schools;

  2  observe the management and instruction; give suggestions for

  3  improvement; and advise with supervisors, principals,

  4  teachers, patrons, and other citizens with the view of

  5  promoting interest in education and improving the school

  6  conditions of the district.

  7         (18)  CONFERENCES, INSTITUTES, AND STUDY COURSES.--Call

  8  and conduct institutes and conferences with employees of the

  9  school board, school patrons, and other interested citizens;

10  organize and direct study and extension courses for employees,

11  advising them as to their professional studies; assist patrons

12  and people generally in acquiring knowledge of the aims,

13  services, and needs of the schools.

14         (19)  PROFESSIONAL AND GENERAL IMPROVEMENT.--Attend

15  such conferences for superintendents as may be called or

16  scheduled by the Department of Education and avail himself or

17  herself of means of professional and general improvement so

18  that he or she may function most efficiently.

19         (20)  RECOMMEND REVOKING CERTIFICATES.--Recommend in

20  writing to the Department of Education the revoking of any

21  certificate for good cause, including a full statement of the

22  reason for the superintendent's recommendation.

23         (21)  MAKE RECORDS AVAILABLE TO SUCCESSOR.--Leave with

24  the school board and make available to his or her successor

25  upon retiring from office a complete inventory of school

26  equipment and other property, together with all official

27  records and such other records as may be needed in supervising

28  instruction and in administering the district school system.

29         (22)  RECOMMEND PROCEDURES FOR INFORMING GENERAL

30  PUBLIC.--Recommend to the school board procedures whereby the

31  general public can be adequately informed of the educational


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  programs, needs, and objectives of public education within the

  2  district.

  3         (23)  SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY.--Recommend

  4  procedures for implementing and maintaining a system of school

  5  improvement and education accountability as provided by

  6  statute and State Board of Education rule.

  7         (24)  OTHER DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES.--Perform such

  8  other duties as may be assigned to the superintendent by law

  9  or by rules of the state board.

10         Section 14.  Subsection (2) of section 230.331, Florida

11  Statutes, is amended to read:

12         230.331  Reproduction and destruction of district

13  school records.--

14         (2)  After complying with the provisions of s. 257.37,

15  the superintendent is authorized to photograph,

16  microphotograph, or reproduce on film or prints, documents,

17  records, data, and information of a permanent character which

18  in his or her discretion he or she may select, and the

19  superintendent is authorized to destroy any of the said

20  documents after they have been reproduced photographed and

21  after audit of the superintendent's office has been completed

22  for the period embracing the dates of said instruments.

23  Information Photographs or microphotographs in the form of

24  film or prints made in compliance with the provisions of this

25  section shall have the same force and effect as the originals

26  thereof would have, and shall be treated as originals for the

27  purpose of their admissibility in evidence. Duly certified or

28  authenticated reproductions of such photographs or

29  microphotographs shall be admitted in evidence equally with

30  the originals original photographs or microphotographs.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 15.  Section 230.35, Florida Statutes, is

  2  amended to read:

  3         230.35  Schools under control of school board and

  4  superintendent.--Except as otherwise provided by law, all

  5  public schools conducted within the district shall be under

  6  the direction and control of the school board with the

  7  superintendent as executive officer.

  8         Section 16.  Sections 230.59 and 230.655, Florida

  9  Statutes, and section 230.71, Florida Statutes, as amended by

10  chapters 95-147 and 95-376, Laws of Florida, are hereby

11  repealed.

12         Section 17.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section

13  232.01, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

14         232.01  Regular School attendance required between ages

15  of 6 and 16; permitted at age of 5; exceptions.--

16         (1)(a)1.  All children who have attained the age of 6

17  years or who will have attained the age of 6 years by February

18  1 of any school year or who are older than 6 years of age but

19  who have not attained the age of 16 years, except as

20  hereinafter provided, are required to attend school regularly

21  during the entire school term.

22         2.  Children who will have attained the age of 5 years

23  on or before September 1 of the school year are eligible for

24  admission to public kindergartens during that school year

25  under rules prescribed by the school board.

26         3.  Children who will have attained the age of 3 years

27  on or before September 1 of the school year are eligible for

28  admission to prekindergarten early intervention programs

29  during that school year as provided in s. 230.2305 or a

30  preschool program as provided in s. 228.061.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 18.  Section 232.021, Florida Statutes, is

  2  amended to read:

  3         232.021  Attendance records and reports required.--All

  4  officials, teachers, and other employees in public, parochial,

  5  denominational, and private schools, including private tutors,

  6  shall keep all records and shall prepare and submit promptly

  7  all reports that may be required by law and by regulations of

  8  state and district boards.  Such records shall include a

  9  register of enrollment and attendance and all such persons

10  named above shall make such reports therefrom as may be

11  required by the state board.  The enrollment register shall

12  show the absence or attendance of each child enrolled for each

13  school day of the year in a manner prescribed by the state

14  board.  The register shall be open for the inspection by the

15  designated school representative or the superintendent or

16  attendance assistant of the district in which the school is

17  located. Violation of the provisions of this section shall be

18  a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided by

19  law.

20         Section 19.  Section 232.0225, Florida Statutes, is

21  amended to read:

22         (Substantial rewording of section.  See

23         s. 232.0225, F.S., for present text.)

24         232.0225  Absence for religious instruction or

25  holidays.--Each school board shall adopt a policy which

26  authorizes a parent or guardian to request and be granted

27  permission for absence of a student from school for religious

28  instruction or religious holidays.

29         Section 20.  Section 232.023, Florida Statutes, as

30  amended by chapter 95-147, Laws of Florida, is hereby

31  repealed.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 21.  Section 232.03, Florida Statutes, is

  2  amended to read:

  3         232.03  Evidence of date of birth required.--Before

  4  admitting a child to prekindergarten or kindergarten, the

  5  principal shall require evidence that the child has attained

  6  the age at which he or she should be admitted in accordance

  7  with the provisions of s. 232.01, s. 232.04, or s. 232.045.

  8  The superintendent may require evidence of the age of any

  9  child whom he or she believes to be within the limits of

10  compulsory attendance as provided for by law.  If the first

11  prescribed evidence is not available, the next evidence

12  obtainable in the order set forth below shall be accepted:

13         (1)  A duly attested transcript of the child's birth

14  record filed according to law with a public officer charged

15  with the duty of recording births;

16         (2)  A duly attested transcript of a certificate of

17  baptism showing the date of birth and place of baptism of the

18  child, accompanied by an affidavit sworn to by the parent;

19         (3)  An insurance policy on the child's life which has

20  been in force for at least 2 years;

21         (4)  A bona fide contemporary Bible record of the

22  child's birth accompanied by an affidavit sworn to by the

23  parent;

24         (5)  A passport or certificate of arrival in the United

25  States showing the age of the child;

26         (6)  A transcript of record of age shown in the child's

27  school record of at least 4 years prior to application,

28  stating date of birth; or

29         (7)  If none of these evidences can be produced, an

30  affidavit of age sworn to by the parent, accompanied by a

31  certificate of age signed by a public health officer or by a


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  public school physician, or, if neither of these shall be

  2  available in the county, by a licensed practicing physician

  3  designated by the school board, which certificate shall state

  4  that the health officer or physician has examined the child

  5  and believes that the age as stated in the affidavit is

  6  substantially correct.

  7         Section 22.  Subsection (2) of section 232.032, Florida

  8  Statutes, as created by chapter 94-320, Laws of Florida,

  9  section 232.034, Florida Statutes, as amended by chapter

10  95-147, Laws of Florida, and sections 232.04 and 232.045,

11  Florida Statutes, are hereby repealed.

12         Section 23.  Section 232.06, Florida Statutes, is

13  amended to read:

14         232.06  Certificates of exemptions authorized in

15  certain cases.--Children within the compulsory attendance age

16  limits who hold valid certificates of exemption which have

17  been issued by the superintendent shall be exempt from

18  attending school.  A certificate of exemption shall cease to

19  be valid at the end of the school year in which it is issued.

20  Children entitled to such certificates and the conditions upon

21  which they may be issued are as follows:

22         (1)  PHYSICAL AND MENTAL DISABILITY.--Any child whose

23  physical, mental, or emotional condition is such as to prevent

24  his or her successful participation in regular or special

25  education programs for exceptional children; provided, that

26  before issuing a certificate of exemption for physical,

27  mental, or emotional disability, the superintendent shall

28  require the submission of a statement from the county health

29  officer, if a licensed physician, in counties having such an

30  officer, and in other counties from a licensed practicing

31  physician or qualified psychological examiner designated by


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  the district certifying that the child is physically or

  2  mentally incapacitated for school attendance; provided,

  3  further, that if appropriate programs are not available within

  4  the school system, arrangements shall be made with adjoining

  5  districts or other appropriate agencies, residential schools,

  6  or approved nonpublic schools providing appropriate programs

  7  and services as determined by the Department of Education

  8  under regulations prescribed by the state board.  Any child so

  9  exempt from educational provisions shall immediately be

10  reported to the department.

11         (2)  EMPLOYMENT EXEMPTION.--Children who have reached

12  14 years of age who hold employment certificates and are

13  employed under provisions of the Child Labor Law.

14         (3)  JUDICIAL EXEMPTIONS.--Upon the recommendation of a

15  circuit judge and the agreement of the superintendent, any

16  child within the compulsory attendance age limit may be

17  granted a certificate of exemption.

18         (4)  CHILD CARE EXEMPTION.--A parent who does not have

19  access to child care, provided that:

20         (a)  The superintendent certifies that:

21         1.  Space is not available in any child care center

22  which is operated by, or under contract with, the school

23  district and is located within 1 hour from the student's home

24  or 30 minutes from the student's school.

25         2.  The student's child has been placed on the waiting

26  list for enrollment in the child care centers operated by, or

27  under contract with, the school district.

28         3.  The student is not required to enroll in the

29  district's teenage parent program as an eligibility

30  requirement for enrollment of the student's child in a school

31  district child care center.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         4.  When child care is not available within the school

  2  system, the district has attempted to arrange child care

  3  through the Florida Subsidized Child Care Program.

  4         (b)  In all cases, the certificate of exemption remains

  5  valid until the student's child is placed in a child care

  6  center operated by, or under contract with, the school

  7  district, until a Florida Subsidized Child Care Program

  8  enrollment is available, or until the end of the school year,

  9  whichever occurs sooner.

10         Section 24.  Section 232.09, Florida Statutes, is

11  amended to read:

12         232.09  Parents responsible for attendance of

13  children.--Each parent of a child within the compulsory

14  attendance age shall be responsible for such child's school

15  attendance as required by law.  The absence of a child from

16  school shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this

17  section; however, no criminal prosecution shall be brought

18  against a parent, guardian, or other person having control of

19  the child until the provisions of s. 232.17(2)(c) have been

20  complied with. No parent of a child shall be held responsible

21  for such child's nonattendance at school under any of the

22  following conditions:

23         (1)  WITH PERMISSION.--The absence was with permission

24  of the head of the school; or

25         (2)  WITHOUT KNOWLEDGE.--The absence was without the

26  parent's knowledge, consent, or connivance, in which case the

27  child shall be dealt with as a dependent child; or

28         (3)  FINANCIAL INABILITY.--The parent was unable

29  financially to provide necessary clothes for the child, which

30  inability was reported in writing to the superintendent prior

31  to the opening of school or immediately after the beginning of


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  such inability; provided, that the validity of any claim for

  2  exemption under this subsection shall be determined by the

  3  superintendent subject to appeal to the school board; or

  4         (4)  SICKNESS, INJURY, OR OTHER INSURMOUNTABLE

  5  CONDITION.--Attendance was impracticable or inadvisable on

  6  account of sickness or injury, attested to by a written

  7  statement of a licensed practicing physician, or was

  8  impracticable because of some other stated insurmountable

  9  condition as defined by rules regulations of the state board.

10         Section 25.  Sections 232.10, 232.13, and 232.165,

11  Florida Statutes, are hereby repealed.

12         Section 26.  Section 232.17, Florida Statutes, 1996

13  Supplement, is amended to read:

14         232.17  Enforcement of school attendance assistants;

15  qualifications; compensation; duties.--Provisions for the

16  employment, qualifications, compensation, and duties of

17  attendance assistants shall be as follows:

18         (1)  EMPLOYMENT AND QUALIFICATIONS OF ATTENDANCE

19  ASSISTANTS.--The school board, upon the recommendation of the

20  superintendent, may employ and fix the compensation, including

21  reimbursement for travel, of a sufficient number of qualified

22  attendance assistants to guarantee regular attendance at

23  school of all children of the district within compulsory

24  school-age requirements who are not herein exempted from

25  attendance.

26         (2)  DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF ATTENDANCE

27  ASSISTANTS.--The duties and responsibilities of the attendance

28  assistant shall be exercised under the direction of the

29  superintendent and shall be as follows:

30         (a)  Maintain records.--Pupil accounting records,

31  unless maintained by others assigned by the superintendent,


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  shall be kept by attendance assistants.  These records shall

  2  be on forms approved pursuant to regulations of the state

  3  board.

  4         (1)(b)  INVESTIGATE NONENROLLMENT AND UNEXCUSED

  5  ABSENCES.--In accordance with procedure established by the

  6  state board, a designated school representative attendance

  7  assistants shall investigate cases of nonenrollment and

  8  unexcused absences from school of all children within the

  9  compulsory school age.

10         (2)(c)  GIVE WRITTEN NOTICE.--Under the direction of

11  the superintendent, a designated school representative the

12  attendance assistant shall give written notice, either in

13  person or by return receipt registered mail, to the parent,

14  guardian, or other person having control when no valid reason

15  is found for a child's nonenrollment in school or when the

16  child has a minimum of 3 but fewer than 15 unexcused absences

17  within 90 days, requiring enrollment or attendance within 3

18  days from the date of notice.  If such notice and requirement

19  are ignored, the school representative attendance assistant

20  shall report the case to the superintendent, and may refer the

21  case to the case staffing committee, established pursuant to

22  s. 39.426, if the conditions of s. 232.19(3) have been met.

23  The superintendent may take such steps as are necessary to

24  bring criminal prosecution against the parent, guardian, or

25  other person having control.  No further written notice of the

26  child's absence from school is required to be given to the

27  parent, guardian, or other person having control unless the

28  child, upon his or her return to school, remains in attendance

29  for 10 consecutive days.

30         (3)(d)  RETURN CHILD TO PARENT.--A designated school

31  representative The attendance assistant shall visit the home


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  or place of residence of a child and any other place in which

  2  he or she is likely to find any child who is required to

  3  attend school when such child is absent from school during

  4  school hours, and, when such child has been found, shall

  5  return the child to his or her parent or to the principal or

  6  teacher in charge of the school, or to the private tutor from

  7  whom absent.

  8         (e)  Visit home.--The attendance assistant shall visit

  9  promptly the home of each child of school age in his or her

10  attendance district not in attendance upon the school, and of

11  any child who should attend the Florida State School for the

12  Deaf and the Blind, and who is reported as not enrolled in

13  that school or as absent without excuse.  If no valid reason

14  is found for such nonenrollment or absence from such school or

15  schools the attendance assistant shall give written notice to

16  the parent, requiring the child's enrollment or attendance as

17  prescribed above.  The attendance assistant shall secure the

18  written approval of the president of the Florida State School

19  for the Deaf and the Blind before he or she directs or

20  requests the parents of any child to take or send such child

21  to that school.  Ten days' notice must be given in the case of

22  a child who is ordered sent to that school.  On refusal or

23  failure of the parent to meet such requirement, the attendance

24  assistant shall report the same to the superintendent, and

25  that official shall proceed to take such action as is

26  prescribed in s. 232.19(2).

27         (4)(f)  REPORT TO THE DIVISION OF JOBS AND BENEFITS.--A

28  designated school representative The attendance assistant

29  shall report to the Division of Jobs and Benefits of the

30  Department of Labor and Employment Security or to any person

31  acting in similar capacity who may be designated by law to


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  receive such notices, all violations of the Child Labor Law

  2  that may come to his or her knowledge.

  3         (5)(g)  RIGHT TO INSPECT.--A designated school

  4  representative The attendance assistant shall have the same

  5  right of access to, and inspection of, establishments where

  6  minors may be employed or detained as is given by law to the

  7  Division of Jobs and Benefits only for the purpose of

  8  ascertaining whether children of compulsory school age are

  9  actually employed there and are actually working there

10  regularly. The school representative attendance assistant

11  shall, if he or she finds unsatisfactory working conditions or

12  violations of the Child Labor Law, report his or her findings

13  to the Division of Jobs and Benefits or its agents.

14         (h)  Record of visits.--The attendance assistant shall

15  keep an accurate record of all children returned to schools or

16  homes, of all cases prosecuted, and of all other service

17  performed.  A written report of all such activities shall be

18  made quarterly to the school board and shall be filed in the

19  office of the superintendent.

20         Section 27.  Subsections (3) and (5) of section 232.19,

21  Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, are amended to read:

22         232.19  Court procedure and penalties.--The court

23  procedure and penalties for the enforcement of the provisions

24  of this chapter, relating to compulsory school attendance,

25  shall be as follows:

26         (3)  HABITUAL TRUANCY CASES.--A designated school

27  representative The school social worker, the attendance

28  assistant, or the school superintendent's designee if there is

29  no school social worker or attendance assistant shall refer a

30  student who is habitually truant and the student's family to

31  the children-in-need-of-services and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  families-in-need-of-services provider or the case staffing

  2  committee, established pursuant to s. 39.426, as determined by

  3  the cooperative agreement required in this section.  The case

  4  staffing committee may request the Department of Juvenile

  5  Justice or its designee to file a child-in-need-of-services

  6  petition based upon the report and efforts of the school

  7  district or other community agency or may seek to resolve the

  8  truancy behavior through the school or community-based

  9  organizations or agencies. Prior to and subsequent to the

10  filing of a child-in-need-of-services petition due to habitual

11  truancy, the appropriate governmental agencies must allow a

12  reasonable time to complete actions required by this

13  subsection to remedy the conditions leading to the truant

14  behavior. The following criteria must be met and documented in

15  writing prior to the filing of a petition:

16         (a)  The child must have 15 unexcused absences within

17  90 days with or without the knowledge or consent of the

18  child's parent or legal guardian and must not be exempt from

19  attendance by virtue of being over the age of compulsory

20  school attendance or by meeting the criteria in s. 232.06, s.

21  232.09, or any other exemption specified by law or the rules

22  of the State Board of Education.

23         (b)  In addition to the actions described in s. 232.17,

24  the school administration must have completed the following

25  activities to determine the cause, and to attempt the

26  remediation, of the child's truant behavior:

27         1.  After a minimum of 3 and prior to 15 unexcused

28  absences within 90 days, one or more meetings must have been

29  held, either in person or by phone, between a designated

30  school representative attendance assistant or school social

31  worker, the child's parent or guardian, and the child, if


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  necessary, to report and to attempt to solve the truancy

  2  problem. However, if the designated school representative

  3  attendance assistant or school social worker has documented

  4  the refusal of the parent or guardian to participate in the

  5  meetings, this requirement has been met.

  6         2.  Educational counseling must have been provided to

  7  determine whether curriculum changes would help solve the

  8  truancy problem, and, if any changes were indicated, such

  9  changes must have been instituted but proved unsuccessful in

10  remedying the truant behavior. Such curriculum changes may

11  include enrollment of the child in a dropout prevention an

12  alternative education program that meets the specific

13  educational and behavioral needs of the child, including a

14  second chance school, as provided for in s. 230.2316, designed

15  to resolve truant behavior.

16         3.  Educational evaluation, which may include

17  psychological evaluation, must have been provided to assist in

18  determining the specific condition, if any, that is

19  contributing to the child's nonattendance.  The evaluation

20  must have been supplemented by specific efforts by the school

21  to remedy any diagnosed condition.

22

23  If a child within the compulsory school attendance age is

24  responsive to the interventions described in this paragraph

25  and has completed the necessary requirements to pass the

26  current grade as indicated in the district pupil progression

27  plan, the child shall be passed.

28         (c)  The district manager of the Department of Juvenile

29  Justice or the district manager's designee and the

30  superintendent of the local school district or the

31  superintendent's designee must have developed a cooperative


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  interagency agreement which clearly defines each department's

  2  role, responsibility, and function in working with habitual

  3  truants and their families.  The interagency agreement shall

  4  specify that the participants address issues of streamlining

  5  service delivery, the appropriateness of legal intervention,

  6  case management, the role and responsibility of the case

  7  staffing committee, student and parental intervention and

  8  involvement, and community action plans.  The interagency

  9  agreement shall delineate timeframes for implementation and

10  identify a mechanism for reporting results by the district

11  juvenile justice manager or the district manager's designee

12  and the superintendent of schools or the superintendent's

13  designee to the Department of Juvenile Justice and the

14  Department of Education and other governmental entities as

15  needed. The cooperative agreement may designate which agency

16  shall be responsible for the intervention steps in s.

17  39.01(73), or this section, if such designation shall yield

18  more effective and efficient intervention services.

19         (5)  PROCEEDINGS AND PROSECUTIONS; WHO MAY

20  BEGIN.--Proceedings or prosecutions under the provisions of

21  this chapter may be begun by the superintendent, by a

22  designated school representative an attendance assistant, by

23  the probation officer of the county, by the executive officer

24  of any court of competent jurisdiction, or by an officer of

25  any court of competent jurisdiction, or by a duly authorized

26  agent of the Department of Education.

27         (6)  PENALTIES.--The penalties for refusing or failing

28  to comply with the provisions of this chapter shall be as

29  follows:

30         (a)  The parent.--A parent who refuses or fails to have

31  a child who is under his or her control attend school


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  regularly, or who refuses or fails to comply with the

  2  requirements in subsection (3), is guilty of a misdemeanor of

  3  the second degree, punishable as provided by law.  The

  4  continued or habitual absence of a child without the consent

  5  of the principal or teacher in charge of the school he or she

  6  attends or should attend, or of the tutor who instructs or

  7  should instruct him or her, is prima facie evidence of a

  8  violation of this chapter; however, the court of the

  9  appropriate jurisdiction, upon finding that the parent has

10  made a bona fide and diligent effort to control and keep the

11  child in school, shall excuse the parent from any criminal

12  liability prescribed herein and shall refer the parent and

13  child for counseling, guidance, or other needed services.

14         (b)  The principal or teacher.--A principal or teacher

15  in charge of a school, public, parochial, denominational, or

16  private, or a private tutor who willfully violates any

17  provision of this chapter may, upon satisfactory proof of such

18  violation, have his or her certificate revoked by the

19  Department of Education.

20         (c)  The employer.--An employer who fails to notify the

21  superintendent when he or she ceases to employ a child is

22  guilty of a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as

23  provided by law.

24         Section 28.  Subsections (2) and (3) of section

25  232.245, Florida Statutes, and section 232.2452, Florida

26  Statutes, as amended by chapter 95-147, Laws of Florida, are

27  hereby repealed.

28         Section 29.  Section 232.2461, Florida Statutes, is

29  hereby repealed.

30         Section 30.  Section 232.2462, Florida Statutes, is

31  amended to read:


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         232.2462  Attendance requirement for receipt of high

  2  school credit; Definition of "credit".--

  3         (1)(a)  For the purposes of requirements for high

  4  school graduation, one full credit means a minimum of 150

  5  hours of bona fide instruction in a designated course of study

  6  which contains student performance standards as provided for

  7  in s. 232.2454.  Six semester credit hours of instruction

  8  earned through enrollment pursuant to s. 240.116 shall also

  9  equal one full credit.

10         (b)  The hourly requirements for one-half credit are

11  one-half the requirements specified in paragraph (a).

12         (2)  A student may not be awarded a credit if he or she

13  has not been in for instruction for a minimum of 135 hours

14  unless he or she has demonstrated mastery of the student

15  performance standards in the course of study as provided by

16  rules of the district school board.  Excused absences as

17  determined by the district school board and as carried out by

18  the secondary school principal shall not be counted against

19  the 135-hour minimum requirement.  Criteria for determining

20  excused absences shall be as provided in s. 232.0225, absence

21  for religious instruction, or a religious holiday, and s.

22  232.09(4), absence due to sickness, injury, or other

23  insurmountable condition, and absence due to participation in

24  an academic class or program. Missed work shall be made up, as

25  provided in the pupil progression plan established by the

26  district school board by rule, for all excused absences. The

27  difference between the 135-hour minimum requirement and the

28  150-hour definition of full credit established in this section

29  may at the discretion of the secondary school principal be

30  used for noninstructional extracurricular activities unless

31  otherwise provided by district school board rule. In credit


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  programs operated in the period beyond 180 school days, each

  2  full-credit course must be established for a minimum of 120

  3  hours.

  4         (2)(3)  In awarding credit for high school graduation,

  5  each school district shall maintain a one-half credit earned

  6  system which shall include courses provided on a full-year

  7  basis.  A student enrolled in a full-year course shall receive

  8  one-half credit if the student successfully completes either

  9  the first half or the second half of a full-year course but

10  fails to successfully complete the other half of the course

11  and the averaging of the grades obtained in each half would

12  not result in a passing grade. A student enrolled in a

13  full-year course shall receive a full credit if the student

14  successfully completes either the first half or the second

15  half of a full-year course but fails to successfully complete

16  the other half of the course and the averaging of the grades

17  obtained in each half would result in a passing grade,

18  provided that such additional requirements specified in school

19  board policies, such as class attendance, homework,

20  participation, and other indicators of performance, shall be

21  successfully completed by the student.

22         Section 31.  Subsections (2) and (3) of section

23  232.2468, Florida Statutes, as amended by chapters 96-221 and

24  96-406, Laws of Florida, are hereby repealed, and subsection

25  (1) of said section is renumbered as subsections (41), (42),

26  and (43) of section 228.041, Florida Statutes, 1996

27  Supplement, and amended to read:

28         228.041  Definitions.--Specific definitions shall be as

29  follows, and wherever such defined words or terms are used in

30  the Florida School Code, they shall be used as follows:

31         (1)  DEFINITION.--


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (41)(a)  GRADUATION RATE.--The term "graduation rate"

  2  means the percentage calculated by dividing the number of

  3  entering 9th graders into the number of students who receive,

  4  4 years later, a high school diploma, a special diploma, or a

  5  certificate of completion, as provided for in s. 232.246, or

  6  who receive a special certificate of completion, as provided

  7  in s. 232.247, and students 19 years of age or younger who

  8  receive a general equivalency diploma, as provided in s.

  9  229.814.  The number of 9th grade students used in the

10  calculation of a graduation rate for this state shall be

11  students enrolling in the grade for the first time.

12         (42)(b)  HABITUAL TRUANCY RATE.--The term "habitual

13  truancy rate" means the annual percentage of students in

14  membership within the age of compulsory school attendance

15  pursuant to s. 232.01 who are classified as habitual truants

16  as defined in subsection s. 228.041(28).

17         (43)(c)  DROPOUT RATE.--The term "dropout rate" means

18  the annual percentage calculated by dividing the number of

19  students over the age of compulsory school attendance,

20  pursuant to s. 232.01, at the time of the fall membership

21  count, into the number of students who withdraw from school

22  during a given school year and who are classified as dropouts

23  pursuant to subsection s. 228.041(29).

24

25  The State Board of Education may adopt rules to implement this

26  subsection.

27         Section 32.  Section 232.257, Florida Statutes, as

28  amended by chapters 95-147 and 95-376, Laws of Florida, and

29  section 232.258, Florida Statutes, as created by chapter

30  94-209, Laws of Florida, are hereby repealed.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 33.  Subsection (3) of section 232.271, Florida

  2  Statutes, 1996 Supplement, is amended to read:

  3         232.271  Removal by teacher.--

  4         (3)  If a teacher removes a student from class under

  5  subsection (2), the principal may place the student in another

  6  appropriate classroom, in in-school suspension, or in a

  7  dropout prevention an alternative education program as

  8  provided by s. 230.2316; or the principal may recommend the

  9  student for out-of-school suspension or expulsion, as

10  appropriate. The student may be prohibited from attending or

11  participating in school-sponsored or school-related

12  activities. The principal may not return the student to that

13  teacher's class without the teacher's consent unless the

14  committee established under s. 232.272 determines that such

15  placement is the best or only available alternative. The

16  teacher and the placement review committee must render

17  decisions within 5 days of the removal of the student from the

18  classroom.

19         Section 34.  Sections 232.276, 232.3015, and 232.303,

20  Florida Statutes, and section 232.304, Florida Statutes, as

21  amended by chapter 95-147, Laws of Florida, are hereby

22  repealed.

23         Section 35.  Section 233.011, Florida Statutes, as

24  amended by chapter 95-147, Laws of Florida, is hereby

25  repealed.

26         Section 36.  Section 233.061, Florida Statutes, is

27  amended to read:

28         233.061  Required instruction.--

29         (1)  Each school district shall provide all courses

30  required for high school graduation and appropriate

31  instruction designed to ensure that students meet state board


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  adopted standards in the following subject areas:  reading and

  2  other language arts, mathematics, science, social studies,

  3  foreign languages, health and physical education, and the

  4  arts.

  5         (2)(1)  Members of the instructional staff of the

  6  public schools, subject to the rules and regulations of the

  7  state board and of the school board, shall teach efficiently

  8  and faithfully, using the books and materials required,

  9  following the prescribed courses of study, and employing

10  approved methods of instruction, the following:

11         (a)  The content of the Declaration of Independence and

12  how it forms the philosophical foundation of our government.;

13         (b)  The arguments in support of adopting our

14  republican form of government, as they are embodied in the

15  most important of the Federalist Papers.;

16         (c)  The essentials of the United States Constitution

17  and how it provides the structure of our government.;

18         (d)  Flag education, including proper flag display and

19  flag salute.;

20         (e)  The elements of civil government.;

21         (f)  The history of the Holocaust (1933-1945), the

22  systematic, planned annihilation of European Jews and other

23  groups by Nazi Germany, a watershed event in the history of

24  humanity, to be taught in a manner that leads to an

25  investigation of human behavior, an understanding of the

26  ramifications of prejudice, racism, and stereotyping, and an

27  examination of what it means to be a responsible and

28  respectful person, for the purposes of encouraging tolerance

29  of diversity in a pluralistic society and for nurturing and

30  protecting democratic values and institutions.;

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (g)  The history of African-Americans, including the

  2  history of African peoples before the political conflicts that

  3  led to the development of slavery, the passage to America, the

  4  enslavement experience, abolition, and the contributions of

  5  African-Americans to society.;

  6         (h)  The elementary principles of agriculture.;

  7         (i)  The true effects of all alcoholic and intoxicating

  8  liquors and beverages and narcotics upon the human body and

  9  mind.;

10         (j)  Kindness to animals.;

11         (k)  The history of the state.;

12         (l)  The conservation of natural resources.; and

13         (m)  Comprehensive health education that addresses

14  concepts of community health; consumer health; environmental

15  health; family life, including an awareness of the benefits of

16  sexual abstinence as the expected standard and the

17  consequences of teenage pregnancy; mental and emotional

18  health; injury prevention and safety; nutrition; personal

19  health; prevention and control of disease; and substance use

20  and abuse.

21         (n)(m)  Such additional materials, subjects, courses,

22  or fields in such grades as may be prescribed by law or by

23  rules of the state board and the school board in fulfilling

24  the requirements of law.

25         (2)  State and district school officials shall furnish

26  and put into execution a system and method of teaching the

27  true effects of alcohol and narcotics on the human body and

28  mind, provide the necessary textbooks, literature, equipment,

29  and directions, see that such subjects are efficiently taught

30  by means of pictures, charts, oral instruction, and lectures

31  and other approved methods, and require such reports as are


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  deemed necessary to show the work which is being covered and

  2  the results being accomplished.

  3         (3)  Any child whose parent presents to the school

  4  principal a signed statement that the teaching of disease, its

  5  symptoms, development, and treatment, and the viewing of

  6  pictures or motion pictures that teach about disease, conflict

  7  with the religious teachings of the child's religious

  8  affiliation, is exempt from such instruction; and a child so

  9  exempted may not be penalized by reason of that exemption.

10         Section 37.  Section 233.0612, Florida Statutes, is

11  created to read:

12         233.0612  Authorized instruction.--Each school district

13  may provide students with programs and instruction at the

14  appropriate grade levels in areas including, but not limited

15  to, the following:

16         (1)  Character development and law education.

17         (2)  The objective study of the Bible and religion.

18         (3)  Traffic education.

19         (4)  Free enterprise and consumer education.

20         (5)  Programs to encourage patriotism and greater

21  respect for country.

22         (6)  Drug abuse resistance education.

23         (7)  Comprehensive health education.

24         (8)  Care of nursing home patients.

25         (9)  Instruction in acquired immune deficiency

26  syndrome.

27         (10)  Voting instruction including the use of county

28  voting machines.

29         (11)  Before-school and after-school programs.

30         Section 38.  Section 233.0615, Florida Statutes, as

31  amended by chapter 94-209, Laws of Florida, section 233.06411,


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  Florida Statutes, as created by chapter 95-180, Laws of

  2  Florida, sections 233.0645, 233.065, 233.0661, and 233.0662,

  3  Florida Statutes, subsections (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), and (7)

  4  of section 233.0663, Florida Statutes, as amended by chapter

  5  95-147, Laws of Florida, section 233.067, Florida Statutes, as

  6  amended by chapters 94-232, 95-147, and 96-307, Laws of

  7  Florida, section 233.0671, and subsections (3) and (4) of

  8  section 233.068, Florida Statutes, are hereby repealed.

  9         Section 39.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section

10  233.07, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

11         233.07  State instructional materials committees.--

12         (2)(a)  All appointments shall be pursuant to the

13  conditions prescribed in this section.  No member shall serve

14  more than two consecutive terms on any committee.  After

15  October 1, 1991, All appointments shall be for 18-month terms.

16  All vacancies shall be filled in the manner of the original

17  appointment for only the time remaining in the unexpired term.

18  A committee member whose term has not expired as of July 1,

19  1991, shall continue to serve for the remaining period of his

20  or her appointment.  At no time may a school district have

21  more than one representative on a committee, it being the

22  intent of the Legislature to involve representatives from the

23  maximum number of school districts in the process of

24  instructional materials selection.  The Commissioner of

25  Education and a member of the Department of Education whom he

26  or she shall designate shall be additional and ex officio

27  members of each committee.

28         Section 40.  Section 234.041, Florida Statutes, is

29  renumbered as section 316.72, Florida Statutes.

30

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 41.  Sections 234.0515 and 234.061, Florida

  2  Statutes, and section 234.091, Florida Statutes, as amended by

  3  chapter 95-147, Laws of Florida, are hereby repealed.

  4         Section 42.  Section 234.302, Florida Statutes, is

  5  renumbered as section 316.75, Florida Statutes, and amended to

  6  read:

  7         316.75 234.302  School crossing guards.--The Department

  8  of Transportation shall adopt uniform guidelines for the

  9  training of school crossing guards.  Each local governmental

10  entity administering a school crossing guard program shall

11  provide a training program for school crossing guards

12  according to the uniform guidelines for the training of school

13  crossing guards adopted by the Department of Transportation.

14  Successful completion of the such training program shall be

15  required of each school guard except:

16         (1)  A person who received equivalent training during

17  employment as a law enforcement officer.;

18         (2)  A person who receives less than $5,000 in annual

19  compensation in a county with a population of less than

20  75,000.; and

21         (3)  A student who serves in a school patrol.

22

23  School crossing guard training programs may be made available

24  to nonpublic schools upon contract.

25         Section 43.  Paragraphs (c) and (d) of subsection (5)

26  of section 24.121, Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, are

27  amended to read:

28         24.121  Allocation of revenues and expenditure of funds

29  for public education.--

30         (5)

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (c)  A portion of such net revenues, as determined

  2  annually by the Legislature, shall be distributed to each

  3  school district and shall be made available to each public

  4  school in the district for enhancing school performance

  5  through development and implementation of a school improvement

  6  plan pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18).

  7         (d)  Beginning July 1, 1993, no funds shall be released

  8  for any purpose from the Educational Enhancement Trust Fund to

  9  any school district in which one or more schools do not have

10  an approved school improvement plan pursuant to s.

11  230.23(16)(18).

12         Section 44.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (73) of

13  section 39.01, Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, are amended

14  to read:

15         39.01  Definitions.--When used in this chapter:

16         (73)  "To be habitually truant" means that:

17         (b)  In addition to the actions described in s. 232.17,

18  the school administration has completed the following

19  escalating activities to determine the cause, and to attempt

20  the remediation, of the child's truant behavior:

21         1.  After a minimum of 3 and prior to 15 unexcused

22  absences within 90 days, one or more meetings have been held,

23  either in person or by phone, between a designated school

24  representative attendance assistant or school social worker,

25  the child's parent or guardian, and the child, if necessary,

26  to report and to attempt to solve the truancy problem.

27  However, if the designated school representative attendance

28  assistant or school social worker has documented the refusal

29  of the parent or guardian to participate in the meetings, then

30  this requirement has been met;

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         2.  Educational counseling has been provided to

  2  determine whether curriculum changes would help solve the

  3  truancy problem, and, if any changes were indicated, such

  4  changes were instituted but proved unsuccessful in remedying

  5  the truant behavior. Such curriculum changes may include

  6  enrollment of the child in an alternative education program

  7  that meets the specific educational and behavioral needs of

  8  the child, including a second chance school, as provided for

  9  in s. 230.2316, designed to resolve truant behavior;

10         3.  Educational evaluation, pursuant to the

11  requirements of s. 232.19(3)(b)3., has been provided; and

12         4.  The designated school representative social worker,

13  the attendance assistant, or the school superintendent's

14  designee if there is no school social worker or attendance

15  assistant has referred the student and family to the

16  children-in-need-of-services and families-in-need-of-services

17  provider or the case staffing committee, established pursuant

18  to s. 39.426, as determined by the cooperative agreement

19  required in s. 232.19(3).  The case staffing committee may

20  request the department or its designee to file a

21  child-in-need-of-services petition based upon the report and

22  efforts of the school district or other community agency or

23  may seek to resolve the truancy behavior through the school or

24  community-based organizations or agencies.

25

26  If a child within the compulsory school attendance age is

27  responsive to the interventions described in this paragraph

28  and has completed the necessary requirements to pass the

29  current grade as indicated in the district pupil progression

30  plan, the child shall not be determined to be habitually

31  truant. If a child within the compulsory school attendance age


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  has 15 unexcused absences or fails to enroll in school, the

  2  State Attorney may file a child-in-need-of-services petition.

  3  Prior to filing a petition, the  child must be referred to the

  4  appropriate agency for evaluation.  After consulting with the

  5  evaluating agency, the State Attorney may elect to file a

  6  child-in-need-of-services petition.

  7         Section 45.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) and

  8  subsections (8) and (12) of section 228.053, Florida Statutes,

  9  are amended to read:

10         228.053  Developmental research schools.--

11         (3)  MISSION.--The mission of a developmental research

12  school shall be the provision of a vehicle for the conduct of

13  research, demonstration, and evaluation regarding management,

14  teaching, and learning. Programs to achieve the mission of a

15  developmental research school shall embody the goals and

16  standards of "Blueprint 2000" established pursuant to ss.

17  229.591 and 229.592 and shall ensure an appropriate education

18  for its students.

19         (a)  Each developmental research school shall emphasize

20  mathematics, science, computer science, and foreign languages.

21  The primary goal of a developmental research school is to

22  enhance instruction and research in such specialized subjects

23  by using the resources available on a state university campus,

24  while also providing an education in nonspecialized subjects.

25  Each developmental research school shall provide sequential

26  elementary and secondary instruction where appropriate. A

27  developmental research school may not provide instruction at

28  grade levels higher than grade 12 without authorization from

29  the State Board of Education. Each developmental research

30  school shall develop and implement a school improvement plan

31  pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18).


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (8)  ADVISORY BOARDS.--"Blueprint 2000" provisions and

  2  intent specify that each public school in the state shall

  3  establish a school advisory council that is reflective of the

  4  population served by the school, pursuant to s. 229.58, and is

  5  responsible for the development and implementation of the

  6  school improvement plan pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18).

  7  Developmental research schools shall comply with the

  8  provisions of s. 229.58 in one of two ways:

  9         (a)  Two advisory bodies.--Each developmental research

10  school may:

11         1.  Establish an advisory body pursuant to the

12  provisions and requirements of s. 229.58 to be responsible for

13  the development and implementation of the school improvement

14  plan, pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18).

15         2.  Establish an advisory board to provide general

16  oversight and guidance. The dean of the affiliated college of

17  education shall be a standing member of the board, and the

18  president of the university shall appoint three faculty

19  members from the college of education, one layperson who

20  resides in the county in which the school is located, and two

21  parents or legal guardians of students who attend the

22  developmental research school to serve on the advisory board.

23  The term of each member shall be for 2 years, and any vacancy

24  shall be filled with a person of the same classification as

25  his or her predecessor for the balance of the unexpired term.

26  The president shall stagger the terms of the initial

27  appointees in a manner that results in the expiration of terms

28  of no more than two members in any year. The president shall

29  call the organizational meeting of the board. The board shall

30  annually elect a chair and a vice chair. There shall be no

31  limitation on successive appointments to the board or


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  successive terms that may be served by a chair or vice chair.

  2  The board shall adopt internal organizational procedures or

  3  bylaws necessary for efficient operation as provided in

  4  chapter 120. Board members shall not receive per diem or

  5  travel expenses for the performance of their duties.  The

  6  board shall:

  7         a.  Meet at least quarterly.

  8         b.  Monitor the operations of the school and the

  9  distribution of moneys allocated for such operations.

10         c.  Establish necessary policy, program, and

11  administration modifications.

12         d.  Evaluate biennially the performance of the director

13  and principal and recommend corresponding action to the dean

14  of the college of education.

15         e.  Annually review evaluations of the school's

16  operation and research findings.

17         (b)  One advisory body.--Each developmental research

18  school may establish an advisory body responsible for the

19  development and implementation of the school improvement plan,

20  pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18), in addition to general

21  oversight and guidance responsibilities. The advisory body

22  shall reflect the membership composition requirements

23  established in s. 229.58, but may also include membership by

24  the dean of the college of education and additional members

25  appointed by the president of the university that represent

26  faculty members from the college of education, the university,

27  or other bodies deemed appropriate for the mission of the

28  school.

29         (12)  EXCEPTIONS TO LAW.--To encourage innovative

30  practices and facilitate the mission of the developmental

31  research schools, in addition to the exceptions to law


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  specified in s. 229.592(6), the following exceptions shall be

  2  permitted for developmental research schools:

  3         (a)  The methods and requirements of the following

  4  statutes shall be held in abeyance:  ss. 230.01; 230.02;

  5  230.03; 230.04; 230.05; 230.061; 230.08; 230.10; 230.105;

  6  230.11; 230.12; 230.15; 230.16; 230.17; 230.173; 230.18;

  7  230.19; 230.201; 230.202; 230.21; 230.22; 230.2215; 230.2318;

  8  230.232; 230.24; 230.241; 230.26; 230.28; 230.30; 230.303;

  9  230.31; 230.32; 230.321; 230.33; 230.35; 230.39; 230.59;

10  230.63; 230.64; 230.643; 230.655; 234.01; 234.021; 234.0515;

11  234.061; 234.112; 316.75 234.302; 236.25; 236.261; 236.29;

12  236.31; 236.32; 236.35; 236.36; 236.37; 236.38; 236.39;

13  236.40; 236.41; 236.42; 236.43; 236.44; 236.45; 236.46;

14  236.47; 236.48; 236.49; 236.50; 236.51; 236.52; 236.55;

15  236.56; 237.051; 237.071; 237.091; 237.201; and 237.40. With

16  the exception of subsection (16) (18) of s. 230.23, s. 230.23

17  shall be held in abeyance. Reference to school boards in s.

18  230.23(16)(18) shall mean the president of the university or

19  the president's designee.

20         (b)  The following statutes or related rules may be

21  waived for any developmental research school so requesting,

22  provided the general statutory purpose of each section is met

23  and the developmental research school has submitted a written

24  request to the Joint Developmental Research School Planning,

25  Articulation, and Evaluation Committee for approval pursuant

26  to this subsection:  ss. 229.555; 231.291; 232.2462; 232.36;

27  233.34; 237.01; 237.02; 237.031; 237.041; 237.061; 237.081;

28  237.111; 237.121; 237.131; 237.141; 237.151; 237.161; 237.162;

29  237.171; 237.181; 237.211; and 237.34. Notwithstanding

30  reference to the responsibilities of the superintendent or

31  school board in chapter 237, developmental research schools


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  shall follow the policy intent of the chapter and shall, at

  2  least, adhere to the general state agency accounting

  3  procedures established in s. 11.46.

  4         1.  Two or more developmental research schools may

  5  jointly originate a request for waiver and submit the request

  6  to the committee if such waiver is approved by the school

  7  advisory council of each developmental research school

  8  desiring the waiver.

  9         2.  A developmental research school may submit a

10  request to the committee for a waiver if such request is

11  presented by a school advisory council established pursuant to

12  s. 229.58, if such waiver is required to implement a school

13  improvement plan required by s. 230.23(16)(18), and if such

14  request is made using forms established pursuant to s.

15  229.592(6). The Joint Developmental Research School Planning,

16  Articulation, and Evaluation Committee shall monitor the

17  waiver activities of all developmental research schools and

18  shall report annually to the department and the Florida

19  Commission on Education Reform and Accountability, in

20  conjunction with the feedback report required pursuant to s.

21  229.592(3), the number of waivers requested and submitted to

22  the committee by developmental research schools, and the

23  number of such waiver requests not approved. For each waiver

24  request not approved, the committee shall report the statute

25  or rule for which the waiver was requested, the rationale for

26  the developmental research school request, and the reason the

27  request was not approved.

28         (c)  The written request for waiver of statute or rule

29  shall indicate at least how the general statutory purpose will

30  be met, how granting the waiver will assist schools in

31  improving student outcomes related to the student performance


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  standards adopted pursuant to s. 229.592(5), and how student

  2  improvement will be evaluated and reported. In considering any

  3  waiver, the committee shall ensure protection of the health,

  4  safety, welfare, and civil rights of the students and

  5  protection of the public interest.

  6         (d)  The procedure established in s. 229.592(6)(f)

  7  shall be followed for any request for a waiver which is not

  8  denied, or for which a request for additional information is

  9  not issued.

10

11  Notwithstanding the request provisions of s. 229.592(6),

12  developmental research schools shall request all waivers

13  through the Joint Developmental Research School Planning,

14  Articulation, and Evaluation Committee, as established in s.

15  228.054. The committee shall approve or disapprove said

16  requests pursuant to this subsection and s. 229.592(6);

17  however, the Commissioner of Education shall have standing to

18  challenge any decision of the committee should it adversely

19  affect the health, safety, welfare, or civil rights of the

20  students or public interest. The department shall immediately

21  notify the committee and developmental research school of the

22  decision and provide a rationale therefor.

23         Section 46.  Subsections (1), (2), and (3) of section

24  228.061, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:

25         228.061  Other public schools; preschool programs,

26  prekindergarten early intervention programs, school-age child

27  care programs, special schools and courses.--The public

28  schools of Florida may, in addition to the schools prescribed

29  in s. 228.051, include preschool programs, prekindergarten

30  early intervention programs, school-age child care programs,

31  special schools, and courses and classes as authorized below:


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (1)  PRESCHOOL PROGRAMS.--Preschool programs shall

  2  comprise classes for children who have attained the ages

  3  prescribed by s. 232.01 232.045 and may be established at the

  4  discretion of the school board.  Such programs or classes

  5  shall be supported and maintained from district taxes, from

  6  such funds supplemented by tuition charges, or from funds from

  7  federal or other lawful sources, exclusive of state sources;

  8  however, state funds may be used to support prekindergarten

  9  early intervention programs pursuant to s. 230.2305.

10         (2)  PREKINDERGARTEN EARLY INTERVENTION

11  PROGRAMS.--Prekindergarten early intervention programs shall

12  consist of educational and enrichment activities for children

13  who have attained the ages prescribed by s. 232.01 232.045.

14  Such programs shall be supported and maintained by state

15  funds, district funds, tuition charges, or such funds as may

16  be available from federal or other lawful sources.

17         (3)  SCHOOL-AGE CHILD CARE PROGRAMS.--School-age child

18  care programs shall consist of educational and recreational

19  programs provided before and after the regular school day and

20  during school holidays to children eligible to attend public

21  schools as provided by s. ss. 232.01, 232.04, and 232.045.

22  Such programs shall be supported and maintained from state or

23  district funds, tuition charges, and such funds as may be

24  available from federal or other lawful sources.

25         Section 47.  Subsection (4) of section 229.0535,

26  Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, is amended to read:

27         229.0535  Authority to enforce school improvement.--It

28  is the intent of the Legislature that all public schools be

29  held accountable for ensuring that students perform at

30  acceptable levels.  A system of school improvement and

31  accountability that assesses student performance by school,


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  identifies schools not providing adequate progress, and

  2  institutes appropriate measures for enforcing improvement

  3  shall be the responsibility of the State Board of Education.

  4         (4)  The State Board of Education is authorized to

  5  require the Department of Education or Comptroller to withhold

  6  any transfer of state funds to the school district if, within

  7  the timeframe specified in state board action, the school

  8  district has failed to comply with said action ordered to

  9  improve low-performing schools. Withholding the transfer of

10  funds shall occur only after all other recommended actions for

11  school improvement have failed to improve the performance of

12  the school. The State Board of Education may invoke the same

13  penalty to any school board that fails to develop and

14  implement a plan for assistance and intervention for

15  low-performing schools as specified in s. 230.23(16)(18)(c).

16         Section 48.  Subsection (3) of section 229.565, Florida

17  Statutes, is amended to read:

18         229.565  Educational evaluation procedures.--

19         (3)  EDUCATION EVALUATION.--The Commissioner of

20  Education, or the Auditor General as provided in paragraph

21  (a), shall periodically examine and evaluate procedures,

22  records, and programs in each district to determine compliance

23  with law and rules established by the state board and in each

24  correctional institution operated by the Department of

25  Corrections to determine compliance with law and rules

26  established by the Department of Corrections for the

27  Correctional Education Program pursuant to s. 944.801. Such

28  evaluations shall include, but not be limited to:

29         (a)  Reported full-time equivalent membership in each

30  program category. This evaluation shall be conducted by the

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  Auditor General for the Florida Education Finance Program

  2  full-time enrollment verification function.

  3         (b)  The organization of all special programs to ensure

  4  compliance with law and the criteria established and approved

  5  by the state board pursuant to the provisions of this section

  6  and s. 230.23(4)(m).

  7         (c)  The procedures for identification and placement of

  8  students in educational alternative programs for students who

  9  are disruptive or unsuccessful in a normal school environment

10  and for diagnosis and placement of students in special

11  programs for exceptional students, to determine that the

12  district is following the criteria for placement established

13  by rules of the state board and the procedures for placement

14  established by that district school board.

15         (d)  Procedures for screening, identification, and

16  assignment of instructional strategies of the Florida Primary

17  Education Program, or an approved alternative program as

18  provided in s. 230.2312, and any other provisions of the

19  program.

20         (d)(e)  An evaluation of the standards by which the

21  school district evaluates basic and special programs for

22  quality, efficiency, and effectiveness.

23         (e)(f)  Determination of the ratio of administrators to

24  teachers in each school district.

25         (f)(g)  Compliance with the cost accounting and

26  reporting requirements of s. 237.34 and the extent to which

27  the percentage expenditure requirements therein are being met.

28         (g)(h)  Clearly defined data collection and

29  documentation requirements, including specifications of which

30  records and information need to be kept and how long the

31  records need to be retained.  The information and


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  1  documentation needs for evaluation shall be presented to the

  2  school districts and explained well in advance of the actual

  3  audit date.

  4         (h)(i)  Determination of school district achievement in

  5  meeting the performance standards specified in s. 232.2454(1).

  6         Section 49.  Subsection (2) of section 229.58, Florida

  7  Statutes, is amended to read:

  8         229.58  District and school advisory councils.--

  9         (2)  DUTIES.--Each advisory council shall perform such

10  functions as are prescribed by regulations of the  school

11  board; however, no advisory council shall have any of the

12  powers and duties now reserved by law to the school board.

13  Each school advisory council shall assist in the preparation

14  and evaluation of the school improvement plan required

15  pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18) and shall provide such

16  assistance as the principal may request in preparing the

17  school's annual budget and plan as required by s. 229.555(1).

18         Section 50.  Subsections (1) and (6), paragraphs (b)

19  and (e) of subsection (3), and paragraph (c) of subsection (4)

20  of section 229.592, Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, are

21  amended to read:

22         229.592  Implementation of state system of school

23  improvement and education accountability.--

24         (1)  DEVELOPMENT.--It is the intent of the Legislature

25  that every public school in the state shall have a school

26  improvement plan, as required by s. 230.23(16)(18), fully

27  implemented and operational by the beginning of the 1993-1994

28  school year.  Vocational standards considered pursuant to s.

29  239.229 shall be incorporated into the school improvement plan

30  for each area technical center operated by a school board by

31  the 1994-1995 school year, and area technical centers shall


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  prepare school report cards incorporating such standards,

  2  pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18), for the 1995-1996 school year.

  3  In order to accomplish this, the Florida Commission on

  4  Education Reform and Accountability and the school districts

  5  and schools shall carry out the duties assigned to them by ss.

  6  229.594 and 230.23(16)(18), respectively.  In addition, the

  7  following initial steps in program development shall be

  8  undertaken beginning June 1, 1991, and shall continue during

  9  the 1991-1992 school fiscal year:

10         (a)  Each school shall conduct an initial needs

11  assessment including separately each school-within-a-school,

12  magnet school, self-contained educational alternative center,

13  or satellite center, and the results of the assessments shall

14  be accompanied by a needs response plan and submitted to the

15  Florida Commission on Education Reform and Accountability by

16  November 1, 1991. The commissioner must provide a format for

17  the needs assessments to the school board by June 1, 1991, and

18  the local school board shall coordinate each needs assessment.

19  The assessments shall be based on data from the 1990-1991

20  school year and shall address at least the following:

21         1.  The status of the school in relation to the general

22  goals for education contained in s. 229.591;

23         2.  The academic status of students attending the

24  school as reflected by test scores, dropout and same grade

25  retention rates, the availability of upper level courses in

26  mathematics and science, the percentage of the school's

27  enrollment and the number of completers by race and gender in

28  upper-level mathematics and science courses, and the number of

29  students entering postsecondary institutions;

30         3.  Student school participation characteristics

31  including: attendance rates, the number of expulsions and


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  1  suspensions, and the number of instances of corporal

  2  punishment;

  3         4.  The economic status of the student body and area

  4  served by the school;

  5         5.  The demographic characteristics of the student body

  6  and the faculty and staff of the school;

  7         6.  The financial status of the school as reflected by

  8  per-student expenditures for instruction and administration,

  9  and other appropriate measures; and

10         7.  Such other needs assessment indicators as may be

11  determined by the individual school.

12         (b)  Each area technical center operated by a school

13  board shall conduct a needs assessment as part of the school

14  improvement process.  The results of the assessments shall be

15  accompanied by a needs response plan and be submitted to the

16  Florida Commission on Education Reform and Accountability by

17  November 1, 1992.  The commissioner shall provide a format for

18  the needs assessments to the school boards by August 1, 1992,

19  and the local school board shall coordinate each needs

20  assessment.  The first such assessment shall be based on data

21  from the 1991-1992 school year and must address at least the

22  following:

23         1.  The vocational standards articulated in s. 239.229.

24         2.  The financial status of the center as indicated by

25  per-student expenditures for instruction and administration,

26  and other appropriate measures.

27         3.  Student completion and placement rates.

28         4.  A forecast of occupations indicating future

29  workplace needs required over the next 5 years within the

30  service area, based upon labor market supply and demand data

31  and local economic conditions.


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  1         5.  Other such needs assessment indicators as may be

  2  determined by the center.

  3         (c)  The needs response plan for each school and the

  4  district shall generally describe proposed actions to reduce

  5  any needs identified by the needs assessment.

  6         (d)  The Commissioner of Education shall provide the

  7  school boards with the technical assistance necessary to

  8  conduct the school needs assessments.

  9         (e)  The Florida Commission on Education Reform and

10  Accountability and the Department of Education shall review

11  and analyze the needs assessment information received from the

12  school boards and shall submit a summary report on the

13  information to the Legislature by January 1, 1992, and shall

14  provide, upon request, the needs assessment on any individual

15  school.  By November 1, 1991, the commission shall identify a

16  core of performance standards addressing the state's most

17  pressing educational problems for use in the analysis of the

18  needs assessment information.

19         (3)  COMMISSIONER.--The commissioner shall be

20  responsible for implementing and maintaining a system of

21  intensive school improvement and stringent education

22  accountability.

23         (b)  The commissioner shall be held responsible for the

24  implementation and maintenance of the system of school

25  improvement and education accountability outlined in this

26  subsection.  There shall be an annual determination of whether

27  adequate progress is being made toward implementing and

28  maintaining a system of school improvement and education

29  accountability based, in part, on feedback required pursuant

30  to s. 230.23(18) and submitted to the Florida Commission on

31  Education Reform and Accountability.


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  1         (e)  As co-chair of the Florida Commission on Education

  2  Reform and Accountability, the commissioner shall appear

  3  before the appropriate committees of the Legislature annually

  4  in October to report and recommend changes in state policy

  5  necessary to foster school improvement and education

  6  accountability.  The report shall reflect the recommendations

  7  of the Florida Commission on Education Reform and

  8  Accountability. Included in the report shall be a list of the

  9  schools for which school boards have developed assistance and

10  intervention plans and an analysis of the various strategies

11  used by the school boards. In the fall of 1992 and 1993, the

12  commissioner shall report in writing to the public on the

13  current status of the state's education system.  School boards

14  shall distribute this report to the parents of all pupils in

15  the district.  Beginning with the 1993-1994 school year and

16  each school year thereafter, School reports shall be

17  distributed pursuant to this paragraph and s.

18  230.23(16)(18)(e) according to guidelines adopted by the State

19  Board of Education.

20         (4)  DEPARTMENT.--

21         (c)  Pursuant to s. 24.121(5)(d), the department shall

22  not release funds from the Educational Enhancement Trust Fund

23  to any district in which a school does not have an approved

24  school improvement plan, pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18), after

25  1 full school year of planning and development.  The

26  department shall send a technical assistance team to each

27  school without an approved plan to develop such school

28  improvement plan.  The department shall release the funds upon

29  approval of the plan. Notice shall be given to the public of

30  the department's intervention and shall identify each school

31  without a plan.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (6)  EXCEPTIONS TO LAW.--To facilitate innovative

  2  practices and to allow local selection of educational methods

  3  during the time period required for careful deliberation by

  4  the Legislature and the Florida Commission on Education Reform

  5  and Accountability, the following time-limited exceptions

  6  shall be permitted:

  7         (a)  In the annual general appropriations acts, the

  8  Legislature may authorize exceptions to any laws pertaining to

  9  fiscal policies, including ss. 236.013 and 236.081, provided

10  the intent is to give school districts increased flexibility

11  and local control of education funds. If the General

12  Appropriations Act does not contain a specific line-item

13  appropriation or a specific listing within a line-item

14  appropriation which provides funding for the programs

15  established pursuant to the following statutes, the statute

16  shall be held in abeyance for that fiscal year, and any

17  approved plan for implementing said statute shall be null and

18  void for said fiscal year: ss. 228.0855; 230.2215; 230.2305;

19  230.2318; 231.087; 231.613; 232.257; 233.0615; 233.0678;

20  234.021; 236.0873; 236.083; 236.092; 236.122; 236.1225;

21  236.1228; and 239.401.

22         (b)  The methods and requirements of the following

23  statutes shall be held in abeyance: ss. 228.088; and 229.57(4)

24  and (5).

25

26  In determining which statutes and rules stand in the way of

27  school improvement, the Florida Commission on Education Reform

28  and Accountability shall consider the effect that holding the

29  statutes listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) in abeyance has had

30  on the school improvement process. It is the intent of the

31  Legislature that statutes listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) be


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  systematically repealed after being held in abeyance for 3

  2  consecutive fiscal years.

  3         (c)  The Legislature authorizes that the methods and

  4  requirements of the statutes listed in paragraph (a) for which

  5  a specific line-item appropriation or a specific listing

  6  within a line-item appropriation is contained and funded in

  7  the General Appropriations Act and the following statutes may

  8  be waived for any school board so requesting, provided the

  9  general statutory purpose of each section is met and the

10  school board has submitted a written request to the

11  commissioner for approval pursuant to this subsection: ss.

12  228.041(13) and (16); 229.602(5); 230.23(3), (4)(f) and (o),

13  (6), (7)(a), (b), and (c), (11)(c), and (15)(17); 231.095;

14  232.01; 232.04; 232.045; 232.245; 232.2462; 232.2463; 233.011;

15  233.34; 236.013(3) relating to the 36-hour limit; and 239.121.

16  Graduation requirements in s. 232.246 may be met by

17  demonstrating performance of intended outcomes for any course

18  in the Course Code Directory if a waiver from the requirements

19  of s. 232.2462 has been approved based upon a need identified

20  in a school improvement plan. In developing procedures for

21  awarding credits based on performance outcomes, districts may

22  request waivers from State Board of Education rules relating

23  to curriculum frameworks and credits for courses and programs

24  in the Course Code Directory. Credit awarded for a course or

25  program beyond that allowed by the Course Code Directory shall

26  count as credit for electives. Upon request by any school

27  district, the commissioner shall evaluate and establish

28  procedures for variations in academic credits awarded toward

29  graduation by a high school offering six periods per day

30  compared to those awarded by high schools operating on other

31  schedules.


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  1         1.  A school board may originate a request for waiver

  2  and submit the request to the commissioner if such waiver is

  3  required to implement districtwide improvements.

  4         2.  A school board may submit a request to the

  5  commissioner for a waiver if such request is presented to the

  6  school board by a school advisory council established pursuant

  7  to s. 229.58 and if such waiver is required to implement a

  8  school improvement plan required by s. 230.23(16)(18). The

  9  school board shall report annually to the Florida Commission

10  on Education Reform and Accountability, in conjunction with

11  the feedback report required pursuant to subsection (3), the

12  number of waivers requested by school advisory councils, the

13  number of such waiver requests approved and submitted to the

14  commissioner, and the number of such waiver requests not

15  approved and not submitted to the commissioner. For each

16  waiver request not approved, the school board shall report the

17  statute or rule for which the waiver was requested, the

18  rationale for the school advisory council request, and the

19  reason the request was not approved.

20         3.  When approved by the commissioner, a waiver

21  requested pursuant to this paragraph shall be for a 5-year

22  period.

23         (d)  Notwithstanding the provisions of chapter 120 and

24  for the purpose of implementing this subsection, the

25  commissioner may waive State Board of Education rules adopted

26  to implement statutes listed in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c),

27  provided that the intent of each rule is met and the school

28  board has submitted a written request to the commissioner for

29  approval pursuant to this subsection.

30         (e)  The written request for waiver of statute or rule

31  shall indicate at least how the general statutory purpose will


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  be met, how granting the waiver will assist schools in

  2  improving student outcomes related to the student performance

  3  standards adopted pursuant to subsection (5), and how student

  4  improvement will be evaluated and reported. In considering any

  5  waiver, the commissioner shall ensure protection of the

  6  health, safety, welfare, and civil rights of the students and

  7  protection of the public interest.

  8         (f)  Any request for a waiver which is not denied, or

  9  for which a request for additional information is not issued,

10  within 21 days after receipt of the written request shall be

11  deemed approved. Any waiver for which a timely request for

12  additional information has been issued shall be deemed to be

13  approved if a denial is not issued within 21 days after the

14  commissioner's receipt of the specifically requested

15  additional information. On denial of a request for a waiver,

16  the commissioner shall state with particularity the grounds or

17  basis for the denial. The commissioner shall report the

18  specific statutes and rules for which waivers are requested

19  and the number and disposition of such requests to the Florida

20  Commission on Education Reform and Accountability for use in

21  determining which statutes and rules stand in the way of

22  school improvement.

23         Section 51.  Subsection (1) of section 229.594, Florida

24  Statutes, is amended to read:

25         229.594  Powers and duties of the commission.--

26         (1)  The commission shall review and recommend

27  procedures for a new system of school improvement and

28  education accountability and recommend the repeal or

29  modification of statutes, fiscal policies, and rules that

30  stand in the way of school improvement.  Specifically, the

31  commission shall:


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (a)  Serve as an advisory body to oversee the

  2  development, establishment, implementation, and maintenance of

  3  a program of school improvement and education accountability

  4  based upon the achievement of state education goals.  This

  5  responsibility shall include the following:

  6         1.  Holding public hearings, as determined to be

  7  necessary, in various parts of the state.  The purpose of

  8  these hearings shall be to receive public comment on the

  9  status of education and suggestions regarding the

10  establishment and implementation of a system of school

11  improvement and education accountability.  When feasible,

12  alternative methods such as teleconferencing shall be employed

13  to increase public involvement.

14         2.  Observing the development and implementation of

15  school improvement plans pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18).

16  Particular attention shall be paid to ensuring the involvement

17  of teachers, parents, and community in the development and

18  implementation of individually prepared school improvement

19  plans.

20         3.  Involving the business community in the provision

21  of needed training for school advisory councils, teachers,

22  principals, district administrators, and school board members.

23         4.  Annually recommending changes in statutes, rules,

24  and policies needed to implement and maintain a system of

25  school improvement and education accountability in the state.

26         (b)  Review and, with assistance from the Department of

27  Education, analyze results of school needs assessments

28  submitted by district school boards and, by January 1, 1992,

29  submit a report of its findings to the Legislature.  The

30  report shall include recommendations for changes in the school

31  improvement and accountability required by s. 230.23(16)(18)


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  which are considered necessary as a result of the school needs

  2  assessments.  The report shall also include a recommendation

  3  regarding the minimum number of credits, subjects, and courses

  4  that should be required by the state for regular and

  5  alternative high school diplomas; the number of hours of

  6  instruction required to receive a credit; the length of a high

  7  school day; and the number of periods per day for high

  8  schools.

  9         (c)  Recommend to the Legislature and State Board of

10  Education, as appropriate, the components of a system of

11  school improvement and accountability.  Initial

12  recommendations must be reviewed and revised as necessary

13  annually and must include:

14         1.  Performance standards for indicating state, school

15  district, and school progress toward the state education goals

16  and a definition of what shall be considered "adequate

17  progress" toward meeting these performance standards.

18  Effective June 1, 1993, such standards must incorporate the

19  provisions of s. 239.229.

20         2.  Methods for measuring state, school district, and

21  school progress toward the goals.  These assessment methods

22  must include the most effective and efficient procedures

23  available from the current system of assessment and

24  alternative and new assessment practices.

25         3.  Methods for public reporting on the progress toward

26  the goals by the state, school districts, and individual

27  schools. Emphasis shall be placed on reporting individual

28  school improvement and progress, and comparisons between

29  schools shall be minimized. Methods for reporting the status

30  of children and families and community services available in

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  each school district to help children and families in need

  2  shall also be developed.

  3         4.  Effective use of existing methods for recognizing

  4  schools and development of necessary additional methods to

  5  recognize schools that meet or make adequate progress toward

  6  the education goals.  The commission shall also consider the

  7  development of incentives including financial incentives for

  8  schools that make exceptional progress toward the education

  9  goals.

10         5.  Guidelines that may be adopted as rule and used by

11  the State Board of Education and the school board in

12  determining the action for any school that does not improve

13  after 3 years of assistance and intervention, including

14  commission responsibility in recommending action for said

15  schools. The guidelines shall be stringent and shall ensure

16  that the school is not permitted to continue serving students

17  in a less than adequate manner.

18

19  If in the opinion of the commission an adequate system of

20  accountability is in place to protect the public interest, the

21  commission may recommend to the Legislature the repeal or

22  revision of laws, including fiscal policies, and to the State

23  Board of Education the repeal or revision of rules, which in

24  the opinion of the commission stand in the way of school

25  improvement.  The commission may defer any or all

26  recommendations for repeal or revision of laws and rules until

27  such time as it determines an adequate system of

28  accountability to be established and implemented.

29         Section 52.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section

30  229.8055, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

31         229.8055  Environmental education.--


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (5)  The Department of Education shall:

  2         (a)  Assign appropriate staff to work directly with

  3  general curriculum development activities through district and

  4  school administrators responsible for general curriculum in

  5  order to explicitly integrate appropriate environmental topics

  6  into the regular curriculum, where appropriate, through

  7  curriculum frameworks and performance standards as required by

  8  s. 233.011(3)(a) and (b).

  9         Section 53.  Section 231.085, Florida Statutes, is

10  amended to read:

11         231.085  Duties of principals.--A district school board

12  shall employ, through written contract, public school

13  principals who shall supervise the operation and management of

14  the schools and property as the board determines necessary.

15  Each principal shall perform such duties as may be assigned by

16  the superintendent pursuant to the rules of the school board.

17  Such rules shall include, but not be limited to, rules

18  relating to administrative responsibility, instructional

19  leadership of the educational program of the school to which

20  the principal is assigned, submission of personnel

21  recommendations to the superintendent, administrative

22  responsibility for records and reports, administration of

23  corporal punishment, and student suspension.  Each principal

24  shall provide leadership in the development or revision and

25  implementation of a school improvement plan pursuant to s.

26  230.23(16)(18).

27         Section 54.  Section 231.095, Florida Statutes, is

28  amended to read:

29         231.095  Teachers assigned teaching duties outside

30  field in which certified.--When a teacher in a district school

31  system is assigned teaching duties in a class dealing with


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  subject matter that is outside the field in which the teacher

  2  is certified, the parents or guardians of all students in the

  3  class shall be notified in writing of such assignment. Such

  4  notification shall be provided in each school's annual report

  5  required pursuant to s. 230.23(18).

  6         Section 55.  Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section

  7  231.1725, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

  8         231.1725  Employment of substitute teachers, teachers

  9  of adult education, nondegreed teachers of career education,

10  and noncertificated teachers in critical teacher shortage

11  areas.--

12         (1)  Notwithstanding the provisions of ss. 231.02,

13  231.15, 231.17, and 231.172 or any other provision of law or

14  rule to the contrary, each school board shall establish the

15  minimal qualifications for:

16         (d)  Part-time and full-time noncertificated teachers

17  in critical teacher shortage areas. The qualifications shall

18  require the filing of fingerprints in the same manner as

19  required by s. 231.02 and shall be based on academic training

20  in the essential generic and specialization competencies of

21  the instructional assignment. The school board shall be

22  responsible for determining critical teacher shortage areas

23  within the school district. Each school board shall annually

24  report the number, qualifications, and areas of assignment of

25  all noncertificated teachers employed pursuant to this

26  paragraph during each school year. The report shall be

27  publicly disclosed pursuant to s. 230.23(18).

28         Section 56.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section

29  236.013, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

30

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         236.013  Definitions.--Notwithstanding the provisions

  2  of s. 228.041, the following terms are defined as follows for

  3  the purposes of this act:

  4         (2)  A "full-time equivalent student" in each program

  5  of the district is defined in terms of full-time students and

  6  part-time students as follows:

  7         (c)1.  A "full-time equivalent student" is:

  8         a.  A full-time student in any one of the programs

  9  listed in s. 236.081(1)(c); or

10         b.  A combination of full-time or part-time students in

11  any one of the programs listed in s. 236.081(1)(c) which is

12  the equivalent of one full-time student based on the following

13  calculations:

14         (I)  A full-time student, except a postsecondary or

15  adult student or a senior high school student enrolled in

16  adult education when such courses are required for high school

17  graduation, in a combination of programs listed in s.

18  236.081(1)(c) shall be a fraction of a full-time equivalent

19  membership in each special program equal to the number of net

20  hours per school year for which he or she is a member, divided

21  by the appropriate number of hours set forth in subparagraph

22  (a)1. or subparagraph (a)2.; the difference between that

23  fraction or sum of fractions and the maximum value as set

24  forth in subsection (5) for each full-time student is presumed

25  to be the balance of the student's time not spent in such

26  special education programs and shall be recorded as time in

27  the appropriate basic program.

28         (II)  A student in the basic half-day kindergarten

29  program of not less than 450 net hours shall earn one-half of

30  a full-time equivalent membership.

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (III)  A half-day kindergarten student in a combination

  2  of programs listed in s. 236.081(1)(c) is a fraction of a

  3  full-time equivalent membership in each special program equal

  4  to the number of net hours or major portion thereof per school

  5  year for which he or she is a member divided by the number of

  6  hours set forth in sub-sub-subparagraph (II); the difference

  7  between that fraction and the number of hours set forth in

  8  sub-sub-subparagraph (II) for each full-time student in

  9  membership in a half-day kindergarten program is presumed to

10  be the balance of the student's time not spent in such special

11  education programs and shall be recorded as time in the

12  appropriate basic program.

13         (IV)  A part-time student, except a postsecondary or

14  adult student, is a fraction of a full-time equivalent

15  membership in each basic and special program equal to the

16  number of net hours or major fraction thereof per school year

17  for which he or she is a member, divided by the appropriate

18  number of hours set forth in subparagraph (a)1. or

19  subparagraph (a)2.

20         (V)  A postsecondary or adult student or a senior high

21  school student enrolled in adult education when such courses

22  are required for high school graduation is a portion of a

23  full-time equivalent membership in each special program equal

24  to the net hours or major fraction thereof per fiscal year for

25  which he or she is a member, divided by the appropriate number

26  of hours set forth in subparagraph (a)1. or subparagraph (a)2.

27         (VI)  A full-time student who is part of a program

28  authorized by subparagraph (a)3. in a combination of programs

29  listed in s. 236.081(1)(c) is a fraction of a full-time

30  equivalent membership in each regular or special program equal

31  to the number of net hours per school year for which he or she


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  is a member, divided by the appropriate number of hours set

  2  forth in subparagraph (a)1. or subparagraph (a)2.

  3         (VII)  A prekindergarten handicapped student shall meet

  4  the requirements specified for kindergarten students.

  5         2.  A student in membership in a program scheduled for

  6  more or less than 180 school days is a fraction of a full-time

  7  equivalent membership equal to the number of instructional

  8  hours in membership divided by the appropriate number of hours

  9  set forth in subparagraph (a)1.; however, for the purposes of

10  this subparagraph, membership in programs scheduled for more

11  than 180 days is limited to:

12         a.  Special programs for exceptional students;

13         b.  Special vocational-technical programs;

14         c.  Special adult general education programs;

15         d.  Dropout prevention programs provided for those

16  students who were in membership in substance abuse or youth

17  services programs as defined in s. 230.2316 for students in

18  residential programs operated by the Department of Children

19  and Family Services; programs operated by the Department of

20  Juvenile Justice as defined in s. 230.23161 in which students

21  receive educational services; or teenage parent programs as

22  defined in s. 230.23166 for students who and are in need of

23  such additional instruction;

24         e.  Students-at-risk programs provided for those

25  students who were in membership in an educational alternative

26  or disciplinary program in Dropout prevention programs as

27  defined in s. 230.2316 in which students are placed for

28  academic or disciplinary purposes or programs in English for

29  speakers of other languages as defined in s. 233.058 for

30  students who were in membership for all of the last 15 days of

31


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  the 180-day term or a total of 30 days within the 180-day term

  2  and are in need of such additional instruction;

  3         f.  Other basic programs offered for promotion or

  4  credit instruction as defined by rules of the state board; and

  5         g.  Programs which modify the school year to

  6  accommodate the needs of children who have moved with their

  7  parents for the purpose of engaging in the farm labor or fish

  8  industries, provided such programs are approved by the

  9  commissioner.

10

11  The department shall determine and implement an equitable

12  method of equivalent funding for experimental schools and for

13  schools operating under emergency conditions, which schools

14  have been approved by the department under the provisions of

15  s. 228.041(13) to operate for less than the minimum school

16  day.

17         Section 57.  Paragraph (o) of subsection (1) of section

18  236.081, Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, is amended to

19  read:

20         236.081  Funds for operation of schools.--If the annual

21  allocation from the Florida Education Finance Program to each

22  district for operation of schools is not determined in the

23  annual appropriations act or the substantive bill implementing

24  the annual appropriations act, it shall be determined as

25  follows:

26         (1)  COMPUTATION OF THE BASIC AMOUNT TO BE INCLUDED FOR

27  OPERATION.--The following procedure shall be followed in

28  determining the annual allocation to each district for

29  operation:

30         (o)  Instruction in career education.--Effective for

31  the 1985-1986 school year and thereafter, district pupil


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  1  progression plans shall provide for the substitution of

  2  vocational courses for the nonelective courses required for

  3  high school graduation pursuant to s. 232.246.  A student in

  4  grades 9 through 12 who enrolls in and satisfactorily

  5  completes a job-preparatory program may substitute credit for

  6  a portion of the required four credits in English, three

  7  credits in mathematics, and three credits in science.  The

  8  credit substituted for English, mathematics, or science earned

  9  through the vocational job-preparatory program shall be on a

10  curriculum equivalency basis as provided for in the State

11  Course Code Directory.  Upon adoption of curriculum frameworks

12  for vocational courses pursuant to s. 233.011, The State Board

13  of Education shall authorize by rule vocational course

14  substitutions not to exceed two credits in each of the

15  nonelective academic subject areas of English, mathematics,

16  and science.  School districts shall provide for vocational

17  course substitutions not to exceed two credits in each of the

18  nonelective academic subject areas of English, mathematics,

19  and science, upon adoption of vocational student performance

20  standards by the school board pursuant to s. 232.2454.  A

21  vocational program which has been used as a substitute for a

22  nonelective academic credit in one subject area may not be

23  used as a substitute for any other subject area.  The credit

24  in practical arts or exploratory career education required for

25  high school graduation pursuant to s. 232.246(1) shall be

26  funded as a career education course.

27         Section 58.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section

28  236.0811, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

29         236.0811  Educational training.--

30         (2)(a)1.  Pursuant to rules of the State Board of

31  Education, each school board shall develop and annually


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  1  approve a master plan for inservice educational training. The

  2  plan shall include all inservice programs for all district

  3  employees from all fund sources and shall be updated annually

  4  by September 1 using criteria and procedures for continued

  5  approval as specified by state board rule. Verification that

  6  the plan meets all requirements of this section shall be

  7  submitted annually to the commissioner by October 1. The plan

  8  shall be based on an assessment of the inservice educational

  9  training needs of the district conducted by a committee that

10  includes parents, classroom teachers, and other educational

11  personnel. This assessment shall identify districtwide

12  inservice needs and the inservice training needs of local

13  schools. The plan shall include, at a minimum, the inservice

14  activities that are necessary for implementation of the

15  schools' improvement plans during the current fiscal year. The

16  plan shall include, but is not limited to, components

17  addressing:  competencies in the identification, assessment,

18  and prescription of instruction for exceptional students;

19  competencies in the identification, assessment, and

20  prescription of instruction for child abuse and neglect

21  prevention and for substance and alcohol abuse prevention; and

22  competencies in instruction for multicultural sensitivity in

23  the classroom. In addition, the plan must include a component

24  to provide regular training to classroom teachers on advances

25  in the field of normal child development and the disorders of

26  development. The plan shall also include components that may

27  be used to satisfy the certification requirements applicable

28  to teachers of students with limited proficiency in English

29  and components that may be used for the renewal of a

30  certificate in each of the following areas: a study of the

31  middle grades, understanding the student in the middle grades,


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  1  organizing interdisciplinary instruction in the middle grades,

  2  developing critical thinking and creative thinking in students

  3  in the middle grades, counseling functions of the teacher in

  4  the middle grades, developing creative learning materials for

  5  the middle grades, and planning and evaluating programs in the

  6  middle grades. The plan shall include inservice activities for

  7  all district employees from all fund sources.

  8         2.  Classroom teachers and guidance counselors shall be

  9  required to participate in the inservice training for child

10  abuse and neglect prevention, for alcohol and substance abuse

11  prevention education, and for multicultural sensitivity

12  education, which may include negotiation and conflict

13  resolution training.

14         3.  The department shall withhold funding of any

15  district's master inservice plan, as required by this section,

16  which fails to provide and require training in substance abuse

17  prevention education pursuant to s. 233.067(4)(c)1. for all

18  classroom teachers and guidance counselors.  The department is

19  authorized to waive one or more inservice areas related to the

20  middle grades if the district can document its unsuccessful

21  attempt to secure a competent trainer or sufficient enrollment

22  or when the department determines that specific validated

23  competencies may be substituted in lieu of such inservice

24  areas.

25         Section 59.  Subsection (4) of section 236.0812,

26  Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

27         236.0812  Medicaid certified school funding

28  maximization.--

29         (4)  Federal Medicaid earnings received as a result of

30  funds certified pursuant to this section shall be deposited

31  into the Medicaid Earnings Trust Fund, if created by law,


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  otherwise in the Educational Aids Trust Fund.  Of the funds

  2  earned by each district, not less than 25 percent shall be

  3  used to enhance the district's exceptional student education

  4  nongifted programs.  The remaining funds shall be used by the

  5  district in areas which directly impact on classroom

  6  activities.  However, if Committee Substitute for Committee

  7  Substitute for House Bill 165 or similar legislation becomes

  8  law, up to $150,000 of any funds which may become available as

  9  a result of a district certifying state or local education

10  funds to earn federal Medicaid match may be allocated to each

11  of the five school districts whose school improvement plans,

12  pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18), include the establishment of a

13  school of the 21st century.

14         Section 60.  Section 236.0842, Florida Statutes, is

15  hereby repealed.

16         Section 61.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of section

17  236.1228, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

18         236.1228  Accountability program grants.--

19         (4)  STATEWIDE INDICATORS.--

20         (b)  The statewide indicators are:

21         1.  Improve graduation rate.--The statewide goal is to

22  achieve a graduation rate of 85 percent by 1992.  The graduate

23  rate will be calculated as defined in s. 228.041(41)

24  232.2468(1)(a).  The district annual graduation rate indicator

25  shall be at least an increase of one percentage point or

26  one-third of the difference between the second preceding year

27  and 85 percent, whichever is greater.

28         2.  Improve dropout rate.--The statewide goal is to

29  achieve a dropout rate in high school of 4 percent or less by

30  1992. The dropout rate will be calculated as defined in s.

31  228.041(43) 232.2468(1)(c).  The district and high school


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  annual dropout rate indicator for the high school shall be 6

  2  percent or less and the district average shall be 4 percent or

  3  less for grades 9 through 12.

  4         3.  Improve promotion rate.--The statewide goal is to

  5  achieve a 95-percent promotion rate from grade to grade in

  6  grades 9 through 12 by 1992.  The district and high school

  7  annual promotion rate indicator for the high school from grade

  8  to grade in grades 9 through 12 shall be 94 percent or higher

  9  and the district average shall be 95 percent or higher for

10  grades 9 through 12.

11         4.  Increase enrollment in and completion of upper

12  level science courses.--The statewide goal is to have 20

13  percent or more of the high school students enrolled in and

14  completing level 3 science courses, 55 percent or more of the

15  high school students enrolled in level 2 science courses, and

16  20 percent or less of the high school students enrolled in

17  level 1 science courses by 1992. Components of the district

18  and high school annual science enrollment indicator are:

19         a.  For level 3 science courses, the high school shall

20  have 15 percent or more of the grades 9 through 12 students

21  enrolled in level 3 science courses and the district average

22  shall be 20 percent or more of the grades 9 through 12

23  students enrolled in level 3 science courses;

24         b.  For level 2 science courses, the high school shall

25  have 45 percent or more of the grades 9 through 12 students

26  enrolled in level 2 science courses and the district average

27  shall be 55 percent or more of the grades 9 through 12

28  students enrolled in level 2 science courses; and

29         c.  For level 1 science courses, the high school shall

30  have 30 percent or less of the grades 9 through 12 students

31  enrolled in level 1 science courses and the district average


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  shall be 20 percent or less of the grades 9 through 12

  2  students enrolled in level 1 science courses.

  3         5.  Increase enrollment in and completion of upper

  4  level mathematics courses.--The statewide goal is to have 15

  5  percent or more of the high school students enrolled in and

  6  completing level 3 mathematics courses, 50 percent or more of

  7  the high school students enrolled in level 2 mathematics

  8  courses, and 30 percent or less of the high school students

  9  enrolled in level 1 mathematics courses by 1992. Components of

10  the district and high school annual mathematics enrollment

11  indicator are:

12         a.  For level 3 mathematics courses, the high school

13  shall have 10 percent or more of the grades 9 through 12

14  students enrolled in level 3 mathematics courses and the

15  district average shall be 15 percent or more of the grades 9

16  through 12 students enrolled in level 3 mathematics courses;

17         b.  For level 2 mathematics courses, the high school

18  shall have 40 percent or more of the grades 9 through 12

19  students enrolled in level 2 mathematics courses and the

20  district average shall be 50 percent or more of the grades 9

21  through 12 students enrolled in level 2 mathematics courses;

22  and

23         c.  For level 1 mathematics courses, the high school

24  shall have 40 percent or less of the grades 9 through 12

25  students enrolled in level 1 mathematics courses and the

26  district average shall be 30 percent or less of the grades 9

27  through 12 students enrolled in level 1 mathematics courses.

28         6.  Improve utilization of postsecondary feedback

29  report.--The statewide goal is to reduce annually the high

30  school's graduates who are enrolled in a degree program and

31  are referred for remediation in mathematics, reading, and


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  writing in public colleges and universities by 50 percent of

  2  the number for the second preceding year.  The district and

  3  high school annual referrals for remediation indicators for

  4  high school shall be a reduction of 40 percent or more and the

  5  district's average reduction shall be 50 percent or more of

  6  the number for the second preceding year.

  7         Section 62.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section

  8  236.24, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

  9         236.24  Sources of district school fund.--

10         (2)

11         (b)1.  Securities purchased by any such school board

12  under the authority of this law shall be delivered by the

13  seller to the school board or its appointed safekeeper.  The

14  safekeeper shall be a qualified bank or trust company

15  chartered to operate as such by the State of Florida or the

16  United States Government.  The safekeeper shall issue

17  documentation trust receipts for each transaction, and a

18  monthly statement detailing all transactions for the period.

19         2.  Securities physically delivered to the school board

20  shall be placed in a safe-deposit box in a bank or other

21  institution located within the county and duly licensed and

22  insured.  Withdrawals from such safe-deposit box shall be only

23  by persons duly authorized by resolution of the school board.

24         3.  The school board may also receive bank trust

25  receipts in return for investment of surplus funds in

26  securities.  Any trust receipts received must enumerate the

27  various securities held together with the specific number of

28  each security held.  The actual securities on which the trust

29  receipts are issued may be held by any bank depository

30  chartered by the United States Government or the State of

31  Florida or their designated agents.


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         Section 63.  Subsection (7) of section 239.101, Florida

  2  Statutes, is amended to read:

  3         239.101  Legislative intent.--

  4         (7)  The Legislature finds that career education is a

  5  crucial component of the educational programs conducted within

  6  school districts and community colleges. Accordingly, career

  7  education must be represented in accountability processes

  8  undertaken for educational institutions. It is the intent of

  9  the Legislature that the vocational standards articulated in

10  s. 239.229(2) be considered in the development of

11  accountability measures for public schools pursuant to ss.

12  229.591, 229.592, 229.593, 229.594, and 230.23(16)(18) and for

13  community colleges pursuant to s. 240.324.

14         Section 64.  Subsections (1) and (3) of section

15  239.229, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:

16         239.229  Vocational standards.--

17         (1)  The purpose of career education is to enable

18  students who complete vocational programs to attain and

19  sustain employment and realize economic self-sufficiency.  The

20  purpose of this section is to identify issues related to

21  career education for which school boards and community college

22  boards of trustees are accountable.  It is the intent of the

23  Legislature that the standards articulated in subsection (2)

24  be considered in the development of accountability standards

25  for public schools pursuant to ss. 229.591, 229.592, 229.593,

26  229.594, and 230.23(16)(18) and for community colleges

27  pursuant to s. 240.324.

28         (3)  Each area technical center operated by a school

29  board shall establish a center advisory council pursuant to s.

30  229.58.  The center advisory council shall assist in the

31  preparation and evaluation of center improvement plans


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  required pursuant to s. 230.23(16)(18) and may provide

  2  assistance, upon the request of the center director, in the

  3  preparation of the center's annual budget and plan as required

  4  by s. 229.555(1).

  5         Section 65.  Subsection (3) of section 397.405, Florida

  6  Statutes, is amended to read:

  7         397.405  Exemptions from licensure.--The following are

  8  exempt from the licensing provisions of this chapter:

  9         (3)  A substance abuse education program established

10  pursuant to s. 233.061 233.067.

11         Section 66.  Subsection (2) of section 402.22, Florida

12  Statutes, 1996 Supplement, is amended to read:

13         402.22  Education program for students who reside in

14  residential care facilities operated by the Department of

15  Health and Rehabilitative Services.--

16         (2)  District school boards shall establish educational

17  programs for all students ages 5 through 18 under the

18  residential care of the Department of Health and

19  Rehabilitative Services and may provide for students below age

20  3 5 as provided for in s. 232.01(1)(e). Funding of such

21  programs shall be pursuant to s. 236.081.

22         Section 67.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section

23  415.5015, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

24         415.5015  Child abuse prevention training in the

25  district school system.--

26         (5)  PREVENTION TRAINING CENTERS; FUNCTIONS; SELECTION

27  PROCESS; MONITORING AND EVALUATION.--

28         (a)  Each training center shall perform the following

29  functions:

30         1.  Act as a clearinghouse to provide information on

31  prevention curricula which meet the requirements of this


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  section and the requirements of ss. 231.17, 233.011(3)(a),

  2  236.0811, and 415.501.

  3         2.  Assist the local school district in selecting a

  4  prevention program model which meets the needs of the local

  5  community.

  6         3.  At the request of the local school district, design

  7  and administer training sessions to develop or expand local

  8  primary prevention and training programs.

  9         4.  Provide assistance to local school districts,

10  including, but not limited to, all of the following:

11  administration, management, program development, multicultural

12  staffing, and community education, in order to better meet the

13  requirements of this section and of ss. 231.17, 233.011(3)(a),

14  236.0811, and 415.501.

15         5.  At the request of the Department of Education or

16  the local school district, provide ongoing program development

17  and training to achieve all of the following:

18         a.  Meet the special needs of children, including, but

19  not limited to, the needs of disabled and high-risk children.

20         b.  Conduct an outreach program to inform the

21  surrounding communities of the existence of primary prevention

22  and training programs and of funds to conduct such programs.

23         6.  Serve as a resource to the Department of Health and

24  Rehabilitative Services and its districts.

25         Section 68.  Subsection (2) of section 450.121, Florida

26  Statutes, is amended to read:

27         450.121  Enforcement of Child Labor Law.--

28         (2)  It is the duty of the division and its agents and

29  all sheriffs or other law enforcement officers of the state or

30  of any municipality of the state to enforce the provisions of

31  this law, to make complaints against persons violating its


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1  provisions, and to prosecute violations of the same. The

  2  division and its agents have authority to enter and inspect at

  3  any time any place or establishment covered by this law and to

  4  have access to age certificates kept on file by the employer

  5  and such other records as may aid in the enforcement of this

  6  law. A designated school representative acting in accordance

  7  with Attendance assistants employed pursuant to s. 232.17

  8  shall report to the division all violations of the Child Labor

  9  Law that may come to his or her their knowledge.

10         Section 69.  Subsection (12) of section 493.6102,

11  Florida Statutes, 1996 Supplement, is amended to read:

12         493.6102  Inapplicability of parts I through IV of this

13  chapter.--This chapter shall not apply to:

14         (12)  Any person who is a school crossing guard

15  employed by a third party hired by a city or county and

16  trained in accordance with s. 316.75 234.302.

17         Section 70.  Subsection (2) of section 561.025, Florida

18  Statutes, is amended to read:

19         561.025  Alcoholic Beverage and Tobacco Trust

20  Fund.--There is created within the State Treasury the

21  Alcoholic Beverage and Tobacco Trust Fund. All funds collected

22  by the division under ss. 210.15, 210.40, or under s. 569.003

23  and the Beverage Law with the exception of state funds

24  collected pursuant to ss. 561.501, 563.05, 564.06, and 565.12

25  shall be deposited in the State Treasury to the credit of the

26  trust fund, notwithstanding any other provision of law to the

27  contrary.  Moneys deposited to the credit of the trust fund

28  shall be used to operate the division and to provide a

29  proportionate share of the operation of the office of the

30  secretary and the Division of Administration of the Department

31  of Business and Professional Regulation; except that:


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                                        CS/HB 137, First Engrossed



  1         (2)  Ten percent of the revenues derived from retail

  2  tobacco products dealer permit fees collected under s. 569.003

  3  shall be transferred to the Department of Education to provide

  4  for teacher training and for research and evaluation to reduce

  5  and prevent the use of tobacco products by children, pursuant

  6  to s. 233.067(4).

  7         Section 71.  This act shall take effect July 1, 1997.

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