Chapter 0014 - 491R - H Ver of HB2006
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House Engrossed
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State of Arizona
House of Representatives
Forty-ninth Legislature
First Regular Session
2009
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CHAPTER 14
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HOUSE BILL 2006
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AN ACT
AMENDING SECTIONS 15-183 AND 15-342, ARIZONA REVISED STATUTES; RELATING TO SCHOOL
DISTRICTS.
(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:
Section 1. Section 15-183, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:
15-183. Charter schools; application;
requirements; immunity; exemptions; renewal of application;
reprisal
A. An applicant seeking to establish a charter school shall submit a written
application to a proposed sponsor as prescribed in subsection C of this section. The
application shall include a detailed business plan for the charter school and may include
a mission statement for the charter school, a description of the charter school's
organizational structure and the governing body, a financial plan for the first three
years of operation of the charter school, a description of the charter school's hiring
policy, the name of the charter school's applicant or applicants and requested sponsor, a
description of the charter school's facility and the location of the school, a
description of the grades being served and an outline of criteria designed to measure the
effectiveness of the school.
B. The sponsor of a charter school may contract with a public body, private person
or private organization for the purpose of establishing a charter school pursuant to this
article.
C. The sponsor of a charter school may be either a school district governing board,
the state board of education or the state board for charter schools, subject to the
following requirements:
1. For charter schools that submit an application for sponsorship to a school
district governing board:
(a) An applicant for a charter school may submit its application to a school
district governing board, which shall either accept or reject sponsorship of the charter
school within ninety days. An applicant may submit a revised application for
reconsideration by the governing board. If the governing board rejects the application,
the governing board shall notify the applicant in writing of the reasons for the
rejection. The applicant may request, and the governing board may provide, technical
assistance to improve the application.
(b) In the first year that a school district is determined to be out of compliance
with the uniform system of financial records, within fifteen days of the determination of
noncompliance, the school district shall notify by certified mail each charter school
sponsored by the school district that the school district is out of compliance with the
uniform system of financial records. The notification shall include a statement that if
the school district is determined to be out of compliance for a second consecutive year,
the charter school will be required to transfer sponsorship to another entity pursuant to
subdivision (c) of this paragraph.
(c) In the second consecutive year that a school district is determined to be out
of compliance with the uniform system of financial records, within fifteen days of the
determination of noncompliance, the school district shall notify by certified mail each
charter school sponsored by the school district that the school district is out of
compliance with the uniform system of financial records. A charter school that receives a
notification of school district noncompliance pursuant to this subdivision shall file a
written sponsorship transfer application within forty-five days with the state board of
education, the state board for charter schools or the school district governing board if
the charter school is located within the geographic boundaries of that school district.
A charter school that receives a notification of school district noncompliance may
request an extension of time to file a sponsorship transfer application and the state
board of education, the state board for charter schools or a school district governing
board may grant an extension of not more than an additional thirty days if good cause
exists for the extension. The state board of education and the state board for charter
schools shall approve a sponsorship transfer application pursuant to this paragraph.
(d) Beginning July 1, 2000, a school district governing board shall not grant a
charter to a charter school that is located outside the geographic boundaries of that
school district.
(e) A school district that has been determined to be out of compliance with the
uniform system of financial records during either of the previous two fiscal years shall
not sponsor a new or transferring charter school.
2. The applicant may submit the application to the state board of education or the
state board for charter schools. The state board of education or the state board for
charter schools may approve the application if the application meets the requirements of
this article and may approve the charter if the proposed sponsor determines, within its
sole discretion, that the applicant is sufficiently qualified to operate a charter
school. The state board of education or the state board for charter schools may approve
any charter schools transferring charters. The state board of education and the state
board for charter schools shall approve any charter schools transferring charters from a
school district that is determined to be out of compliance with the uniform system of
financial records pursuant to this section, but may require the charter school to sign a
new charter that is equivalent to the charter awarded by the former sponsor. If the state
board of education or the state board for charter schools rejects the preliminary
application, the state board of education or the state board for charter schools shall
notify the applicant in writing of the reasons for the rejection and of suggestions for
improving the application. An applicant may submit a revised application for
reconsideration by the state board of education or the state board for charter schools.
The applicant may request, and the state board of education or the state board for
charter schools may provide, technical assistance to improve the application.
3. Each applicant seeking to establish a charter school shall submit a full set of
fingerprints to the approving agency for the purpose of obtaining a state and federal
criminal records check pursuant to section 41-1750 and Public Law 92-544. If an applicant
will have direct contact with students, the applicant shall possess a valid fingerprint
clearance card that is issued pursuant to title 41, chapter 12, article 3.1. The
department of public safety may exchange this fingerprint data with the federal bureau of
investigation. The criminal records check shall be completed before the issuance of a
charter.
4. All persons engaged in instructional work directly as a classroom, laboratory or
other teacher or indirectly as a supervisory teacher, speech therapist or principal shall
have a valid fingerprint clearance card that is issued pursuant to title 41, chapter 12,
article 3.1, unless the person is a volunteer or guest speaker who is accompanied in the
classroom by a person with a valid fingerprint clearance card. A charter school shall not
employ a teacher whose certificate has been revoked for a violation of section 15-507 or
15-550 or for any offense that placed a pupil in danger. All other personnel shall be
fingerprint checked pursuant to section 15-512. Before employment, the charter school
shall make documented, good faith efforts to contact previous employers of a person to
obtain information and recommendations that may be relevant to a person's fitness for
employment as prescribed in section 15-512, subsection F. The charter school shall notify
the department of public safety if the charter school or sponsor receives credible
evidence that a person who possesses a valid fingerprint clearance card is arrested for
or is charged with an offense listed in section 41-1758.03, subsection B. Charter schools
may hire personnel that have not yet received a fingerprint clearance card if proof is
provided of the submission of an application to the department of public safety for a
fingerprint clearance card and if the charter school that is seeking to hire the
applicant does all of the following:
(a) Documents in the applicant's file the necessity for hiring and placement of the
applicant before receiving a fingerprint clearance card.
(b) Ensures that the department of public safety completes a statewide criminal
records check on the applicant. A statewide criminal records check shall be completed by
the department of public safety every one hundred twenty days until the date that the
fingerprint check is completed.
(c) Obtains references from the applicant's current employer and the two most
recent previous employers except for applicants who have been employed for at least five
years by the applicant's most recent employer.
(d) Provides general supervision of the applicant until the date that the
fingerprint card is obtained.
(e) Completes a search of criminal records in all local jurisdictions outside of
this state in which the applicant has lived in the previous five years.
(f) Verifies the fingerprint status of the applicant with the department of public
safety.
5. If a charter school operator is not already subject to a public meeting or
hearing by the municipality in which the charter school is located, the operator of a
charter school shall conduct a public meeting at least thirty days before the charter
school operator opens a site or sites for the charter school. The charter school operator
shall post notices of the public meeting in at least three different locations that are
within three hundred feet of the proposed charter school site.
6. A person who is employed by a charter school or who is an applicant for
employment with a charter school, who is arrested for or charged with a nonappealable
offense listed in section 41-1758.03, subsection B and who does not immediately report
the arrest or charge to the person's supervisor or potential employer is guilty of
unprofessional conduct and the person shall be immediately dismissed from employment with
the charter school or immediately excluded from potential employment with the charter
school.
7. A person who is employed by a charter school and who is convicted of any
nonappealable offense listed in section 41-1758.03, subsection B or is convicted of any
nonappealable offense that amounts to unprofessional conduct under section 15-550 shall
immediately do all of the following:
(a) Surrender any certificates issued by the department of education.
(b) Notify the person's employer or potential employer of the conviction.
(c) Notify the department of public safety of the conviction.
(d) Surrender the person's fingerprint clearance card.
D. A board that is authorized to sponsor charter schools pursuant to this article
has no legal authority over or responsibility for a charter school sponsored by a
different board. This subsection does not apply to the state board of education's duty to
exercise general supervision over the public school system pursuant to section 15-203,
subsection A, paragraph 1.
E. The charter of a charter school shall ensure the following:
1. Compliance with federal, state and local rules, regulations and statutes
relating to health, safety, civil rights and insurance. The department of education shall
publish a list of relevant rules, regulations and statutes to notify charter schools of
their responsibilities under this paragraph.
2. That it is nonsectarian in its programs, admission policies and employment
practices and all other operations.
3. That it provides a comprehensive program of instruction for at least a
kindergarten program or any grade between grades one and twelve, except that a school may
offer this curriculum with an emphasis on a specific learning philosophy or style or
certain subject areas such as mathematics, science, fine arts, performance arts or
foreign language.
4. That it designs a method to measure pupil progress toward the pupil outcomes
adopted by the state board of education pursuant to section 15-741.01, including
participation in the Arizona instrument to measure standards test and the nationally
standardized norm-referenced achievement test as designated by the state board and the
completion and distribution of an annual report card as prescribed in chapter 7, article
3 of this title.
5. That, except as provided in this article and in its charter, it is exempt from
all statutes and rules relating to schools, governing boards and school districts.
6. That, except as provided in this article, it is subject to the same financial
and electronic data submission requirements as a school district, including the uniform
system of financial records as prescribed in chapter 2, article 4 of this title,
procurement rules as prescribed in section 15-213 and audit requirements. The auditor
general shall conduct a comprehensive review and revision of the uniform system of
financial records to ensure that the provisions of the uniform system of financial
records that relate to charter schools are in accordance with commonly accepted
accounting principles used by private business. A school's charter may include
exceptions to the requirements of this paragraph that are necessary as determined by the
district governing board, the state board of education or the state board for charter
schools. The department of education or the office of the auditor general may conduct
financial, program or compliance audits.
7. Compliance with all federal and state laws relating to the education of children
with disabilities in the same manner as a school district.
8. That it provides for a governing body for the charter school that is responsible
for the policy decisions of the charter school.
9. That it provides a minimum of one hundred seventy-five instructional days before
June 30 of each fiscal year unless it is operating on an alternative calendar approved by
its sponsor. The superintendent of public instruction shall adjust the apportionment
schedule accordingly to accommodate a charter school utilizing an alternative calendar.
F. The charter of a charter school shall include a description of the charter
school's personnel policies, personnel qualifications and method of school governance and
the specific role and duties of the sponsor of the charter school. A charter school shall
keep on file the resumes of all current and former employees who provide instruction to
pupils at the charter school. Resumes shall include an individual's educational and
teaching background and experience in a particular academic content subject area. A
charter school shall inform parents and guardians of the availability of the resume
information and shall make the resume information available for inspection on request of
parents and guardians of pupils enrolled at the charter school. Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to require any charter school to release personally
identifiable information in relation to any teacher or employee including the teacher's
or employee's address, salary, social security number or telephone number.
G. The charter of a charter school may be amended at the request of the governing
body of the charter school and on the approval of the sponsor.
H. Charter schools may contract, sue and be sued.
I. An approved plan to establish a charter school is effective for fifteen years
from the first day of operation. At least eighteen months before the expiration of the
approved plan, the sponsor shall notify the charter school that the charter school may
apply for renewal. A charter school that elects to apply for renewal shall file an
application for renewal at least fifteen months before the expiration of the approved
plan. In addition to any other requirements, the application for renewal shall include a
detailed business plan for the charter school. The sponsor may deny the request for
renewal if, in its judgment, the charter school has failed to complete the obligations of
the contract or has failed to comply with this article. A sponsor shall give written
notice of its intent not to renew the charter school's request for renewal to the charter
school at least twelve months before the expiration of the approved plan to allow the
charter school an opportunity to apply to another sponsor to transfer the operation of
the charter school. If the operation of the charter school is transferred to another
sponsor, the fifteen year period of the current charter shall be maintained. A sponsor
shall review a charter at five year intervals and may revoke a charter at any time if the
charter school breaches one or more provisions of its charter. At least ninety days
before the effective date of the proposed revocation the sponsor shall give written
notice to the operator of the charter school of its intent to revoke the charter. Notice
of the sponsor's intent to revoke the charter shall be delivered personally to the
operator of the charter school or sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to
the address of the charter school. The notice shall incorporate a statement of reasons
for the proposed revocation of the charter. The sponsor shall allow the charter school at
least ninety days to correct the problems associated with the reasons for the proposed
revocation of the charter. The final determination of whether to revoke the charter shall
be made at a public hearing called for such purpose.
J. After renewal of the charter at the end of the fifteen year period described in
subsection I of this section, the charter may be renewed for successive periods of
fifteen years if the charter school and its sponsor deem that the school is in compliance
with its own charter and this article.
K. A charter school that is sponsored by the state board of education or the state
board for charter schools may not be located on the property of a school district unless
the district governing board grants this authority.
L. A governing board or a school district employee who has control over personnel
actions shall not take unlawful reprisal against another employee of the school district
because the employee is directly or indirectly involved in an application to establish a
charter school. A governing board or a school district employee shall not take unlawful
reprisal against an educational program of the school or the school district because an
application to establish a charter school proposes the conversion of all or a portion of
the educational program to a charter school. For the purposes of this subsection,
"unlawful reprisal" means an action that is taken by a governing board or a school
district employee as a direct result of a lawful application to establish a charter
school and that is adverse to another employee or an education program and:
1. With respect to a school district employee, results in one or more of the
following:
(a) Disciplinary or corrective action.
(b) Detail, transfer or reassignment.
(c) Suspension, demotion or dismissal.
(d) An unfavorable performance evaluation.
(e) A reduction in pay, benefits or awards.
(f) Elimination of the employee's position without a reduction in force by reason
of lack of monies or work.
(g) Other significant changes in duties or responsibilities that are inconsistent
with the employee's salary or employment classification.
2. With respect to an educational program, results in one or more of the following:
(a) Suspension or termination of the program.
(b) Transfer or reassignment of the program to a less favorable department.
(c) Relocation of the program to a less favorable site within the school or school
district.
(d) Significant reduction or termination of funding for the program.
M. Charter schools shall secure insurance for liability and property loss. The
governing body of a charter school that is sponsored by the state board of education or
the state board for charter schools may enter into an intergovernmental agreement or
otherwise contract to participate in an insurance program offered by a risk retention
pool established pursuant to section 11-952.01 or 41-621.01 or the charter school may
secure its own insurance coverage. The pool may charge the requesting charter school
reasonable fees for any services it performs in connection with the insurance program.
N. Charter schools do not have the authority to acquire property by eminent domain.
O. A sponsor, including members, officers and employees of the sponsor, is immune
from personal liability for all acts done and actions taken in good faith within the
scope of its authority.
P. Charter school sponsors and this state are not liable for the debts or financial
obligations of a charter school or persons who operate charter schools.
Q. The sponsor of a charter school shall establish procedures to conduct
administrative hearings on determination by the sponsor that grounds exist to revoke a
charter. Procedures for administrative hearings shall be similar to procedures prescribed
for adjudicative proceedings in title 41, chapter 6, article 10. Except as provided in
section 41-1092.08, subsection H, final decisions of the state board of education and the
state board for charter schools from hearings conducted pursuant to this subsection are
subject to judicial review pursuant to title 12, chapter 7, article 6.
R. The sponsoring entity of a charter school shall have oversight and
administrative responsibility for the charter schools that it sponsors.
S. Charter schools may pledge, assign or encumber their assets to be used as
collateral for loans or extensions of credit.
T. All property accumulated by a charter school shall remain the property of the
charter school.
U. Charter schools may not locate a school on property that is less than one-fourth
mile from agricultural land regulated pursuant to section 3-365, except that the owner of
the agricultural land may agree to comply with the buffer zone requirements of section
3-365. If the owner agrees in writing to comply with the buffer zone requirements and
records the agreement in the office of the county recorder as a restrictive covenant
running with the title to the land, the charter school may locate a school within the
affected buffer zone. The agreement may include any stipulations regarding the charter
school, including conditions for future expansion of the school and changes in the
operational status of the school that will result in a breach of the agreement.
V. A transfer of a charter to another sponsor, a transfer of a charter school site
to another sponsor or a transfer of a charter school site to a different charter shall be
completed before the beginning of the fiscal year that the transfer is scheduled to
become effective. An entity that sponsors charter schools may accept a transferring
school after the beginning of the fiscal year if the transfer is approved by the
superintendent of public instruction. The superintendent of public instruction shall
have the discretion to consider each transfer during the fiscal year on a case by case
basis. If a charter school is sponsored by a school district that is determined to be
out of compliance with this title, the uniform system of financial records or any other
state or federal law, the charter school may transfer to another sponsoring entity at any
time during the fiscal year.
W. The sponsoring entity may not charge any fees to a charter school that it
sponsors unless the sponsor has provided services to the charter school and the fees
represent the full value of those services provided by the sponsor. On request, the value
of the services provided by the sponsor to the charter school shall be demonstrated to
the department of education.
X. CHARTER SCHOOLS MAY ENTER INTO AN INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENT WITH A
PRESIDING JUDGE OF THE JUVENILE COURT TO IMPLEMENT A LAW RELATED EDUCATION PROGRAM AS
DEFINED IN SECTION 15-154. THE PRESIDING JUDGE OF THE JUVENILE COURT MAY ASSIGN JUVENILE
PROBATION OFFICERS TO PARTICIPATE IN A LAW RELATED EDUCATION PROGRAM IN ANY CHARTER
SCHOOL IN THE COUNTY. THE COST OF JUVENILE PROBATION OFFICERS WHO PARTICIPATE IN THE
PROGRAM IMPLEMENTED PURSUANT TO THIS PARAGRAPH SHALL BE FUNDED BY THE CHARTER SCHOOL.
Sec. 2. Section 15-342, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:
15-342. Discretionary powers
The governing board may:
1. Expel pupils for misconduct.
2. Exclude from grades one through eight children under six years of age.
3. Make such separation of groups of pupils as it deems advisable.
4. Maintain such special schools during vacation as deemed necessary for the
benefit of the pupils of the school district.
5. Permit a superintendent or principal or representatives of the superintendent or
principal to travel for a school purpose, as determined by a majority vote of the
board. The board may permit members and members-elect of the board to travel within or
without the school district for a school purpose and receive reimbursement. Any
expenditure for travel and subsistence pursuant to this paragraph shall be as provided in
title 38, chapter 4, article 2. The designated post of duty referred to in section 38-621
shall be construed, for school district governing board members, to be the member's
actual place of residence, as opposed to the school district office or the school
district boundaries. Such expenditures shall be a charge against the budgeted school
district funds. The governing board of a school district shall prescribe procedures and
amounts for reimbursement of lodging and subsistence expenses. Reimbursement amounts
shall not exceed the maximum amounts established pursuant to section 38-624, subsection
C.
6. Construct or provide in rural districts housing facilities for teachers and
other school employees which the board determines are necessary for the operation of the
school.
7. Sell or lease to the state, a county, a city or a tribal government agency,
any school property required for a public purpose, provided the sale or lease of the
property will not affect the normal operations of a school within the school district.
8. Annually budget and expend funds for membership in an association of school
districts within this state.
9. Enter into leases or lease-purchase agreements for school buildings or grounds,
or both, as lessor or as lessee, for periods of less than five years subject to voter
approval for construction of school buildings as prescribed in section 15-341, subsection
A, paragraph 8.
10. Subject to chapter 16 of this title, sell school sites or enter into leases or
lease-purchase agreements for school buildings and grounds, as lessor or as lessee, for a
period of five years or more, but not to exceed ninety-nine years, if authorized by a
vote of the school district electors in an election called by the governing board as
provided in section 15-491, except that authorization by the school district electors in
an election is not required if one of the following requirements is met:
(a) The market value of the school property is less than fifty thousand dollars.
(b) The buildings and sites are completely funded with monies distributed by the
school facilities board.
(c) The transaction involves the sale of improved or unimproved property pursuant
to an agreement with the school facilities board in which the school district agrees to
sell the improved or unimproved property and transfer the proceeds of the sale to the
school facilities board in exchange for monies from the school facilities board for the
acquisition of a more suitable school site. For a sale of property acquired by a school
district prior to July 9, 1998, a school district shall transfer to the school facilities
board that portion of the proceeds that equals the cost of the acquisition of a more
suitable school site. If there are any remaining proceeds after the transfer of monies to
the school facilities board, a school district shall only use those remaining proceeds
for future land purchases approved by the school facilities board, or for capital
improvements not funded by the school facilities board for any existing or future
facility.
(d) The transaction involves the sale of improved or unimproved property pursuant
to a formally adopted plan and the school district uses the proceeds of this sale to
purchase other property that will be used for similar purposes as the property that was
originally sold, provided that the sale proceeds of the improved or unimproved property
are used within two years after the date of the original sale to purchase the replacement
property. If the sale proceeds of the improved or unimproved property are not used within
two years after the date of the original sale to purchase replacement property, the sale
proceeds shall be used towards payment of any outstanding bonded indebtedness. If any
sale proceeds remain after paying for outstanding bonded indebtedness, or if the district
has no outstanding bonded indebtedness, sale proceeds shall be used to reduce the
district's primary tax levy. A school district shall not use the provisions of this
subdivision unless all of the following conditions exist:
(i) The school district is the sole owner of the improved or unimproved property
that the school district intends to sell.
(ii) The school district did not purchase the improved or unimproved property that
the school district intends to sell with monies that were distributed pursuant to chapter
16 of this title.
(iii) The transaction does not violate section 15-341, subsection G.
11. Review the decision of a teacher to promote a pupil to a grade or retain a pupil
in a grade in a common school or to pass or fail a pupil in a course in high school. The
pupil has the burden of proof to overturn the decision of a teacher to promote, retain,
pass or fail the pupil. In order to sustain the burden of proof, the pupil shall
demonstrate to the governing board that the pupil has mastered the academic standards
adopted by the state board of education pursuant to sections 15-701 and 15-701.01. If the
governing board overturns the decision of a teacher pursuant to this paragraph, the
governing board shall adopt a written finding that the pupil has mastered the academic
standards. Notwithstanding title 38, chapter 3, article 3.1, the governing board shall
review the decision of a teacher to promote a pupil to a grade or retain a pupil in a
grade in a common school or to pass or fail a pupil in a course in high school in
executive session unless a parent or legal guardian of the pupil or the pupil, if
emancipated, disagrees that the review should be conducted in executive session and then
the review shall be conducted in an open meeting. If the review is conducted in executive
session, the board shall notify the teacher of the date, time and place of the review and
shall allow the teacher to be present at the review. If the teacher is not present at the
review, the board shall consult with the teacher before making its decision. Any request,
including the written request as provided in section 15-341, the written evidence
presented at the review and the written record of the review, including the decision of
the governing board to accept or reject the teacher's decision, shall be retained by the
governing board as part of its permanent records.
12. Provide transportation or site transportation loading and unloading areas for
any child or children if deemed for the best interest of the district, whether within or
without the district, county or state.
13. Enter into intergovernmental agreements and contracts with school districts or
other governing bodies as provided in section 11-952.
14. Include in the curricula which it prescribes for high schools in the school
district career and technical education, vocational education and technology education
programs and career and technical, vocational and technology program improvement services
for the high schools, subject to approval by the state board of education. The governing
board may contract for the provision of career and technical, vocational and technology
education as provided in section 15-789.
15. Suspend a teacher or administrator from the teacher's or administrator's duties
without pay for a period of time of not to exceed ten school days, if the board
determines that suspension is warranted pursuant to section 15-341, subsection A,
paragraphs 23 and 24.
16. Dedicate school property within an incorporated city or town to such city or
town or within a county to that county for use as a public right-of-way if both of the
following apply:
(a) Pursuant to an ordinance adopted by such city, town or county, there will be
conferred upon the school district privileges and benefits which may include benefits
related to zoning.
(b) The dedication will not affect the normal operation of any school within the
district.
17. Enter into option agreements for the purchase of school sites.
18. Donate surplus or outdated learning materials to nonprofit community
organizations where the governing board determines that the anticipated cost of selling
the learning materials equals or exceeds the estimated market value of the materials.
19. Prescribe policies for the assessment of reasonable fees for students to use
district-provided parking facilities. The fees are to be applied by the district solely
against costs incurred in operating or securing the parking facilities. Any policy
adopted by the governing board pursuant to this paragraph shall include a fee waiver
provision in appropriate cases of need or economic hardship.
20. Establish alternative educational programs that are consistent with the laws of
this state to educate pupils, including pupils who have been reassigned pursuant to
section 15-841, subsection E or F.
21. Require a period of silence to be observed at the commencement of the first
class of the day in the schools. If a governing board chooses to require a period of
silence to be observed, the teacher in charge of the room in which the first class is
held shall announce that a period of silence not to exceed one minute in duration will be
observed for meditation, and during that time no activities shall take place and silence
shall be maintained.
22. Require students to wear uniforms.
23. Exchange unimproved property or improved property, including school sites, where
the governing board determines that the improved property is unnecessary for the
continued operation of the school district without requesting authorization by a vote of
the school district electors if the governing board determines that the exchange is
necessary to protect the health, safety or welfare of pupils or when the governing board
determines that the exchange is based on sound business principles for either:
(a) Unimproved or improved property of equal or greater value.
(b) Unimproved property that the owner contracts to improve if the value of the
property ultimately received by the school district is of equal or greater value.
24. For common and high school pupils, assess reasonable fees for optional
extracurricular activities and programs conducted when the common or high school is not
in session, except that no fees shall be charged for pupils' access to or use of
computers or related materials. For high school pupils, the governing board may assess
reasonable fees for fine arts and vocational education courses and for optional services,
equipment and materials offered to the pupils beyond those required to successfully
complete the basic requirements of any other course, except that no fees shall be charged
for pupils' access to or use of computers or related materials. Fees assessed pursuant to
this paragraph shall be adopted at a public meeting after notice has been given to all
parents of pupils enrolled at schools in the district and shall not exceed the actual
costs of the activities, programs, services, equipment or materials. The governing board
shall authorize principals to waive the assessment of all or part of a fee assessed
pursuant to this paragraph if it creates an economic hardship for a pupil. For the
purposes of this paragraph, "extracurricular activity" means any optional, noncredit,
educational or recreational activity which supplements the education program of the
school, whether offered before, during or after regular school hours.
25. Notwithstanding section 15-341, subsection A, paragraphs 8 and 10, construct
school buildings and purchase or lease school sites, without a vote of the school
district electors, if the buildings and sites are totally funded from one or more of the
following:
(a) Monies in the unrestricted capital outlay fund, except that the estimated cost
shall not exceed two hundred fifty thousand dollars for a district that utilizes the
provisions of section 15-949.
(b) Monies distributed from the school facilities board established by section
15-2001.
(c) Monies specifically donated for the purpose of constructing school buildings.
Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to eliminate the requirement for an election
to raise revenues for a capital outlay override pursuant to section 15-481 or a bond
election pursuant to section 15-491.
26. Conduct a background investigation that includes a fingerprint check conducted
pursuant to section 41-1750, subsection G for certificated personnel and personnel who
are not paid employees of the school district, as a condition of employment. A school
district may release the results of a background check to another school district for
employment purposes. The school district may charge the costs of fingerprint checks to
its fingerprinted employee, except that the school district may not charge the costs of
fingerprint checks for personnel who are not paid employees of the school district.
27. Sell advertising space on the exterior of school buses as follows:
(a) Advertisements shall be age appropriate and not contain promotion of any
substance that is illegal for minors such as alcohol, tobacco and drugs or gambling.
Advertisements shall comply with the state sex education policy of abstinence.
(b) Advertising approved by the governing board may appear only on the sides of the
bus in the following areas:
(i) The signs shall be below the seat level rub rail and not extend above the
bottom of the side windows.
(ii) The signs shall be at least three inches from any required lettering, lamp,
wheel well or reflector behind the service door or stop signal arm.
(iii) The signs shall not extend from the body of the bus so as to allow a handhold
or present a danger to pedestrians.
(iv) The signs shall not interfere with the operation of any door or window.
(v) The signs shall not be placed on any emergency doors.
(c) Establish a school bus advertisement fund that is comprised of revenues from
the sale of advertising space on school buses. The monies in a school bus advertisement
fund are not subject to reversion and shall be used for the following purposes:
(i) To comply with the energy conservation measures prescribed in section 15-349 in
school districts that are in area A as defined in section 49-541, and any remaining
monies shall be used to purchase alternative fuel support vehicles and any other pupil
related costs as determined by the governing board.
(ii) For any pupil related costs as determined by the governing board in school
districts not subject to the provisions of item (i) of this subdivision.
28. Assess reasonable damage deposits to pupils in grades seven through twelve for
the use of textbooks, musical instruments, band uniforms or other equipment required for
academic courses. The governing board shall adopt policies on any damage deposits
assessed pursuant to this paragraph at a public meeting called for this purpose after
providing notice to all parents of pupils in grades seven through twelve in the school
district. Principals of individual schools within the district may waive the damage
deposit requirement for any textbook or other item if the payment of the damage deposit
would create an economic hardship for the pupil. The school district shall return the
full amount of the damage deposit for any textbook or other item if the pupil returns the
textbook or other item in reasonably good condition within the time period prescribed by
the governing board. For the purposes of this paragraph, "in reasonably good condition"
means the textbook or other item is in the same or a similar condition as it was when the
pupil received it, plus ordinary wear and tear.
29. Notwithstanding section 15-1105, expend surplus monies in the civic center
school fund for maintenance and operations or unrestricted capital outlay, if sufficient
monies are available in the fund after meeting the needs of programs established pursuant
to section 15-1105.
30. Notwithstanding section 15-1143, expend surplus monies in the community school
program fund for maintenance and operations or unrestricted capital outlay, if sufficient
monies are available in the fund after meeting the needs of programs established pursuant
to section 15-1142.
31. Adopt guidelines for standardization of the format of the school report cards
required by section 15-746 for schools within the district.
32. Adopt policies that require parental notification when a law enforcement officer
interviews a pupil on school grounds. Policies adopted pursuant to this paragraph shall
not impede a peace officer from the performance of the peace officer's duties. If the
school district governing board adopts a policy that requires parental notification:
(a) The policy may provide reasonable exceptions to the parental notification
requirement.
(b) The policy shall set forth whether and under what circumstances a parent may be
present when a law enforcement officer interviews the pupil, including reasonable
exceptions to the circumstances under which a parent may be present when a law
enforcement officer interviews the pupil, and shall specify a reasonable maximum time
after a parent is notified that an interview of a pupil by a law enforcement officer may
be delayed to allow the parent to be present.
33. Enter into voluntary partnerships with any party to finance with funds other
than school district funds and cooperatively design school facilities that comply with
the adequacy standards prescribed in section 15-2011 and the square footage per pupil
requirements pursuant to section 15-2041, subsection D, paragraph 3, subdivision (b).
The design plans and location of any such school facility shall be submitted to the
school facilities board for approval pursuant to section 15-2041, subsection 0. If the
school facilities board approves the design plans and location of any such school
facility, the party in partnership with the school district may cause to be constructed
and the district may begin operating the school facility before monies are distributed
from the school facilities board pursuant to section 15-2041. Monies distributed from
the new school facilities fund to a school district in a partnership with another party
to finance and design the school facility shall be paid to the school district pursuant
to section 15-2041. The school district shall reimburse the party in partnership with the
school district from the monies paid to the school district pursuant to section 15-2041,
in accordance with the voluntary partnership agreement. Before the school facilities
board distributes any monies pursuant to this subsection, the school district shall
demonstrate to the school facilities board that the facilities to be funded pursuant to
section 15-2041, subsection O meet the minimum adequacy standards prescribed in section
15-2011. If the cost to construct the school facility exceeds the amount that the school
district receives from the new school facilities fund, the partnership agreement between
the school district and the other party shall specify that, except as otherwise provided
by the other party, any such excess costs shall be the responsibility of the school
district. The school district governing board shall adopt a resolution in a public
meeting that AN analysis has been conducted on the prospective effects of the
decision to operate a new school with existing monies from the school district's
maintenance and operations budget and how this decision may affect other schools in the
school district. If a school district acquires land by donation at an appropriate school
site approved by the school facilities board and a school facility is financed and built
on the land pursuant to this paragraph, the school facilities board shall distribute an
amount equal to twenty per cent of the fair market value of the land that can be used for
academic purposes. The school district shall place the monies in the unrestricted
capital outlay fund and increase the unrestricted capital budget limit by the amount of
the monies placed in the fund. Monies distributed under this paragraph shall be
distributed from the new school facilities fund pursuant to section 15-2041. If a school
district acquires land by donation at an appropriate school site approved by the school
facilities board and a school facility is financed and built on the land pursuant to this
paragraph, the school district shall not receive monies from the school facilities board
for the donation of real property pursuant to section 15-2041, subsection F. It is
unlawful for:
(a) A county, city or town to require as a condition of any land use approval that
a landowner or landowners that entered into a partnership pursuant to this paragraph
provide any contribution, donation or gift, other than a site donation, to a school
district. This subdivision only applies to the property in the voluntary partnership
agreement pursuant to this paragraph.
(b) A county, city or town to require as a condition of any land use approval that
the landowner or landowners located within the geographic boundaries of the school
subject to the voluntary partnership pursuant to this paragraph provide any donation or
gift to the school district except as provided in the voluntary partnership agreement
pursuant to this paragraph.
(c) A community facilities district established pursuant to title 48, chapter 4,
article 6 to be used for reimbursement of financing the construction of a school pursuant
to this paragraph.
(d) For A school district to enter into an agreement pursuant to this paragraph
with any party other than a master planned community party. Any land area consisting of
at least three hundred twenty acres that is the subject of a development agreement with a
county, city or town entered into pursuant to section 9-500.05 or 11-1101 shall be deemed
to be a master planned community. For the purposes of this subdivision, "master planned
community" means a land area consisting of at least three hundred twenty acres, which may
be noncontiguous, that is the subject of a zoning ordinance approved by the governing
body of the county, city or town in which the land is located that establishes the use of
the land area as a planned area development or district, planned community development or
district, planned unit development or district or other land use category or district
that is recognized in the local ordinance of such county, city or town and that specifies
the use of such land is for a master planned development.
34. ENTER INTO AN INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENT WITH A PRESIDING JUDGE OF THE
JUVENILE COURT TO IMPLEMENT A LAW RELATED EDUCATION PROGRAM AS DEFINED IN SECTION 15-154.
THE PRESIDING JUDGE OF THE JUVENILE COURT MAY ASSIGN JUVENILE PROBATION OFFICERS TO
PARTICIPATE IN A LAW RELATED EDUCATION PROGRAM IN ANY SCHOOL DISTRICT IN THE COUNTY. THE
COST OF JUVENILE PROBATION OFFICERS WHO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM IMPLEMENTED PURSUANT
TO THIS PARAGRAPH SHALL BE FUNDED BY THE SCHOOL DISTRICT.
APPROVED BY THE GOVERNOR JULY 9, 2009.
FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE JULY 9, 2009.
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