Florida Senate - 2025                             CS for SB 7030
       
       
        
       By the Committee on Appropriations; and the Appropriations
       Committee on Pre-K - 12 Education
       
       
       
       
       576-03223-25                                          20257030c1
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to educational scholarship programs;
    3         creating s. 1011.687, F.S.; creating an operating
    4         categorical fund for implementing the Family
    5         Empowerment Scholarship Program; providing
    6         requirements for the use and disbursement of funds;
    7         defining the term “full-time equivalent student”;
    8         requiring the Department of Education to release funds
    9         if certain criteria are met; providing requirements
   10         for the release of each payment; providing
   11         requirements for excess funds; creating s. 1011.689,
   12         F.S.; creating the educational enrollment
   13         stabilization program to provide supplemental state
   14         funds to address changes in full-time equivalent
   15         student enrollment; requiring the department to use
   16         funds to ensure that a school district’s funds are not
   17         lower than a specified calculation; requiring the
   18         department to use funds to provide a supplements
   19         payment to school districts that have a decline in
   20         enrollment; providing for the calculation of the
   21         supplemental payment; requiring the department to
   22         ensure funding is available for certain scholarship
   23         programs; requiring the department to appropriate
   24         funds from the General Appropriations Act to keep the
   25         educational enrollment stabilization program at a
   26         minimum balance; amending s. 1011.65, F.S.; requiring
   27         that specified data include a verification that
   28         certain full-time equivalent student membership survey
   29         data has been cross-checked by the department;
   30         amending s. 1002.40, F.S.; renaming the Hope
   31         Scholarship Program as the Hope Program; repealing s.
   32         1002.411, F.S., relating to New Worlds Scholarship
   33         Accounts; amending s. 1002.421, F.S.; defining terms;
   34         requiring an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
   35         organization to provide a parent with certain
   36         information on scholarship programs; requiring an
   37         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization to
   38         create a single application for all educational
   39         scholarship programs; providing requirements for such
   40         application; prohibiting an eligible nonprofit
   41         scholarship-funding organization from charging a fee
   42         for the application; requiring an eligible nonprofit
   43         scholarship-funding organization to establish two
   44         application approval windows; providing deadlines for
   45         such application approval windows; requiring an
   46         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization to
   47         review applications and award scholarships in a
   48         specified order of priority; requiring an eligible
   49         nonprofit scholarship-funding organization to award
   50         scholarships to newly eligible students on a first
   51         come, first-served basis; requiring a parent to notify
   52         the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
   53         organization within a specified timeframe if a
   54         scholarship offer is accepted or declined within a
   55         specified timeframe; prohibiting a parent from
   56         applying for multiple scholarships for an individual
   57         student at the same time; authorizing specified
   58         students to apply for a scholarship at any time but
   59         only receive payments prospectively; prohibiting an
   60         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
   61         from restricting or reserving scholarships for use at
   62         a particular school; requiring such organization to
   63         notify each parent of a scholarship applicant that
   64         participation in the program does not guarantee
   65         enrollment at an eligible private school; providing
   66         that a parent who submitted an application by a
   67         specified date need not submit a new application;
   68         authorizing a parent to withdraw their application and
   69         reapply; prohibiting an eligible nonprofit
   70         scholarship-funding organization from requiring
   71         documentation beyond the requirements of the
   72         scholarship program; requiring an eligible nonprofit
   73         scholarship-funding organization to verify a student’s
   74         eligibility upon receipt of an application; requiring
   75         an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
   76         to send a list of verified eligible students to the
   77         department by specified dates; requiring the
   78         department to assign each verified eligible student a
   79         Florida student identification number; requiring the
   80         department to use such number for tracking and
   81         reporting scholarship data; requiring the department
   82         to cross-check each list of verified eligible students
   83         with certain other lists; requiring the department to
   84         send the cross-checked list to the eligible nonprofit
   85         scholarship-funding organization; requiring the
   86         department to notify an eligible nonprofit
   87         scholarship-funding organization of specified
   88         information; requiring an eligible nonprofit
   89         scholarship-funding organization to verify a student’s
   90         continued eligibility before disbursing each payment;
   91         providing criteria for verifying continued
   92         eligibility; requiring parents of students receiving
   93         scholarship payments to verify specified information;
   94         providing criteria for verifying continued
   95         eligibility; requiring parents of students receiving
   96         scholarship payments to verify specified information;
   97         providing that the scholarship program award amounts
   98         are the amounts provided in the General Appropriations
   99         Act; providing parameters for the calculation of the
  100         scholarship amounts for certain students; requiring an
  101         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization to
  102         establish and maintain a scholarship account for each
  103         student; providing methods for the transfer of funds;
  104         providing requirements for such accounts; providing
  105         that accrued interest is in addition to and not part
  106         of a student’s account; providing that program funds
  107         include awarded funds and accrued interest and are
  108         available only for authorized expenditures; requiring
  109         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organizations
  110         to make payments by funds transfer; providing
  111         requirements for such funds transfer; prohibiting a
  112         student’s scholarship award from being reduced to
  113         cover certain fees; requiring that commodities or
  114         services related to the funds transfer system be
  115         procured by a specified method; providing an
  116         exception; prohibiting an eligible nonprofit
  117         scholarship-funding organization from transferring
  118         funds to an account that has a balance in excess of a
  119         specified amount; authorizing students in a
  120         scholarship program to take specified tests and
  121         certain assessments; providing an exception; requiring
  122         a participating private school to administer or
  123         provide for students to take specified tests and
  124         assessments; requiring a participating private school
  125         to submit a certain written request to the department
  126         by a specified date; requiring a school district to
  127         administer tests and assessments at a participating
  128         private school; requiring an owner or operator to
  129         undergo a background screening; providing requirements
  130         for the submission of fingerprints; requiring the
  131         Department of Law Enforcement to retain such
  132         fingerprints in a specified manner and to enter such
  133         fingerprints into the statewide automated biometric
  134         identification system; requiring that such
  135         fingerprints be available for certain purposes and
  136         uses; requiring the Department of Law Enforcement to
  137         run a certain search of such fingerprints; prohibiting
  138         an owner or operator who fails the background
  139         screening from participating in a scholarship program;
  140         prohibiting such owner or operator from transferring
  141         ownership or management authority to a relative;
  142         defining the term “relative”; requiring an eligible
  143         nonprofit scholarship-funding organization to report
  144         the annual audit of background screening results to
  145         the Department of Education; providing that a
  146         participating private school may be sectarian or
  147         nonsectarian; revising information required to be
  148         provided to the department by an eligible private
  149         school; deleting obsolete language; providing
  150         construction; requiring the department to publish and
  151         update information on its website relating to
  152         scholarship programs; requiring the department to
  153         investigate complaints; requiring the department to
  154         maintain and annually publish a list of tests that
  155         satisfy a specified requirement; requiring the
  156         department to develop a standard withdrawal form for
  157         parents withdrawing a student from public school;
  158         providing requirements for such form; requiring the
  159         department to develop a uniform reimbursement process;
  160         requiring an organization, by a specified date, to
  161         approve, deny, or request more information relating to
  162         a reimbursement request; requiring the department to
  163         coordinate with each organization to provide a
  164         participating private school with statewide
  165         assessments; deleting the definition of the term
  166         “owner or operator”; requiring a school district, by a
  167         specified date, to inform certain households of
  168         eligibility to apply for a scholarship program;
  169         requiring the school district to coordinate with the
  170         department to provide a participating private school
  171         with statewide assessments; requiring a school
  172         district to publish information about a scholarship
  173         program on its website; requiring a school district to
  174         provide a parent with the withdrawal form upon
  175         request; deleting obsolete language; amending s.
  176         1002.394, F.S.; deleting obsolete language; providing
  177         that authorized uses of program funds include digital
  178         devices; providing that authorized uses of program
  179         funds include membership dues and activity fees for
  180         Career and Technical Student Organizations; providing
  181         that tuition and fees that meet certain requirements
  182         are eligible for program funds; revising conditions
  183         under which a student is no longer eligible for
  184         scholarship funding; requiring an eligible nonprofit
  185         scholarship-funding organization to notify a parent
  186         before closing a student’s account; requiring an
  187         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization to
  188         report certain information to the Department of
  189         Education regarding scholarship accounts closed under
  190         certain circumstances; requiring an eligible nonprofit
  191         scholarship-funding organization to notify a parent
  192         if, upon a student reaching a specified age, a balance
  193         exists in the student’s account, the amount of the
  194         balance, and how the funds may be used; deleting a
  195         provision allowing a public school student to receive
  196         a scholarship for transportation; deleting obsolete
  197         language; amending s. 1002.395, F.S.; deleting
  198         obsolete language; deleting provisions related to
  199         scholarship priority; deleting a provision allowing a
  200         public school student to receive a scholarship for
  201         transportation; revising a provision requiring
  202         eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organizations
  203         to verify that scholarship funds are used for
  204         specified purposes; requiring an eligible nonprofit
  205         scholarship-funding organization to report to the
  206         department the total number of scholarship accounts
  207         closed due to certain reasons; amending s. 1003.485,
  208         F.S.; deleting language relating to the purpose of the
  209         New Worlds Reading Initiative; conforming a cross
  210         reference; amending s. 1008.25, F.S.; making a
  211         conforming change; amending s. 1010.305, F.S.;
  212         requiring the Auditor General to periodically examine
  213         the records of eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
  214         organizations; providing for appropriate adjustments
  215         to be made and excess funds to be deducted if criteria
  216         and procedures have not been followed by an eligible
  217         nonprofit scholarship-funding organization; amending
  218         s. 1011.61, F.S.; conforming a cross-reference;
  219         amending s. 1011.62, F.S.; deleting obsolete language
  220         relating to the state-funded discretionary supplement;
  221         amending ss. 11.45, 212.099, and 1002.45, F.S.;
  222         conforming cross-references; providing an effective
  223         date.
  224          
  225  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  226  
  227         Section 1. Section 1011.687, Florida Statutes, is created
  228  to read:
  229         1011.687 Educational scholarship programs; operating
  230  categorical fund.—
  231         (1) There is created an operating categorical fund for
  232  implementing the Family Empowerment Scholarship Program pursuant
  233  to s. 1002.394. These funds shall be in the amount provided in
  234  the General Appropriations Act and any additional funds
  235  transferred from the Educational Enrollment Stabilization Fund
  236  pursuant to s. 1011.689.
  237         (2) Educational scholarship funding operating categorical
  238  funds shall be used to award scholarships as required in s.
  239  1002.394 and in accordance with s. 1002.421. Funds shall be
  240  disbursed from this fund based on the full-time equivalent
  241  scholarship students forecasted or reported as participating in
  242  the program.
  243         (3)A “full-time equivalent student” for a student
  244  participating in a scholarship program under s. 1002.394 or s.
  245  1002.395 means a student who receives all 10 scholarship
  246  payments, that are distributed on a monthly basis. A student who
  247  receives less than 10 payments shall generate a fraction of
  248  full-time equivalent student membership proportional to the
  249  number of payments received.
  250         (4) For the purposes of calculating a scholarship award
  251  amount, a full-time equivalent student shall be based upon the
  252  student’s county of residence.
  253         (5) Contingent upon verification that the organization is
  254  in compliance with s. 1002.395(6)(i), the department shall
  255  release funds from the operating categorical fund on a quarterly
  256  basis to the organization with the first quarter payment
  257  released no later than July 30. The funds shall be held by the
  258  organization for deposit into the students accounts in
  259  accordance with the payment schedules.
  260         (a) The first quarter release payment shall be based upon
  261  the amount of full-time equivalent student membership forecasted
  262  as provided in the General Appropriations Act.
  263         (b) The second, third, and fourth quarter release payments
  264  shall be based upon the amount of full-time equivalent student
  265  membership reported and cross-checked by the department pursuant
  266  to s. 1002.421(3).
  267         (c) If the funds released to the organization are in excess
  268  of the funds certified to the department by the organization as
  269  the amount distributed for student scholarships in accordance
  270  with scholarship program requirements, the department is
  271  authorized to adjust the amount of the overpayment in the third
  272  and fourth quarter payment releases.
  273         Section 2. Section 1011.689, Florida Statutes, is created
  274  to read:
  275         1011.689 Educational enrollment stabilization program.—The
  276  educational enrollment stabilization program is created to
  277  provide supplemental state funds as needed to address changes in
  278  full-time equivalent student enrollment throughout the school
  279  year in both the Florida Finance Education Program and the
  280  educational scholarship programs created pursuant to chapter
  281  1002.
  282         (1) SCHOOL DISTRICT STABILIZATION.—To maintain the
  283  stability of the operations of public schools, including charter
  284  schools, in each school district, the department shall use funds
  285  as appropriated to ensure that based on each recalculation of
  286  the Florida Education Finance Program, a school district’s funds
  287  per unweighted full-time equivalent student are not less than
  288  the greater of either the school district’s funds per unweighted
  289  full-time equivalent student as appropriated in the General
  290  Appropriations Act or the school district’s funds per unweighted
  291  full-time equivalent student as recalculated based upon the
  292  receipt of the certified taxable value for school purposes
  293  pursuant to s. 1011.62(4).
  294         (2) SCHOOL DISTRICT DECLINING ENROLLMENT.—To maintain the
  295  stability of the operations of public schools, the department
  296  shall use funds as appropriated to provide a supplemental
  297  payment to school districts that have a decline in unweighted
  298  full-time equivalent students between the legislative
  299  calculation provided in the General Appropriations Act and the
  300  third calculation of the Florida Education Finance Program
  301  within the same year. The supplemental payment shall be computed
  302  by multiplying a percentage of the decline in the unweighted
  303  full-time equivalent students as determined by the Legislature
  304  by the base student allocation and by the comparable wage factor
  305  or the small district factor. The percentage used for districts
  306  that are fiscally constrained must be greater than the
  307  percentage used for non-fiscally constrained districts. The
  308  supplemental funds may not be added to the district’s total
  309  Florida Education Finance Program funds for any future
  310  calculations.
  311         (3) FAMILY EMPOWERMENT SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM.—To maintain
  312  scholarship award amounts, the department shall use funds as
  313  appropriated to ensure that funding is available if the number
  314  of full-time equivalent students enrolled in the scholarship
  315  program is greater than the amount appropriated in the General
  316  Appropriations Act in the educational scholarship funding
  317  operating categorical established under s. 1011.687.
  318         (4) FLORIDA TAX CREDIT SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM.If available
  319  funds in the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program are
  320  insufficient to cover eligible applicants who are personalized
  321  education program students, the department shall use funds as
  322  appropriated to award scholarships to such eligible applicants
  323  up to the number authorized in s. 1002.395.
  324         (5) MINIMUM BALANCE.—The Legislature shall annually
  325  appropriate funds in the General Appropriations Act to the
  326  department for the educational stabilization program in an
  327  amount necessary to maintain a projected minimum balance of $250
  328  million at the beginning of the upcoming fiscal year.
  329  Notwithstanding s. 216.301 and pursuant to s. 216.351, the
  330  unexpended balance of funds appropriated pursuant to this
  331  subsection which is not disbursed by June 30 of the fiscal year
  332  in which the funds are appropriated may be carried forward for
  333  up to 10 years after the effective date of the original
  334  appropriation.
  335         Section 3. Section 1011.65, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  336  read:
  337         1011.65 Florida Education Finance Program Appropriation
  338  Allocation Conference.—Prior to the distribution of any funds
  339  appropriated in the General Appropriations Act for the K-12
  340  Florida Education Finance Program formula and for the formula
  341  funded categorical programs, the Commissioner of Education shall
  342  conduct an allocation conference. Conference principals shall
  343  include representatives of the Department of Education, the
  344  Executive Office of the Governor, and the appropriations
  345  committees of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
  346  Conference principals shall discuss and agree to all
  347  conventions, including rounding conventions, and methods of
  348  computation to be used to calculate Florida Education Finance
  349  Program and categorical entitlements of the districts for the
  350  fiscal year for which the appropriations are made. These
  351  conventions and calculation methods shall remain in effect until
  352  further agreements are reached in subsequent allocation
  353  conferences called by the commissioner for that purpose. The
  354  commissioner shall also, prior to each recalculation of Florida
  355  Education Finance Program and categorical allocations of the
  356  districts, provide conference principals with all data necessary
  357  to replicate those allocations precisely. This data shall
  358  include a matrix by district by program of all full-time
  359  equivalent changes made by the department as part of its
  360  administration of state full-time equivalent caps. This data
  361  must include verification that the department has cross-checked
  362  the full-time equivalent student membership survey data with the
  363  full-time equivalent student data for the educational
  364  scholarship programs established under chapter 1002 to avoid
  365  duplication.
  366         Section 4. Section 1002.40, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  367  read:
  368         1002.40 The Hope Scholarship Program.—
  369         (1) PURPOSE.—The Hope Scholarship Program is established to
  370  provide the parent of a public school student who was subjected
  371  to an incident listed in subsection (3) an opportunity to
  372  transfer the student to another public school or to request a
  373  scholarship for the student to enroll in and attend an eligible
  374  private school.
  375         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
  376         (a) “Parent” means a resident of this state who is a
  377  parent, as defined in s. 1000.21, and whose student reported an
  378  incident in accordance with subsection (4).
  379         (b) “Program” means the Hope Scholarship Program.
  380         (c) “School” means any educational program or activity
  381  conducted by a public K-12 educational institution, any school
  382  related or school-sponsored program or activity, and riding on a
  383  school bus, as defined in s. 1006.25(1), including waiting at a
  384  school bus stop.
  385         (3) PROGRAM ELIGIBILITY.—A student enrolled in a Florida
  386  public school in kindergarten through grade 12 is eligible for
  387  the educational options described in subsection (4) if the
  388  student reported an incident in accordance with that subsection.
  389  For purposes of this section, the term “incident” means battery;
  390  harassment; hazing; bullying; kidnapping; physical attack;
  391  robbery; sexual offenses, harassment, assault, or battery;
  392  threat or intimidation; or fighting at school, as defined by the
  393  department in accordance with s. 1006.09(6).
  394         (4) SCHOOL DISTRICT OBLIGATIONS; PARENTAL OPTIONS.—Upon
  395  receipt of a report of an incident, the school principal, or his
  396  or her designee, shall provide a copy of the report to the
  397  parent and investigate the incident to determine if the incident
  398  must be reported as required by s. 1006.09(6). Within 24 hours
  399  after receipt of the report, the principal or his or her
  400  designee shall provide a copy of the report to the parent of the
  401  alleged offender and to the superintendent. Upon conclusion of
  402  the investigation or within 15 days after the incident was
  403  reported, whichever occurs first, the school district shall
  404  notify the parent of the program, offer the parent an
  405  opportunity to enroll his or her student in another public
  406  school that has capacity, and notify the parent of their
  407  eligibility to apply for a scholarship to attend an eligible
  408  private school under ss. 1002.394 and 1002.395.
  409         (5) RULES.—The State Board of Education shall adopt rules
  410  to administer this section.
  411         Section 5. Section 1002.411, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
  412         Section 6. Section 1002.421, Florida Statutes, is amended
  413  to read:
  414         1002.421 State school choice scholarship programs program
  415  accountability and oversight.—
  416         (1) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, s. 1002.394, and
  417  s. 1002.395, the term:
  418         (a) “Approved provider” means a provider approved by the
  419  Agency for Persons with Disabilities, a health care practitioner
  420  as defined in s. 456.001, or a provider approved by the
  421  department pursuant to s. 1002.66.
  422         (b) “Choice navigator” means an individual who meets the
  423  requirements of s. 1002.395(6)(d)8. and who provides
  424  consultations, at a mutually agreed upon location, on the
  425  selection of, application for, and enrollment in educational
  426  options addressing the academic needs of a student; curriculum
  427  selection; and advice on career and postsecondary education
  428  opportunities. However, this section does not authorize a choice
  429  navigator to oversee or exercise control over the curricula or
  430  academic programs of a personalized education program.
  431         (c) “Curriculum” means a complete course of study for a
  432  particular content area or grade level, including any required
  433  supplemental materials and associated online instruction.
  434         (d) “Disability” means, for a 3- or 4-year-old child or for
  435  a student in kindergarten to grade 12, autism spectrum disorder
  436  as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
  437  Disorders, Fifth Edition, published by the American Psychiatric
  438  Association; cerebral palsy as defined in s. 393.063; Down
  439  syndrome as defined in s. 393.063; an intellectual disability as
  440  defined in s. 393.063; a speech impairment; a language
  441  impairment; an orthopedic impairment; any other health
  442  impairment; an emotional or a behavioral disability; a specific
  443  learning disability, including, but not limited to, dyslexia,
  444  dyscalculia, or developmental aphasia; Phelan-McDermid syndrome
  445  as defined in s. 393.063; Prader-Willi syndrome as defined in s.
  446  393.063; spina bifida as defined in s. 393.063; being a high
  447  risk child as defined in s. 393.063(22)(a); muscular dystrophy;
  448  Williams syndrome; rare diseases that affect patient populations
  449  of fewer than 200,000 individuals in the United States, as
  450  defined by the National Organization for Rare Disorders;
  451  anaphylaxis; a hearing impairment, including deafness; a visual
  452  impairment, including blindness; traumatic brain injury;
  453  hospital or homebound; or identification as dual sensory
  454  impaired, as defined by rules of the State Board of Education
  455  and evidenced by reports from local school districts. The term
  456  “hospital or homebound” includes a student who has a medically
  457  diagnosed physical or psychiatric condition or illness, as
  458  defined by the state board in rule, and who is confined to the
  459  home or hospital for more than 6 months.
  460         (e) “Eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization”
  461  or “organization” means a state university; or an independent
  462  college or university that is eligible to participate in the
  463  William L. Boyd, IV, Effective Access to Student Education Grant
  464  Program; is located and chartered in this state; is not for
  465  profit; is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the
  466  Southern Association of Colleges and Schools; or is a charitable
  467  organization that:
  468         1.Is exempt from federal income tax pursuant to s.
  469  501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;
  470         2.Is a Florida entity formed under chapter 605, chapter
  471  607, or chapter 617 and whose principal office is located in
  472  this state; and
  473         3.Complies with s. 1002.395(6) and (15).
  474         (f) “Eligible postsecondary educational institution” means
  475  a Florida College System institution; a state university; a
  476  school district technical center; a school district adult
  477  general education center; an independent college or university
  478  that is eligible to participate in the William L. Boyd, IV,
  479  Effective Access to Student Education Grant Program under s.
  480  1009.89; or an accredited independent postsecondary educational
  481  institution as defined in s. 1005.02 which is licensed to
  482  operate in this state under part III of chapter 1005 or is
  483  approved to participate in a reciprocity agreement as defined in
  484  s. 1000.35(2).
  485         (g) “Eligible private school” means a private school as
  486  defined in s. 1002.01 which is located in Florida and which
  487  offers an education to students in any grades K-12 and meets the
  488  requirements in this section.
  489         (h)“Household income” has the same meaning as the term
  490  “income” as defined in the Income Eligibility Guidelines for
  491  free and reduced price meals under the National School Lunch
  492  Program in 7 C.F.R. part 210 as published in the Federal
  493  Register by the United States Department of Agriculture.
  494         (i) “IEP” means an individual education plan, regardless of
  495  whether the plan has been reviewed or revised within the last 12
  496  months.
  497         (j) “Inactive” means that no eligible expenditures have
  498  been made from an account.
  499         (k) “Job coach” means an individual employed to help people
  500  with disabilities learn, accommodate to, and perform their work
  501  duties.
  502         (l) “Law enforcement officer” has the same meaning as
  503  provided in s. 943.10(1).
  504         (m)“Owner or operator” includes:
  505         1.An owner, a president, an officer, or a director of an
  506  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization or a person
  507  with equivalent decisionmaking authority over an eligible
  508  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization; or
  509         2.An owner, an operator, a superintendent, or a principal
  510  of an eligible private school or a person with equivalent
  511  decisionmaking authority over an eligible private school.
  512         (n) “Parent” means a resident of this state who is a parent
  513  as defined in s. 1000.21.
  514         (o)“Personalized education program” has the same meaning
  515  as in s. 1002.01.
  516         (p)“Personalized education student” means a student whose
  517  parent applies to an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
  518  organization for participation in a personalized education
  519  program.
  520         (q)“Student learning plan” means a customized learning
  521  plan developed by a parent at least annually to guide
  522  instruction for his or her student and to identify the goods and
  523  services needed to address the academic needs of his or her
  524  student.
  525         (2) SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION PROCESS.—
  526         (a) An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
  527  must provide the parent with information on each scholarship
  528  program established pursuant to this chapter which clearly
  529  outlines the eligibility requirements of and authorized uses of
  530  funds for each program to enable the parent of a student to
  531  determine which program best fits the needs of each student.
  532  Specifically, for a student applying based on eligibility
  533  pursuant to s. 1002.394(3)(b) or s. 1002.395, except for
  534  students eligible pursuant to a personalized education program,
  535  a participating private school must discuss the school’s
  536  academic programs and policies, specialized services, code of
  537  conduct, and attendance policies before enrollment with the
  538  parent to determine which programs and services may meet the
  539  student’s individual needs.
  540         (b) The organization must create a single application for
  541  all educational scholarship programs established pursuant to
  542  this chapter in a manner that creates an electronic record of
  543  the application, which must include the date the application was
  544  submitted, the date the application was approved or denied, and
  545  the date the scholarship was accepted or declined. The
  546  organization may not charge a fee for the application.
  547         (c) The organization must establish two application
  548  approval windows each school year during which a parent of an
  549  eligible student, including renewal students, may apply for an
  550  educational scholarship program pursuant to this chapter, except
  551  for personalized education students, who may only apply during
  552  the fall application window.
  553         1.a. For the 2025-2026 school year, the application
  554  deadline for the fall application window must be no later than
  555  July 15.
  556         b. For the 2026-2027 school year and thereafter, the
  557  application deadline for the fall application window must be no
  558  later than May 31.
  559         2. The application deadline for the spring application
  560  window must be no later than November 1.
  561         (d) An organization must review applications and award
  562  scholarships using the following priorities:
  563         1. An application for a student who is eligible pursuant to
  564  s. 1002.394(3)(a) or s. 1002.395 and:
  565         a.Whose household income level does not exceed 185 percent
  566  of the federal poverty level or who is in foster care or out-of
  567  home care; and then
  568         b.Whose household income level exceeds 185 percent of the
  569  federal poverty level but does not exceed 400 percent of the
  570  federal poverty level.
  571         2. An application for a student who is eligible and
  572  received a scholarship during the previous school year.
  573         3. An application for a student who was affected by the
  574  disapproval of an organization’s participation by the department
  575  pursuant to s. 1002.395 during the previous school year.
  576  
  577  The organization must award scholarships to newly eligible
  578  students on a first-come, first-served basis unless the student
  579  is seeking priority pursuant to this paragraph.
  580         (e)A parent must notify the organization within 30 days,
  581  except for the 2025-2026 school year for which the parent must
  582  notify the organization within 15 days, of the application
  583  window deadline whether the scholarship offer is accepted or
  584  declined. A failure to respond within the timeframe established
  585  results in an automatic declination of the scholarship. A parent
  586  of a student who is awarded funds during the fall does not need
  587  to reapply during the spring application window. A parent of a
  588  student who is awarded funds during the spring window may only
  589  receive five of the 10 payment installments for the school year.
  590         (f) A parent may not apply for multiple scholarships under
  591  s. 1002.394 or s. 1002.395 for an individual student at the same
  592  time.
  593         (g) Notwithstanding the application window deadlines, a
  594  student in foster care or out-of-home care who is a dependent
  595  child of a member of the United States Armed Forces or who
  596  reported an incident pursuant to s. 1002.40 may apply for a
  597  scholarship at any time but may only receive payments
  598  prospectively.
  599         (h) An organization may not restrict or reserve
  600  scholarships for use at a particular eligible private school or
  601  provide scholarships to a child of an owner or operator of such
  602  school. The organization must notify each parent of a
  603  scholarship applicant that participation in the scholarship
  604  program does not guarantee enrollment at an eligible private
  605  school.
  606         (i) For the 2025-2026 school year, a parent who applies for
  607  a scholarship by April 30, 2025, does not need to submit a new
  608  application pursuant to the requirements of this section but
  609  must, by the time the organization is required to send its
  610  verified list to the department, provide the documentation
  611  required for eligibility. However, a parent may withdraw their
  612  application and reapply pursuant to the requirements of this
  613  section.
  614  
  615  An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization may not
  616  further regulate, exercise control over, or require
  617  documentation beyond the requirements of the scholarship
  618  programs unless the regulation, control, or documentation is
  619  necessary for participation in the program.
  620         (3) ENROLLMENT VERIFICATION.—Upon receipt of an
  621  application, the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
  622  organization must verify each student’s initial or continuing
  623  eligibility. Each student must apply for a scholarship each
  624  academic year. An organization may not grant multiyear
  625  scholarships in one approval process.
  626         (a) To verify eligibility the organization must request for
  627  each student and include in each student’s file all of the
  628  following information:
  629         1. More than one form of proof of residency or proof that
  630  the student is the dependent of an active duty member of the
  631  United States Armed Forces who has received permanent change of
  632  station orders to this state or, at the time of renewal, whose
  633  home of record or state of legal residence is Florida.
  634         2. A copy of the student’s birth certificate.
  635         3. For a student who was enrolled in public school in the
  636  school year prior to participation in the scholarship program,
  637  proof that the parent submitted the standard withdrawal form to
  638  the public school at which the student was previously enrolled.
  639         4. The following documentation from the parent attesting
  640  that while the student receives scholarship payments, the
  641  student will be enrolled in and in compliance with the
  642  applicable attendance requirements under ss. 1003.01(16) and
  643  1003.21(1):
  644         a. A copy of the notice of a parent’s intent to establish
  645  and maintain a home education program pursuant to s. 1002.41;
  646         b. A personalized education program and a copy of the
  647  student learning plan that has been reviewed and verified by the
  648  organization pursuant to s. 1002.395(7)(c); or
  649         c. A letter of admission or enrollment from an eligible
  650  private school for the school year in which the student is
  651  applying.
  652         (b) In addition, if the student:
  653         1. Previously participated in a scholarship program, the
  654  organization must request for each student the assessment
  655  results necessary to verify compliance with subsection (7).
  656         2. Is seeking priority eligible based upon household
  657  income, the parent of the student must authorize the
  658  organization to access information needed for income eligibility
  659  determination and verification held by other state or federal
  660  agencies, including the Department of Revenue, the Department of
  661  Children and Families, the Department of Education, the
  662  Department of Commerce, and the Agency for Health Care
  663  Administration.
  664         (c) An organization must send to the department a list of
  665  verified eligible students and any information necessary for the
  666  department to review the list by:
  667         1. August 15 for the 2025-2026 school year for the fall
  668  application window.
  669         2. July 15 for the 2026-2027 school year and each school
  670  year thereafter for the fall application window.
  671         3. December 15 for the spring application window.
  672         (d) The department must assign each verified eligible
  673  student a Florida student identification number. Once a student
  674  is assigned a Florida student identification number, the
  675  organization must use that number for the reporting and tracking
  676  of all scholarship data.
  677         (e) The department must cross-check each list of verified
  678  eligible students with the most recent public school enrollment
  679  lists and each list of verified eligible students applying to
  680  receive a scholarship award before an organization makes any
  681  payments to avoid duplication between organizations and between
  682  the organizations and the public schools.
  683         (f) The department, after the list of verified eligible
  684  students has been cross-checked and each student has been
  685  assigned a Florida student identification number, shall send the
  686  updated list to the organization who may then fund students
  687  based on the department’s list of verified eligible students.
  688  The department must notify an organization of any of the
  689  organization’s identified students who were submitted for a
  690  scholarship from another organization and which organization the
  691  student shall receive funding from.
  692         (4) PREPAYMENT VERIFICATION.—Prior to the disbursement of
  693  each scholarship payment, the organization must verify the
  694  student’s continued eligibility based upon the requirements of
  695  the applicable student’s scholarship program.
  696         (a) For scholarship programs that require private school
  697  enrollment, the organization must verify that the student is
  698  enrolled in and in attendance at an eligible participating
  699  private school.
  700         (b) Prior to the receipt of each scholarship payment, a
  701  parent of the student must attest that the student is not
  702  enrolled full-time in a public school and is enrolled in and in
  703  attendance at, unless excused for illness or other good cause:
  704         1. A home education program;
  705         2. A personalized education program; or
  706         3. An eligible private school.
  707         (c) The organization may not make any payment into a
  708  student’s account upon notification that the student is enrolled
  709  in a public school unless the organization can verify the
  710  student’s continued eligibility. An organization is liable to
  711  the state for payments made in violation of this subsection and
  712  must reimburse the state for funds that were improperly awarded
  713  which cannot be recovered.
  714         (5) SCHOLARSHIP AWARD AMOUNTS AND PAYMENT SCHEDULE.—
  715         (a) Beginning in the 2025-2026 school year, the calculated
  716  scholarship program award amounts shall be the amounts provided
  717  in the General Appropriations Act which are based upon the
  718  amounts by basic program and program for exceptional students
  719  under the Florida Education Finance Program. These amounts shall
  720  be adjusted annually based upon the value of the percentage
  721  change increase in per student funding at the state level for
  722  public school districts as provided in the General
  723  Appropriations Act.
  724         1. The calculated scholarship amount for a student
  725  determined eligible pursuant to s. 1002.394(3)(a) or s. 1002.395
  726  shall be based upon the student’s current grade level and county
  727  of residence.
  728         2. The calculated scholarship amount for a student
  729  determined eligible pursuant to s. 1002.394(3)(b) must be based
  730  upon the student’s current grade level, exceptional student
  731  program, and county of residence.
  732         a.The calculated scholarship amount for a student who
  733  received a Gardiner Scholarship pursuant to former s. 1002.385
  734  in the 2020-2021 school year shall be the greater of the amount
  735  calculated pursuant to this subsection or the amount the student
  736  received for the 2020-2021 school year.
  737         b.The calculated scholarship amount for a student who
  738  received a John M. McKay Scholarship pursuant to former s.
  739  1002.39 in the 2020-2021 school year shall be the greater of the
  740  amount calculated pursuant to this subsection or the amount the
  741  student received for the 2020-2021 school year.
  742         (b) The scholarship award shall be divided into 10 equal
  743  installments. The organization must make payments no later than
  744  August 20, except for the 2025-2026 school year for which the
  745  first payment must be made no later than September 1, September
  746  15, October 15, November 15, January 15, February 15, March 15,
  747  April 15, and May 15 of each school year in which the
  748  scholarship is in force and in accordance with the prepayment
  749  verification process. The first payment must be for two
  750  installments.
  751         (6) SCHOLARSHIP ACCOUNTS.—The organization must establish
  752  and maintain a separate scholarship account for each student
  753  enrolled in a scholarship program. For each account, the
  754  organization must maintain a record of accrued interest which is
  755  retained in the student’s account. Accrued interest in the
  756  student’s account is in addition to, and not part of, the
  757  awarded funds. Program funds include both the awarded funds and
  758  accrued interest and are available only for authorized program
  759  expenditures.
  760         (a) Payment of the scholarship by the eligible nonprofit
  761  scholarship-funding organization shall be by funds transfer,
  762  including, but not limited to, debit cards, electronic payment
  763  cards, or any means of payment the department deems commercially
  764  viable or cost-effective. A student’s scholarship award may not
  765  be reduced to cover debit card or electronic payment fees.
  766  Commodities or services related to the development of such
  767  transfer system must be procured by competitive solicitation
  768  unless purchased from a state term contract pursuant to s.
  769  287.056.
  770         (b) For students eligible pursuant to s. 1002.394(3)(a) or
  771  s. 1002.395, except for those students enrolled in a
  772  personalized education program:
  773         1. The organization must commit scholarship funds on behalf
  774  of the student for tuition and fees that the parent must pay at
  775  a participating private school before scholarship account funds
  776  may be used for additional authorized uses under s.
  777  1002.394(4)(a) or s. 1002.395(4)(d). A parent is responsible for
  778  all eligible expenses in excess of the scholarship amount. An
  779  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization shall ensure
  780  that the parent has approved a funds transfer before any
  781  scholarship funds are deposited. The parent may not designate
  782  any entity or individual associated with a participating private
  783  school as the parent’s attorney in fact to approve a funds
  784  transfer.
  785         2. After funds have been committed pursuant to subparagraph
  786  1., funds may be used as authorized in s. 1002.394(4)(a) and as
  787  authorized in the organization’s purchasing handbook by paying
  788  for the authorized use directly and then submitting a
  789  reimbursement request to the organization. An organization may
  790  require the use of an online platform for direct purchases of
  791  products if such use does not limit a parent’s choice of
  792  curriculum or academic programs. If a parent purchases a product
  793  identical to one offered by an organization’s online platform
  794  for a lower price, the organization must reimburse the parent
  795  the cost of the product.
  796         3. The initial payment shall be made after the
  797  organization’s verification of admission acceptance, and
  798  subsequent payments shall be made upon verification of continued
  799  enrollment and attendance at a participating private school.
  800  Payments for tuition and fees for full-time enrollment shall be
  801  made within 7 business days after approval by the parent and the
  802  private school.
  803         4. An organization may not transfer any funds to an account
  804  of a student which has a balance in excess of $24,000.
  805         (c) For students eligible pursuant to s. 1002.394(3)(b):
  806         1. The organization must verify qualifying educational
  807  expenditures pursuant to the requirements of s. 1002.394(4)(b).
  808  The organization must verify any expenditures made pursuant to
  809  s. 1002.394(4)(b)1. and 2. before the distribution of funds.
  810  Review of expenditures made for services specified in s.
  811  1002.394(4)(b)3.-16. may be completed after the purchase is
  812  made.
  813         2. An organization may not transfer any funds to an account
  814  of a student which has a balance in excess of $50,000.
  815         (d) The parent of a student who fails to comply with this
  816  subsection forfeits the scholarship. An organization must notify
  817  the parent when a scholarship account is closed and program
  818  funds revert to the state.
  819         (7) TESTING REQUIREMENTS.—A student participating in a
  820  scholarship program in grades 3 through 10 may take the
  821  nationally norm-referenced tests that are identified by the
  822  department or take the statewide assessments pursuant to s.
  823  1008.22. Students with disabilities for whom standardized
  824  testing is not appropriate are exempt from this requirement.
  825         (a) A participating private school must annually administer
  826  or make provision for students participating in the program in
  827  grades 3 through 10 to take one of the nationally norm
  828  referenced tests or cooperate with a student whose parent
  829  chooses to participate in the statewide assessments pursuant to
  830  s. 1008.22. A parent must require his or her student
  831  participating in the program to take the norm-referenced tests
  832  offered by the participating private school. The parent may also
  833  choose to have the student participate in the statewide
  834  assessments pursuant to s. 1008.22.
  835         (b)1. If the participating private school chooses to offer
  836  and administer the statewide assessments pursuant to s. 1008.22
  837  to all students who attend the private school in grades 3
  838  through 10, it must submit a request in writing to the
  839  department by March 1 of each year in order to administer the
  840  statewide assessments in the subsequent school year. In turn,
  841  upon the request of the department, a school district shall
  842  coordinate with the department to provide to a participating
  843  private school the statewide assessments and any related
  844  materials for administering the assessments.
  845         2. A school district is responsible for administering tests
  846  at a participating private school, including:
  847         a.Providing training for private school staff on test
  848  security and assessment administration procedures;
  849         b.Distributing testing materials to a private school;
  850         c.Retrieving testing materials from a private school;
  851         d.Providing the required format for a private school to
  852  submit information to the district for test administration and
  853  enrollment purposes; and
  854         e.Providing any required assistance, monitoring, or
  855  investigation related to administering tests and assessments at
  856  a private school.
  857         3. A participating private school shall report a student’s
  858  scores to his or her parent. By August 15 of each year, a
  859  participating private school must report the scores of all
  860  participating students to a state university as described in s.
  861  1002.395(9)(b)3.
  862         4. If a parent requests that the student participating in
  863  the program take statewide assessments pursuant to s. 1008.22
  864  and the participating private school has not chosen to offer and
  865  administer the statewide assessments, the district in which the
  866  participating private school is located must provide locations
  867  and times for the student to take the assessments. The parent is
  868  responsible for transporting the student to the assessment site
  869  designated by the school district.
  870         5. For students determined eligible pursuant to s.
  871  1002.395(7)(b), an organization must receive eligible student
  872  test scores, and beginning with the 2027-2028 school year, by
  873  August 15, annually report test scores for such students to a
  874  state university pursuant to s. 1002.395(9)(b)3.
  875         (8) BACKGROUND SCREENING REQUIREMENTS.—
  876         (a) Each owner or operator or an individual providing
  877  services under s. 1002.394(4)(b)4. or s. 1002.395(6)(d)4., prior
  878  to employment or engagement to provide services, to undergo
  879  level 2 background screening as provided under chapter 435. The
  880  fingerprints for the background screening must be electronically
  881  submitted to the Department of Law Enforcement and may be taken
  882  by an authorized law enforcement agency or a private company
  883  that is trained to take fingerprints. However, the complete set
  884  of fingerprints of an owner or operator or service provider may
  885  not be taken by the owner or operator or service provider. The
  886  owner or operator or service provider shall provide a copy of
  887  the results of the state and national criminal history check to
  888  the Department of Education. The cost of the background
  889  screening may be borne by the owner or operator or service
  890  provider.
  891         1. Every 5 years following employment or engagement to
  892  provide services, an owner or operator or service provider must
  893  meet level 2 screening standards as described in s. 435.04, at
  894  which time the owner or operator or service provider shall
  895  request the Department of Law Enforcement to forward the
  896  fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for level 2
  897  screening. If the fingerprints of an owner or operator or
  898  service provider are not retained by the Department of Law
  899  Enforcement under subparagraph 2., the owner or operator or
  900  service provider must electronically file a complete set of
  901  fingerprints with the Department of Law Enforcement. Upon
  902  submission of fingerprints for this purpose, the owner or
  903  operator or service provider shall request that the Department
  904  of Law Enforcement forward the fingerprints to the Federal
  905  Bureau of Investigation for level 2 screening, and the
  906  fingerprints shall be retained by the Department of Law
  907  Enforcement under subparagraph 2.
  908         2. Fingerprints submitted to the Department of Law
  909  Enforcement as required by this paragraph must be retained by
  910  the Department of Law Enforcement in a manner approved by rule
  911  and entered in the statewide automated biometric identification
  912  system authorized by s. 943.05(2)(b). The fingerprints must
  913  thereafter be available for all purposes and uses authorized for
  914  arrest fingerprints entered in the statewide automated biometric
  915  identification system pursuant to s. 943.051.
  916         3. The Department of Law Enforcement shall run a search of
  917  all arrest fingerprints received under s. 943.051 against the
  918  fingerprints retained in the statewide automated biometric
  919  identification system under subparagraph 2. Any arrest record
  920  that is identified with an owner’s or operator’s fingerprints
  921  must be reported to the owner or operator or service provider,
  922  who must report to the Department of Education. Any costs
  923  associated with the search shall be borne by the owner or
  924  operator or service provider.
  925         4. An owner or operator who fails the level 2 background
  926  screening is not eligible to participate in a scholarship
  927  program under this chapter. A service provider must submit a
  928  notarized attestation to the organization and make the
  929  background screening results available upon request. A person
  930  that fails to make the background screening results available
  931  upon request to either the parent or organization is
  932  disqualified from participating in the program. No later than
  933  December 1, 2025, an organization may not provide scholarship
  934  funds to a person or provider that has not submitted the
  935  notarized attestation.
  936         5. In addition to the offenses listed in s. 435.04, a
  937  person required to undergo background screening pursuant to this
  938  part or authorizing statutes may not have an arrest awaiting
  939  final disposition for, must not have been found guilty of, or
  940  entered a plea of nolo contendere to, regardless of
  941  adjudication, and must not have been adjudicated delinquent for,
  942  and the record must not have been sealed or expunged for, any of
  943  the following offenses or any similar offense of another
  944  jurisdiction:
  945         a. Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony.
  946         b. This chapter, if the offense was a felony.
  947         c. Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud.
  948         d. Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud.
  949         e. Section 741.28, relating to domestic violence.
  950         f. Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through
  951  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or
  952  photooptical systems.
  953         g. Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent
  954  insurance claims.
  955         h. Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering.
  956         i. Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of personal
  957  identification information.
  958         j. Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card
  959  through fraudulent means.
  960         k. Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit
  961  cards, if the offense was a felony.
  962         l. Section 831.01, relating to forgery.
  963         m. Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged instruments.
  964         n. Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills, checks,
  965  drafts, or promissory notes.
  966         o. Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank bills,
  967  checks, drafts, or promissory notes.
  968         p. Section 831.30, relating to fraud in obtaining medicinal
  969  drugs.
  970         q. Section 831.31, relating to the sale, manufacture,
  971  delivery, or possession with the intent to sell, manufacture, or
  972  deliver any counterfeit controlled substance, if the offense was
  973  a felony.
  974         6. At least 30 calendar days before a transfer of ownership
  975  of a private school, the owner or operator shall notify the
  976  parent of each scholarship student.
  977         7. The owner or operator of a private school that has been
  978  deemed ineligible to participate in a scholarship program
  979  pursuant to this chapter may not transfer ownership or
  980  management authority of the school to a relative in order to
  981  participate in a scholarship program as the same school or a new
  982  school. For purposes of this subparagraph, the term “relative”
  983  means father, mother, son, daughter, grandfather, grandmother,
  984  brother, sister, uncle, aunt, cousin, nephew, niece, husband,
  985  wife, father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law,
  986  brother-in-law, sister-in-law, stepfather, stepmother, stepson,
  987  stepdaughter, stepbrother, stepsister, half brother, or half
  988  sister.
  989         (b) An organization must report the annual audit of
  990  background screening results required under this subsection to
  991  the department.
  992         (9) PRIVATE SCHOOL ELIGIBILITY AND OBLIGATIONS.—A private
  993  school participating in an educational scholarship program
  994  established pursuant to this chapter may be sectarian or
  995  nonsectarian and must be a private school as defined in s.
  996  1002.01 in this state, be registered, and be in compliance with
  997  all requirements of this section in addition to private school
  998  requirements outlined in s. 1002.42, specific requirements
  999  identified within respective scholarship program laws, and other
 1000  provisions of Florida law that apply to private schools.
 1001  Additionally, a private school participating in an educational
 1002  scholarship program pursuant to this chapter, and must:
 1003         (a) Comply with the antidiscrimination provisions of 42
 1004  U.S.C. s. 2000d.
 1005         (b) Notify the department of its intent to participate in a
 1006  scholarship program.
 1007         (c) Notify the department of any change in the school’s
 1008  name, school director, mailing address, or physical location
 1009  within 15 days after the change.
 1010         (d)  Provide to the department or scholarship-funding
 1011  organization all documentation required for a student’s
 1012  participation or required by the organization to process a
 1013  scholarship payment, including the private school’s and
 1014  student’s individual fee schedule, and attendance verification
 1015  as required by the department or scholarship-funding
 1016  organization, prior to scholarship payment. Such information
 1017  must be provided by the deadlines established by the
 1018  organization and in accordance with the requirements of this
 1019  section or ss. 1002.394 and 1002.395. A student is not eligible
 1020  to receive a scholarship payment if the private school fails to
 1021  meet the deadlines.
 1022         (e) Annually complete and submit to the department a
 1023  notarized scholarship compliance statement certifying that all
 1024  school employees and contracted personnel with direct student
 1025  contact have undergone background screening pursuant to s.
 1026  435.12 and have met the screening standards as provided in s.
 1027  435.04.
 1028         (f) Demonstrate fiscal soundness and accountability by:
 1029         1. Being in operation for at least 3 school years or
 1030  obtaining a surety bond or letter of credit for the amount equal
 1031  to the scholarship funds for any quarter and filing the surety
 1032  bond or letter of credit with the department.
 1033         2. Requiring the parent of each scholarship student to
 1034  personally restrictively endorse the scholarship warrant to the
 1035  school or to approve a funds transfer before any funds are
 1036  deposited for a student. The school may not act as attorney in
 1037  fact for the parent of a scholarship student under the authority
 1038  of a power of attorney executed by such parent, or under any
 1039  other authority, to endorse a scholarship warrant or approve a
 1040  funds transfer on behalf of such parent.
 1041         (g) Meet applicable state and local health, safety, and
 1042  welfare laws, codes, and rules, including:
 1043         1. Firesafety.
 1044         2. Building safety.
 1045         (h) Employ or contract with teachers who hold baccalaureate
 1046  or higher degrees, have at least 3 years of teaching experience
 1047  in public or private schools, or have special skills, knowledge,
 1048  or expertise that qualifies them to provide instruction in
 1049  subjects taught.
 1050         (i) Maintain a physical location in the state at which each
 1051  student has regular and direct contact with teachers. Regular
 1052  and direct contact with teachers may be satisfied for students
 1053  enrolled pursuant to s. 1002.394(4)(b) or in a personalized
 1054  education program if students have regular and direct contact
 1055  with teachers at the physical location at least 2 school days
 1056  per week and the student learning plan addresses the remaining
 1057  instructional time.
 1058         (j) Publish on the school’s website, or provide in a
 1059  written format, information for parents regarding the school,
 1060  including, but not limited to, programs, services, the
 1061  qualifications of classroom teachers, and a statement that a
 1062  parentally placed private school student with a disability does
 1063  not have an individual right to receive some or all of the
 1064  special education and related services that the student would
 1065  receive if enrolled in a public school under the Individuals
 1066  with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), as amended.
 1067         (k) At a minimum, provide the parent of each scholarship
 1068  student with a written explanation of the student’s progress on
 1069  a quarterly basis.
 1070         (l) Cooperate with a student whose parent chooses to
 1071  participate in the statewide assessments pursuant to s. 1008.22.
 1072         (m) Require each employee and contracted personnel with
 1073  direct student contact, upon employment or engagement to provide
 1074  services, to undergo a state and national background screening,
 1075  pursuant to s. 943.0542, by electronically filing with the
 1076  Department of Law Enforcement a complete set of fingerprints
 1077  taken by an authorized law enforcement agency or an employee of
 1078  the private school, a school district, or a private company who
 1079  is trained to take fingerprints and deny employment to or
 1080  terminate an employee if he or she fails to meet the screening
 1081  standards under s. 435.04. Results of the screening shall be
 1082  provided to the participating private school. For purposes of
 1083  this paragraph:
 1084         1. An “employee or contracted personnel with direct student
 1085  contact” means any employee or contracted personnel who has
 1086  unsupervised access to a scholarship student for whom the
 1087  private school is responsible.
 1088         2. The costs of fingerprinting and the background check
 1089  shall not be borne by the state.
 1090         3. Continued employment of an employee or contracted
 1091  personnel after notification that he or she has failed the
 1092  background screening under this paragraph shall cause a private
 1093  school to be ineligible for participation in a scholarship
 1094  program.
 1095         4. An employee or contracted personnel holding a valid
 1096  Florida teaching certificate who has been fingerprinted pursuant
 1097  to s. 1012.32 is not required to comply with the provisions of
 1098  this paragraph.
 1099         5. All fingerprints submitted to the Department of Law
 1100  Enforcement as required by this section shall be retained by the
 1101  Department of Law Enforcement in a manner provided by rule and
 1102  entered in the statewide automated biometric identification
 1103  system authorized by s. 943.05(2)(b). Such fingerprints shall
 1104  thereafter be available for all purposes and uses authorized for
 1105  arrest fingerprints entered in the statewide automated biometric
 1106  identification system pursuant to s. 943.051.
 1107         6. The Department of Law Enforcement shall search all
 1108  arrest fingerprints received under s. 943.051 against the
 1109  fingerprints retained in the statewide automated biometric
 1110  identification system under subparagraph 5. Any arrest record
 1111  that is identified with the retained fingerprints of a person
 1112  subject to the background screening under this section shall be
 1113  reported to the employing school with which the person is
 1114  affiliated. Each private school participating in a scholarship
 1115  program is required to participate in this search process by
 1116  informing the Department of Law Enforcement of any change in the
 1117  employment or contractual status of its personnel whose
 1118  fingerprints are retained under subparagraph 5. The Department
 1119  of Law Enforcement shall adopt a rule setting the amount of the
 1120  annual fee to be imposed upon each private school for performing
 1121  these searches and establishing the procedures for the retention
 1122  of private school employee and contracted personnel fingerprints
 1123  and the dissemination of search results. The fee may be borne by
 1124  the private school or the person fingerprinted.
 1125         7. Employees and contracted personnel whose fingerprints
 1126  are not retained by the Department of Law Enforcement under
 1127  subparagraphs 5. and 6. are required to be refingerprinted and
 1128  must meet state and national background screening requirements
 1129  upon reemployment or reengagement to provide services in order
 1130  to comply with the requirements of this section.
 1131         8. Every 5 years following employment or engagement to
 1132  provide services with a private school, employees or contracted
 1133  personnel required to be screened under this section must meet
 1134  screening standards under s. 435.04, at which time the private
 1135  school shall request the Department of Law Enforcement to
 1136  forward the fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation
 1137  for national processing. If the fingerprints of employees or
 1138  contracted personnel are not retained by the Department of Law
 1139  Enforcement under subparagraph 5., employees and contracted
 1140  personnel must electronically file a complete set of
 1141  fingerprints with the Department of Law Enforcement. Upon
 1142  submission of fingerprints for this purpose, the private school
 1143  shall request that the Department of Law Enforcement forward the
 1144  fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for national
 1145  processing, and the fingerprints shall be retained by the
 1146  Department of Law Enforcement under subparagraph 5.
 1147         (n) Adopt policies establishing standards of ethical
 1148  conduct for educational support employees, instructional
 1149  personnel, and school administrators. The policies must require
 1150  all educational support employees, instructional personnel, and
 1151  school administrators, as defined in s. 1012.01, to complete
 1152  training on the standards; establish the duty of educational
 1153  support employees, instructional personnel, and school
 1154  administrators to report, and procedures for reporting, alleged
 1155  misconduct by other educational support employees, instructional
 1156  personnel, and school administrators which affects the health,
 1157  safety, or welfare of a student; and include an explanation of
 1158  the liability protections provided under ss. 39.203 and 768.095.
 1159  A private school, or any of its employees, may not enter into a
 1160  confidentiality agreement regarding terminated or dismissed
 1161  educational support employees, instructional personnel, or
 1162  school administrators, or employees, personnel, or
 1163  administrators who resign in lieu of termination, based in whole
 1164  or in part on misconduct that affects the health, safety, or
 1165  welfare of a student, and may not provide the employees,
 1166  personnel, or administrators with employment references or
 1167  discuss the employees’, personnel’s, or administrators’
 1168  performance with prospective employers in another educational
 1169  setting, without disclosing the employees’, personnel’s, or
 1170  administrators’ misconduct. Any part of an agreement or contract
 1171  that has the purpose or effect of concealing misconduct by
 1172  educational support employees, instructional personnel, or
 1173  school administrators which affects the health, safety, or
 1174  welfare of a student is void, is contrary to public policy, and
 1175  may not be enforced.
 1176         (o) Before employing a person in any position that requires
 1177  direct contact with students, conduct employment history checks
 1178  of previous employers, screen the person through use of the
 1179  screening tools described in s. 1001.10(5), and document the
 1180  findings. If unable to contact a previous employer, the private
 1181  school must document efforts to contact the employer. The
 1182  private school may not employ a person whose educator
 1183  certificate is revoked, who is barred from reapplying for an
 1184  educator certificate, or who is on the disqualification list
 1185  maintained by the department pursuant to s. 1001.10(4)(b).
 1186         (p) Require each owner or operator of the private school,
 1187  prior to employment or engagement to provide services, to
 1188  undergo level 2 background screening as provided under chapter
 1189  435. For purposes of this paragraph, the term “owner or
 1190  operator” means an owner, operator, superintendent, or principal
 1191  of, or a person with equivalent decisionmaking authority over, a
 1192  private school participating in a scholarship program
 1193  established pursuant to this chapter. The fingerprints for the
 1194  background screening must be electronically submitted to the
 1195  Department of Law Enforcement and may be taken by an authorized
 1196  law enforcement agency or a private company who is trained to
 1197  take fingerprints. However, the complete set of fingerprints of
 1198  an owner or operator may not be taken by the owner or operator.
 1199  The owner or operator shall provide a copy of the results of the
 1200  state and national criminal history check to the Department of
 1201  Education. The cost of the background screening may be borne by
 1202  the owner or operator.
 1203         1. Every 5 years following employment or engagement to
 1204  provide services, each owner or operator must meet level 2
 1205  screening standards as described in s. 435.04, at which time the
 1206  owner or operator shall request the Department of Law
 1207  Enforcement to forward the fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of
 1208  Investigation for level 2 screening. If the fingerprints of an
 1209  owner or operator are not retained by the Department of Law
 1210  Enforcement under subparagraph 2., the owner or operator must
 1211  electronically file a complete set of fingerprints with the
 1212  Department of Law Enforcement. Upon submission of fingerprints
 1213  for this purpose, the owner or operator shall request that the
 1214  Department of Law Enforcement forward the fingerprints to the
 1215  Federal Bureau of Investigation for level 2 screening, and the
 1216  fingerprints shall be retained by the Department of Law
 1217  Enforcement under subparagraph 2.
 1218         2. Fingerprints submitted to the Department of Law
 1219  Enforcement as required by this paragraph must be retained by
 1220  the Department of Law Enforcement in a manner approved by rule
 1221  and entered in the statewide automated biometric identification
 1222  system authorized by s. 943.05(2)(b). The fingerprints must
 1223  thereafter be available for all purposes and uses authorized for
 1224  arrest fingerprints entered in the statewide automated biometric
 1225  identification system pursuant to s. 943.051.
 1226         3. The Department of Law Enforcement shall search all
 1227  arrest fingerprints received under s. 943.051 against the
 1228  fingerprints retained in the statewide automated biometric
 1229  identification system under subparagraph 2. Any arrest record
 1230  that is identified with an owner’s or operator’s fingerprints
 1231  must be reported to the owner or operator, who must report to
 1232  the Department of Education. Any costs associated with the
 1233  search shall be borne by the owner or operator.
 1234         4. An owner or operator who fails the level 2 background
 1235  screening is not eligible to participate in a scholarship
 1236  program under this chapter.
 1237         5. In addition to the offenses listed in s. 435.04, a
 1238  person required to undergo background screening pursuant to this
 1239  part or authorizing statutes may not have an arrest awaiting
 1240  final disposition for, must not have been found guilty of, or
 1241  entered a plea of nolo contendere to, regardless of
 1242  adjudication, and must not have been adjudicated delinquent for,
 1243  and the record must not have been sealed or expunged for, any of
 1244  the following offenses or any similar offense of another
 1245  jurisdiction:
 1246         a. Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony.
 1247         b. This chapter, if the offense was a felony.
 1248         c. Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud.
 1249         d. Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud.
 1250         e. Section 741.28, relating to domestic violence.
 1251         f. Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through
 1252  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or
 1253  photooptical systems.
 1254         g. Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent
 1255  insurance claims.
 1256         h. Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering.
 1257         i. Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of personal
 1258  identification information.
 1259         j. Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card
 1260  through fraudulent means.
 1261         k. Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit
 1262  cards, if the offense was a felony.
 1263         l. Section 831.01, relating to forgery.
 1264         m. Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged instruments.
 1265         n. Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills, checks,
 1266  drafts, or promissory notes.
 1267         o. Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank bills,
 1268  checks, drafts, or promissory notes.
 1269         p. Section 831.30, relating to fraud in obtaining medicinal
 1270  drugs.
 1271         q. Section 831.31, relating to the sale, manufacture,
 1272  delivery, or possession with the intent to sell, manufacture, or
 1273  deliver any counterfeit controlled substance, if the offense was
 1274  a felony.
 1275         6. At least 30 calendar days before a transfer of ownership
 1276  of a private school, the owner or operator shall notify the
 1277  parent of each scholarship student.
 1278         7. The owner or operator of a private school that has been
 1279  deemed ineligible to participate in a scholarship program
 1280  pursuant to this chapter may not transfer ownership or
 1281  management authority of the school to a relative in order to
 1282  participate in a scholarship program as the same school or a new
 1283  school. For purposes of this subparagraph, the term “relative”
 1284  means father, mother, son, daughter, grandfather, grandmother,
 1285  brother, sister, uncle, aunt, cousin, nephew, niece, husband,
 1286  wife, father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law,
 1287  brother-in-law, sister-in-law, stepfather, stepmother, stepson,
 1288  stepdaughter, stepbrother, stepsister, half brother, or half
 1289  sister.
 1290         (p)(q) Provide a report from an independent certified
 1291  public accountant who performs the agreed-upon procedures
 1292  developed pursuant to s. 1002.395(6)(l) s. 1002.395(6)(q) if the
 1293  private school receives more than $250,000 in funds from
 1294  scholarships awarded under this chapter in a state fiscal year.
 1295  A private school subject to this subsection must annually submit
 1296  the report by September 15 to the scholarship-funding
 1297  organization that awarded the majority of the school’s
 1298  scholarship funds. The agreed-upon procedures must be conducted
 1299  in accordance with attestation standards established by the
 1300  American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
 1301         (q)(r) Prohibit education support employees, instructional
 1302  personnel, and school administrators from employment in any
 1303  position that requires direct contact with students if the
 1304  personnel or administrators are ineligible for such employment
 1305  pursuant to this section or s. 1012.315, or have been terminated
 1306  or have resigned in lieu of termination for sexual misconduct
 1307  with a student. If the prohibited conduct occurs subsequent to
 1308  employment, the private school must report the person and the
 1309  disqualifying circumstances to the department for inclusion on
 1310  the disqualification list maintained pursuant to s.
 1311  1001.10(4)(b).
 1312         (r)(s) Not be owned or operated by a person or an entity
 1313  domiciled in, owned by, or in any way controlled by a foreign
 1314  country of concern or foreign principal as defined in s.
 1315  288.860. A violation of this paragraph constitutes an imminent
 1316  threat to the health, safety, and welfare of the school’s
 1317  students and to the public, sufficient to justify immediate
 1318  suspension of payment of scholarship funds under paragraph
 1319  (11)(e) (3)(e), as well as denial, suspension, or revocation of
 1320  a school’s participation in a scholarship program under
 1321  paragraph (11)(b) (3)(b).
 1322         (s) The inclusion of eligible private schools within
 1323  options available to Florida public school students does not
 1324  expand the regulatory authority of the state, its officers, or
 1325  any school district to impose any additional regulation of
 1326  private schools beyond that reasonably necessary to enforce
 1327  requirements expressly set forth in this section.
 1328  
 1329  The department shall suspend the payment of funds to a private
 1330  school that knowingly fails to comply with this subsection or
 1331  subsection (8), and shall prohibit the school from enrolling new
 1332  scholarship students, for 1 fiscal year and until the school
 1333  complies. If a private school fails to meet the requirements of
 1334  this subsection or subsection (8) or has consecutive years of
 1335  material exceptions listed in the report required under
 1336  paragraph (p) (q), the commissioner may determine that the
 1337  private school is ineligible to participate in a scholarship
 1338  program.
 1339         (10)(2) DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OBLIGATIONS.—
 1340         (a) The Department of Education shall:
 1341         1. Annually verify the eligibility of private schools that
 1342  meet the requirements of this section, specific requirements
 1343  identified within respective scholarship program laws, and other
 1344  provisions of state law that apply to private schools.
 1345         2. Establish a toll-free hotline that provides parents and
 1346  private schools with information on participation in the
 1347  scholarship programs.
 1348         3. Publish and update, as necessary, information on the
 1349  department website about the educational scholarship programs
 1350  established under this chapter, including, but not limited to,
 1351  student eligibility criteria, parental responsibilities, and
 1352  relevant data. The information must include a list of approved
 1353  providers as required by s. 1002.66, eligible postsecondary
 1354  educational institutions, eligible private schools, and eligible
 1355  organizations and may identify or provide links to lists of
 1356  other approved providers.
 1357         4.3. Establish a process by which individuals may notify
 1358  the department of any violation by a parent, private school, or
 1359  school district of state laws relating to program participation.
 1360  If the department has reasonable cause to believe that a
 1361  violation of this section or any rule adopted by the State Board
 1362  of Education has occurred, it shall conduct an inquiry or make a
 1363  referral to the appropriate agency for an investigation. A
 1364  department inquiry is not subject to the requirements of chapter
 1365  120.
 1366         5. Investigate any written complaint of a violation of this
 1367  section by a parent, a student, a participating private school,
 1368  a public school, a school district, an organization, a provider,
 1369  or another appropriate party in accordance with the process
 1370  established under s. 1002.421.
 1371         6.4. Require an annual, notarized, sworn compliance
 1372  statement from participating private schools certifying
 1373  compliance with state laws, and retain such records.
 1374         7.5. Coordinate with the entities conducting the health
 1375  inspection for a private school to obtain copies of the
 1376  inspection reports.
 1377         8.6. Conduct site visits to private schools entering a
 1378  scholarship program for the first time. Beginning with the 2019
 1379  2020 school year, a private school is not eligible to receive
 1380  scholarship payments until a satisfactory site visit has been
 1381  conducted and the school is in compliance with all other
 1382  requirements of this section.
 1383         9.7. Coordinate with the State Fire Marshal to obtain
 1384  access to fire inspection reports for private schools. The
 1385  authority conducting the fire safety inspection shall certify to
 1386  the State Fire Marshal that the annual inspection has been
 1387  completed and that the school is in full compliance. The
 1388  certification shall be made electronically or by such other
 1389  means as directed by the State Fire Marshal.
 1390         10.8. Upon the request of a participating private school
 1391  authorized to administer statewide assessments, provide at no
 1392  cost to the school the statewide assessments administered under
 1393  s. 1008.22 and any related materials for administering the
 1394  assessments. Students at a private school may be assessed using
 1395  the statewide assessments if the addition of those students and
 1396  the school does not cause the state to exceed its contractual
 1397  caps for the number of students tested and the number of testing
 1398  sites. The state shall provide the same materials and support to
 1399  a private school that it provides to a public school. A private
 1400  school that chooses to administer statewide assessments under s.
 1401  1008.22 shall follow the requirements set forth in ss. 1008.22
 1402  and 1008.24, rules adopted by the State Board of Education to
 1403  implement those sections, and district-level testing policies
 1404  established by the district school board.
 1405         11. Maintain and annually publish a list of nationally
 1406  norm-referenced tests identified for purposes of satisfying the
 1407  testing requirements in subsection (7). The tests must meet
 1408  industry standards of quality in accordance with state board
 1409  rule.
 1410         12. Develop a standard withdrawal form for parents who are
 1411  withdrawing their students from public school to enroll in a
 1412  scholarship program under this chapter. The form must include
 1413  the student’s Florida Education Identification number, full
 1414  name, date of birth, school or program from which the student is
 1415  withdrawing, and date of withdrawal.
 1416         (b) The department may conduct site visits to any private
 1417  school participating in a scholarship program pursuant to this
 1418  chapter that has received a complaint about a violation of state
 1419  law or state board rule pursuant to subparagraph (a)4. (a)3. or
 1420  has received a notice of noncompliance or a notice of proposed
 1421  action within the previous 2 years.
 1422         (c) Annually, by December 15, the department shall report
 1423  to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
 1424  the House of Representatives its actions in implementing
 1425  accountability in the scholarship programs under this section,
 1426  any substantiated allegations or violations of law or rule by an
 1427  eligible private school under this section, and the corrective
 1428  action taken.
 1429         (d) The department shall develop a uniform reimbursement
 1430  process that organizations must use when processing
 1431  reimbursement requests, including invoices, pursuant to s.
 1432  1002.394(11)(b)6. or s. 1002.395(6)(u). An organization must
 1433  approve, deny, or request more information relating to a
 1434  reimbursement request within 30 days after receipt of such
 1435  request. The department shall coordinate with each organization
 1436  to develop a process to collect input and feedback from parents,
 1437  private schools, and providers before an organization may
 1438  implement substantial modifications or enhancements to the
 1439  reimbursement process.
 1440         (11)(3) COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION AUTHORITY AND
 1441  OBLIGATIONS.—The Commissioner of Education:
 1442         (a) Shall deny, suspend, or revoke a private school’s
 1443  participation in a scholarship program if it is determined that
 1444  the private school has failed to comply with this section or
 1445  exhibits a previous pattern of failure to comply. However, if
 1446  the noncompliance is correctable within a reasonable amount of
 1447  time, not to exceed 45 days, and if the health, safety, or
 1448  welfare of the students is not threatened, the commissioner may
 1449  issue a notice of noncompliance which provides the private
 1450  school with a timeframe within which to provide evidence of
 1451  compliance before taking action to suspend or revoke the private
 1452  school’s participation in the scholarship program.
 1453         (b) May deny, suspend, or revoke a private school’s
 1454  participation in a scholarship program if the commissioner
 1455  determines that an owner or operator of the private school is
 1456  operating or has operated an educational institution in this
 1457  state or in another state or jurisdiction in a manner contrary
 1458  to the health, safety, or welfare of the public or if the owner
 1459  or operator has exhibited a previous pattern of failure to
 1460  comply with this section or specific requirements identified
 1461  within respective scholarship program laws. For purposes of this
 1462  subsection, the term “owner or operator” has the same meaning as
 1463  provided in paragraph (1)(p).
 1464         (c) May permanently deny or revoke the authority of an
 1465  owner, officer, or director to establish or operate a private
 1466  school in the state and include such individual on the
 1467  disqualification list maintained by the department pursuant to
 1468  s. 1001.10(4)(b) if the commissioner decides that the owner,
 1469  officer, or director:
 1470         1. Is operating or has operated an educational institution
 1471  in the state or another state or jurisdiction in a manner
 1472  contrary to the health, safety, or welfare of the public; or
 1473         2. Has operated an educational institution that closed
 1474  during the school year. An individual may be removed from the
 1475  disqualification list if the individual reimburses the
 1476  department or eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 1477  organization the amount of scholarship funds received by the
 1478  educational institution during the school year in which it
 1479  closed.
 1480         (d)1. In making such a determination, may consider factors
 1481  that include, but are not limited to, acts or omissions by an
 1482  owner or operator which led to a previous denial, suspension, or
 1483  revocation of participation in a state or federal education
 1484  scholarship program; an owner’s or operator’s failure to
 1485  reimburse the department or scholarship-funding organization for
 1486  scholarship funds improperly received or retained by a school;
 1487  the imposition of a prior criminal sanction related to an
 1488  owner’s or operator’s management or operation of an educational
 1489  institution; the imposition of a civil fine or administrative
 1490  fine, license revocation or suspension, or program eligibility
 1491  suspension, termination, or revocation related to an owner’s or
 1492  operator’s management or operation of an educational
 1493  institution; or other types of criminal proceedings in which an
 1494  owner or operator was found guilty of, regardless of
 1495  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to,
 1496  any offense involving fraud, deceit, dishonesty, or moral
 1497  turpitude.
 1498         2. The commissioner’s determination is subject to the
 1499  following:
 1500         a. If the commissioner intends to deny, suspend, or revoke
 1501  a private school’s participation in the scholarship program, the
 1502  department shall notify the private school of such proposed
 1503  action in writing by certified mail and regular mail to the
 1504  private school’s address of record with the department. The
 1505  notification shall include the reasons for the proposed action
 1506  and notice of the timelines and procedures set forth in this
 1507  paragraph.
 1508         b. The private school that is adversely affected by the
 1509  proposed action shall have 15 days after receipt of the notice
 1510  of proposed action to file with the department’s agency clerk a
 1511  request for a proceeding pursuant to ss. 120.569 and 120.57. If
 1512  the private school is entitled to a hearing under s. 120.57(1),
 1513  the department shall forward the request to the Division of
 1514  Administrative Hearings.
 1515         c. Upon receipt of a request referred pursuant to this
 1516  subparagraph, the director of the Division of Administrative
 1517  Hearings shall expedite the hearing and assign an administrative
 1518  law judge who shall commence a hearing within 30 days after the
 1519  receipt of the formal written request by the division and enter
 1520  a recommended order within 30 days after the hearing or within
 1521  30 days after receipt of the hearing transcript, whichever is
 1522  later. Each party shall be allowed 10 days in which to submit
 1523  written exceptions to the recommended order. A final order shall
 1524  be entered by the agency within 30 days after the entry of a
 1525  recommended order. The provisions of this sub-subparagraph may
 1526  be waived upon stipulation by all parties.
 1527         (e) May immediately suspend payment of scholarship funds if
 1528  it is determined that there is probable cause to believe that
 1529  there is:
 1530         1. An imminent threat to the health, safety, or welfare of
 1531  the students;
 1532         2. A previous pattern of failure to comply with this
 1533  section; or
 1534         3. Fraudulent activity on the part of the private school.
 1535  Notwithstanding s. 1002.22, in incidents of alleged fraudulent
 1536  activity pursuant to this section, the department’s Office of
 1537  Inspector General is authorized to release personally
 1538  identifiable records or reports of students to the following
 1539  persons or organizations:
 1540         a. A court of competent jurisdiction in compliance with an
 1541  order of that court or the attorney of record in accordance with
 1542  a lawfully issued subpoena, consistent with the Family
 1543  Educational Rights and Privacy Act, 20 U.S.C. s. 1232g.
 1544         b. A person or entity authorized by a court of competent
 1545  jurisdiction in compliance with an order of that court or the
 1546  attorney of record pursuant to a lawfully issued subpoena,
 1547  consistent with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act,
 1548  20 U.S.C. s. 1232g.
 1549         c. Any person, entity, or authority issuing a subpoena for
 1550  law enforcement purposes when the court or other issuing agency
 1551  has ordered that the existence or the contents of the subpoena
 1552  or the information furnished in response to the subpoena not be
 1553  disclosed, consistent with the Family Educational Rights and
 1554  Privacy Act, 20 U.S.C. s. 1232g, and 34 C.F.R. s. 99.31.
 1555  
 1556  The commissioner’s order suspending payment pursuant to this
 1557  paragraph may be appealed pursuant to the same procedures and
 1558  timelines as the notice of proposed action set forth in
 1559  subparagraph (d)2.
 1560         (12) SCHOOL DISTRICT OBLIGATIONS.—
 1561         (a) By January 1 of each year, a school district shall
 1562  inform all households within the district receiving free or
 1563  reduced-priced meals under the National School Lunch Act of
 1564  their eligibility to apply for a scholarship program established
 1565  under this chapter. The form of such notice shall be provided by
 1566  the department, and the school district shall include the
 1567  provided form in any normal correspondence with eligible
 1568  households. If an organization requests a special communication
 1569  to be issued to households within the district receiving free or
 1570  reduced-price meals under the National School Lunch Act, the
 1571  organization shall reimburse the district for the cost of
 1572  postage. Such notice is limited to once a year.
 1573         (b) Upon the request of the department, a school district
 1574  shall coordinate with the department to provide to a
 1575  participating private school the statewide assessments
 1576  administered under s. 1008.22 and any related materials for
 1577  administering the assessments. For a student participating in a
 1578  scholarship program established under this chapter whose parent
 1579  requests that the student take the statewide assessments under
 1580  s. 1008.22, the district in which the student attends a
 1581  participating private school shall provide locations and times
 1582  to take all statewide assessments. A school district is
 1583  responsible for implementing test administrations at a
 1584  participating private school, including:
 1585         1. Providing training for private school staff on test
 1586  security and assessment administration procedures;
 1587         2. Distributing testing materials to a private school;
 1588         3. Retrieving testing materials from a private school;
 1589         4. Providing the required format for a private school to
 1590  submit information to the district for test administration and
 1591  enrollment purposes; and
 1592         5. Providing any required assistance, monitoring, or
 1593  investigation at a private school.
 1594         (c) Each school district must publish information about a
 1595  scholarship program established under this chapter on the
 1596  district’s website homepage. At a minimum, the published
 1597  information must include a website link to the scholarship
 1598  programs published on the department’s website as well as a
 1599  telephone number and e-mail address that students and parents
 1600  may use to contact relevant personnel in the school district to
 1601  obtain information about the scholarship.
 1602         (d) A school district, upon the request of a parent, must
 1603  provide the parent of a student enrolled in a school in the
 1604  school district the standard withdrawal form developed by the
 1605  department. The school district must sign a completed form
 1606  within 10 days after receipt. The school district must also
 1607  publish the withdrawal form on its website in a downloadable
 1608  format
 1609         (4) The inclusion of eligible private schools within
 1610  options available to Florida public school students does not
 1611  expand the regulatory authority of the state, its officers, or
 1612  any school district to impose any additional regulation of
 1613  private schools beyond those reasonably necessary to enforce
 1614  requirements expressly set forth in this section.
 1615         (13)(5)RULEMAKING.—The State Board of Education shall
 1616  adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to administer
 1617  this section, including rules to establish a deadline for
 1618  private school applications for participation and timelines for
 1619  the department to conduct site visits.
 1620         Section 7. Subsections (2) through (12) of section
 1621  1002.394, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1622         1002.394 The Family Empowerment Scholarship Program.—
 1623         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 1624         (a) “Approved provider” means a provider approved by the
 1625  Agency for Persons with Disabilities, a health care practitioner
 1626  as defined in s. 456.001, or a provider approved by the
 1627  department pursuant to s. 1002.66.
 1628         (b) “Choice navigator” has the same meaning as in s.
 1629  1002.395(2).
 1630         (c) “Curriculum” means a complete course of study for a
 1631  particular content area or grade level, including any required
 1632  supplemental materials and associated online instruction.
 1633         (d) “Department” means the Department of Education.
 1634         (e) “Disability” means, for a 3- or 4-year-old child or for
 1635  a student in kindergarten to grade 12, autism spectrum disorder,
 1636  as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
 1637  Disorders, Fifth Edition, published by the American Psychiatric
 1638  Association; cerebral palsy, as defined in s. 393.063; Down
 1639  syndrome, as defined in s. 393.063; an intellectual disability,
 1640  as defined in s. 393.063; a speech impairment; a language
 1641  impairment; an orthopedic impairment; any other health
 1642  impairment; an emotional or a behavioral disability; a specific
 1643  learning disability, including, but not limited to, dyslexia,
 1644  dyscalculia, or developmental aphasia; Phelan-McDermid syndrome,
 1645  as defined in s. 393.063; Prader-Willi syndrome, as defined in
 1646  s. 393.063; spina bifida, as defined in s. 393.063; being a
 1647  high-risk child, as defined in s. 393.063(22)(a); muscular
 1648  dystrophy; Williams syndrome; rare diseases which affect patient
 1649  populations of fewer than 200,000 individuals in the United
 1650  States, as defined by the National Organization for Rare
 1651  Disorders; anaphylaxis; a hearing impairment, including
 1652  deafness; a visual impairment, including blindness; traumatic
 1653  brain injury; hospital or homebound; or identification as dual
 1654  sensory impaired, as defined by rules of the State Board of
 1655  Education and evidenced by reports from local school districts.
 1656  The term “hospital or homebound” includes a student who has a
 1657  medically diagnosed physical or psychiatric condition or
 1658  illness, as defined by the state board in rule, and who is
 1659  confined to the home or hospital for more than 6 months.
 1660         (f) “Eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization”
 1661  or “organization” has the same meaning as in s. 1002.395(2).
 1662         (g) “Eligible postsecondary educational institution” means
 1663  a Florida College System institution; a state university; a
 1664  school district technical center; a school district adult
 1665  general education center; an independent college or university
 1666  that is eligible to participate in the William L. Boyd, IV,
 1667  Effective Access to Student Education Grant Program under s.
 1668  1009.89; or an accredited independent postsecondary educational
 1669  institution, as defined in s. 1005.02, which is licensed to
 1670  operate in this state under part III of chapter 1005 or is
 1671  approved to participate in a reciprocity agreement as defined in
 1672  s. 1000.35(2).
 1673         (h) “Eligible private school” has the same meaning as in s.
 1674  1002.395(2).
 1675         (i) “IEP” means an individual education plan, regardless of
 1676  whether the plan has been reviewed or revised within the last 12
 1677  months.
 1678         (j) “Inactive” means that no eligible expenditures have
 1679  been made from an account funded pursuant to paragraph (12)(b).
 1680         (k) “Job coach” means an individual employed to help people
 1681  with disabilities learn, accommodate to, and perform their work
 1682  duties.
 1683         (l) “Law enforcement officer” has the same meaning as
 1684  provided in s. 943.10(1).
 1685         (m) “Parent” means a resident of this state who is a
 1686  parent, as defined in s. 1000.21.
 1687         (b)(n) “Program” means the Family Empowerment Scholarship
 1688  Program.
 1689         (3) SCHOLARSHIP ELIGIBILITY.—
 1690         (a)1. A parent of a student may apply pursuant to s.
 1691  1002.421 for and receive from the state a scholarship for the
 1692  purposes specified in paragraph (4)(a) if the student:
 1693         1.a. Is a resident of this state or the dependent child of
 1694  an active duty member of the United States Armed Forces who has
 1695  received permanent change of station orders to this state; and
 1696         2.b. Is eligible to enroll in kindergarten through grade 12
 1697  in a public school in this state or received a scholarship under
 1698  the Hope Scholarship Program in the 2023-2024 school year.
 1699         2. Priority must be given in the following order:
 1700         a. A student whose household income level does not exceed
 1701  185 percent of the federal poverty level or who is in foster
 1702  care or out-of-home care.
 1703         b. A student whose household income level exceeds 185
 1704  percent of the federal poverty level, but does not exceed 400
 1705  percent of the federal poverty level.
 1706         (b) A parent of a student with a disability may apply
 1707  pursuant to s. 1002.421 for and receive from the state a
 1708  scholarship for the purposes specified in paragraph (4)(b) if
 1709  the student:
 1710         1. Is a resident of this state or the dependent child of an
 1711  active duty member of the United States Armed Forces who has
 1712  received permanent change of station orders to this state or, at
 1713  the time of renewal, whose home of record or state of legal
 1714  residence is Florida;
 1715         2. Is 3 or 4 years of age during the year in which the
 1716  student applies for program participation or is eligible to
 1717  enroll in kindergarten through grade 12 in a public school in
 1718  this state;
 1719         3. Has a disability as defined in subsection (2); and
 1720         4. Is the subject of an IEP written in accordance with
 1721  rules of the State Board of Education or with the applicable
 1722  rules of another state or has received a diagnosis of a
 1723  disability from a physician who is licensed under chapter 458 or
 1724  chapter 459, a psychologist who is licensed under chapter 490,
 1725  or a physician who holds an active license issued by another
 1726  state or territory of the United States, the District of
 1727  Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
 1728         (4) AUTHORIZED USES OF PROGRAM FUNDS.—
 1729         (a) Program funds awarded to a student determined eligible
 1730  pursuant to paragraph (3)(a) may be used for:
 1731         1. Tuition and fees at an eligible private school.
 1732         2. Instructional materials, including digital materials,
 1733  digital devices, and Internet resources.
 1734         3. Curriculum as defined in subsection (2).
 1735         4. Tuition and fees associated with full-time or part-time
 1736  enrollment in an eligible postsecondary educational institution
 1737  or a program offered by the postsecondary educational
 1738  institution, unless the program is subject to s. 1009.25 or
 1739  reimbursed pursuant to s. 1009.30; an approved preapprenticeship
 1740  program as defined in s. 446.021(5) which is not subject to s.
 1741  1009.25 and complies with all applicable requirements of the
 1742  department pursuant to chapter 1005; a private tutoring program
 1743  authorized under s. 1002.43; a virtual program offered by a
 1744  department-approved private online provider that meets the
 1745  provider qualifications specified in s. 1002.45(2)(a); the
 1746  Florida Virtual School as a private paying student; or an
 1747  approved online course offered pursuant to s. 1003.499 or s.
 1748  1004.0961.
 1749         5. Fees for nationally standardized, norm-referenced
 1750  achievement tests, Advanced Placement Examinations, industry
 1751  certification examinations, assessments related to postsecondary
 1752  education, or other assessments.
 1753         6. Contracted services provided by a public school or
 1754  school district, including classes. A student who receives
 1755  contracted services under this subparagraph is not considered
 1756  enrolled in a public school for eligibility purposes as
 1757  specified in subsection (6) but rather attending a public school
 1758  on a part-time basis as authorized under s. 1002.44.
 1759         7. Tuition and fees for part-time tutoring services or fees
 1760  for services provided by a choice navigator. Such services must
 1761  be provided by a person who holds a valid Florida educator’s
 1762  certificate pursuant to s. 1012.56, a person who holds an
 1763  adjunct teaching certificate pursuant to s. 1012.57, a person
 1764  who has a bachelor’s degree or a graduate degree in the subject
 1765  area or related subject area in which instruction is given, a
 1766  person who has demonstrated a mastery of subject area knowledge
 1767  pursuant to s. 1012.56(5), or a person certified by a nationally
 1768  or internationally recognized research-based training program as
 1769  approved by the department. As used in this subparagraph, the
 1770  term “part-time tutoring services” does not qualify as regular
 1771  school attendance as defined in s. 1003.01(16)(e).
 1772         8. Membership dues and related activity fees for
 1773  participation in Career and Technical Student Organizations.
 1774         (b) Program funds awarded to a student with a disability
 1775  determined eligible pursuant to paragraph (3)(b) may be used for
 1776  the following purposes:
 1777         1. Instructional materials, including digital devices,
 1778  digital periphery devices, and assistive technology devices that
 1779  allow a student to access instruction or instructional content
 1780  and training on the use of and maintenance agreements for these
 1781  devices.
 1782         2. Curriculum as defined in subsection (2).
 1783         3. Specialized services by approved providers or by a
 1784  hospital in this state which are selected by the parent. These
 1785  specialized services may include, but are not limited to:
 1786         a. Applied behavior analysis services as provided in ss.
 1787  627.6686 and 641.31098.
 1788         b. Services provided by speech-language pathologists as
 1789  defined in s. 468.1125(8).
 1790         c. Occupational therapy as defined in s. 468.203.
 1791         d. Services provided by physical therapists as defined in
 1792  s. 486.021(8).
 1793         e. Services provided by listening and spoken language
 1794  specialists and an appropriate acoustical environment for a
 1795  child who has a hearing impairment, including deafness, and who
 1796  has received an implant or assistive hearing device.
 1797         4. Tuition and fees associated with full-time or part-time
 1798  enrollment in a home education program that meets all of the
 1799  following requirements:
 1800         a. Provides educational courses or activities.
 1801         b. Has a publicly available description of courses and
 1802  activities.
 1803         c. Has a tuition and fee schedule.
 1804         d. Makes the tuition and fees payable to a registered
 1805  business entity.
 1806         5. Tuition and fees associated with full-time or part-time
 1807  enrollment in; an eligible private school; an eligible
 1808  postsecondary educational institution or a program offered by
 1809  the postsecondary educational institution, unless the program is
 1810  subject to s. 1009.25 or reimbursed pursuant to s. 1009.30; an
 1811  approved preapprenticeship program as defined in s. 446.021(5)
 1812  which is not subject to s. 1009.25 and complies with all
 1813  applicable requirements of the department pursuant to chapter
 1814  1005; a private tutoring program authorized under s. 1002.43; a
 1815  virtual program offered by a department-approved private online
 1816  provider that meets the provider qualifications specified in s.
 1817  1002.45(2)(a); the Florida Virtual School as a private paying
 1818  student; or an approved online course offered pursuant to s.
 1819  1003.499 or s. 1004.0961.
 1820         6.5. Fees for nationally standardized, norm-referenced
 1821  achievement tests, Advanced Placement Examinations, industry
 1822  certification examinations, assessments related to postsecondary
 1823  education, or other assessments.
 1824         7.6. Contributions to the Stanley G. Tate Florida Prepaid
 1825  College Program pursuant to s. 1009.98 or the Florida College
 1826  Savings Program pursuant to s. 1009.981 for the benefit of the
 1827  eligible student.
 1828         8.7. Contracted services provided by a public school or
 1829  school district, including classes. A student who receives
 1830  services under a contract under this paragraph is not considered
 1831  enrolled in a public school for eligibility purposes as
 1832  specified in subsection (6) but rather attending a public school
 1833  on a part-time basis as authorized under s. 1002.44.
 1834         9.8. Tuition and fees for part-time tutoring services or
 1835  fees for services provided by a choice navigator. Such services
 1836  must be provided by a person who holds a valid Florida
 1837  educator’s certificate pursuant to s. 1012.56, a person who
 1838  holds an adjunct teaching certificate pursuant to s. 1012.57, a
 1839  person who has a bachelor’s degree or a graduate degree in the
 1840  subject area or related subject area in which instruction is
 1841  given, a person who has demonstrated a mastery of subject area
 1842  knowledge pursuant to s. 1012.56(5), or a person certified by a
 1843  nationally or internationally recognized research-based training
 1844  program as approved by the department. As used in this
 1845  subparagraph, the term “part-time tutoring services” does not
 1846  qualify as regular school attendance as defined in s.
 1847  1003.01(16)(e).
 1848         10.9. Fees for specialized summer education programs.
 1849         11.10. Fees for specialized after-school education
 1850  programs.
 1851         12.11. Transition services provided by job coaches.
 1852  Transition services are a coordinated set of activities which
 1853  are focused on improving the academic and functional achievement
 1854  of a student with a disability to facilitate the student’s
 1855  movement from school to postschool activities and are based on
 1856  the student’s needs.
 1857         13.12. Fees for an annual evaluation of educational
 1858  progress by a state-certified teacher under s. 1002.41(1)(f), if
 1859  this option is chosen for a home education student.
 1860         14.13. Tuition and fees associated with programs offered by
 1861  Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program providers approved
 1862  pursuant to s. 1002.55, school readiness providers approved
 1863  pursuant to s. 1002.88, and prekindergarten programs offered by
 1864  an eligible private school.
 1865         15.14. Fees for services provided at a center that is a
 1866  member of the Professional Association of Therapeutic
 1867  Horsemanship International.
 1868         16.15. Fees for services provided by a therapist who is
 1869  certified by the Certification Board for Music Therapists or
 1870  credentialed by the Art Therapy Credentials Board, Inc.
 1871         17. Membership dues and related activity fees for
 1872  participation in Career and Technical Student Organizations.
 1873         (5) TERM OF SCHOLARSHIP.—For purposes of continuity of
 1874  educational choice:
 1875         (a)1. A scholarship funded to an eligible student pursuant
 1876  to paragraph (3)(a) shall remain in force until:
 1877         a. The organization determines that the student is not
 1878  eligible for program renewal;
 1879         b. The Commissioner of Education suspends or revokes
 1880  program participation or use of funds;
 1881         c. The student’s parent has forfeited participation in the
 1882  program for failure to comply with the scholarship program
 1883  requirements subsection (10);
 1884         d. The student, who uses the scholarship for tuition and
 1885  fees pursuant to subparagraph (4)(a)1., enrolls in a public
 1886  school. However, if a student enters a Department of Juvenile
 1887  Justice detention center for a period of no more than 21 days,
 1888  the student is not considered to have returned to a public
 1889  school on a full-time basis for that purpose; or
 1890         e. The student graduates from high school or attains 21
 1891  years of age, whichever occurs first.
 1892         2.a. The student’s scholarship account must be closed and
 1893  any remaining funds shall revert to the state after:
 1894         a.(I) Denial or revocation of program eligibility by the
 1895  commissioner for fraud or abuse, including, but not limited to,
 1896  the student or student’s parent accepting any payment, refund,
 1897  or rebate, in any manner, from a provider of any services
 1898  received pursuant to paragraph (4)(a);
 1899         b.(II)One fiscal year Two consecutive fiscal years in
 1900  which an account has been inactive; or
 1901         c.(III) A student remains unenrolled in an eligible private
 1902  school for 30 days while receiving a scholarship that requires
 1903  full-time enrollment; or
 1904         d. A student’s scholarship no longer remains in force due
 1905  to any of the reasons provided in subparagraph 1.
 1906         3. An organization must notify the parent prior to closing
 1907  a student’s account regarding the reason the account will be
 1908  closed and that the balance of funds will revert upon closure.
 1909         4. An organization must annually report to the department
 1910  the total number of scholarship accounts that were closed
 1911  pursuant to this subparagraph and the amount of funds by account
 1912  which reverted to the state
 1913         b. Reimbursements for program expenditures may continue
 1914  until the account balance is expended or remaining funds have
 1915  reverted to the state.
 1916         (b)1. A scholarship funded to an eligible student pursuant
 1917  to paragraph (3)(b) shall remain in force until:
 1918         a. The parent does not renew program eligibility;
 1919         b. The organization determines that the student is not
 1920  eligible for program renewal;
 1921         c. The Commissioner of Education suspends or revokes
 1922  program participation or use of funds;
 1923         d. The student’s parent has forfeited participation in the
 1924  program for failure to comply with the scholarship requirements
 1925  subsection (10);
 1926         e. The student enrolls full time in a public school; or
 1927         f. The student graduates from high school or attains 22
 1928  years of age, whichever occurs first.
 1929         2. Reimbursements for program expenditures may continue
 1930  until the account balance is expended or the account is closed.
 1931         3. A student’s scholarship account must be closed and any
 1932  remaining funds, including, but not limited to, contributions
 1933  made to the Stanley G. Tate Florida Prepaid College Program or
 1934  earnings from or contributions made to the Florida College
 1935  Savings Program using program funds pursuant to subparagraph
 1936  (4)(b)7. (4)(b)6., shall revert to the state after:
 1937         a. Denial or revocation of program eligibility by the
 1938  commissioner for fraud or abuse, including, but not limited to,
 1939  the student or student’s parent accepting any payment, refund,
 1940  or rebate, in any manner, from a provider of any services
 1941  received pursuant to subsection (4); or
 1942         b. Any period of 3 consecutive years after high school
 1943  completion or graduation during which the student has not been
 1944  enrolled in an eligible postsecondary educational institution or
 1945  a program offered by the institution; or
 1946         c. Two consecutive fiscal years in which an account has
 1947  been inactive.
 1948         4. An organization must notify the parent prior to closing
 1949  a student’s account regarding the reason the account will be
 1950  closed and that the balance of funds will revert upon closure.
 1951         5. Upon a student reaching the age of 16, the organization
 1952  must notify the parent if there is a balance in the student’s
 1953  account and provide the amount of the balance and information
 1954  regarding how the funds may be used.
 1955         6. An organization must report to the department the total
 1956  number of scholarship accounts that were closed pursuant to this
 1957  paragraph and the amount of funds by account that reverted to
 1958  the state.
 1959         (c) Upon reasonable notice to the organization and the
 1960  school district, the student’s parent may remove the student
 1961  from the participating private school and place the student in a
 1962  public school in accordance with this section.
 1963         (d) Upon reasonable notice to the organization, the
 1964  student’s parent may move the student from one participating
 1965  private school to another participating private school.
 1966         (6) SCHOLARSHIP PROHIBITIONS.—A student is not eligible for
 1967  a Family Empowerment Scholarship while he or she is:
 1968         (a) Enrolled full time in a public school, including, but
 1969  not limited to, the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind,
 1970  the College-Preparatory Boarding Academy, the Florida School for
 1971  Competitive Academics, the Florida Virtual School, the Florida
 1972  Scholars Academy, a developmental research school authorized
 1973  under s. 1002.32, or a charter school authorized under this
 1974  chapter. For purposes of this paragraph, a 3- or 4-year-old
 1975  child who receives services funded through the Florida Education
 1976  Finance Program is considered to be a student enrolled in a
 1977  public school;
 1978         (b) Enrolled in a school operating for the purpose of
 1979  providing educational services to youth in a Department of
 1980  Juvenile Justice commitment program;
 1981         (c) Receiving any other educational scholarship pursuant to
 1982  this chapter. However, an eligible public school student
 1983  receiving a scholarship under s. 1002.411 may receive a
 1984  scholarship for transportation pursuant to subparagraph
 1985  (4)(a)2.;
 1986         (d) Not having regular and direct contact with his or her
 1987  private school teachers pursuant to s. 1002.421(9)(i) s.
 1988  1002.421(1)(i), unless he or she is eligible pursuant to
 1989  paragraph (3)(b) and enrolled in the participating private
 1990  school’s transition-to-work program pursuant to subsection (16)
 1991  or a home education program pursuant to s. 1002.41;
 1992         (e) Participating in a private tutoring program pursuant to
 1993  s. 1002.43 unless he or she is determined eligible pursuant to
 1994  paragraph (3)(b); or
 1995         (f) Participating in virtual instruction pursuant to s.
 1996  1002.455 that receives state funding pursuant to the student’s
 1997  participation.
 1998         (7) SCHOOL DISTRICT OBLIGATIONS.—
 1999         (a) By January 1 of each year, a school district shall
 2000  inform all households within the district receiving free or
 2001  reduced-priced meals under the National School Lunch Act of
 2002  their eligibility to apply to the department for a Family
 2003  Empowerment Scholarship. The form of such notice shall be
 2004  provided by the department, and the school district shall
 2005  include the provided form in any normal correspondence with
 2006  eligible households. Such notice is limited to once a year.
 2007         (b)1. The parent of a student with a disability who does
 2008  not have an IEP in accordance with subparagraph (3)(b)4. or who
 2009  seeks a reevaluation of an existing IEP may request an IEP
 2010  meeting and evaluation from the school district in order to
 2011  obtain or revise a matrix of services. The school district shall
 2012  notify a parent who has made a request for an IEP that the
 2013  district is required to complete the IEP and matrix of services
 2014  within 30 days after receiving notice of the parent’s request.
 2015  The school district shall conduct a meeting and develop an IEP
 2016  and a matrix of services within 30 days after receipt of the
 2017  parent’s request in accordance with State Board of Education
 2018  rules. The district must accept the diagnosis and consider the
 2019  service plan of the licensed professional providing the
 2020  diagnosis pursuant to subparagraph (3)(b)4. The school district
 2021  must complete a matrix that assigns the student to one of the
 2022  levels of service as they existed before the 2000-2001 school
 2023  year. For a nonpublic school student without an IEP, the school
 2024  district is authorized to use evaluation reports and plans of
 2025  care developed by the licensed professionals under subparagraph
 2026  (4)(b)3. to complete the matrix of services.
 2027         2.a. The school district must provide the student’s parent
 2028  and the department with the student’s matrix level within 10
 2029  calendar days after its completion.
 2030         b. The department shall notify the parent and the
 2031  organization of the amount of the funds awarded within 10 days
 2032  after receiving the school district’s notification of the
 2033  student’s matrix level.
 2034         c. A school district may change a matrix of services only
 2035  if the change is a result of an IEP reevaluation or to correct a
 2036  technical, typographical, or calculation error.
 2037         (b)1.(c)1. Within 10 days after an IEP meeting is held, a
 2038  school district shall notify the parent of a student of all
 2039  options available pursuant to this section and offer that
 2040  student’s parent an opportunity to enroll the student in another
 2041  public school in the school district.
 2042         2. The parent is not required to accept the offer of
 2043  enrolling the student in another public school in lieu of
 2044  requesting a scholarship. However, if the parent chooses the
 2045  public school option, the student may continue attending the
 2046  public school chosen by the parent until the student graduates
 2047  from high school.
 2048         3. The parent may choose another public school in the
 2049  school district, and the school district shall provide
 2050  transportation to the public school selected by the parent.
 2051         4. The parent may choose, as an alternative, to enroll the
 2052  student in and transport the student to a public school in an
 2053  adjacent school district that has available space and has a
 2054  program with the services agreed to in the student’s IEP already
 2055  in place, and that school district shall accept the student and
 2056  report the student for purposes of the school district’s funding
 2057  pursuant to the Florida Education Finance Program.
 2058         (d) Upon the request of the department, a school district
 2059  shall coordinate with the department to provide to a
 2060  participating private school the statewide assessments
 2061  administered under s. 1008.22 and any related materials for
 2062  administering the assessments. For a student who participates in
 2063  the Family Empowerment Scholarship Program whose parent requests
 2064  that the student take the statewide assessments under s.
 2065  1008.22, the district in which the student attends a
 2066  participating private school shall provide locations and times
 2067  to take all statewide assessments. A school district is
 2068  responsible for implementing test administrations at a
 2069  participating private school, including the:
 2070         1. Provision of training for private school staff on test
 2071  security and assessment administration procedures;
 2072         2. Distribution of testing materials to a private school;
 2073         3. Retrieval of testing materials from a private school;
 2074         4. Provision of the required format for a private school to
 2075  submit information to the district for test administration and
 2076  enrollment purposes; and
 2077         5. Provision of any required assistance, monitoring, or
 2078  investigation at a private school.
 2079         (e) Each school district must publish information about the
 2080  Family Empowerment Scholarship Program on the district’s website
 2081  homepage. At a minimum, the published information must include a
 2082  website link to the Family Empowerment Scholarship Program
 2083  published on the Department of Education website as well as a
 2084  telephone number and e-mail that students and parents may use to
 2085  contact relevant personnel in the school district to obtain
 2086  information about the scholarship.
 2087         (8) DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OBLIGATIONS.—
 2088         (a) The department shall:
 2089         1. Publish and update, as necessary, information on the
 2090  department website about the Family Empowerment Scholarship
 2091  Program, including, but not limited to, student eligibility
 2092  criteria, parental responsibilities, and relevant data.
 2093         2. Report, as part of the determination of full-time
 2094  equivalent membership pursuant to s. 1011.62(1)(a), all
 2095  scholarship students funded through the Florida Education
 2096  Finance Program, and cross-check the list of scholarship
 2097  students submitted by the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2098  organization with the full-time equivalent student membership
 2099  survey data to avoid duplication.
 2100         3. Maintain and annually publish a list of nationally norm
 2101  referenced tests identified for purposes of satisfying the
 2102  testing requirement in subparagraph (9)(c)1. The tests must meet
 2103  industry standards of quality in accordance with state board
 2104  rule.
 2105         4. Notify eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2106  organizations of the deadlines for submitting the verified list
 2107  of eligible scholarship students.
 2108         (a)5. Deny or terminate program participation upon a
 2109  parent’s failure to comply with the scholarship program
 2110  requirements subsection (10).
 2111         6. Notify the parent and the organization when a
 2112  scholarship account is closed and program funds revert to the
 2113  state.
 2114         7. Notify an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2115  organization of any of the organization’s or other
 2116  organization’s identified students who are receiving
 2117  scholarships under this chapter.
 2118         (b)8. Maintain on its website a list of approved providers
 2119  as required by s. 1002.66, eligible postsecondary educational
 2120  institutions, eligible private schools, and eligible
 2121  organizations and may identify or provide links to lists of
 2122  other approved providers.
 2123         9. Require each organization to verify eligible
 2124  expenditures before the distribution of funds for any
 2125  expenditures made pursuant to subparagraphs (4)(b)1. and 2.
 2126  Review of expenditures made for services specified in
 2127  subparagraphs (4)(b)3.-15. may be completed after the purchase
 2128  is made.
 2129         (c)10. Investigate any written complaint of a violation of
 2130  this section by a parent, a student, a participating private
 2131  school, a public school, a school district, an organization, a
 2132  provider, or another appropriate party in accordance with the
 2133  process established under s. 1002.421.
 2134         (d)11. Require quarterly reports by an organization, which
 2135  must include, at a minimum, the number of students participating
 2136  in the program; the demographics of program participants; the
 2137  disability category of program participants; the matrix level of
 2138  services, if known; the program award amount per student; the
 2139  total expenditures for the purposes specified in paragraph
 2140  (4)(b); the types of providers of services to students; the
 2141  number of scholarship applications received, the number of
 2142  applications processed within 30 days after receipt, and the
 2143  number of incomplete applications received; data related to
 2144  reimbursement submissions, including the average number of days
 2145  for a reimbursement to be reviewed and the average number of
 2146  days for a reimbursement to be approved; any parent input and
 2147  feedback collected regarding the program; and any other
 2148  information deemed necessary by the department.
 2149         12. Notify eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2150  organizations that scholarships may not be awarded in a school
 2151  district in which the award will exceed 99 percent of the school
 2152  district’s share of state funding through the Florida Education
 2153  Finance Program as calculated by the department.
 2154         13. Adjust payments to eligible nonprofit scholarship
 2155  funding organizations and, when the Florida Education Finance
 2156  Program is recalculated, adjust the amount of state funds
 2157  allocated to school districts through the Florida Education
 2158  Finance Program based upon the results of the cross-check
 2159  completed pursuant to subparagraph 2.
 2160         (b) At the direction of the Commissioner of Education, the
 2161  department may:
 2162         1. Suspend or revoke program participation or use of
 2163  program funds by the student or participation or eligibility of
 2164  an organization, eligible postsecondary educational institution,
 2165  approved provider, or other party for a violation of this
 2166  section.
 2167         2. Determine the length of, and conditions for lifting, a
 2168  suspension or revocation specified in this paragraph.
 2169         3. Recover unexpended program funds or withhold payment of
 2170  an equal amount of program funds to recover program funds that
 2171  were not authorized for use.
 2172  
 2173  In determining whether to suspend or revoke participation or
 2174  lift a suspension or revocation in accordance with this
 2175  paragraph, the department may consider factors that include, but
 2176  are not limited to, acts or omissions that led to a previous
 2177  suspension or revocation of participation in a state or federal
 2178  program or an education scholarship program; failure to
 2179  reimburse the organization for funds improperly received or
 2180  retained; failure to reimburse government funds improperly
 2181  received or retained; imposition of a prior criminal sanction
 2182  related to the person or entity or its officers or employees;
 2183  imposition of a civil fine or administrative fine, license
 2184  revocation or suspension, or program eligibility suspension,
 2185  termination, or revocation related to a person’s or entity’s
 2186  management or operation; or other types of criminal proceedings
 2187  in which the person or entity or its officers or employees were
 2188  found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or entered a plea
 2189  of nolo contendere or guilty to, any offense involving fraud,
 2190  deceit, dishonesty, or moral turpitude.
 2191         (e)(c)The department shall Notify each school district of
 2192  the full-time equivalent student consensus estimate of students
 2193  participating in the program developed pursuant to s.
 2194  216.136(4)(a).
 2195         (f)(d)The department may Provide guidance to a
 2196  participating private school that submits a transition-to-work
 2197  program plan pursuant to subsection (15) (16).
 2198         (9) PRIVATE SCHOOL ELIGIBILITY AND OBLIGATIONS.—To be
 2199  eligible to participate in the Family Empowerment Scholarship
 2200  Program, a private school may be sectarian or nonsectarian and
 2201  must:
 2202         (a) Comply with all requirements for private schools
 2203  participating in state school choice scholarship programs
 2204  pursuant to s. 1002.421.
 2205         (b) Provide to the organization all documentation required
 2206  for a student’s participation, including confirmation of the
 2207  student’s admission to the private school, the private school’s
 2208  and student’s fee schedules, and any other information required
 2209  by the organization to process scholarship payment under
 2210  subparagraph (12)(a)4. Such information must be provided by the
 2211  deadlines established by the organization and in accordance with
 2212  the requirements of this section. A student is not eligible to
 2213  receive a quarterly scholarship payment if the private school
 2214  fails to meet the deadline.
 2215         (c)1. Annually administer or make provision for students
 2216  participating in the program in grades 3 through 10 to take one
 2217  of the nationally norm-referenced tests that are identified by
 2218  the department pursuant to paragraph (8)(a) or to take the
 2219  statewide assessments pursuant to s. 1008.22. Students with
 2220  disabilities for whom the physician or psychologist who issued
 2221  the diagnosis or the IEP team determines that standardized
 2222  testing is not appropriate are exempt from this requirement. A
 2223  participating private school shall report a student’s scores to
 2224  his or her parent. By August 15 of each year, a participating
 2225  private school must report the scores of all participating
 2226  students to a state university as described in s.
 2227  1002.395(9)(f).
 2228         2. Administer the statewide assessments pursuant to s.
 2229  1008.22 if the private school chooses to offer the statewide
 2230  assessments. A participating private school may choose to offer
 2231  and administer the statewide assessments to all students who
 2232  attend the private school in grades 3 through 10 and must submit
 2233  a request in writing to the department by March 1 of each year
 2234  in order to administer the statewide assessments in the
 2235  subsequent school year.
 2236         (d) For a student determined eligible pursuant to paragraph
 2237  (3)(b), discuss the school’s academic programs and policies,
 2238  specialized services, code of conduct, and attendance policies
 2239  before enrollment with the parent to determine which programs
 2240  and services may meet the student’s individual needs.
 2241  
 2242  If a private school fails to meet the requirements of this
 2243  subsection or s. 1002.421, the commissioner may determine that
 2244  the private school is ineligible to participate in the
 2245  scholarship program.
 2246         (9)(10) PARENT AND STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES FOR PROGRAM
 2247  PARTICIPATION.—
 2248         (a) A parent who applies for a scholarship under paragraph
 2249  (3)(a) whose student will be enrolled full time in an eligible
 2250  private school must:
 2251         1. Select an eligible private school and apply for the
 2252  admission of his or her student.
 2253         2. Request the scholarship by the date established by the
 2254  organization in a manner that creates a written or electronic
 2255  record of the request and the date of receipt of the request.
 2256         3.a. Beginning with new applications for the 2025-2026
 2257  school year and thereafter, notify the organization by December
 2258  15 that the scholarship is being accepted or declined.
 2259         b. Beginning with renewal applications for the 2025-2026
 2260  school year and thereafter, notify the organization by May 31
 2261  that the scholarship is being renewed or declined.
 2262         4. Inform the applicable school district when the parent
 2263  withdraws his or her student from a public school to attend an
 2264  eligible private school using the standard withdrawal form
 2265  developed by the department pursuant to s. 1002.421.
 2266         3.5. Require his or her student participating in the
 2267  program to remain in attendance at the eligible private school
 2268  throughout the school year unless excused by the school for
 2269  illness or other good cause.
 2270         4.6. Meet with the eligible private school’s principal or
 2271  the principal’s designee to review the school’s academic
 2272  programs and policies, specialized services, code of student
 2273  conduct, and attendance policies before enrollment.
 2274         7. Require his or her student participating in the program
 2275  to take the norm-referenced assessment offered by the eligible
 2276  private school. The parent may also choose to have the student
 2277  participate in the statewide assessments pursuant to paragraph
 2278  (7)(d). If the parent requests that the student participating in
 2279  the program take all statewide assessments required pursuant to
 2280  s. 1008.22, the parent is responsible for transporting the
 2281  student to the assessment site designated by the school
 2282  district.
 2283         8. Approve each payment before the scholarship funds may be
 2284  deposited by funds transfer pursuant to subparagraph (12)(a)3.
 2285  The parent may not designate any entity or individual associated
 2286  with the participating private school as the parent’s attorney
 2287  in fact to approve a funds transfer. A participant who fails to
 2288  comply with this paragraph forfeits the scholarship.
 2289         9. Agree to have the organization commit scholarship funds
 2290  on behalf of his or her student for tuition and fees for which
 2291  the parent is responsible for payment at the eligible private
 2292  school before using scholarship account funds for additional
 2293  authorized uses under paragraph (4)(a). A parent is responsible
 2294  for all eligible expenses in excess of the amount of the
 2295  scholarship.
 2296         10. Comply with the scholarship application and renewal
 2297  processes and requirements established by the organization.
 2298         (b) A parent who applies for a scholarship under paragraph
 2299  (3)(b) is exercising his or her parental option to determine the
 2300  appropriate placement or the services that best meet the needs
 2301  of his or her child and must:
 2302         1. Apply to an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2303  organization to participate in the program by a date set by the
 2304  organization. The request must be communicated directly to the
 2305  organization in a manner that creates a written or electronic
 2306  record of the request and the date of receipt of the request.
 2307         2.a. Beginning with new applications for the 2025-2026
 2308  school year and thereafter, notify the organization by December
 2309  15 that the scholarship is being accepted or declined.
 2310         b. Beginning with renewal applications for the 2025-2026
 2311  school year and thereafter, notify the organization by May 31
 2312  that the scholarship is being renewed or declined.
 2313         3. sign an agreement with the organization and annually
 2314  submit a sworn compliance statement to the organization to
 2315  satisfy or maintain program eligibility, including eligibility
 2316  to receive and spend program payments by:
 2317         1.a. Affirming that the student is enrolled in a program
 2318  that meets regular school attendance requirements as provided in
 2319  s. 1003.01(16)(b), (c), or (d).
 2320         2.b. Affirming that the program funds are used only for
 2321  authorized purposes serving the student’s educational needs, as
 2322  described in paragraph (4)(b); that any prepaid college plan or
 2323  college savings plan funds contributed pursuant to subparagraph
 2324  (4)(b)7. subparagraph (4)(b)6. will not be transferred to
 2325  another beneficiary while the plan contains funds contributed
 2326  pursuant to this section; and that they will not receive a
 2327  payment, refund, or rebate of any funds provided under this
 2328  section.
 2329         3.c. Affirming that the parent is responsible for all
 2330  eligible expenses in excess of the amount of the scholarship and
 2331  for the education of his or her student by, as applicable:
 2332         a.(I) Requiring the student to take an assessment in
 2333  accordance with s. 1002.421(7) paragraph (9)(c);
 2334         b.(II) Providing an annual evaluation in accordance with s.
 2335  1002.41(1)(f); or
 2336         c.(III) Requiring the child to take any preassessments and
 2337  postassessments selected by the provider if the child is 4 years
 2338  of age and is enrolled in a program provided by an eligible
 2339  Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program provider. A student
 2340  with disabilities for whom the physician or psychologist who
 2341  issued the diagnosis or the IEP team determines that a
 2342  preassessment and postassessment is not appropriate is exempt
 2343  from this requirement. A participating provider shall report a
 2344  student’s scores to the parent.
 2345         4.d. Affirming that the student remains in good standing
 2346  with the provider or school if those options are selected by the
 2347  parent.
 2348         5.e. Enrolling his or her child in a program from a
 2349  Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program provider authorized
 2350  under s. 1002.55, a school readiness provider authorized under
 2351  s. 1002.88, a prekindergarten program offered by an eligible
 2352  private school, or an eligible private school if selected by the
 2353  parent.
 2354         6.f. Comply with the scholarship application and renewal
 2355  processes and requirements established by the organization. A
 2356  student whose participation in the program is not renewed may
 2357  continue to spend scholarship funds that are in his or her
 2358  account from prior years unless the account must be closed
 2359  pursuant to subparagraph (5)(b)3. Notwithstanding any changes to
 2360  the student’s IEP, a student who was previously eligible for
 2361  participation in the program shall remain eligible to apply for
 2362  renewal. However, for a high-risk child to continue to
 2363  participate in the program in the school year after he or she
 2364  reaches 6 years of age, the child’s application for renewal of
 2365  program participation must contain documentation that the child
 2366  has a disability defined in paragraph (2)(e) other than high
 2367  risk status.
 2368         7.g. Procuring the services necessary to educate the
 2369  student. If such services include enrollment in an eligible
 2370  private school, the parent must meet with the private school’s
 2371  principal or the principal’s designee to review the school’s
 2372  academic programs and policies, specialized services, code of
 2373  student conduct, and attendance policies before his or her
 2374  student is enrolled. The parent must also approve each payment
 2375  to the eligible private school before the scholarship funds may
 2376  be deposited by funds transfer pursuant to subparagraph
 2377  (12)(a)4. The parent may not designate any entity or individual
 2378  associated with the eligible private school as the parent’s
 2379  attorney in fact to approve a funds transfer. When the student
 2380  receives a scholarship, the district school board is not
 2381  obligated to provide the student with a free appropriate public
 2382  education. For purposes of s. 1003.57 and the Individuals with
 2383  Disabilities in Education Act, a participating student has only
 2384  those rights that apply to all other unilaterally parentally
 2385  placed students, except that, when requested by the parent,
 2386  school district personnel must develop an IEP or matrix level of
 2387  services.
 2388         (c) A parent may not apply for multiple scholarships under
 2389  this section and s. 1002.395 for an individual student at the
 2390  same time.
 2391         (d) A participant who fails to comply with this subsection
 2392  forfeits the scholarship.
 2393         (10)(11) OBLIGATIONS OF ELIGIBLE SCHOLARSHIP-FUNDING
 2394  ORGANIZATIONS.—
 2395         (a) An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 2396  awarding scholarships to eligible students pursuant to this
 2397  section paragraph (3)(a) shall:
 2398         1. Establish a process for parents who are in compliance
 2399  with paragraph (10)(a) to renew their students’ scholarships.
 2400  Renewal applications for the 2025-2026 school year and
 2401  thereafter must provide for a renewal timeline beginning
 2402  February 1 of the prior school year and ending April 30 of the
 2403  prior school year. A student’s renewal is contingent upon an
 2404  eligible private school providing confirmation of student
 2405  admission pursuant to subsection (9). The process must require
 2406  that parents confirm that the scholarship is being renewed or
 2407  declined by May 31.
 2408         2. Establish a process that allows a parent to apply for a
 2409  new scholarship. The process may begin no earlier than February
 2410  1 of the prior school year and must authorize submission of
 2411  applications until November 15. The process must be in a manner
 2412  that creates a written or electronic record of the application
 2413  request and the date of receipt of the application request.
 2414  Applications received after the deadline may be considered for
 2415  scholarship award in the subsequent fiscal year. The process
 2416  must require that parents confirm that the scholarship is being
 2417  accepted or declined by December 15.
 2418         (a)3. Verify the household income level of students seeking
 2419  priority eligibility and submit the verified list of students to
 2420  the department.
 2421         4. Award scholarships in priority order pursuant to
 2422  paragraph (3)(a).
 2423         5. Establish and maintain separate scholarship accounts for
 2424  each eligible student. For each account, the organization must
 2425  maintain a record of accrued interest that is retained in the
 2426  student’s account and available only for authorized program
 2427  expenditures.
 2428         6. Permit eligible students to use program funds for the
 2429  purposes specified in paragraph (4)(a), as authorized in the
 2430  organization’s purchasing handbook, by paying for the authorized
 2431  use directly, then submitting a reimbursement request to the
 2432  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization. However, an
 2433  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization may require
 2434  the use of an online platform for direct purchases of products
 2435  so long as such use does not limit a parent’s choice of
 2436  curriculum or academic programs. If a parent purchases a product
 2437  identical to one offered by an organization’s online platform
 2438  for a lower price, the organization must reimburse the parent
 2439  the cost of the product.
 2440         7. In a timely manner, submit the verified list of students
 2441  and any information requested by the department relating to the
 2442  scholarship under this section.
 2443         8. Notify the department about any violation of this
 2444  section.
 2445         9. Document each student’s eligibility for a fiscal year
 2446  before granting a scholarship for that fiscal year. A student is
 2447  ineligible for a scholarship if the student’s account has been
 2448  inactive for 2 consecutive fiscal years.
 2449         10. Notify each parent that participation in the
 2450  scholarship program does not guarantee enrollment.
 2451         11. Commit scholarship funds on behalf of the student for
 2452  tuition and fees for which the parent is responsible for payment
 2453  at the participating private school before using scholarship
 2454  account funds for additional authorized uses under paragraph
 2455  (4)(a).
 2456         (b) For students An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2457  organization awarding scholarships to eligible students pursuant
 2458  to paragraph (3)(b) shall:
 2459         1. Establish a process for parents who are in compliance
 2460  with paragraph (10)(b) to renew their students’ scholarships.
 2461  Renewal applications for the 2025-2026 school year and
 2462  thereafter must provide for a renewal timeline beginning
 2463  February 1 of the prior school year and ending April 30 of the
 2464  prior school year. A student’s renewal is contingent upon an
 2465  eligible private school providing confirmation of student
 2466  admission pursuant to subsection (9), if applicable. The process
 2467  must require that parents confirm that the scholarship is being
 2468  renewed or declined by May 31.
 2469         2. Establish a process that allows a parent to apply for a
 2470  new scholarship. The process may begin no earlier than February
 2471  1 of the prior school year and must authorize the submission of
 2472  applications until November 15. The process must be in a manner
 2473  that creates a written or electronic record of the application
 2474  request and the date of receipt of the application request.
 2475  Applications received after the deadline may be considered for
 2476  scholarship award in the subsequent fiscal year. The process
 2477  must require that parents confirm that the scholarship is being
 2478  accepted or declined by December 15.
 2479         3. Review applications and award scholarships using the
 2480  following priorities:
 2481         a. Renewing students from the previous school year.
 2482         b. An eligible student who meets the criteria for an
 2483  initial award pursuant to paragraph (3)(b) on a first-come,
 2484  first-served basis.
 2485         4. Establish and maintain separate accounts for each
 2486  eligible student. For each account, the organization must
 2487  maintain a record of accrued interest that is retained in the
 2488  student’s account and available only for authorized program
 2489  expenditures.
 2490         5. Verify qualifying educational expenditures pursuant to
 2491  the requirements of paragraph (4)(b).
 2492         6. Return any remaining program funds to the department
 2493  pursuant to paragraph (6)(b).
 2494         1.7. Notify the parent about the availability of, and the
 2495  requirements associated with requesting, an initial IEP or IEP
 2496  reevaluation every 3 years for each student participating in the
 2497  program.
 2498         2.8. Notify the parent of available state and local
 2499  services, including, but not limited to, services under chapter
 2500  413.
 2501         9. In a timely manner, submit to the department the
 2502  verified list of eligible scholarship students and any
 2503  information requested by the department relating to the
 2504  scholarship under this section.
 2505         (c)10. Notify the department of any violation of this
 2506  section.
 2507         11. Document each scholarship student’s eligibility for a
 2508  fiscal year before granting a scholarship for that fiscal year
 2509  pursuant to paragraph (3)(b). A student is ineligible for a
 2510  scholarship if the student’s account has been inactive for 2
 2511  consecutive fiscal years.
 2512         (d)(c)An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2513  organization may, from eligible contributions received pursuant
 2514  to s. 1002.395(6)(l)1., Use an amount, from eligible
 2515  contributions received pursuant to s. 1002.395(6)(l)1., not to
 2516  exceed 2.5 percent of the total amount of all scholarships
 2517  funded under this section for administrative expenses associated
 2518  with performing functions under this section. An organization
 2519  that, for the prior fiscal year, has complied with the
 2520  expenditure requirements of s. 1002.395(6)(i)3. s.
 2521  1002.395(6)(l)3. may use an amount not to exceed 3 percent. Such
 2522  administrative expense amount is considered within the 3-percent
 2523  limit on the total amount an organization may use to administer
 2524  scholarships under this chapter.
 2525         (d) An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 2526  shall establish a process to collect input and feedback from
 2527  parents, private schools, and providers before implementing
 2528  substantial modifications or enhancements to the reimbursement
 2529  process.
 2530         (11)(12) SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING AND PAYMENT.—
 2531         (a)1. The calculated scholarship amount for a participating
 2532  student determined eligible pursuant to paragraph (3)(a) shall
 2533  be based upon the grade level and school district in which the
 2534  student was assigned as 100 percent of the funds per unweighted
 2535  full-time equivalent in the Florida Education Finance Program
 2536  for a student in the basic program established pursuant to s.
 2537  1011.62(1)(c)1., plus a per-full-time equivalent share of funds
 2538  for the categorical programs established in s. 1011.62(5),
 2539  (7)(a), and (16), as funded in the General Appropriations Act.
 2540         2.a. For renewing scholarship students, the organization
 2541  must verify the student’s continued eligibility to participate
 2542  in the scholarship program at least 30 days before each payment.
 2543  Upon receiving the verified list of eligible scholarship
 2544  students, the department shall release, from state funds only,
 2545  the amount calculated pursuant to subparagraph 1. to the
 2546  organization for deposit into the student’s account in quarterly
 2547  payments no later than August 1, November 1, February 1, and
 2548  April 1 of each school year in which the scholarship is in
 2549  force.
 2550         b. For new scholarship students, the organization must
 2551  verify the student’s eligibility to participate in the
 2552  scholarship program at least 30 days before each payment. Upon
 2553  receiving the verified list of eligible scholarship students,
 2554  the department shall release, from state funds only, the amount
 2555  calculated pursuant to subparagraph 1. to the organization for
 2556  deposit into the student’s account in quarterly payments no
 2557  later than September 1, November 1, February 1, and April 1 of
 2558  each school year in which the scholarship is in force. For a
 2559  student exiting a Department of Juvenile Justice commitment
 2560  program who chooses to participate in the scholarship program,
 2561  the amount calculated pursuant to subparagraph 1. must be
 2562  transferred from the school district in which the student last
 2563  attended a public school before commitment to the Department of
 2564  Juvenile Justice.
 2565         c. The department is authorized to release the state funds
 2566  contingent upon verification that the organization will comply
 2567  with s. 1002.395(6)(l) based upon the organization’s submitted
 2568  verified list of eligible scholarship students pursuant to s.
 2569  1002.395.
 2570         3. The initial payment shall be made after the
 2571  organization’s verification of admission acceptance, and
 2572  subsequent payments shall be made upon verification of continued
 2573  enrollment and attendance at the participating private school.
 2574  Payments for tuition and fees for full-time enrollment shall be
 2575  made within 7 business days after approval by the parent
 2576  pursuant to paragraph (10)(a) and the private school pursuant to
 2577  paragraph (9)(b). Payment must be by funds transfer or any other
 2578  means of payment that the department deems to be commercially
 2579  viable or cost-effective. An organization shall ensure that the
 2580  parent has approved a funds transfer before any scholarship
 2581  funds are deposited.
 2582         4. An organization may not transfer any funds to an account
 2583  of a student determined eligible pursuant to paragraph (3)(a)
 2584  which has a balance in excess of $24,000.
 2585         (b)1. For the 2024-2025 school year, the maximum number of
 2586  scholarships funded under paragraph (3)(b) shall be 72,615.
 2587  Beginning in the 2025-2026 school year, the maximum number of
 2588  scholarships funded under paragraph (3)(b) shall annually
 2589  increase by 5 percent of the state’s total exceptional student
 2590  education full-time equivalent student membership, not including
 2591  gifted students. The maximum number of scholarships funded shall
 2592  increase by 1 percent of the state’s total exceptional student
 2593  education full-time equivalent student membership, not including
 2594  gifted students, in the school year following any school year in
 2595  which the number of scholarships funded exceeds 95 percent of
 2596  the number of available scholarships for that school year. An
 2597  eligible student who meets any of the following requirements
 2598  shall be excluded from the maximum number of students if the
 2599  student:
 2600         (a)a. Received specialized instructional services under the
 2601  Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program pursuant to s.
 2602  1002.66 during the previous school year and the student has a
 2603  current IEP developed by the district school board in accordance
 2604  with rules of the State Board of Education;
 2605         (b)b. Is a dependent child of a law enforcement officer or
 2606  a member of the United States Armed Forces, a foster child, or
 2607  an adopted child; or
 2608         (c)c. Spent the prior school year in attendance at a
 2609  Florida public school or the Florida School for the Deaf and the
 2610  Blind. For purposes of this subparagraph, the term “prior school
 2611  year in attendance” means that the student was enrolled and
 2612  reported by:
 2613         1.(I) A school district for funding during either the
 2614  preceding October or February full-time equivalent student
 2615  membership surveys in kindergarten through grade 12, which
 2616  includes time spent in a Department of Juvenile Justice
 2617  commitment program if funded under the Florida Education Finance
 2618  Program;
 2619         2.(II) The Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind during
 2620  the preceding October or February full-time equivalent student
 2621  membership surveys in kindergarten through grade 12;
 2622         3.(III) A school district for funding during the preceding
 2623  October or February full-time equivalent student membership
 2624  surveys, was at least 4 years of age when enrolled and reported,
 2625  and was eligible for services under s. 1003.21(1)(e); or
 2626         4.(IV) Received a John M. McKay Scholarship for Students
 2627  with Disabilities in the 2021-2022 school year.
 2628         2. For a student who has a Level I to Level III matrix of
 2629  services or a diagnosis by a physician or psychologist, the
 2630  calculated scholarship amount for a student participating in the
 2631  program must be based upon the grade level and school district
 2632  in which the student would have been enrolled as the total funds
 2633  per unweighted full-time equivalent in the Florida Education
 2634  Finance Program for a student in the basic exceptional student
 2635  education program pursuant to s. 1011.62(1)(c) and (d), plus a
 2636  per full-time equivalent share of funds for the categorical
 2637  programs established in s. 1011.62(5), (7)(a), (8), and (16), as
 2638  funded in the General Appropriations Act. For the categorical
 2639  program established in s. 1011.62(8), the funds must be
 2640  allocated based on the school district’s average exceptional
 2641  student education guaranteed allocation funds per exceptional
 2642  student education full-time equivalent student.
 2643         3. For a student with a Level IV or Level V matrix of
 2644  services, the calculated scholarship amount must be based upon
 2645  the school district to which the student would have been
 2646  assigned as the total funds per full-time equivalent for the
 2647  Level IV or Level V exceptional student education program
 2648  pursuant to s. 1011.62(1)(c)2.a. or b., plus a per-full time
 2649  equivalent share of funds for the categorical programs
 2650  established in s. 1011.62(5), (7)(a), and (16), as funded in the
 2651  General Appropriations Act.
 2652         4. For a student who received a Gardiner Scholarship
 2653  pursuant to former s. 1002.385 in the 2020-2021 school year, the
 2654  amount shall be the greater of the amount calculated pursuant to
 2655  subparagraph 2. or the amount the student received for the 2020
 2656  2021 school year.
 2657         5. For a student who received a John M. McKay Scholarship
 2658  pursuant to former s. 1002.39 in the 2020-2021 school year, the
 2659  amount shall be the greater of the amount calculated pursuant to
 2660  subparagraph 2. or the amount the student received for the 2020
 2661  2021 school year.
 2662         6. The organization must verify the student’s eligibility
 2663  to participate in the scholarship program at least 30 days
 2664  before each payment.
 2665         7.a. For renewing scholarship students, upon receiving the
 2666  verified list of eligible scholarship students, the department
 2667  shall release, from state funds only, the amount calculated
 2668  pursuant to subparagraph 1. to the organization for deposit into
 2669  the student’s account in quarterly payments no later than August
 2670  1, November 1, February 1, and April 1 of each school year in
 2671  which the scholarship is in force.
 2672         b. For new scholarship students, upon receiving the
 2673  verified list of eligible scholarship students, the department
 2674  shall release, from state funds only, the amount calculated
 2675  pursuant to subparagraph 1. to the organization for deposit into
 2676  the student’s account in quarterly payments no later than
 2677  September 1, November 1, February 1, and April 1 of each school
 2678  year in which the scholarship is in force.
 2679         8. If a scholarship student is attending an eligible
 2680  private school full time, the initial payment shall be made
 2681  after the organization’s verification of admission acceptance,
 2682  and subsequent payments shall be made upon verification of
 2683  continued enrollment and attendance at the eligible private
 2684  school. Payments for tuition and fees for full-time enrollment
 2685  shall be made within 7 business days after approval by the
 2686  parent pursuant to paragraph (10)(b) and the private school
 2687  pursuant to paragraph (9)(b).
 2688         9. Accrued interest in the student’s account is in addition
 2689  to, and not part of, the awarded funds. Program funds include
 2690  both the awarded funds and accrued interest.
 2691         10. The organization may develop a system for payment of
 2692  benefits by funds transfer, including, but not limited to, debit
 2693  cards, electronic payment cards, or any other means of payment
 2694  which the department deems to be commercially viable or cost
 2695  effective. A student’s scholarship award may not be reduced for
 2696  debit card or electronic payment fees. Commodities or services
 2697  related to the development of such a system must be procured by
 2698  competitive solicitation unless they are purchased from a state
 2699  term contract pursuant to s. 287.056.
 2700         11. An organization may not transfer any funds to an
 2701  account of a student determined to be eligible pursuant to
 2702  paragraph (3)(b) which has a balance in excess of $50,000.
 2703         12. Moneys received pursuant to this section do not
 2704  constitute taxable income to the qualified student or the parent
 2705  of the qualified student.
 2706         (c) An organization may not submit a new scholarship
 2707  student for funding after February 1.
 2708         (d) Within 30 days after the release of state funds
 2709  pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b), the eligible scholarship
 2710  funding organization shall certify to the department the amount
 2711  of funds distributed for student scholarships. If the amount of
 2712  funds released by the department is more than the amount
 2713  distributed by the organization, the department is authorized to
 2714  adjust the amount of the overpayment in the subsequent quarterly
 2715  payment release.
 2716         Section 8. Subsections (2), (3), (4), and (6) through (11),
 2717  and paragraph (e) of subsection (15) of section 1002.395,
 2718  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2719         1002.395 Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program.—
 2720         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 2721         (a) “Annual tax credit amount” means, for any state fiscal
 2722  year, the sum of the amount of tax credits approved under
 2723  paragraph (5)(b), including tax credits to be taken under s.
 2724  220.1875 or s. 624.51055, which are approved for a taxpayer
 2725  whose taxable year begins on or after January 1 of the calendar
 2726  year preceding the start of the applicable state fiscal year.
 2727         (b) “Choice navigator” means an individual who meets the
 2728  requirements of sub-subparagraph (6)(d)4.g. and who provides
 2729  consultations, at a mutually agreed upon location, on the
 2730  selection of, application for, and enrollment in educational
 2731  options addressing the academic needs of a student; curriculum
 2732  selection; and advice on career and postsecondary education
 2733  opportunities. However, nothing in this section authorizes a
 2734  choice navigator to oversee or exercise control over the
 2735  curricula or academic programs of a personalized education
 2736  program.
 2737         (b)(c) “Department” means the Department of Revenue.
 2738         (c)(d) “Direct certification list” means the certified list
 2739  of children who qualify for the food assistance program, the
 2740  Temporary Assistance to Needy Families Program, or the Food
 2741  Distribution Program on Indian Reservations provided to the
 2742  Department of Education by the Department of Children and
 2743  Families.
 2744         (d)(e) “Division” means the Division of Alcoholic Beverages
 2745  and Tobacco of the Department of Business and Professional
 2746  Regulation.
 2747         (e)(f) “Eligible contribution” means a monetary
 2748  contribution from a taxpayer, subject to the restrictions
 2749  provided in this section, to an eligible nonprofit scholarship
 2750  funding organization pursuant to this section and ss. 212.099,
 2751  212.1831, and 212.1832. The taxpayer making the contribution may
 2752  not designate a specific child as the beneficiary of the
 2753  contribution.
 2754         (f)(g) “Eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2755  organization” means a state university; or an independent
 2756  college or university that is eligible to participate in the
 2757  William L. Boyd, IV, Effective Access to Student Education Grant
 2758  Program, located and chartered in this state, is not for profit,
 2759  and is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern
 2760  Association of Colleges and Schools; or is a charitable
 2761  organization that:
 2762         1. Is exempt from federal income tax pursuant to s.
 2763  501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;
 2764         2. Is a Florida entity formed under chapter 605, chapter
 2765  607, or chapter 617 and whose principal office is located in the
 2766  state; and
 2767         3. Complies with subsections (6) and (13) (15).
 2768         (h) “Eligible postsecondary educational institution” means
 2769  a Florida College System institution; a state university; a
 2770  school district technical center; a school district adult
 2771  general education center; an independent college or university
 2772  eligible to participate in the William L. Boyd, IV, Effective
 2773  Access to Student Education Grant Program under s. 1009.89; or
 2774  an accredited independent postsecondary educational institution,
 2775  as defined in s. 1005.02, which is licensed to operate in this
 2776  state under part III of chapter 1005 or is approved to
 2777  participate in a reciprocity agreement as defined in s.
 2778  1000.35(2).
 2779         (i) “Eligible private school” means a private school, as
 2780  defined in s. 1002.01, located in Florida which offers an
 2781  education to students in any grades K-12 and that meets the
 2782  requirements in subsection (8).
 2783         (j) “Household income” has the same meaning as the term
 2784  “income” as defined in the Income Eligibility Guidelines for
 2785  free and reduced price meals under the National School Lunch
 2786  Program in 7 C.F.R. part 210 as published in the Federal
 2787  Register by the United States Department of Agriculture.
 2788         (k) “Owner or operator” includes:
 2789         1. An owner, president, officer, or director of an eligible
 2790  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization or a person with
 2791  equivalent decisionmaking authority over an eligible nonprofit
 2792  scholarship-funding organization.
 2793         2. An owner, operator, superintendent, or principal of an
 2794  eligible private school or a person with equivalent
 2795  decisionmaking authority over an eligible private school.
 2796         (l) “Personalized education program” has the same meaning
 2797  as in s. 1002.01.
 2798         (m) “Personalized education student” means a student whose
 2799  parent applies to an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2800  organization for participation in a personalized education
 2801  program.
 2802         (n) “Student learning plan” means a customized learning
 2803  plan developed by a parent, at least annually, to guide
 2804  instruction for his or her student and to identify the goods and
 2805  services needed to address the academic needs of his or her
 2806  student.
 2807         (g)(o) “Tax credit cap amount” means the maximum annual tax
 2808  credit amount that the department may approve for a state fiscal
 2809  year.
 2810         (h)(p) “Unweighted FTE funding amount” means the statewide
 2811  average total funds per unweighted full-time equivalent funding
 2812  amount that is incorporated by reference in the General
 2813  Appropriations Act, or any subsequent special appropriations
 2814  act, for the applicable state fiscal year.
 2815         (3) PROGRAM; INITIAL SCHOLARSHIP ELIGIBILITY.—
 2816         (a) The Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program is
 2817  established.
 2818         (b)1. A student is eligible for a Florida tax credit
 2819  scholarship under this section if the student:
 2820         (a)a. Is a resident of this state or the dependent child of
 2821  an active duty member of the United States Armed Forces who has
 2822  received permanent change of station orders to this state or, at
 2823  the time of renewal, whose home of record or state of legal
 2824  residence is Florida; and
 2825         (b)b. Is eligible to enroll in kindergarten through grade
 2826  12 in a public school in this state or received a scholarship
 2827  under the Hope Scholarship Program in the 2023-2024 school year.
 2828         2. Priority must be given in the following order:
 2829         a. A student whose household income level does not exceed
 2830  185 percent of the federal poverty level or who is in foster
 2831  care or out-of-home care.
 2832         b. A student whose household income level exceeds 185
 2833  percent of the federal poverty level, but does not exceed 400
 2834  percent of the federal poverty level.
 2835         (4) SCHOLARSHIP PROHIBITIONS.—A student is not eligible for
 2836  a scholarship while he or she is:
 2837         (a) Enrolled full time in a public school, including, but
 2838  not limited to, the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind,
 2839  the College-Preparatory Boarding Academy, the Florida School for
 2840  Competitive Academics, the Florida Virtual School, the Florida
 2841  Scholars Academy, a developmental research school authorized
 2842  under s. 1002.32, or a charter school authorized under this
 2843  chapter. For purposes of this paragraph, a 3- or 4-year-old
 2844  child who receives services funded through the Florida Education
 2845  Finance Program is considered a student enrolled full time in a
 2846  public school;
 2847         (b) Enrolled in a school operating for the purpose of
 2848  providing educational services to youth in a Department of
 2849  Juvenile Justice commitment program;
 2850         (c) Receiving any other educational scholarship pursuant to
 2851  this chapter. However, an eligible public school student
 2852  receiving a scholarship under s. 1002.411 may receive a
 2853  scholarship for transportation pursuant to subparagraph
 2854  (6)(d)4.;
 2855         (d) Not having regular and direct contact with his or her
 2856  private school teachers pursuant to s. 1002.421(9)(i) s.
 2857  1002.421(1)(i) unless he or she is enrolled in a personalized
 2858  education program;
 2859         (e) Participating in a home education program as defined in
 2860  s. 1002.01(1);
 2861         (f) Participating in a private tutoring program pursuant to
 2862  s. 1002.43 unless he or she is enrolled in a personalized
 2863  education program; or
 2864         (g) Participating in virtual instruction pursuant to s.
 2865  1002.455 that receives state funding pursuant to the student’s
 2866  participation.
 2867         (6) OBLIGATIONS OF ELIGIBLE NONPROFIT SCHOLARSHIP-FUNDING
 2868  ORGANIZATIONS.—An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2869  organization:
 2870         (a) Must comply with the antidiscrimination provisions of
 2871  42 U.S.C. s. 2000d.
 2872         (b)Must comply with the following background check
 2873  requirements:
 2874         1.All owners and operators as defined in subparagraph
 2875  (2)(k)1. are, before employment or engagement to provide
 2876  services, subject to level 2 background screening as provided
 2877  under chapter 435. The fingerprints for the background screening
 2878  must be electronically submitted to the Department of Law
 2879  Enforcement and can be taken by an authorized law enforcement
 2880  agency or by an employee of the eligible nonprofit scholarship
 2881  funding organization or a private company who is trained to take
 2882  fingerprints. However, the complete set of fingerprints of an
 2883  owner or operator may not be taken by the owner or operator. The
 2884  results of the state and national criminal history check shall
 2885  be provided to the Department of Education for screening under
 2886  chapter 435. The cost of the background screening may be borne
 2887  by the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization or
 2888  the owner or operator.
 2889         2.Every 5 years following employment or engagement to
 2890  provide services or association with an eligible nonprofit
 2891  scholarship-funding organization, each owner or operator must
 2892  meet level 2 screening standards as described in s. 435.04, at
 2893  which time the nonprofit scholarship-funding organization shall
 2894  request the Department of Law Enforcement to forward the
 2895  fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for level 2
 2896  screening. If the fingerprints of an owner or operator are not
 2897  retained by the Department of Law Enforcement under subparagraph
 2898  3., the owner or operator must electronically file a complete
 2899  set of fingerprints with the Department of Law Enforcement. Upon
 2900  submission of fingerprints for this purpose, the eligible
 2901  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization shall request that
 2902  the Department of Law Enforcement forward the fingerprints to
 2903  the Federal Bureau of Investigation for level 2 screening, and
 2904  the fingerprints shall be retained by the Department of Law
 2905  Enforcement under subparagraph 3.
 2906         3.Fingerprints submitted to the Department of Law
 2907  Enforcement as required by this paragraph must be retained by
 2908  the Department of Law Enforcement in a manner approved by rule
 2909  and entered in the statewide automated biometric identification
 2910  system authorized by s. 943.05(2)(b). The fingerprints must
 2911  thereafter be available for all purposes and uses authorized for
 2912  arrest fingerprints entered in the statewide automated biometric
 2913  identification system pursuant to s. 943.051.
 2914         4.The Department of Law Enforcement shall search all
 2915  arrest fingerprints received under s. 943.051 against the
 2916  fingerprints retained in the statewide automated biometric
 2917  identification system under subparagraph 3. Any arrest record
 2918  that is identified with an owner’s or operator’s fingerprints
 2919  must be reported to the Department of Education. The Department
 2920  of Education shall participate in this search process by paying
 2921  an annual fee to the Department of Law Enforcement and by
 2922  informing the Department of Law Enforcement of any change in the
 2923  employment, engagement, or association status of the owners or
 2924  operators whose fingerprints are retained under subparagraph 3.
 2925  The Department of Law Enforcement shall adopt a rule setting the
 2926  amount of the annual fee to be imposed upon the Department of
 2927  Education for performing these services and establishing the
 2928  procedures for the retention of owner and operator fingerprints
 2929  and the dissemination of search results. The fee may be borne by
 2930  the owner or operator of the nonprofit scholarship-funding
 2931  organization.
 2932         5.A nonprofit scholarship-funding organization whose owner
 2933  or operator fails the level 2 background screening is not
 2934  eligible to provide scholarships under this section.
 2935         6.A nonprofit scholarship-funding organization whose owner
 2936  or operator in the last 7 years has filed for personal
 2937  bankruptcy or corporate bankruptcy in a corporation of which he
 2938  or she owned more than 20 percent shall not be eligible to
 2939  provide scholarships under this section.
 2940         7.In addition to the offenses listed in s. 435.04, a
 2941  person required to undergo background screening pursuant to this
 2942  part or authorizing statutes must not have an arrest awaiting
 2943  final disposition for, must not have been found guilty of, or
 2944  entered a plea of nolo contendere to, regardless of
 2945  adjudication, and must not have been adjudicated delinquent, and
 2946  the record must not have been sealed or expunged for, any of the
 2947  following offenses or any similar offense of another
 2948  jurisdiction:
 2949         a.Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony.
 2950         b.This chapter, if the offense was a felony.
 2951         c.Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud.
 2952         d.Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud.
 2953         e.Section 741.28, relating to domestic violence.
 2954         f.Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through
 2955  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or
 2956  photooptical systems.
 2957         g.Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent
 2958  insurance claims.
 2959         h.Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering.
 2960         i.Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of personal
 2961  identification information.
 2962         j.Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card
 2963  through fraudulent means.
 2964         k.Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit
 2965  cards, if the offense was a felony.
 2966         l.Section 831.01, relating to forgery.
 2967         m.Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged instruments.
 2968         n.Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills, checks,
 2969  drafts, or promissory notes.
 2970         o.Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank bills,
 2971  checks, drafts, or promissory notes.
 2972         p.Section 831.30, relating to fraud in obtaining medicinal
 2973  drugs.
 2974         q.Section 831.31, relating to the sale, manufacture,
 2975  delivery, or possession with the intent to sell, manufacture, or
 2976  deliver any counterfeit controlled substance, if the offense was
 2977  a felony.
 2978         (b)(c) Must not have an owner or operator, as defined in
 2979  subparagraph (2)(k)1., who owns or operates an eligible private
 2980  school that is participating in the scholarship program.
 2981         (c)(d)1. For the 2023-2024 school year, may fund no more
 2982  than 20,000 scholarships for students who are enrolled pursuant
 2983  to subsection (7) paragraph (7)(b). The number of scholarships
 2984  funded for such students may increase by 40,000 in each
 2985  subsequent school year. This paragraph subparagraph is repealed
 2986  July 1, 2027.
 2987         2. Shall establish a process for parents who are in
 2988  compliance with paragraph (7)(a) to renew their students’
 2989  scholarships. Renewal applications for the 2025-2026 school year
 2990  and thereafter must provide for a renewal timeline beginning
 2991  February 1 of the prior school year and ending April 30 of the
 2992  prior school year. A student’s renewal is contingent upon an
 2993  eligible private school providing confirmation of admission
 2994  pursuant to subsection (8). The process must require that
 2995  parents confirm that the scholarship is being renewed or
 2996  declined by May 31.
 2997         3. Shall establish a process that allows a parent to apply
 2998  for a new scholarship. The process must be in a manner that
 2999  creates a written or electronic record of the application
 3000  request and the date of receipt of the application request. The
 3001  process must require that parents confirm that the scholarship
 3002  is being accepted or declined by a date set by the organization.
 3003         4. Must establish and maintain separate scholarship
 3004  accounts from eligible contributions for each eligible student.
 3005  For each account, the organization must maintain a record of
 3006  accrued interest retained in the student’s account. The
 3007  organization
 3008         (d) Must verify that scholarship funds are used for:
 3009         1.a. Tuition and fees for full-time or part-time enrollment
 3010  in an eligible private school.
 3011         2.b. Instructional materials, including digital materials,
 3012  digital devices, and Internet resources.
 3013         3.c. Curriculum as defined in s. 1002.394(2).
 3014         4.d. Tuition and fees associated with full-time or part
 3015  time enrollment in a home education instructional program that
 3016  meets all of the following requirements:
 3017         a. Provides educational courses or activities.
 3018         b. Has a publicly available description of courses and
 3019  activities.
 3020         c. Has a tuition and fee schedule.
 3021         d. Makes the tuition and fees payable to a registered
 3022  business entity.
 3023         5. Tuition and fees associated with full-time or part-time
 3024  enrollment in; an eligible postsecondary educational institution
 3025  or a program offered by the postsecondary educational
 3026  institution, unless the program is subject to s. 1009.25 or
 3027  reimbursed pursuant to s. 1009.30; an approved preapprenticeship
 3028  program as defined in s. 446.021(5) which is not subject to s.
 3029  1009.25 and complies with all applicable requirements of the
 3030  Department of Education pursuant to chapter 1005; a private
 3031  tutoring program authorized under s. 1002.43; a virtual program
 3032  offered by a department-approved private online provider that
 3033  meets the provider qualifications specified in s. 1002.45(2)(a);
 3034  the Florida Virtual School as a private paying student; or an
 3035  approved online course offered pursuant to s. 1003.499 or s.
 3036  1004.0961.
 3037         6.e. Fees for nationally standardized, norm-referenced
 3038  achievement tests, Advanced Placement Examinations, industry
 3039  certification examinations, assessments related to postsecondary
 3040  education, or other assessments.
 3041         7.f. Contracted services provided by a public school or
 3042  school district, including classes. A student who receives
 3043  contracted services under this subparagraph sub-subparagraph is
 3044  not considered enrolled in a public school for eligibility
 3045  purposes as specified in subsection (9) (11) but rather
 3046  attending a public school on a part-time basis as authorized
 3047  under s. 1002.44.
 3048         8.g. Tuition and fees for part-time tutoring services or
 3049  fees for services provided by a choice navigator. Such services
 3050  must be provided by a person who holds a valid Florida
 3051  educator’s certificate pursuant to s. 1012.56, a person who
 3052  holds an adjunct teaching certificate pursuant to s. 1012.57, a
 3053  person who has a bachelor’s degree or a graduate degree in the
 3054  subject area in which instruction is given, a person who has
 3055  demonstrated a mastery of subject area knowledge pursuant to s.
 3056  1012.56(5), or a person certified by a nationally or
 3057  internationally recognized research-based training program as
 3058  approved by the Department of Education. As used in this
 3059  paragraph, the term “part-time tutoring services” does not
 3060  qualify as regular school attendance as defined in s.
 3061  1003.01(16)(e).
 3062         9. Membership dues and related activity fees for
 3063  participation in Career and Technical Student Organizations.
 3064         (e) For students determined eligible pursuant to subsection
 3065  (7) paragraph (7)(b), must:
 3066         1. Establish a process for parents who are in compliance
 3067  with subparagraph (7)(b)1. to apply for a new scholarship. New
 3068  scholarship applications for the 2025-2026 school year and
 3069  thereafter must provide for an application timeline beginning
 3070  February 1 of the prior school year and ending April 30 of the
 3071  prior school year. The process must require that parents confirm
 3072  that the scholarship is being accepted or declined by May 31.
 3073         2. Establish a process for parents who are in compliance
 3074  with paragraph (7)(b) to renew their students’ scholarships.
 3075  Renewal scholarship applications for the 2025-2026 school year
 3076  and thereafter must provide for a renewal timeline beginning
 3077  February 1 of the prior school year and ending April 30 of the
 3078  prior school year. The process must require that parents confirm
 3079  that the scholarship is being renewed or declined by May 31.
 3080         1.3. Maintain a signed agreement from the parent which
 3081  constitutes compliance with the attendance requirements under
 3082  ss. 1003.01(16) and 1003.21(1).
 3083         2.4. Receive eligible student test scores and, beginning
 3084  with the 2027-2028 school year, by August 15, annually report
 3085  test scores for students pursuant to subsection (7) paragraph
 3086  (7)(b) to a state university pursuant to paragraph (8)(d)
 3087  (9)(f).
 3088         3.5. Provide parents with information, guidance, and
 3089  support to create and annually update a student learning plan
 3090  for their student. The organization must maintain the plan and
 3091  allow parents to electronically submit, access, and revise the
 3092  plan continuously.
 3093         4.6. Upon submission by the parent of an annual student
 3094  learning plan, fund a scholarship for a student determined
 3095  eligible.
 3096         (f) Must give first priority to eligible renewal students
 3097  who received a scholarship from an eligible nonprofit
 3098  scholarship-funding organization during the previous school
 3099  year. The eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3100  must fully apply and exhaust all funds available under this
 3101  section for renewal scholarship awards before awarding any
 3102  initial scholarships.
 3103         (g) Must provide a new scholarship to an eligible student
 3104  on a first-come, first-served basis unless the student is
 3105  seeking priority eligibility pursuant to subsection (3).
 3106         (g)(h) Must refer any student eligible for a scholarship
 3107  pursuant to this section who did not receive a renewal or
 3108  initial scholarship based solely on the lack of available funds
 3109  under this section to another eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3110  funding organization that may have funds available.
 3111         (i) May not restrict or reserve scholarships for use at a
 3112  particular eligible private school or provide scholarships to a
 3113  child of an owner or operator as defined in subparagraph
 3114  (2)(k)1.
 3115         (j) Must allow a student in foster care or out-of-home care
 3116  or a dependent child of a parent who is a member of the United
 3117  States Armed Forces to apply for a scholarship at any time.
 3118         (h)(k) Must allow an eligible student to attend any
 3119  eligible private school and must allow a parent to transfer a
 3120  scholarship during a school year to any other eligible private
 3121  school of the parent’s choice.
 3122         (i)1.(l)1. May use eligible contributions received pursuant
 3123  to this section and ss. 212.099, 212.1831, and 212.1832 during
 3124  the state fiscal year in which such contributions are collected
 3125  for administrative expenses if the organization has operated as
 3126  an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization for at
 3127  least the preceding 3 fiscal years and did not have any findings
 3128  of material weakness or material noncompliance in its most
 3129  recent audit under paragraph (k) (o) or is in good standing in
 3130  each state in which it administers a scholarship program and the
 3131  audited financial statements for the preceding 3 fiscal years
 3132  are free of material misstatements and going concern issues.
 3133  Administrative expenses from eligible contributions may not
 3134  exceed 3 percent of the total amount of all scholarships and
 3135  stipends funded by an eligible scholarship-funding organization
 3136  under this chapter. Such administrative expenses must be
 3137  reasonable and necessary for the organization’s management and
 3138  distribution of scholarships funded under this chapter.
 3139  Administrative expenses may include developing or contracting
 3140  with rideshare programs or facilitating carpool strategies for
 3141  recipients of a transportation scholarship under s. 1002.394. No
 3142  funds authorized under this subparagraph shall be used for
 3143  lobbying or political activity or expenses related to lobbying
 3144  or political activity. Up to one-third of the funds authorized
 3145  for administrative expenses under this subparagraph may be used
 3146  for expenses related to the recruitment of contributions from
 3147  taxpayers. An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3148  organization may not charge an application fee.
 3149         2. Must expend for annual or partial-year scholarships 100
 3150  percent of any eligible contributions from the prior fiscal
 3151  year.
 3152         3. Must expend for annual or partial-year scholarships an
 3153  amount equal to or greater than 75 percent of all net eligible
 3154  contributions, as defined in subsection (2), remaining after
 3155  administrative expenses during the state fiscal year in which
 3156  such eligible contributions are collected. No more than 25
 3157  percent of such net eligible contributions may be carried
 3158  forward to the following state fiscal year. All amounts carried
 3159  forward, for audit purposes, must be specifically identified for
 3160  particular students, by student name and the name of the school
 3161  to which the student is admitted, subject to the requirements of
 3162  ss. 1002.22 and 1002.221 and 20 U.S.C. s. 1232g, and the
 3163  applicable rules and regulations issued pursuant thereto. Any
 3164  amounts carried forward shall be expended for annual or partial
 3165  year scholarships in the following state fiscal year. Eligible
 3166  contributions remaining on June 30 of each year that are in
 3167  excess of the 25 percent that may be carried forward shall be
 3168  used to provide scholarships to eligible students or transferred
 3169  to other eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organizations to
 3170  provide scholarships for eligible students. All transferred
 3171  funds must be deposited by each eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3172  funding organization receiving such funds into its scholarship
 3173  account. All transferred amounts received by any eligible
 3174  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization must be separately
 3175  disclosed in the annual financial audit required under paragraph
 3176  (k) (o).
 3177         4. Must, before granting a scholarship for an academic
 3178  year, document each scholarship student’s eligibility for that
 3179  academic year. A scholarship-funding organization may not grant
 3180  multiyear scholarships in one approval process.
 3181         (m) Must maintain separate accounts for scholarship funds
 3182  and operating funds.
 3183         (j)(n) With the prior approval of the Department of
 3184  Education, may transfer funds to another eligible nonprofit
 3185  scholarship-funding organization if additional funds are
 3186  required to meet scholarship demand at the receiving nonprofit
 3187  scholarship-funding organization. A transfer is limited to the
 3188  greater of $500,000 or 20 percent of the total contributions
 3189  received by the nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3190  making the transfer. All transferred funds must be deposited by
 3191  the receiving nonprofit scholarship-funding organization into
 3192  its scholarship accounts. All transferred amounts received by
 3193  any nonprofit scholarship-funding organization must be
 3194  separately disclosed in the annual financial and compliance
 3195  audit required in this section.
 3196         (k)(o) Must provide to the Auditor General and the
 3197  Department of Education a report on the results of an annual
 3198  financial audit of its accounts and records conducted by an
 3199  independent certified public accountant in accordance with
 3200  auditing standards generally accepted in the United States,
 3201  government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the
 3202  Auditor General. The audit report must include a report on
 3203  financial statements presented in accordance with generally
 3204  accepted accounting principles. Audit reports must be provided
 3205  to the Auditor General and the Department of Education within
 3206  180 days after completion of the eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3207  funding organization’s fiscal year. The Auditor General shall
 3208  review all audit reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph.
 3209  The Auditor General shall request any significant items that
 3210  were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Auditor
 3211  General. The items must be provided within 45 days after the
 3212  date of the request. If the scholarship-funding organization
 3213  does not comply with the Auditor General’s request, the Auditor
 3214  General shall notify the Legislative Auditing Committee.
 3215         (p) Must prepare and submit quarterly reports to the
 3216  Department of Education pursuant to paragraph (9)(i). In
 3217  addition, an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3218  must submit in a timely manner the verified list of eligible
 3219  scholarship students and any information requested by the
 3220  Department of Education relating to the scholarship program.
 3221         (l)1.a.(q)1.a. Must participate in the joint development of
 3222  agreed-upon procedures during the 2009-2010 state fiscal year.
 3223  The agreed-upon procedures must uniformly apply to all private
 3224  schools and must determine, at a minimum, whether the private
 3225  school has been verified as eligible by the Department of
 3226  Education under s. 1002.421; has an adequate accounting system,
 3227  system of financial controls, and process for deposit and
 3228  classification of scholarship funds; and has properly expended
 3229  scholarship funds for education-related expenses. During the
 3230  development of the procedures, the participating scholarship
 3231  funding organizations shall specify guidelines governing the
 3232  materiality of exceptions that may be found during the
 3233  accountant’s performance of the procedures. The procedures and
 3234  guidelines shall be provided to private schools and the
 3235  Commissioner of Education by March 15, 2011.
 3236         b. Must participate in a joint review of the agreed-upon
 3237  procedures and guidelines developed under sub-subparagraph a.,
 3238  by February of each biennium, if the scholarship-funding
 3239  organization provided more than $250,000 in scholarship funds
 3240  under this chapter during the state fiscal year preceding the
 3241  biennial review. If the procedures and guidelines are revised,
 3242  the revisions must be provided to private schools and the
 3243  Commissioner of Education by March 15 of the year in which the
 3244  revisions were completed. The revised agreed-upon procedures and
 3245  guidelines shall take effect the subsequent school year.
 3246         c. Must monitor the compliance of a participating private
 3247  school with s. 1002.421(9)(p) s. 1002.421(1)(q) if the
 3248  scholarship-funding organization provided the majority of the
 3249  scholarship funding to the school. For each participating
 3250  private school subject to s. 1002.421(9)(p) s. 1002.421(1)(q),
 3251  the appropriate scholarship-funding organization shall annually
 3252  notify the Commissioner of Education by October 30 of:
 3253         (I) A private school’s failure to submit a report required
 3254  under s. 1002.421(9)(p) s. 1002.421(1)(q); or
 3255         (II) Any material exceptions set forth in the report
 3256  required under s. 1002.421(9)(p) s. 1002.421(1)(q).
 3257         2. Must seek input from the accrediting associations that
 3258  are members of the Florida Association of Academic Nonpublic
 3259  Schools and the Department of Education when jointly developing
 3260  the agreed-upon procedures and guidelines under sub-subparagraph
 3261  1.a. and conducting a review of those procedures and guidelines
 3262  under sub-subparagraph 1.b.
 3263         (m)(r) Must maintain the surety bond or letter of credit
 3264  required by subsection (13) (15). The amount of the surety bond
 3265  or letter of credit may be adjusted quarterly to equal the
 3266  actual amount of undisbursed funds based upon submission by the
 3267  organization of a statement from a certified public accountant
 3268  verifying the amount of undisbursed funds. The requirements of
 3269  this paragraph are waived if the cost of acquiring a surety bond
 3270  or letter of credit exceeds the average 10-year cost of
 3271  acquiring a surety bond or letter of credit by 200 percent. The
 3272  requirements of this paragraph are waived for a state
 3273  university; or an independent college or university which is
 3274  eligible to participate in the William L. Boyd, IV, Effective
 3275  Access to Student Education Grant Program, located and chartered
 3276  in this state, is not for profit, and is accredited by the
 3277  Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges
 3278  and Schools.
 3279         (n)(s) Must provide to the Auditor General any information
 3280  or documentation requested in connection with an operational
 3281  audit of a scholarship-funding organization conducted pursuant
 3282  to s. 11.45.
 3283         (o)1.(t)1. Must develop a purchasing handbook that includes
 3284  policies for authorized uses of scholarship funds under
 3285  paragraph (d) and s. 1002.394(4)(a). The handbook must include,
 3286  at a minimum, a routinely updated list of prohibited items and
 3287  services, and items or services that require preauthorization or
 3288  additional documentation. By August 1, 2024, and by each July 1
 3289  thereafter, the purchasing handbook must be provided to the
 3290  Commissioner of Education and published on the eligible
 3291  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization’s website. Any
 3292  revisions must be provided to the commissioner and published on
 3293  the organization’s website within 30 days after such revisions.
 3294         2. The organization shall assist the Florida Center for
 3295  Students with Unique Abilities established under s. 1004.6495
 3296  with the development of purchasing guidelines, which must
 3297  include a routinely updated list of prohibited items and
 3298  services, and items or services for which preauthorization or
 3299  additional documentation is required, for authorized uses of
 3300  scholarship funds under s. 1002.394(4)(b) and publish the
 3301  guidelines on the organization’s website.
 3302         3. If the organization fails to submit the purchasing
 3303  handbook required by subparagraph 1., the Department of
 3304  Education may assess a financial penalty, not to exceed $10,000,
 3305  as prescribed by State Board of Education rule. This
 3306  subparagraph expires July 1, 2026.
 3307         (p)(u) May permit eligible students to use program funds
 3308  for the purposes specified in paragraph (d), as authorized in
 3309  the organization’s purchasing handbook, by paying for the
 3310  authorized use directly, then submitting a reimbursement request
 3311  to the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization.
 3312  However, an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3313  may require the use of an online platform for direct purchases
 3314  of products so long as such use does not limit a parent’s choice
 3315  of curriculum or academic programs. If a parent purchases a
 3316  product identical to one offered by an organization’s online
 3317  platform for a lower price, the organization shall reimburse the
 3318  parent the cost of the product.
 3319         (v) Must notify each parent that participation in the
 3320  scholarship program does not guarantee enrollment.
 3321         (w) Shall commit scholarship funds on behalf of the student
 3322  for tuition and fees for which the parent is responsible for
 3323  payment at the participating private school before using
 3324  scholarship account funds for additional authorized uses under
 3325  paragraph (d).
 3326         (q)(x)Beginning September 30, 2023, Must submit to the
 3327  department quarterly reports that provide the estimated and
 3328  actual amounts of the net eligible contributions, as defined in
 3329  subsection (2), and all funds carried forward from the prior
 3330  state fiscal year.
 3331         (r)(y) Must establish a process to collect input and
 3332  feedback from parents, private schools, and providers before
 3333  implementing substantial modifications or enhancements to the
 3334  reimbursement process.
 3335  
 3336  Information and documentation provided to the Department of
 3337  Education and the Auditor General relating to the identity of a
 3338  taxpayer that provides an eligible contribution under this
 3339  section shall remain confidential at all times in accordance
 3340  with s. 213.053.
 3341         (7) PARENT AND STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES FOR PROGRAM
 3342  PARTICIPATION.—
 3343         (a) A parent who applies for a scholarship whose student
 3344  will be enrolled full time in an eligible private school must:
 3345         1. Select an eligible private school and apply for the
 3346  admission of his or her child.
 3347         2. Request the scholarship by the date established by the
 3348  organization in a manner that creates a written or electronic
 3349  record of the request and the date of receipt of the request.
 3350         3.a. Beginning with new applications for the 2025-2026
 3351  school year and thereafter, notify the organization by a date
 3352  set by the organization that the scholarship is being accepted
 3353  or declined.
 3354         b. Beginning with renewal applications for the 2025-2026
 3355  school year and thereafter, notify the organization by May 31
 3356  that the scholarship is being renewed or declined.
 3357         4. Inform the applicable school district when the parent
 3358  withdraws his or her student from a public school to attend an
 3359  eligible private school.
 3360         5. Require his or her student participating in the program
 3361  to remain in attendance at the eligible private school
 3362  throughout the school year unless excused by the school for
 3363  illness or other good cause and comply with the private school’s
 3364  published policies.
 3365         6. Meet with the eligible private school’s principal or the
 3366  principal’s designee to review the school’s academic programs
 3367  and policies, specialized services, code of student conduct, and
 3368  attendance policies before enrollment.
 3369         7. Require his or her student participating in the program
 3370  to take the norm-referenced assessment offered by the
 3371  participating private school. The parent may also choose to have
 3372  the student participate in the statewide assessments pursuant to
 3373  s. 1008.22. If the parent requests that the student
 3374  participating in the program take statewide assessments pursuant
 3375  to s. 1008.22 and the participating private school has not
 3376  chosen to offer and administer the statewide assessments, the
 3377  parent is responsible for transporting the student to the
 3378  assessment site designated by the school district.
 3379         8. Approve each payment before the scholarship funds may be
 3380  deposited by funds transfer. The parent may not designate any
 3381  entity or individual associated with the participating private
 3382  school as the parent’s attorney in fact to approve a funds
 3383  transfer. A participant who fails to comply with this paragraph
 3384  forfeits the scholarship.
 3385         9. Authorize the nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3386  to access information needed for income eligibility
 3387  determination and verification held by other state or federal
 3388  agencies, including the Department of Revenue, the Department of
 3389  Children and Families, the Department of Education, the
 3390  Department of Commerce, and the Agency for Health Care
 3391  Administration, for students seeking priority eligibility.
 3392         10. Agree to have the organization commit scholarship funds
 3393  on behalf of his or her student for tuition and fees for which
 3394  the parent is responsible for payment at the participating
 3395  private school before using scholarship account funds for
 3396  additional authorized uses under paragraph (6)(d). A parent is
 3397  responsible for all eligible expenses in excess of the amount of
 3398  the scholarship.
 3399         11. Comply with the scholarship application and renewal
 3400  processes and requirements established by the organization.
 3401         (b) A parent whose student is participating in the
 3402  personalized education program and will not be enrolled full
 3403  time in a public or private school must:
 3404         1. Apply to an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3405  organization to participate in the program as a personalized
 3406  education student by a date set by the organization. The request
 3407  must be communicated directly to the organization in a manner
 3408  that creates a written or electronic record of the request and
 3409  the date of receipt of the request. Beginning with new and
 3410  renewal applications for the 2025-2026 school year and
 3411  thereafter, a parent must notify the organization by May 31 that
 3412  the scholarship is being accepted, renewed, or declined.
 3413         2. sign an agreement with the organization and annually
 3414  submit a sworn compliance statement to the organization to
 3415  satisfy or maintain program eligibility, including eligibility
 3416  to receive and spend program payments, by:
 3417         (a)a. Affirming that the program funds are used only for
 3418  authorized purposes serving the student’s educational needs, as
 3419  described in paragraph (6)(d), and that they will not receive a
 3420  payment, refund, or rebate of any funds provided under this
 3421  section.
 3422         (b)b. Affirming that the parent is responsible for all
 3423  eligible expenses in excess of the amount of the scholarship and
 3424  for the education of his or her student.
 3425         (c)c. Submitting a student learning plan to the
 3426  organization and revising the plan at least annually before
 3427  program renewal.
 3428         (d)d. Requiring his or her student to take a nationally
 3429  norm-referenced test identified by the Department of Education,
 3430  or a statewide assessment under s. 1008.22, and provide
 3431  assessment results to the organization before the student’s
 3432  program renewal.
 3433         e. Complying with the scholarship application and renewal
 3434  processes and requirements established by the organization. A
 3435  student whose participation in the program is not renewed may
 3436  continue to spend scholarship funds that are in his or her
 3437  account from prior years unless the account must be closed
 3438  pursuant to s. 1002.394(5)(a)2.
 3439         (e)f. Procuring the services necessary to educate the
 3440  student. When the student receives a scholarship, the district
 3441  school board is not obligated to provide the student with a free
 3442  appropriate public education.
 3443  
 3444  For purposes of this subsection paragraph, full-time enrollment
 3445  does not include enrollment at a private school that addresses
 3446  regular and direct contact with teachers through the student
 3447  learning plan in accordance with s. 1002.421(9)(i) s.
 3448  1002.421(1)(i).
 3449         (c) A parent may not apply for multiple scholarships under
 3450  this section and s. 1002.394 for an individual student at the
 3451  same time.
 3452  
 3453  An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization may not
 3454  further regulate, exercise control over, or require
 3455  documentation beyond the requirements of this subsection unless
 3456  the regulation, control, or documentation is necessary for
 3457  participation in the program.
 3458         (8) PRIVATE SCHOOL ELIGIBILITY AND OBLIGATIONS.—An eligible
 3459  private school may be sectarian or nonsectarian and must:
 3460         (a) Comply with all requirements for private schools
 3461  participating in state school choice scholarship programs
 3462  pursuant to s. 1002.421.
 3463         (b) Provide to the organization all documentation required
 3464  for a student’s participation, including confirmation of the
 3465  student’s admission to the private school, the private school’s
 3466  and student’s fee schedules, and any other information required
 3467  by the organization to process scholarship payment pursuant to
 3468  paragraph (11)(c). Such information must be provided by the
 3469  deadlines established by the organization and in accordance with
 3470  the requirements of this section. A student is not eligible to
 3471  receive a quarterly scholarship payment if the private school
 3472  fails to meet the deadline.
 3473         (c)1. Annually administer or make provision for students
 3474  participating in the scholarship program in grades 3 through 10
 3475  to take one of the nationally norm-referenced tests identified
 3476  by the department or the statewide assessments pursuant to s.
 3477  1008.22. Students with disabilities for whom standardized
 3478  testing is not appropriate are exempt from this requirement. A
 3479  participating private school must report a student’s scores to
 3480  the parent. A participating private school must annually report
 3481  by August 15 the scores of all participating students to a state
 3482  university described in paragraph (9)(f).
 3483         2. Administer the statewide assessments pursuant to s.
 3484  1008.22 if a participating private school chooses to offer the
 3485  statewide assessments. A participating private school may choose
 3486  to offer and administer the statewide assessments to all
 3487  students who attend the participating private school in grades 3
 3488  through 10 and must submit a request in writing to the
 3489  Department of Education by March 1 of each year in order to
 3490  administer the statewide assessments in the subsequent school
 3491  year.
 3492  
 3493  If a participating private school fails to meet the requirements
 3494  of this subsection or s. 1002.421, the commissioner may
 3495  determine that the participating private school is ineligible to
 3496  participate in the scholarship program.
 3497         (9) DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OBLIGATIONS.—The Department of
 3498  Education shall:
 3499         (a) Annually submit to the department and division, by
 3500  March 15, a list of eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3501  organizations that meet the requirements of paragraph (2)(f)
 3502  (2)(g).
 3503         (b) Annually verify the eligibility of nonprofit
 3504  scholarship-funding organizations that meet the requirements of
 3505  paragraph (2)(f) (2)(g).
 3506         (c) Annually verify the eligibility of expenditures as
 3507  provided in paragraph (6)(d) using the audit required by
 3508  paragraph (6)(k) (6)(o).
 3509         (d) Notify eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3510  organizations of the deadlines for submitting the verified list
 3511  of eligible scholarship students; cross-check the verified list
 3512  with the public school enrollment lists to avoid duplication;
 3513  and, when the Florida Education Finance Program is recalculated,
 3514  adjust the amount of state funds allocated to school districts
 3515  through the Florida Education Finance Program based upon the
 3516  results of the cross-check.
 3517         (e) Maintain and annually publish a list of nationally
 3518  norm-referenced tests identified for purposes of satisfying the
 3519  testing requirement in subparagraph (8)(c)1. The tests must meet
 3520  industry standards of quality in accordance with State Board of
 3521  Education rule.
 3522         (f) Issue a project grant award to a state university, to
 3523  which participating private schools and eligible nonprofit
 3524  scholarship-funding organizations must report the scores of
 3525  participating students on the nationally norm-referenced tests
 3526  or the statewide assessments administered in grades 3 through
 3527  10. The project term is 2 years, and the amount of the project
 3528  is up to $250,000 per year. The project grant award must be
 3529  reissued in 2-year intervals in accordance with this paragraph.
 3530         1. The state university must annually report to the
 3531  Department of Education on the student performance of
 3532  participating students and, beginning with the 2027-2028 school
 3533  year, on the performance of personalized education students:
 3534         a. On a statewide basis. The report shall also include, to
 3535  the extent possible, a comparison of scholarship students’
 3536  performance to the statewide student performance of public
 3537  school students with socioeconomic backgrounds similar to those
 3538  of students participating in the scholarship program. To
 3539  minimize costs and reduce time required for the state
 3540  university’s analysis and evaluation, the Department of
 3541  Education shall coordinate with the state university to provide
 3542  data to the state university in order to conduct analyses of
 3543  matched students from public school assessment data and
 3544  calculate control group student performance using an agreed-upon
 3545  methodology with the state university; and
 3546         b. On an individual school basis for students enrolled full
 3547  time in a private school. The annual report must include student
 3548  performance for each participating private school in which
 3549  enrolled students in the private school participated in a
 3550  scholarship program under this section or s. 1002.394(12)(a) in
 3551  the prior school year. The report shall be according to each
 3552  participating private school, and for participating students, in
 3553  which there are at least 30 participating students who have
 3554  scores for tests administered. If the state university
 3555  determines that the 30-participating-student cell size may be
 3556  reduced without disclosing personally identifiable information,
 3557  as described in 34 C.F.R. s. 99.12, of a participating student,
 3558  the state university may reduce the participating-student cell
 3559  size, but the cell size must not be reduced to less than 10
 3560  participating students. The department shall provide each
 3561  participating private school’s prior school year’s student
 3562  enrollment information to the state university no later than
 3563  June 15 of each year, or as requested by the state university.
 3564         2. The sharing and reporting of student performance data
 3565  under this paragraph must be in accordance with requirements of
 3566  ss. 1002.22 and 1002.221 and 20 U.S.C. s. 1232g, the Family
 3567  Educational Rights and Privacy Act, and the applicable rules and
 3568  regulations issued pursuant thereto, and shall be for the sole
 3569  purpose of creating the annual report required by subparagraph
 3570  1. All parties must preserve the confidentiality of such
 3571  information as required by law. The annual report must not
 3572  disaggregate data to a level that will identify individual
 3573  participating schools, except as required under sub-subparagraph
 3574  1.b., or disclose the academic level of individual students.
 3575         3. The annual report required by subparagraph 1. shall be
 3576  published by the Department of Education on its website.
 3577         (g) Notify an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3578  organization of any of the organization’s identified students
 3579  who are receiving educational scholarships pursuant to this
 3580  chapter.
 3581         (h) Notify an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3582  organization of any of the organization’s identified students
 3583  who are receiving tax credit scholarships from other eligible
 3584  nonprofit scholarship-funding organizations.
 3585         (i) Require quarterly reports by an eligible nonprofit
 3586  scholarship-funding organization regarding the number of
 3587  students participating in the program; the private schools at
 3588  which the students are enrolled; the number of scholarship
 3589  applications received, the number of applications processed
 3590  within 30 days after receipt, and the number of incomplete
 3591  applications received; data related to reimbursement
 3592  submissions, including the average number of days for a
 3593  reimbursement to be reviewed and the average number of days for
 3594  a reimbursement to be approved; any parent input and feedback
 3595  collected regarding the program; and any other information
 3596  deemed necessary by the Department of Education.
 3597         (e)(j) Provide a process to match the direct certification
 3598  list with the scholarship application data submitted by any
 3599  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization eligible to receive
 3600  the 3-percent administrative allowance under paragraph (6)(i)
 3601  (6)(l).
 3602         (f)(k) Notify each school district of the full-time
 3603  equivalent student consensus estimate of scholarship students
 3604  developed pursuant to s. 216.136(4)(a).
 3605         (10) SCHOOL DISTRICT OBLIGATIONS; PARENTAL OPTIONS.—
 3606         (a) Upon the request of any eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3607  funding organization, a school district shall inform all
 3608  households within the district receiving free or reduced-priced
 3609  meals under the National School Lunch Act of their eligibility
 3610  to apply for a tax credit scholarship. The form of such notice
 3611  shall be provided by the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3612  organization, and the district shall include the provided form,
 3613  if requested by the organization, in any normal correspondence
 3614  with eligible households. If an eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3615  funding organization requests a special communication to be
 3616  issued to households within the district receiving free or
 3617  reduced-price meals under the National School Lunch Act, the
 3618  organization shall reimburse the district for the cost of
 3619  postage. Such notice is limited to once a year.
 3620         (b) Upon the request of the Department of Education, a
 3621  school district shall coordinate with the department to provide
 3622  to a participating private school the statewide assessments
 3623  administered under s. 1008.22 and any related materials for
 3624  administering the assessments. A school district is responsible
 3625  for implementing test administrations at a participating private
 3626  school, including the:
 3627         1. Provision of training for participating private school
 3628  staff on test security and assessment administration procedures;
 3629         2. Distribution of testing materials to a participating
 3630  private school;
 3631         3. Retrieval of testing materials from a participating
 3632  private school;
 3633         4. Provision of the required format for a participating
 3634  private school to submit information to the district for test
 3635  administration and enrollment purposes; and
 3636         5. Provision of any required assistance, monitoring, or
 3637  investigation at a participating private school.
 3638         (9)(11) SCHOLARSHIP AMOUNT AND PAYMENT.—
 3639         (a) The scholarship amount provided to any student for any
 3640  single school year by an eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3641  organization from eligible contributions shall be for total
 3642  costs authorized under paragraph (6)(c) (6)(d), not to exceed
 3643  annual limits, which shall be determined as follows:
 3644         1. For a student who received a scholarship in the 2018
 3645  2019 school year, who remains eligible, and who is enrolled in
 3646  an eligible private school, the amount shall be the greater
 3647  amount calculated pursuant to subparagraph 2. or a percentage of
 3648  the unweighted FTE funding amount for the 2018-2019 state fiscal
 3649  year and thereafter as follows:
 3650         a. Eighty-eight percent for a student enrolled in
 3651  kindergarten through grade 5.
 3652         b. Ninety-two percent for a student enrolled in grade 6
 3653  through grade 8.
 3654         c. Ninety-six percent for a student enrolled in grade 9
 3655  through grade 12.
 3656         2. For students initially eligible in the 2019-2020 school
 3657  year or thereafter, the calculated amount for a student to
 3658  attend an eligible private school shall be calculated in
 3659  accordance with s. 1002.394(12)(a).
 3660         (b) Payment of the scholarship by the eligible nonprofit
 3661  scholarship-funding organization shall be by funds transfer,
 3662  including, but not limited to, debit cards, electronic payment
 3663  cards, or any other means of payment that the department deems
 3664  to be commercially viable or cost-effective. An eligible
 3665  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization shall ensure that the
 3666  parent has approved a funds transfer before any scholarship
 3667  funds are deposited.
 3668         (c) If a scholarship student is attending an eligible
 3669  private school full time, the initial payment shall be made
 3670  after the organization’s verification of admission acceptance,
 3671  and subsequent payments shall be made upon verification of
 3672  continued enrollment and attendance at the eligible private
 3673  school. Payments shall be made within 7 business days after
 3674  approval by the parent pursuant to paragraph (7)(a) and the
 3675  private school pursuant to paragraph (8)(b).
 3676         (d) Payment of the scholarship shall be made by the
 3677  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization no less
 3678  frequently than on a quarterly basis.
 3679         (e) An eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3680  may not transfer any funds to an account of a student determined
 3681  eligible under this section which has a balance in excess of
 3682  $24,000.
 3683         (b)(f) A scholarship awarded to an eligible student shall
 3684  remain in force until:
 3685         1. The organization determines that the student is not
 3686  eligible for program renewal;
 3687         2. The Commissioner of Education suspends or revokes
 3688  program participation or use of funds;
 3689         3. The student’s parent has forfeited participation in the
 3690  program for failure to comply with subsection (7);
 3691         4. The student who uses the scholarship for full-time
 3692  tuition and fees at an eligible private school pursuant to
 3693  paragraph (7)(a) enrolls full time in a public school. However,
 3694  if a student enters a Department of Juvenile Justice detention
 3695  center for a period of no more than 21 days, the student is not
 3696  considered to have returned to a public school on a full-time
 3697  basis for that purpose; or
 3698         5. The student graduates from high school or attains 21
 3699  years of age, whichever occurs first.
 3700         (g) Reimbursements for program expenditures may continue
 3701  until the account balance is expended or remaining funds have
 3702  reverted to the state.
 3703         (c)(h) A student’s scholarship account must be closed and
 3704  any remaining funds shall revert to the state after:
 3705         1. Denial or revocation of program eligibility by the
 3706  commissioner for fraud or abuse, including, but not limited to,
 3707  the student or student’s parent accepting any payment, refund,
 3708  or rebate, in any manner, from a provider of any services
 3709  received pursuant to paragraph (6)(d);
 3710         2. One fiscal year Two consecutive fiscal years in which an
 3711  account has been inactive; or
 3712         3. The student remains unenrolled in an eligible private
 3713  school for 30 days while receiving a scholarship that requires
 3714  full-time enrollment;
 3715         4. A student’s scholarship no longer remains in force due
 3716  to any of the reasons provided in paragraph (b).
 3717  
 3718  An organization must report to the Department of Education the
 3719  total number of scholarship accounts that were closed pursuant
 3720  to this paragraph and the amount of funds by account that
 3721  reverted to the state.
 3722         (d)(i) Moneys received pursuant to this section do not
 3723  constitute taxable income to the qualified student or the parent
 3724  of the qualified student.
 3725         (13)(15) NONPROFIT SCHOLARSHIP-FUNDING ORGANIZATIONS;
 3726  APPLICATION.—In order to participate in the scholarship program
 3727  created under this section, a charitable organization that seeks
 3728  to be a nonprofit scholarship-funding organization must submit
 3729  an application for initial approval or renewal to the Office of
 3730  Independent Education and Parental Choice. Charitable
 3731  organizations may apply at any time to participate in the
 3732  program.
 3733         (e) If the State Board of Education disapproves the renewal
 3734  of a nonprofit scholarship-funding organization, the
 3735  organization must notify the affected eligible students and
 3736  parents of the decision within 15 days after disapproval. An
 3737  eligible student affected by the disapproval of an
 3738  organization’s participation remains eligible under this section
 3739  until the end of the school year in which the organization was
 3740  disapproved. The student must apply and be accepted by another
 3741  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization for the
 3742  upcoming school year. The student shall be given priority in
 3743  accordance with s. 1002.421(2)(d)3. paragraph (6)(g).
 3744         Section 9. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) and paragraph
 3745  (l) of subsection (4) of section 1003.485, Florida Statutes, are
 3746  amended to read:
 3747         1003.485 The New Worlds Reading Initiative.—
 3748         (2) NEW WORLDS READING INITIATIVE; PURPOSE.—The purpose of
 3749  the New Worlds Reading Initiative established under the
 3750  department is to instill a love of reading by providing high
 3751  quality, free books to students in prekindergarten through grade
 3752  5 who are reading below grade level and to improve the literacy
 3753  skills of students in prekindergarten through grade 12. The New
 3754  Worlds Reading Initiative shall consist of:
 3755         (b) The New Worlds Scholarship Program under s. 1002.411.
 3756         (4) ADMINISTRATOR RESPONSIBILITIES.—The administrator
 3757  shall:
 3758         (l) Expend eligible contributions received only for the
 3759  purchase and delivery of books and to implement the requirements
 3760  of this section, as well as for administrative expenses not to
 3761  exceed 2 percent of total eligible contributions.
 3762  Notwithstanding s. 1002.395(6)(i)3. s. 1002.395(6)(l)3., the
 3763  administrator may carry forward up to 25 percent of eligible
 3764  contributions made before January 1 of each state fiscal year
 3765  and 100 percent of eligible contributions made on or after
 3766  January 1 of each state fiscal year to the following state
 3767  fiscal year for purposes authorized by this subsection. Any
 3768  eligible contributions in excess of the allowable carry forward
 3769  not used to provide additional books throughout the year to
 3770  eligible students shall revert to the state treasury.
 3771         Section 10. Paragraph (d) of subsection (5) of section
 3772  1008.25, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3773         1008.25 Public school student progression; student support;
 3774  coordinated screening and progress monitoring; reporting
 3775  requirements.—
 3776         (5) READING DEFICIENCY AND PARENTAL NOTIFICATION.—
 3777         (d) The parent of any student who exhibits a substantial
 3778  deficiency in reading, as described in paragraph (a), must be
 3779  immediately notified in writing of the following:
 3780         1. That his or her child has been identified as having a
 3781  substantial deficiency in reading, including a description and
 3782  explanation, in terms understandable to the parent, of the exact
 3783  nature of the student’s difficulty in learning and lack of
 3784  achievement in reading.
 3785         2. A description of the current services that are provided
 3786  to the child.
 3787         3. A description of the proposed intensive interventions
 3788  and supports that will be provided to the child that are
 3789  designed to remediate the identified area of reading deficiency.
 3790         4. The student progression requirements under paragraph
 3791  (2)(h) and that if the child’s reading deficiency is not
 3792  remediated by the end of grade 3, the child must be retained
 3793  unless he or she is exempt from mandatory retention for good
 3794  cause.
 3795         5. Strategies, including multisensory strategies and
 3796  programming, through a read-at-home plan the parent can use in
 3797  helping his or her child succeed in reading. The read-at-home
 3798  plan must provide access to the resources identified in
 3799  paragraph (e).
 3800         6. That the statewide, standardized English Language Arts
 3801  assessment is not the sole determiner of promotion and that
 3802  additional evaluations, portfolio reviews, and assessments are
 3803  available to the child to assist parents and the school district
 3804  in knowing when a child is reading at or above grade level and
 3805  ready for grade promotion.
 3806         7. The district’s specific criteria and policies for a
 3807  portfolio as provided in subparagraph (7)(b)4. and the evidence
 3808  required for a student to demonstrate mastery of Florida’s
 3809  academic standards for English Language Arts. A school must
 3810  immediately begin collecting evidence for a portfolio when a
 3811  student in grade 3 is identified as being at risk of retention
 3812  or upon the request of the parent, whichever occurs first.
 3813         8. The district’s specific criteria and policies for
 3814  midyear promotion. Midyear promotion means promotion of a
 3815  retained student at any time during the year of retention once
 3816  the student has demonstrated ability to read at grade level.
 3817         9. Information about the student’s eligibility for the New
 3818  Worlds Reading Initiative under s. 1003.485 and the New Worlds
 3819  Scholarship Accounts under s. 1002.411 and information on parent
 3820  training modules and other reading engagement resources
 3821  available through the initiative.
 3822  
 3823  After initial notification, the school shall apprise the parent
 3824  at least monthly of the student’s progress in response to the
 3825  intensive interventions and supports. Such communications must
 3826  be in writing and must explain any additional interventions or
 3827  supports that will be implemented to accelerate the student’s
 3828  progress if the interventions and supports already being
 3829  implemented have not resulted in improvement. Upon the request
 3830  of the parent, the teacher or school administrator shall meet to
 3831  discuss the student’s progress. The parent may request more
 3832  frequent notification of the student’s progress, more frequent
 3833  interventions or supports, and earlier implementation of the
 3834  additional interventions or supports described in the initial
 3835  notification.
 3836         Section 11. Section 1010.305, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3837  to read:
 3838         1010.305 Audit of student enrollment.—
 3839         (1) The Auditor General shall periodically examine the
 3840  records of school districts, eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3841  funding organizations as defined in s. 1002.421, and other
 3842  agencies as appropriate, to determine compliance with law and
 3843  State Board of Education rules relating to the classification,
 3844  assignment, and verification of full-time equivalent student
 3845  enrollment and student transportation reported under the Florida
 3846  Education Finance Program.
 3847         (2) If it is determined that the approved criteria and
 3848  procedures for the placement of students and the conduct of
 3849  programs have not been followed by the district or eligible
 3850  nonprofit scholarship-funding organization, appropriate
 3851  adjustments in the full-time equivalent student count for that
 3852  district or eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization
 3853  must be made, and any excess funds must be deducted from
 3854  subsequent allocations of state funds to that district or
 3855  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization. As provided
 3856  for by rule, if errors in a specific program of a district or
 3857  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization recur in
 3858  consecutive years due to lack of corrective action by the
 3859  district or eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization,
 3860  adjustments may be made based upon statistical estimates of
 3861  error projected to the overall district or scholarship program.
 3862         Section 12. Subsection (5) of section 1011.61, Florida
 3863  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3864         1011.61 Definitions.—Notwithstanding the provisions of s.
 3865  1000.21, the following terms are defined as follows for the
 3866  purposes of the Florida Education Finance Program:
 3867         (5) The “Florida Education Finance Program” includes all
 3868  programs and costs as provided in ss. 1003.03, 1011.62, 1011.68,
 3869  and 1011.685, and 1011.687.
 3870         Section 13. Paragraph (a) of subsection (15) and
 3871  subsections (16) and (18) of section 1011.62, Florida Statutes,
 3872  are amended to read:
 3873         1011.62 Funds for operation of schools.—If the annual
 3874  allocation from the Florida Education Finance Program to each
 3875  district for operation of schools is not determined in the
 3876  annual appropriations act or the substantive bill implementing
 3877  the annual appropriations act, it shall be determined as
 3878  follows:
 3879         (15) TOTAL ALLOCATION OF STATE FUNDS TO EACH DISTRICT FOR
 3880  CURRENT OPERATION.—The total annual state allocation to each
 3881  district for current operation for the Florida Education Finance
 3882  Program shall be distributed periodically in the manner
 3883  prescribed in the General Appropriations Act.
 3884         (a) If the funds appropriated for current operation of the
 3885  Florida Education Finance Program, including funds appropriated
 3886  pursuant to subsection (18), are not sufficient to pay the state
 3887  requirement in full, the department shall prorate the available
 3888  state funds to each district in the following manner:
 3889         1. Determine the percentage of proration by dividing the
 3890  sum of the total amount for current operation, as provided in
 3891  this paragraph for all districts collectively, and the total
 3892  district required local effort into the sum of the state funds
 3893  available for current operation and the total district required
 3894  local effort.
 3895         2. Multiply the percentage so determined by the sum of the
 3896  total amount for current operation as provided in this paragraph
 3897  and the required local effort for each individual district.
 3898         3. From the product of such multiplication, subtract the
 3899  required local effort of each district; and the remainder shall
 3900  be the amount of state funds allocated to the district for
 3901  current operation. However, no calculation subsequent to the
 3902  appropriation shall result in negative state funds for any
 3903  district.
 3904         (16) STATE-FUNDED DISCRETIONARY SUPPLEMENT.—
 3905         (a) The state-funded discretionary supplement is created to
 3906  fund the nonvoted discretionary millage for operations pursuant
 3907  to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) for students awarded a Family
 3908  Empowerment Scholarship in accordance with s. 1002.394. To
 3909  calculate the state-funded discretionary supplement for
 3910  inclusion in the amount of the scholarship funding:
 3911         1. For fiscal year 2023-2024, multiply the maximum
 3912  allowable nonvoted discretionary millage for operations pursuant
 3913  to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) by the value of 96 percent of the
 3914  current year’s taxable value for school purposes for the school
 3915  district where the student is reported for purposes of the
 3916  Florida Education Finance Program as appropriated in the General
 3917  Appropriations Act; divide the result by the school district’s
 3918  total unweighted full-time equivalent membership as appropriated
 3919  in the General Appropriations Act; and multiply the result by
 3920  the total unweighted full-time equivalent membership associated
 3921  with the number of Family Empowerment Scholarship students
 3922  included in the school district’s total unweighted full-time
 3923  equivalent membership. A base amount as specified in the General
 3924  Appropriations Act shall be added to this amount for purposes of
 3925  calculating the total amount of the supplement.
 3926         2. Beginning in fiscal year 2024-2025 and thereafter,
 3927  multiply the maximum allowable nonvoted discretionary millage
 3928  for operations pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) by the value of
 3929  96 percent of the current year’s taxable value for school
 3930  purposes for the school district where the student is reported
 3931  for purposes of the Florida Education Finance Program as
 3932  appropriated in the General Appropriations Act; divide the
 3933  result by the school district’s total unweighted full-time
 3934  equivalent membership as appropriated in the General
 3935  Appropriations Act; and multiply the result by the total
 3936  unweighted full-time equivalent membership associated with the
 3937  number of Family Empowerment Scholarship students. The prior
 3938  year’s base amount shall be adjusted based on changes in the
 3939  eligible number of unweighted full-time equivalent membership
 3940  associated with the number of Family Empowerment Scholarship
 3941  students.
 3942         (b) The state-funded discretionary supplement shall be
 3943  recalculated during the fiscal year pursuant to paragraph
 3944  (1)(a). If the recalculated amount is greater than the amount
 3945  provided in the General Appropriations Act, the allocation shall
 3946  be prorated to the level provided to support the appropriation,
 3947  based on each school district’s proportionate share of the total
 3948  allocation.
 3949         (18) EDUCATIONAL ENROLLMENT STABILIZATION PROGRAM.—
 3950         (a) The educational enrollment stabilization program is
 3951  created to provide supplemental state funds as needed to
 3952  maintain the stability of the operations of public schools in
 3953  each school district and to protect districts, including charter
 3954  schools, from financial instability as a result of changes in
 3955  full-time equivalent student enrollment throughout the school
 3956  year.
 3957         (b) The Legislature shall annually appropriate funds in the
 3958  General Appropriations Act to the Department of Education for
 3959  this program in an amount necessary to maintain a projected
 3960  minimum balance of $250 million at the beginning of the upcoming
 3961  fiscal year. The Department of Education shall use funds as
 3962  appropriated to ensure that based on each recalculation of the
 3963  Florida Education Finance Program pursuant to paragraph (1)(a),
 3964  a school district’s funds per unweighted full-time equivalent
 3965  student are not less than the greater of either the school
 3966  district’s funds per unweighted full-time equivalent student as
 3967  appropriated in the General Appropriations Act or the school
 3968  district’s funds per unweighted full-time equivalent student as
 3969  recalculated based upon the receipt of the certified taxable
 3970  value for school purposes pursuant to s. 1011.62(4).
 3971         (c) Notwithstanding s. 216.301 and pursuant to s. 216.351,
 3972  the unexpended balance of funds appropriated pursuant to this
 3973  subsection which is not disbursed by June 30 of the fiscal year
 3974  in which the funds are appropriated may be carried forward for
 3975  up to 10 years after the effective date of the original
 3976  appropriation.
 3977         Section 14. Paragraph (l) of subsection (2) of section
 3978  11.45, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3979         11.45 Definitions; duties; authorities; reports; rules.—
 3980         (2) DUTIES.—The Auditor General shall:
 3981         (l) At least once every 3 years, conduct operational audits
 3982  of the accounts and records of eligible nonprofit scholarship
 3983  funding organizations receiving eligible contributions under s.
 3984  1002.395, including any contracts for services with related
 3985  entities, to determine compliance with the provisions of that
 3986  section. Such audits shall include, but not be limited to, a
 3987  determination of the eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
 3988  organization’s compliance with s. 1002.395(6)(i) s.
 3989  1002.395(6)(l). The Auditor General shall provide its report on
 3990  the results of the audits to the Governor, the President of the
 3991  Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Chief
 3992  Financial Officer, and the Legislative Auditing Committee,
 3993  within 30 days of completion of the audit.
 3994  
 3995  The Auditor General shall perform his or her duties
 3996  independently but under the general policies established by the
 3997  Legislative Auditing Committee. This subsection does not limit
 3998  the Auditor General’s discretionary authority to conduct other
 3999  audits or engagements of governmental entities as authorized in
 4000  subsection (3).
 4001         Section 15. Paragraph (c) of subsection (7) of section
 4002  212.099, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4003         212.099 Credit for contributions to eligible nonprofit
 4004  scholarship-funding organizations.—
 4005         (7)
 4006         (c) The organization may, subject to the limitations of s.
 4007  1002.395(6)(i)1. s. 1002.395(6)(l)1., use eligible contributions
 4008  received during the state fiscal year in which such
 4009  contributions are collected for administrative expenses.
 4010         Section 16. Paragraph (b) of subsection (6) of section
 4011  1002.45, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4012         1002.45 Virtual instruction programs.—
 4013         (6) VIRTUAL INSTRUCTION PROGRAM AND VIRTUAL CHARTER SCHOOL
 4014  FUNDING.—
 4015         (b) Students enrolled in a virtual instruction program
 4016  shall be funded in the Florida Education Finance Program as
 4017  provided in the General Appropriations Act. The calculation to
 4018  determine the amount of funds for each student through the
 4019  Florida Education Finance Program shall include the sum of the
 4020  basic amount for current operations established in s.
 4021  1011.62(1)(s) and all categorical programs except for the
 4022  categorical programs established in ss. 1011.62(7) and, (12),
 4023  and (16), 1011.68, and 1011.685. Students residing outside of
 4024  the school district reporting the full-time equivalent virtual
 4025  student shall be funded from state funds only.
 4026         Section 17. This act shall take effect July 1, 2025.