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H.B. 115 Enrolled
Merlynn T. Newbold
LONG TITLE
General Description:
This bill creates a program to award scholarships to students with disabilities who attend
a private school.
Highlighted Provisions:
This bill:
. specifies criteria for qualifying for a scholarship;
. specifies criteria for private schools to enroll scholarship students;
. specifies the amount, timing, and form of scholarship payments;
. requires the State Board of Education to make rules;
. gives the State Board of Education enforcement authority; and
. requires the Legislature to annually appropriate money from the General Fund for
scholarship payments.
Monies Appropriated in this Bill:
This bill appropriates:
. as an ongoing appropriation subject to future budget constraints, $100,000 from the
Uniform School Fund for fiscal year 2004-05 to the State Board of Education.
Other Special Clauses:
None
Utah Code Sections Affected:
AMENDS:
53A-3-410, as last amended by Chapter 377, Laws of Utah 1999
ENACTS:
53A-1a-701, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-702, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-703, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-704, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-705, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-706, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-707, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-708, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-709, Utah Code Annotated 1953
53A-1a-710, Utah Code Annotated 1953
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
Section 1. Section 53A-1a-701 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-701. Title.
This part is known as the "Carson Smith Scholarships for Students with Special Needs
Act."
Section 2. Section 53A-1a-702 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-702. Findings and purpose.
(1) The Legislature finds that:
(a) the state system of public education as established and maintained under the state
constitution is charged with making available a free public education for all children of the state;
(b) students with disabilities have special needs that merit educational alternatives which
will allow students to learn in an appropriate setting and manner;
(c) those needs may include teachers trained in special teaching methods, small class sizes,
and special materials, equipment, and classroom environments;
(d) the establishment of this scholarship program is justified on the basis of funding the
special needs of students with disabilities as with other programs similarly funded by the state for
people with disabilities; and
(e) nothing in this part shall be construed as a basis for granting vouchers or tuition tax
credits for any other students, with or without disabilities.
(2) The purpose of this part, in accordance with the best interests of the taxpayers and
citizens of this state, is to encourage educational opportunities and provide limited financial
assistance for students with disabilities whose parents enroll their child in a private school when it
is determined that the student's needs are best met by the private school.
Section 3. Section 53A-1a-703 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-703. Definitions.
As used in this part:
(1) "Assessment team" means a team consisting of:
(a) the student's parent or guardian;
(b) the student's classroom teacher;
(c) special education personnel from the student's resident school district; and
(d) if available, special education personnel from the private school at which the student is
enrolled.
(2) "Board" means the State Board of Education.
(3) "Eligible private school" means a private school that meets the requirements of
Section 53A-1a-705 .
(4) "IEP" means a written statement for a student with a disability that is developed,
reviewed, and revised in accordance with board rules and the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act, 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1400 et. seq.
(5) "Scholarship student" means a student who receives a scholarship under this part.
(6) "Value of the weighted pupil unit" means the amount specified in Section
53A-17a-103 that is multiplied by the number of weighted pupil units to yield the funding level for
the basic state-supported school program.
Section 4. Section 53A-1a-704 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-704. Scholarship program created -- Qualifications.
(1) The Carson Smith Scholarship Program is created to award scholarships to students
with disabilities to attend a private school.
(2) To qualify for a scholarship:
(a) the student's custodial parent or legal guardian shall reside within Utah;
(b) the student shall have one or more of the following disabilities:
(i) mental retardation;
(ii) a hearing impairment;
(iii) a speech or language impairment;
(iv) a visual impairment;
(v) a serious emotional disturbance;
(vi) an orthopedic impairment;
(vii) autism;
(viii) traumatic brain injury;
(ix) other health impairment; or
(x) specific learning disabilities;
(c) the student shall be at least five years of age before September 2 of the year in which
admission to a private school is sought and under 19 years of age on the last day of the school
year as determined by the private school, or, if the individual has not graduated from high school,
will be under 22 years of age on the last of the school year as determined by the private school;
and
(d) except as provided in Subsection (3), the student shall:
(i) be enrolled in a Utah public school in the school year prior to the school year the
student will be enrolled in a private school;
(ii) have an IEP; and
(iii) have obtained acceptance for admission to an eligible private school.
(3) The board shall provide, by rule, for a waiver from the requirements of Subsection
(2)(c) in the following circumstances:
(a) the student is enrolled or has obtained acceptance for admission to an eligible private
school;
(b) the private school specializes in serving students with disabilities; and
(c) an assessment team is able to readily determine with reasonable certainty:
(i) that the student has a disability listed in Subsection (2)(b) and would qualify for special
education services, if enrolled in a public school; and
(ii) for the purpose of establishing the scholarship amount, the appropriate level of special
education services which should be provided to the student.
(4) (a) To receive a scholarship:
(i) the parent of a student meeting the qualifications of Subsection (2) shall submit an
application for the scholarship to the school district within which the student is enrolled:
(A) at least 60 days before the date of the first scholarship payment; and
(B) that contains a certification by the parent that the selected school is qualified and
capable of providing the level of special education services required for student; and
(ii) the parent of a student seeking a waiver pursuant to Subsection (3) shall submit an
application for the scholarship to the student's resident school district at least 60 days before the
date of the first scholarship payment.
(b) The board may provide, by rule, for a waiver of the 60-day application deadline.
(5) (a) The scholarship application form shall include a statement disclosing to applicants
that a private school may not provide the same level of special education services that are
provided in a public school.
(b) Upon acceptance of the scholarship, the parent assumes full financial responsibility for
the education of the scholarship student.
(c) The creation of the scholarship program or granting of a scholarship does not:
(i) imply that a public school did not provide a free and appropriate public education for a
student; or
(ii) constitute a waiver or admission by the state.
(6) (a) A scholarship shall remain in force for three years.
(b) A scholarship may be extended for an additional three years, if:
(i) the student is evaluated by an assessment team; and
(ii) the assessment team determines that the student is disabled and would qualify for
special education services, if enrolled in a public school.
(c) The assessment team shall determine the appropriate level of special education
services which should be provided to the student for the purpose of setting the scholarship
amount.
(d) A scholarship may be extended for successive three-year periods as provided in
Subsections (6)(b) and (6)(c):
(i) until the student graduates from high school; or
(ii) if the student does not graduate from high school, until the student is age 22.
(7) A student's parent, at any time, may remove the student from a private school and
place the student in another eligible private school and retain the scholarship.
(8) A scholarship student may not participate in a dual enrollment program pursuant to
Section 53A-11-102.5 .
Section 5. Section 53A-1a-705 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-705. Eligible private schools.
(1) To be eligible to enroll a scholarship student, a private school may be a sectarian or
nonsectarian school and shall:
(a) have a physical location in Utah where the scholarship students attend classes and
have direct contact with the school's teachers;
(b) demonstrate fiscal soundness in accordance with Subsection (4);
(c) comply with the antidiscrimination provisions of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 2000d;
(d) meet state and local health and safety laws and codes;
(e) disclose to the parent of each prospective student, before the student is enrolled, the
special education services that will be provided to the student, including the cost of those services;
(f) (i) administer an annual assessment of each scholarship student's academic progress;
(ii) report the results of the assessment to the student's parent; and
(iii) make the results available to the assessment team evaluating the student pursuant to
Subsection 53A-1a-704 (6);
(g) employ or contract with teachers who:
(i) hold baccalaureate or higher degrees;
(ii) have at least three years of teaching experience in public or private schools; or
(iii) have special skills, knowledge, or expertise that qualifies them to provide instruction:
(A) in the subjects taught; and
(B) to the students taught;
(h) provide to parents the relevant credentials of the teachers who will be teaching their
students; and
(i) adhere to the tenets of its published disciplinary procedures prior to the expulsion of a
scholarship student.
(2) A home school is not eligible to enroll scholarship students.
(3) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (3)(b), a private school intending to enroll
scholarship students shall submit an application to the board by May 1 of the school year
preceding the school year in which it intends to enroll scholarship students.
(b) A private school intending to enroll scholarship students in the 2004-05 school year
shall submit an application by June 15, 2004.
(4) To initially demonstrate financial soundness, the board may require a private school to
obtain an audit and opinion letter from an independent certified public accountant showing that
the school is insured and has sufficient funds to maintain operations for the full school year.
(5) The board shall:
(a) approve a private school's application to enroll scholarship students, if the private
school meets the eligibility requirements of this section; and
(b) make available to the public a list of the eligible private schools.
Section 6. Section 53A-1a-706 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-706. Scholarship payments.
(1) (a) Scholarships shall be awarded by the board subject to the availability of money
appropriated by the Legislature for that purpose.
(b) The Legislature shall annually appropriate money to the board from the General Fund
to make scholarship payments.
(c) If monies are not available to pay for all scholarships requested, the scholarships shall
be allocated in accordance with board rules, with preference given to students who received
scholarships in the previous school year.
(2) Full-year scholarships shall be awarded in the following amounts:
(a) for a student who received an average of 180 minutes per day or more of special
education services in a public school before transferring to a private school, an amount not to
exceed the lesser of:
(i) the value of the weighted pupil unit multiplied by 2.5; or
(ii) the private school tuition and fees; and
(b) for a student who received an average of less than 180 minutes per day of special
education services in a public school before transferring to a private school, an amount not to
exceed the lesser of:
(i) the value of the weighted pupil unit multiplied by 1.5; or
(ii) the private school tuition and fees.
(3) The scholarship amount for a student enrolled in a half-day kindergarten program shall
be the amount specified in Subsection (2)(a) or (2)(b) multiplied by .55.
(4) (a) The scholarship amount for a student who receives a waiver under Subsection
53A-1a-704 (3) shall be based upon the assessment team's determination of the appropriate level
of special education services to be provided to the student.
(b) (i) If the student requires an average of 180 minutes per day or more of special
education services, a full-year scholarship shall be equal to the amount specified in Subsection
(2)(a).
(ii) If the student requires less than an average of 180 minutes per day of special
education services, a full-year scholarship shall be equal to the amount specified in Subsection
(2)(b).
(iii) If the student is enrolled in a half-day kindergarten program, the scholarship is equal
to the amount specified in Subsection (3).
(5) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (5)(b), upon review and receipt of the
documentation required by the board to verify a student's admission to, or continuing enrollment
and attendance at, a private school, the board shall make scholarship payments in four equal
amounts no later than September 1, November 1, February 1, and April 15 of each school year in
which a scholarship is in force.
(b) In accordance with board rule, the board may make a scholarship payment before the
first quarterly payment of the school year, if a private school requires partial payment of tuition
before the start of the school year to reserve space for a student admitted to the school.
(6) Before scholarship payments are made, the board shall cross-check enrollment lists of
scholarship students, school districts, and youth in custody to ensure that scholarship payments
are not erroneously made.
(7) (a) Scholarship payments shall be made by the board by individual warrant made
payable to the student's parent and mailed by the board to the private school. The parent shall
restrictively endorse the warrant to the private school for deposit into the account of the private
school.
(b) A person, on behalf of a private school, may not accept a power of attorney from a
parent to sign a warrant referred to in Subsection (7)(a), and a parent of a scholarship student
may not give a power of attorney designating a person, on behalf of a private school, as the
parent's attorney-in-fact.
Section 7. Section 53A-1a-707 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-707. Board to make rules.
The board shall make rules for the administration of the scholarship program.
Section 8. Section 53A-1a-708 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-708. Enforcement and penalties.
(1) (a) The board shall require private schools to submit signed affidavits assuring the
private school will comply with the requirements of this part and board rules made under this part.
(b) If a school fails to submit a signed affidavit after having an opportunity to provide
explanations and request delays, the board may:
(i) deny the private school permission to enroll scholarship students; and
(ii) interrupt disbursement of or withhold scholarship payments.
(2) The board may:
(a) investigate complaints about a private school's or parent's failure to comply with this
part or board rules made under this part; and
(b) convene administrative hearings for a violation of this part or board rules.
(3) Upon a finding that a private school or parent failed to comply with this part or board
rules made under this part, the board may:
(a) deny a private school permission to enroll scholarship students;
(b) interrupt disbursement of or withhold scholarship payments; or
(c) issue an order for repayment of scholarship payments fraudulently obtained.
Section 9. Section 53A-1a-709 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-709. Limitation on regulation of private schools.
Nothing in this part grants additional authority to any state agency or school district to
regulate private schools except as expressly set forth in this part.
Section 10. Section 53A-1a-710 is enacted to read:
53A-1a-710. Review by Legislative Auditor General.
The Legislative Auditor General shall conduct a review and issue a report on the Carson
Smith Scholarship Program after the program has operated for two school years.
Section 11. Section 53A-3-410 is amended to read:
53A-3-410. Criminal background checks on school personnel -- Notice -- Payment
of cost -- Request for review.
(1) A school district superintendent or the superintendent's designee:
(a) shall require a potential employee or a volunteer who will be given significant
unsupervised access to a student in connection with the volunteer's assignment to submit to a
criminal background check as a condition for employment or appointment; and
(b) where reasonable cause exists, may require an existing employee or volunteer to
submit to a criminal background check.
(2) The chief administrative officer of a private school may require, and the chief
administrative officer of the private school that enrolls scholarship students under Chapter 1a,
Part 7, Carson Smith Scholarships for Students with Special Needs Act, shall require:
(a) a potential employee or volunteer to submit to a criminal background check as a
condition for employment or appointment; and
(b) where reasonable cause exists, an existing employee or volunteer to submit to a
criminal background check.
(3) The applicant, volunteer, or employee shall receive written notice that the background
check has been requested.
(4) (a) (i) Fingerprints of the individual shall be taken, and the Criminal Investigations and
Technical Services Division of the Department of Public Safety, established in Section 53-10-103 ,
shall release the individual's full record of criminal convictions to the administrator requesting the
information.
(ii) The division shall maintain a separate file of fingerprints submitted under Subsection
(4)(a)(i) and notify the State Office of Education when a new entry is made against a person
whose fingerprints are held in the file regarding:
(A) any matters involving an alleged sexual offense;
(B) any matters involving an alleged felony or class A misdemeanor drug offense; or
(C) any matters involving an alleged offense against the person under Title 76, Chapter 5,
Offenses Against the Person.
(iii) The cost of maintaining the separate file shall be paid by the State Office of Education
from fees charged to those submitting fingerprints.
(b) Information received by the division from entities other than agencies or political
subdivisions of the state may not be released to a private school unless the release is permissible
under applicable laws or regulations of the entity providing the information.
(5) The superintendent, local school board, or their counterparts at a private school shall
consider only those convictions which are job-related for the employee, applicant, or volunteer.
(6) (a) The district or private school shall pay the cost of the background check except as
otherwise provided in Subsection (6)(b), and the monies collected shall be credited to the Criminal
Investigations and Technical Services Division to offset its expenses.
(b) The district or private school may require an applicant to pay the costs of a
background check as a condition for consideration for employment or appointment, if:
(i) the applicant:
(A) has passed an initial review;
(B) is one of a pool of no more than five candidates for a position; and
(C) except as may be otherwise provided by state board rule for an applicant who
submitted to a background check while completing a higher education program at a Utah
institution of higher education, has not been the subject of a criminal background check of similar
scope during the preceding two years that was requested by a potential employer or the State
Board of Education; and
(ii) a copy of the background check is provided to the district or school considering
employment or appointment of the applicant.
(7) The Criminal Investigations and Technical Services Division shall, upon request, seek
additional information from regional or national criminal data files in responding to inquiries under
this section.
(8) (a) A private school seeking information from the Federal Bureau of Investigation or
other national criminal data file which the private school may not access directly shall submit its
request to the Teacher Certification Section of the State Board of Education, together with the
required fee and the school's criminal data-related criteria for limiting or rejecting employment.
(b) The section shall submit the request and, upon receiving the requested information,
shall determine whether the subject of the inquiry is entitled to employment under the school's
criteria.
(c) The section shall disclose its determination to the school but may not disclose the data
in the national criminal data file.
(9) (a) The applicant, volunteer, or employee shall have opportunity to respond to any
information received as a result of the background check.
(b) A private school applicant, volunteer, or employee who wishes to respond shall:
(i) submit a request to the school; and
(ii) give a written statement to the Teacher Certification Office authorizing the office to
release the background check information to a hearing officer selected by the individual and the
school.
(c) The individual and the school shall equally share any costs incurred under Subsection
(9)(b).
(d) A public agency shall resolve any request for review by an applicant, volunteer, or
employee seeking employment or employed by the agency through normal administrative
procedures established by the agency.
(10) If a person is denied employment or is dismissed from employment because of
information obtained through a criminal background check, the person shall receive written notice
of the reasons for denial or dismissal and have an opportunity to respond to the reasons under the
procedures set forth in Subsection (9).
(11) Information obtained under this part is confidential and may only be disclosed as
provided in this section.
Section 12. Appropriation.
As an ongoing appropriation subject to future budget constraints, there is appropriated
from the Uniform School Fund for fiscal year 2004-05, $100,000 to the State Board of Education
to fund administration of the Carson Smith Scholarship Program.
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