CS for CS for SB 182                             First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       2026182e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to education; amending s. 1002.33,
    3         F.S.; providing that students may not be dismissed
    4         from certain charter schools based on academic
    5         performance; amending s. 1002.395, F.S.; adding a
    6         condition for Florida Tax Credit (FTC) scholarship
    7         reimbursements; requiring that certain FTC scholarship
    8         funds revert to the organization; amending s. 1002.42,
    9         F.S.; providing that certain private schools are
   10         considered a permitted use in certain zoning
   11         districts; authorizing certain private schools to
   12         operate in facilities that meet specified
   13         requirements; providing exceptions; requiring certain
   14         private schools operating in such facilities to meet
   15         specified Florida Fire Prevention Code standards;
   16         providing that completion of a specified evaluation
   17         system with certain ratings by specified persons
   18         constitutes evidence of compliance with the Florida
   19         Fire Prevention Code for such private schools;
   20         authorizing the State Fire Marshal to adopt rules;
   21         amending s. 1003.42, F.S.; requiring students in
   22         specified grades to receive instruction in cursive
   23         writing; providing requirements for such instruction;
   24         requiring students to demonstrate proficiency in
   25         cursive writing by the end of a specified grade;
   26         defining the term “proficiency in cursive writing”;
   27         amending s. 1003.44, F.S.; requiring, subject to
   28         legislative appropriation, each district school board
   29         to adopt rules to require the display of portraits of
   30         George Washington and Abraham Lincoln at each public
   31         school in the district; requiring the Department of
   32         Education to select the portraits and make them
   33         available to each school district; creating s.
   34         1012.988, F.S.; establishing the School Teacher
   35         Training and Mentoring Program within the Department
   36         of Education; providing the purpose of the program;
   37         authorizing school districts and charter schools to
   38         place certain classroom teachers as teacher mentors in
   39         specified schools for specified purposes; providing
   40         requirements for teacher mentors and mentees;
   41         authorizing teacher mentors to receive a stipend;
   42         providing the time period for each mentor and mentee
   43         relationship through the program; providing
   44         limitations on the number of mentees teacher mentors
   45         may work with; providing department and teacher mentor
   46         responsibilities; authorizing the State Board of
   47         Education to adopt rules; amending s. 1011.62, F.S.;
   48         authorizing specified funds to be used for the School
   49         Teacher Training and Mentoring Program; providing an
   50         effective date.
   51          
   52  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   53  
   54         Section 1. Paragraph (e) of subsection (10) of section
   55  1002.33, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   56         1002.33 Charter schools.—
   57         (10) ELIGIBLE STUDENTS.—
   58         (e) A charter school may limit the enrollment process only
   59  to target the following student populations:
   60         1. Students within specific age groups or grade levels.
   61         2. Students considered at risk of dropping out of school or
   62  academic failure. Such students shall include exceptional
   63  education students.
   64         3. Students enrolling in a charter school-in-the-workplace
   65  or charter school-in-a-municipality established pursuant to
   66  subsection (15).
   67         4. Students residing within a reasonable distance of the
   68  charter school, as described in paragraph (20)(c). Such students
   69  shall be subject to a random lottery and to the racial/ethnic
   70  balance provisions described in subparagraph (7)(a)8. or any
   71  federal provisions that require a school to achieve a
   72  racial/ethnic balance reflective of the community it serves or
   73  within the racial/ethnic range of other nearby public schools.
   74         5. Students who meet reasonable academic, artistic, or
   75  other eligibility standards established by the charter school
   76  and included in the charter school application and charter or,
   77  in the case of existing charter schools, standards that are
   78  consistent with the school’s mission and purpose. Such standards
   79  shall be in accordance with current state law and practice in
   80  public schools and may not discriminate against otherwise
   81  qualified individuals. A school that limits enrollment for such
   82  purposes must place a student on a progress monitoring plan for
   83  at least one semester before dismissing such student from the
   84  school. A student may not be dismissed based on academic
   85  performance while a school is implementing a school improvement
   86  plan pursuant to paragraph (9)(n) or corrective action plan
   87  pursuant to s. 1002.345.
   88         6. Students articulating from one charter school to another
   89  pursuant to an articulation agreement between the charter
   90  schools that has been approved by the sponsor.
   91         7. Students living in a development, or students whose
   92  parent or legal guardian maintains a physical or permanent
   93  employment presence within the development, in which a
   94  developer, including any affiliated business entity or
   95  charitable foundation, contributes to the formation,
   96  acquisition, construction, or operation of one or more charter
   97  schools or charter school facilities and related property in an
   98  amount equal to or having a total appraised value of at least $5
   99  million to be used as charter schools to mitigate the
  100  educational impact created by the development of new residential
  101  dwelling units. Students living in the development are entitled
  102  to 50 percent of the student stations in the charter schools.
  103  The students who are eligible for enrollment are subject to a
  104  random lottery, the racial/ethnic balance provisions, or any
  105  federal provisions, as described in subparagraph 4. The
  106  remainder of the student stations must be filled in accordance
  107  with subparagraph 4.
  108         8. Students whose parent or legal guardian is employed
  109  within a reasonable distance of the charter school, as described
  110  in paragraph (20)(c). The students who are eligible for
  111  enrollment are subject to a random lottery.
  112         Section 2. Paragraphs (g) and (h) of subsection (11) of
  113  section 1002.395, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  114         1002.395 Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program.—
  115         (11) SCHOLARSHIP AMOUNT AND PAYMENT.—
  116         (g) Reimbursements for program expenditures may continue
  117  until the account balance is expended or the scholarship account
  118  is closed remaining funds have reverted to the state.
  119         (h)1. A student’s scholarship account must be closed and
  120  any remaining funds must shall revert to the organization state
  121  after:
  122         a.1. Denial or revocation of program eligibility by the
  123  commissioner for fraud or abuse, including, but not limited to,
  124  the student or student’s parent accepting any payment, refund,
  125  or rebate, in any manner, from a provider of any services
  126  received pursuant to paragraph (6)(d);
  127         b.2. Two consecutive fiscal years in which an account has
  128  been inactive; or
  129         c.3. The student remains unenrolled in an eligible private
  130  school for 30 days while receiving a scholarship that requires
  131  full-time enrollment.
  132         2. All funds that revert to the organization must be
  133  separately accounted for and used to fund scholarships in the
  134  fiscal year the reversion occurs. Any funds remaining at the end
  135  of the fiscal year may be carried forward to the following
  136  fiscal year and must be fully expended for annual or partial
  137  year scholarships in the following fiscal year.
  138         3. By July 1 of each year, an organization must report to
  139  the Department of Education the total number of scholarship
  140  accounts that were closed during the prior fiscal year and the
  141  amount of funds that reverted to the organization.
  142         Section 3. Subsection (19) of section 1002.42, Florida
  143  Statutes, is amended to read:
  144         1002.42 Private schools.—
  145         (19) FACILITIES AND LAND USE.—
  146         (a) A private school may use facilities on property owned
  147  or leased by a library, community service organization, museum,
  148  performing arts venue, theater, cinema, or church facility under
  149  s. 170.201, which is or was actively used as such within 5 years
  150  of any executed agreement with a private school to use the
  151  facilities; any facility or land owned by a Florida College
  152  System institution or university; any similar public
  153  institutional facilities; and any facility recently used to
  154  house a school or child care facility licensed under s. 402.305,
  155  under any such facility’s preexisting zoning and land use
  156  designations without rezoning or obtaining a special exception
  157  or a land use change, and without complying with any mitigation
  158  requirements or conditions. The facility must be located on
  159  property used solely for purposes described in this paragraph,
  160  and must meet applicable state and local health, safety, and
  161  welfare laws, codes, and rules, including firesafety and
  162  building safety.
  163         (b) A private school may use facilities on property
  164  purchased from a library, community service organization,
  165  museum, performing arts venue, theater, cinema, or church
  166  facility under s. 170.201, which is actively or was actively
  167  used as such within 5 years of any executed agreement with a
  168  private school to purchase the facilities; any facility or land
  169  owned by a Florida College System institution or university; any
  170  similar public institutional facilities; and any facility
  171  recently used to house a school or child care facility licensed
  172  under s. 402.305, under any such facility’s preexisting zoning
  173  and land use designations without obtaining a special exception,
  174  rezoning, or a land use change, and without complying with any
  175  mitigation requirements or conditions. The facility must be
  176  located on property used solely for purposes described in this
  177  paragraph, and must meet applicable state and local health,
  178  safety, and welfare laws, codes, and rules, including firesafety
  179  and building safety.
  180         (c) A private school located in a county with four
  181  incorporated municipalities may construct new facilities, which
  182  may be temporary or permanent, on property purchased from or
  183  owned or leased by a library, community service organization,
  184  museum, performing arts venue, theater, cinema, or church under
  185  s. 170.201, which is or was actively used as such within 5 years
  186  of any executed agreement with a private school; any land owned
  187  by a Florida College System institution or state university; and
  188  any land recently used to house a school or child care facility
  189  licensed under s. 402.305, under its preexisting zoning and land
  190  use designations without rezoning or obtaining a special
  191  exception or a land use change, and without complying with any
  192  mitigation requirements or conditions. Any new facility must be
  193  located on property used solely for purposes described in this
  194  paragraph, and must meet applicable state and local health,
  195  safety, and welfare laws, codes, and rules, including firesafety
  196  and building safety.
  197         (d)A private school enrolling 150 or fewer students, or
  198  located within the unincorporated area of a county as defined in
  199  s. 125.011, shall be considered a permitted use and occupancy in
  200  a commercial or mixed-use zoning district within a county or
  201  municipality without rezoning or obtaining a special exception
  202  or a land use change, and without complying with any mitigation
  203  requirements, conditions, performance standards, ordinances,
  204  rules, codes, or policies, except that a county or municipality
  205  may require proportionate mitigation measures necessary to
  206  mitigate vehicular traffic and pedestrian safety.
  207         1.The vehicular traffic and pedestrian safety mitigation
  208  measures required by a county or municipality pursuant to this
  209  subsection shall be limited to those impacts reasonably and
  210  directly attributable to the operation of the private school at
  211  the site and shall be no greater in cost or scope than what is
  212  required of all other uses, education or otherwise, within the
  213  same zoning district.
  214         2.The private school subject to vehicular traffic and
  215  pedestrian safety mitigation measures may, in lieu of complying
  216  with such mitigation measures, provide a traffic study that
  217  demonstrates the school will not have disproportionate impact on
  218  vehicular traffic or pedestrian safety compared to other
  219  allowable uses within the same zoning district.
  220         (e)Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a private
  221  school enrolling 150 or fewer students may operate in a facility
  222  that is an existing assembly, day care, mercantile, or business
  223  occupancy, as defined in the Florida Fire Prevention Code. A
  224  private school operating in such a facility must meet the
  225  standards for existing educational occupancy requirements under
  226  the Florida Fire Prevention Code, adopted by the State Fire
  227  Marshal. Completion of the fire safety evaluation system for
  228  educational occupancies in the National Fire Protection
  229  Association, Life Safety Code, NFPA 101A: Guide on Alternative
  230  Approaches to Life Safety, adopted by the State Fire Marshal, by
  231  a registered design professional licensed under chapter 471 or
  232  chapter 481, with a determination of achieving at a minimum an
  233  “at least equivalent” conclusion, is considered evidence of
  234  compliance with the Florida Fire Prevention Code. The State Fire
  235  Marshal may adopt rules to implement this paragraph.
  236         Section 4. Paragraph (w) is added to subsection (2) of
  237  section 1003.42, Florida Statutes, to read:
  238         1003.42 Required instruction.—
  239         (2) Members of the instructional staff of the public
  240  schools, subject to the rules of the State Board of Education
  241  and the district school board, shall teach efficiently and
  242  faithfully, using the books and materials required that meet the
  243  highest standards for professionalism and historical accuracy,
  244  following the prescribed courses of study, and employing
  245  approved methods of instruction, the following:
  246         (w)1.For students in grades 3 through 5, the study of
  247  cursive writing and the development of the skills necessary for
  248  legible cursive writing, including:
  249         a.Letter formation.
  250         b.Proper spacing and alignment.
  251         c.Practice in writing complete words and sentences in
  252  cursive.
  253         2.By the end of grade 5, each student must demonstrate
  254  proficiency in cursive writing. For purposes of this
  255  subparagraph, the term “proficiency in cursive writing” means
  256  all of the following:
  257         a.The ability to write uppercase and lowercase letters of
  258  the alphabet in cursive writing.
  259         b.Writing words and sentences in cursive legibly and
  260  maintaining proper spacing and alignment.
  261         c.The ability to read and apply cursive writing in a
  262  manner that supports literacy development, including writing
  263  essays and assignments in cursive writing in accordance with
  264  state academic standards.
  265  
  266  The State Board of Education is encouraged to adopt standards
  267  and pursue assessment of the requirements of this subsection.
  268  Instructional programming that incorporates the values of the
  269  recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor and that is
  270  offered as part of a social studies, English Language Arts, or
  271  other schoolwide character building and veteran awareness
  272  initiative meets the requirements of paragraph (u).
  273         Section 5. Subsection (4) of section 1003.44, Florida
  274  Statutes, is amended to read:
  275         1003.44 Patriotic programs; rules.—
  276         (4) Each district school board shall adopt rules to
  277  require:, in all of the schools of the district and in each
  278  building used by the district school board,
  279         (a) The display of the state motto, “In God We Trust,”
  280  designated under s. 15.0301, in a conspicuous place at each
  281  public school in the district and in each building used by the
  282  district school board.
  283         (b) Subject to legislative appropriation, the display of
  284  portraits of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln in a
  285  conspicuous place at each public school in the district. The
  286  Department of Education shall select the portraits and make them
  287  available to each school district.
  288         Section 6. Section 1012.988, Florida Statutes, is created
  289  to read:
  290         1012.988School Teacher Training and Mentoring Program.—
  291         (1)The School Teacher Training and Mentoring Program is
  292  established within the Department of Education. The purpose of
  293  the program is to increase the effectiveness and involvement of
  294  classroom teachers and improve student achievement, classroom
  295  management, and excellence in the state’s public schools.
  296         (2)(a)School districts and charter schools may place
  297  retired classroom teachers or current classroom teachers in
  298  schools earning a grade of “D” or “F” to act as teacher mentors
  299  to:
  300         1.New classroom teachers;
  301         2.Classroom teachers who are rated as needs improvement,
  302  developing, or unsatisfactory on the prior year’s performance
  303  evaluation under s. 1012.34; or
  304         3.Classroom teachers identified by the school
  305  administrator as struggling with behavior management within the
  306  classroom.
  307         (b)Each teacher mentor selected by the school district,
  308  charter school, or charter management organization must have:
  309         1.At least 3 years of teaching experience in
  310  prekindergarten through grade 12.
  311         2.Earned a highly effective rating on his or her most
  312  recent performance evaluation under s. 1012.34.
  313         (c)Each teacher mentor may receive a stipend of up to
  314  $3,000.
  315         (d)Each mentor and mentee relationship through the program
  316  shall be for one grading period.
  317         (e)1.A retired classroom teacher serving as a teacher
  318  mentor may not have more than five mentees at a time.
  319         2.A classroom teacher serving as a teacher mentor may not
  320  have more than one mentee at a time.
  321         (3)The Department of Education shall establish program
  322  standards and a standard contract template for the teacher
  323  mentor and mentee which outlines the responsibilities of each
  324  person and establishes the framework and goals of the program.
  325         (4)Each teacher mentor must:
  326         (a)Present significant historical events with accuracy and
  327  integrity, grounded in verifiable evidence and scholarly rigor.
  328         (b)If a curriculum is used, use a curriculum that affirms
  329  the principles of fairness and equal opportunity reflected in
  330  the Florida Educational Equity Act and encourages respectful
  331  dialogue across diverse perspectives.
  332         (c)Maintain confidentiality, unless prohibited by law.
  333         (d)Not have a personal agenda other than assisting his or
  334  her mentee in developing and reaching the mentee’s goals.
  335         (e)Help his or her mentee in developing skills and
  336  expertise, including drawing upon the teacher mentor’s own
  337  personal experiences.
  338         (5)The State Board of Education may adopt rules to
  339  administer this section.
  340         Section 7. Paragraph (a) of subsection (7) of section
  341  1011.62, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  342         1011.62 Funds for operation of schools.—If the annual
  343  allocation from the Florida Education Finance Program to each
  344  district for operation of schools is not determined in the
  345  annual appropriations act or the substantive bill implementing
  346  the annual appropriations act, it shall be determined as
  347  follows:
  348         (7) EDUCATIONAL ENRICHMENT ALLOCATION.—
  349         (a) The educational enrichment allocation is created to
  350  assist school districts in providing educational enrichment
  351  activities and services that support and increase the academic
  352  achievement of students in grades kindergarten through 12.
  353  Educational enrichment activities and services may be provided
  354  in a manner and at any time during or beyond the regular 180-day
  355  term identified by the school district as being the most
  356  effective and efficient way to best help the student progress
  357  from grade to grade and graduate from high school. Funds from
  358  the educational enrichment allocation may be used for the School
  359  Teacher Training and Mentoring Program under s. 1012.988 if
  360  funds are available. For fiscal year 2023-2024, the educational
  361  enrichment allocation shall consist of a base amount as
  362  specified in the General Appropriations Act. Beginning in fiscal
  363  year 2024-2025, the educational enrichment allocation shall
  364  consist of the base amount that includes a workload adjustment
  365  based on changes in the unweighted full-time equivalent
  366  membership. Beginning in fiscal year 2025-2026, and each year
  367  thereafter, the statewide average base amount as specified in
  368  the General Appropriations Act shall be used for any new
  369  educational entity funded in the Florida Education Finance
  370  Program.
  371         Section 8. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.