1 HB241 2 215678-2 3 By Representatives Collins, Ball, Robertson, Moore (P), Estes, 4 Wood (D), Kitchens, Hurst, Meadows, Shiver, Baker, Stadthagen, 5 Ledbetter and Faulkner 6 RFD: Education Policy 7 First Read: 02-FEB-22 Page 0 1 ENGROSSED 2 3 4 A BILL 5 TO BE ENTITLED 6 AN ACT 7 8 Relating to credentials and the workforce; to create 9 the Alabama Credential Quality and Transparency Act as a new 10 Division 9, commencing with Section 41-29-350, Article 3, 11 Chapter 29, Title 41, Code of Alabama 1975; to establish the 12 Alabama Workforce Council Committee on Credential Quality and 13 Transparency; to provide for full, free, open, public, and 14 interoperable essential data about all educational and 15 occupational credentials and competencies available to the 16 residents of the state; to create the Alabama Terminal on 17 Linking and Analyzing Statistics (ATLAS) on Career Pathways 18 Act as a new Division 10, commencing with Section 41-29-360, 19 Article 3, Chapter 29, Title 41, Code of Alabama 1975; to 20 provide a database through which students, job seekers, and 21 employers may search, compare, and analyze common information 22 about credentials and competencies before making decisions 23 about the quality and value of credentials and the education 24 and workforce programs related to those credentials; to 25 establish the Alabama College and Career Readiness Act by 26 adding Section 41-29-298 to the Code of Alabama 1975; relating 27 to education, credentials, and the workforce; to establish a Page 1 1 statewide definition of college and career readiness and for 2 other purposes relating to workforce development; and in 3 connection therewith to have as its purpose or effect the 4 requirement of a new or increased expenditure of local funds 5 within the meaning of Amendment 621 of the Constitution of 6 Alabama of 1901, as amended by Amendment 890, now appearing as 7 Section 111.05 of the Official Recompilation of the 8 Constitution of Alabama of 1901, as amended. 9 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF ALABAMA: 10 Section 1. Division 9, commencing with Section 11 41-29-350, is added to Article 3, Chapter 29, Title 41 of the 12 Code of Alabama 1975, to read as follows: 13 §41-29-350. 14 This division shall be known and may be cited as the 15 Alabama Credential Quality and Transparency Act. 16 §41-29-351. 17 The Legislature finds and declares all of the 18 following: 19 (1) With nearly 1,000,000 unique credentials in the 20 United States, and at least 5,000 available from Alabama-based 21 providers alone, too many Alabamians do not know which 22 credentials lead to desired outcomes, and employers are unable 23 to understand what skills workers bring to a job. 24 (2) It is critical for credential providers to 25 publish credentials to the Alabama Credential Registry in 26 searchable and comparable formats using a common schema 27 aligned with national standards and trends. Page 2 1 (3) There is a need for better, consistent, and 2 transparent data about credentials and their outcomes in the 3 state to more accurately enable the Alabama Committee on 4 Credentialing and Career Pathways to identify credentials of 5 value. 6 §41-29-352. 7 For the purposes of this division, the following 8 terms shall have the following meanings: 9 (1) COMMITTEE. The Alabama Workforce Council 10 Committee on Credential Quality and Transparency. 11 (2) COMPETENCY. A description of measurable or 12 observable knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary for the 13 successful performance of a task in a given context. 14 (3) CONSUMER. Includes, but is not limited to, 15 students, learners, workers, unemployed individuals, veterans, 16 employers, educators, counselors, program administrators, 17 policy makers, advocates, researchers, parents, and other 18 individuals who are invested in understanding the quality and 19 value of credentials and competencies in the education and 20 employment marketplace. 21 (4) CREDENTIAL. A qualification, achievement, or 22 recognition of competence by an external entity used to 23 indicate suitability through mastery of competencies 24 associated with the credential. For the purposes of this 25 division, credentials include, but are not limited to, 26 diplomas, microcredentials, badges, certificates, industry 27 recognized and registered apprenticeship certificates of Page 3 1 completions, occupational licenses, certifications, and 2 degrees of all types and levels. 3 (5) CREDENTIAL PROVIDER. Any organization that owns, 4 offers, or issues an educational or occupational credential to 5 an individual. 6 (6) CREDENTIAL REGISTRY. The virtual repository of 7 Alabama competency and credential data, accessible to 8 credential providers and the public through an online profile. 9 (7) DYNAMIC CAREER PATHWAY. A career pathway that is 10 approved by the committee and that includes a sequence of 11 occupations that are included on the statewide and regional 12 lists of in-demand occupations and occupations that are part 13 of the dynamic career pathway but are not on a regional or 14 statewide list of in-demand occupations. 15 (8) OCCUPATIONAL ONTOLOGY. The tiered system for 16 classifying competencies and credentials based on their 17 alignment with specific occupations. 18 §41-29-353. 19 (a) The Alabama Workforce Council Committee on 20 Credential Quality and Transparency is established as a 21 committee of the Alabama Workforce Council to advise the 22 Alabama Committee on Credentialing and Career Pathways on 23 making credential and competency data collected through the 24 Alabama Credential Registry publicly available, searchable, 25 comparable, and interoperable using open specifications and 26 linked data formats, including credential transparency 27 description language specifications. Page 4 1 (b) The committee shall be composed of the following 2 members: 3 (1) One representative from each of the technical 4 advisory committees of the Alabama Committee on Credentialing 5 and Career Pathways. 6 (2) The Governor, or his or her designee, who shall 7 chair the committee, shall vote only in the case of a tie, and 8 may not make or second motions. 9 (3) The Secretary of the Department of Early 10 Childhood Education, or his or her designee. 11 (4) The State Superintendent of Education, or his or 12 her designee. 13 (5) The Executive Director of the Alabama Commission 14 on Higher Education, or his or her designee. 15 (6) The Chancellor of the Alabama Community College 16 System, or his or her designee. 17 (7) The Secretary of the Department of Commerce, of 18 his or her designee. 19 (8) The Secretary of Labor, or his or her designee. 20 (9) The Commissioner of the Department of 21 Rehabilitation Services, or his or her designee. 22 (c) The committee, no later than June 30, 2023, and 23 the 30th day of the month of June in each consecutive year, 24 shall provide to the Alabama Committee on Credentialing and 25 Career Pathways, an annual, up-to-date list of credentials of 26 value, to be known as the compendium of valuable credentials, 27 for each of the industry sectors. Based on recommendations Page 5 1 provided by the Office of Education and Workforce Statistics, 2 the committee shall review each credential, newly published or 3 revised, to the Alabama Credential Registry, on a continuing 4 basis and at least annually, against the quality assurance 5 criteria as determined by the Alabama Committee on 6 Credentialing and Career Pathways, and shall classify each 7 credential registered to the Alabama Credential Registry, 8 along with its associated competencies, using the Alabama 9 Occupational Ontology. 10 (d) The committee shall ensure that open credential 11 and competency data is included in, used for, and benefits all 12 of the following: 13 (1) Providing data to improve navigations and 14 guidance tools for the state to identify education and career 15 pathways that lead to economic self-sufficiency, including the 16 Alabama College and Career Exploration Tool. 17 (2) Providing data to improve the process used by 18 the Alabama Committee on Credentialing and Career Pathways to 19 identify credentials of value. 20 (3) Providing data to be used to determine the 21 return on investment for programs and credentials. 22 (4) Providing data on identifying gaps in the 23 availability of high-quality credentials in the state. 24 (5) Providing data to align education and workforce 25 credentials. 26 §41-29-354. Page 6 1 (a) Essential information to maximize informed 2 consumer decisions about all nondegree workforce and 3 occupational credentials and their associated competencies, 4 costs, career pathways, process and outcome-based quality 5 assurance indicators, assessments that are delivered, issued, 6 funded, authorized, overseen, or governed in the state using 7 funding from the Education Trust Fund, the Workforce 8 Innovation and Opportunity Act (P.L. 113-128), licenses issued 9 by any state occupational licensing board or commission, the 10 Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006 11 (P.L. 115-224), or the state approving agency for veterans 12 education and training shall be made publicly available, 13 searchable, comparable, and interoperable using open 14 specifications and linked data formats including credential 15 transparency description language specifications and the 16 annual publication of all educational and occupational 17 credentials, and their associated competencies, to the Alabama 18 Credential Registry. 19 (b) The format and specifications for making all 20 educational and occupational credentials and their associated 21 competencies public, open, and interoperable shall be approved 22 by the committee, be aligned with widely recognized and 23 adopted standards, and allow for open access across sectors 24 and platforms. The information shall be human-readable, 25 machine-actionable, current, accurate, and maintained on the 26 Alabama Credential Registry. Page 7 1 (c) The committee shall coordinate the requirements 2 of this section to ensure that all required data collected 3 through the Alabama Credential Registry is made public in 4 required formats on the Alabama Credential Registry. 5 §41-29-355. 6 (a) All data published to the Alabama Credential 7 Registry in the required open formats and with the data 8 elements described in this division shall be fully available 9 to the public for open use. The data required under this 10 division shall not include any personally identifiable 11 information. 12 (b) No later than January 1, 2023, secondary and 13 postsecondary career and technical education credentials 14 funded through the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical 15 Education Act of 2006 (P.L. 115-224) and programs listed on 16 the eligible training provider list funded through the 17 Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (P.L. 113-128) shall 18 be registered to the compendium of valuable credentials 19 adopted by the Alabama Committee on Credentialing and Career 20 Pathways and aligned to the Alabama Committee on Credentialing 21 and Career Pathways statewide and regional lists of in-demand 22 jobs or dynamic career pathways, or both. 23 (c) All credential and competency data published to 24 the Alabama Credential Registry shall satisfy the requirements 25 of this division on, or before, January 1, 2023. Page 8 1 Section 2. Division 10, commencing with Section 2 41-29-360, is added to Article 3, Chapter 29, Title 41 of the 3 Code of Alabama 1975, to read as follows: 4 §41-29-360. 5 (a) This division shall be known and may be cited as 6 the Alabama Terminal on Linking and Analyzing Statistics 7 (ATLAS) on Career Pathways Act. 8 (b) For the purposes of this division, the following 9 terms shall have the following meanings: 10 (1) AGGREGATED DATA. Information produced by 11 combining unit-record data from one or more sources into 12 summary form for the purpose of analysis or public reporting, 13 or both. 14 (2) COUNCIL. The P-20W Council. 15 (3) DE-IDENTIFICATION. The removal of personally 16 identifiable information and other unique characteristics from 17 data so the data may be analyzed without disclosing the 18 identity of the associated individual. 19 (4) FAMILY EDUCATION RIGHTS AND PRIVACY ACT (FERPA) 20 (20 U.S.C. § 1232g; 34 C.F.R. Part 99). A federal law that 21 protects the privacy of student education records, applying to 22 all entities that receive funds through the United States 23 Department of Education. 24 (5) OFFICE. The Office of Education and Workforce 25 Statistics. 26 (6) P-20W. An abbreviation signifying the education 27 to workforce continuum, where P represents preschool, 20 Page 9 1 represents kindergarten through graduate school, and W 2 represents workforce. 3 (7) PERSONALLY IDENTIFIABLE INFORMATION. A data 4 element, or combination of data elements, contained in an 5 electronic record that identifies an individual. Under the 6 federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), the 7 term means identifiable information that is maintained 8 in education records, including direct identifiers, such as 9 the name or identification number of the student, indirect 10 identifiers, such as the date of birth of the student, or 11 other information which may be used to distinguish or trace 12 the identity of an individual, either directly or indirectly, 13 through linkages with other information. 14 (8) STUDENT DATA. 15 a. Data relating to student performance including 16 all of the following: 17 1. State and national assessments. 18 2. Course taking and completion. 19 3. Grade point average. 20 4. Remediation. 21 5. Retention. 22 6. Special population status as defined by the 23 Alabama Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act state plan. 24 7. Degree, diploma, or credential attainment. 25 8. Enrollment and absenteeism data. 26 9. Demographic data. 27 10. Suspension and expulsion records. Page 10 1 11. Student financial aid data. 2 b. Student data does not include any of the 3 following: 4 1. Juvenile delinquency records. 5 2. Criminal records. 6 3. Medical and health records. 7 (9) SYSTEM. The Alabama Terminal on Linking and 8 Analyzing Statistics (ATLAS) on Career Pathways longitudinal 9 database system. 10 (10) WORKFORCE DATA. Data relating to any of the 11 following: 12 a. Employment status. 13 b. Wage information. 14 c. Special population status as defined by the 15 Alabama Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act state plan. 16 d. Geographic location of employment. 17 e. Industry or occupation, or both. 18 §41-29-361. 19 The Alabama Terminal on Linking and Analyzing 20 Statistics (ATLAS) on Career Pathways System is established as 21 a secure system to exchange and match individual-level 22 education and workforce data from partner agencies while 23 upholding legal protections to ensure the privacy and security 24 of personally identifiable information. The system makes it 25 possible to match data from various agencies and programs over 26 time to create longitudinal records that may then be 27 aggregated and analyzed to assist policy makers with Page 11 1 developing strategies to improve education and workforce 2 outcomes. The system shall generate timely and accurate 3 information on education and training programs to empower 4 students, families, and employers with information to make 5 decisions best suited for their individual needs and to 6 improve the education and training systems at all levels. The 7 system shall be configured in the following manner: 8 (1) All information matched from partner agencies 9 shall be collected, safeguarded, kept confidential, and used 10 only by the Office of Education and Workforce Statistics in 11 accordance with this division and other state and federal law. 12 (2) Each partner entity shall retain ownership of 13 any data it provides to the system and shall reserve the right 14 to opt out of any research request if the request would 15 violate state or federal law. To that end, all of the 16 following shall apply: 17 a. A partner entity may not have access to data 18 owned by another partner entity unless a data request is 19 approved unanimously by the P-20W Council. 20 b. Nothing in this division or P-20W Council rule or 21 policy may prevent partners from engaging in direct data 22 sharing agreements with other partners or with external 23 entities, so long as the data to be shared is owned by the 24 contracting parties. 25 (3) The system shall serve as a data linkage that 26 connects student and workforce data provided by P-20W Council 27 member agencies. Page 12 1 (4) The system shall conduct research relating to 2 all of the following: 3 a. The effectiveness of state and federal education 4 and workforce programs. 5 b. The performance of education preparation 6 programs. 7 c. Instructional practices, education program 8 design, and curriculum alignment. 9 d. Fulfilling data requests required for state and 10 federal reporting. 11 e. The research agenda adopted by the P-20W Council. 12 f. Fulfilling research requests from external 13 researchers or stakeholders that are unanimously approved by 14 the P-20W Council. 15 §41-29-362. 16 (a) The P-20W Council is established to govern the 17 system. 18 (b) The membership of the council shall consist of 19 all of the following: 20 (1) The Governor, or his or her designee, who shall 21 serve as chair of the council. 22 (2) Each partner agency head, or designee, who has 23 signed a memorandum of understanding to share data with the 24 system. 25 (3) The Chair of the House Ways and Means Education 26 Committee. Page 13 1 (4) The Chair of the Senate Finance and Taxation 2 Education Committee. 3 (5) The Chair of the Alabama Workforce Council. 4 (6) Up to four members of the general public, who 5 are experienced in education and workforce data and 6 statistics, who shall be appointed by the Governor and serve 7 at the pleasure of the Governor. 8 (c) The council shall perform all of the following 9 duties: 10 (1) Develop a strategic plan, using a process that 11 is inclusive of the P-20W Council and all relevant 12 stakeholders, that includes a vision for all of the following: 13 a. Increasing data matching efficiencies. 14 b. Creating publicly available data visualization 15 and research tools. 16 c. Making aggregated data available to authorized 17 entities in a timely manner. 18 d. Creating a secure portal for authorized personnel 19 of the P-20W Council to transmit data to the Office of 20 Education and Workforce Statistics. 21 (2) Oversee the development, adoption, and 22 implementation of rules and policies to govern the proceedings 23 of the council, the office, and the system. 24 (3) Oversee compliance regarding the protection of 25 data shared with the system, including compliance with 26 applicable state and federal law. Page 14 1 (4) Develop a data governance and security plan for 2 the system regarding the use, privacy, and security of data 3 consistent with state and federal law, including the federal 4 Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), publish the 5 plan on the system website, and provide an electronic copy of 6 the plan to each partner agency. 7 (5) Establish the research agenda for the system. 8 (6) Establish a process for proposing and approving 9 requests for reports using data matched in the system. 10 (7) Establish policies for sharing aggregated data 11 or reports with the public or external entities. 12 (8) Develop strategies for promoting the transparent 13 operation of the system. 14 (9) Form standing and ad hoc committees and working 15 groups from among its own membership to accomplish its duties. 16 (10) Prepare and provide an annual report to the 17 Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Speaker of the House of 18 Representatives, President Pro Tempore of the Senate, Chairs 19 of the House Education Policy, Senate Education Policy, House 20 Ways and Means Education, and Senate Finance and Taxation 21 Education Committees on the implementation of the system and 22 the activities of the Office of Education and Workforce 23 Statistics during the preceding year. The report shall include 24 all of the following: 25 a. A list and analysis of all research studies 26 conducted by the P-20W Council and the Office of Education and Page 15 1 Workforce Statistics using the system during the preceding 2 year. 3 b. Recommendations or policy changes made by the 4 system and the Office of Education and Workforce Statistics 5 during the preceding fiscal year. 6 c. Goals, recommendations, and priorities for the 7 succeeding fiscal year. 8 (d) All policies and procedures developed by the 9 P-20W Council for the governance and security plan shall apply 10 to the Office of Education and Workforce Statistics and all 11 vendors and contractors of the Office of Education and 12 Workforce Statistics with access to the system and shall be 13 incorporated in all contracts. The governance and security 14 plan developed pursuant to this section, at a minimum, shall 15 include all the following: 16 (1) Secure procedures; training; administrative, 17 physical, and technical safeguards; internal accountability 18 processes; periodic privacy and security audits; review and 19 risk assessments; and security clearance requirements for 20 individuals with access to personally identifiable 21 information. 22 (2) Sanctions for violations of the governance and 23 security plan. 24 (3) Prohibitions against the use of data for 25 unauthorized purposes. 26 (4) Record keeping, data backup, and data 27 destruction plans. Page 16 1 (5) Access and use protocols for third-party vendors 2 and contractors. 3 §41-29-363. 4 (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (a) 5 of Section 41-29-365: 6 (1) The regular meetings of the council shall be 7 held at a time and place established by the chair, at least 8 four times per state fiscal year. 9 (2) Special meetings of the council may be called by 10 the chair, or upon written request of a majority of the 11 members of the council. 12 (3) All regular and special meetings of the council 13 shall comply with the Open Meetings Act. 14 (b) A majority of the members of the council, or 15 their designees, shall constitute a quorum for the transaction 16 of business. Members of the council may participate in any 17 meeting by means of a telephonic conference, video conference, 18 or similar communications equipment, provided that all persons 19 participating in the meeting are able to hear one another at 20 the same time. Participation by such means shall constitute 21 in-person presence at a meeting. 22 (c) The council shall follow Robert's Rules of Order 23 to the extent that those procedures are not inconsistent with 24 this division and state law. 25 (d) The recording of any meeting of the council, or 26 of any committee of the council, and the public access Page 17 1 thereto, shall be governed by the state law relating to open 2 meetings and the accessibility of public records. 3 (e)(1) Each member, including the chair, shall have 4 one vote on any measure before the council. Voting on all 5 matters shall be by voice vote or by roll call, and the ayes 6 and nays shall be entered in the minutes of the meeting. 7 (2) The chair may not make or second any motions, 8 unless otherwise provided by this division. 9 (3) Any action of a majority of a present quorum 10 shall be considered an act of the council. 11 (f) Each member of the council may appoint a 12 designee to represent him or her during the proceedings of the 13 council, and the designee shall enjoy the full rights and 14 privileges of a member of the council. A member shall notify 15 the chair, in writing, of the appointment of a designee. 16 Letters of designation shall remain on file with the chair and 17 the appointee shall be considered the official designee until 18 a subsequent designation letter is received, or a written 19 request is received by the chair to rescind the designation. 20 (g) The chair shall serve as parliamentarian, or may 21 designate a parliamentarian to serve the council. The ruling 22 of the parliamentarian on procedural questions shall be 23 considered final. 24 (h) The members of the P-20W Council shall not 25 receive a salary or per diem allowance for their service, but 26 shall be reimbursed through the Department of Commerce for Page 18 1 expenses incurred in the performance of their duties for the 2 office at the same rate as provided for state employees. 3 (i) Direct access to personally identifying 4 information in the system is restricted to Office of Education 5 and Workforce Statistics staff and authorized staff approved 6 by the P-20W Council. The Office of Education and Workforce 7 Statistics agrees not to re-disclose personally identifiable 8 information or any information derived from the personally 9 identifiable information, except aggregated data as authorized 10 by the P-20W Council. 11 (j) Any person who knowingly releases data collected 12 pursuant to this division to any other person not authorized 13 to lawfully receive the data shall be guilty of a Class C 14 felony and punished as provided by law. 15 §41-29-364. 16 The council may establish standing or ad hoc 17 committees as necessary. Standing and ad hoc committees of the 18 council shall possess authority as provided by the council. 19 (1) A standing committee established by the council 20 shall operate until disbanded by an act of the council. Each 21 member of a standing committee shall be the contact of record 22 for the agencies he or she represents and shall provide timely 23 information and response to the Office of Education and 24 Workforce Statistics and the P-20W Council. 25 (2) An ad hoc committee established by the council 26 shall operate for a definite period of time or purpose 27 provided in the action establishing the ad hoc committee. Page 19 1 (3) The chair of the council shall appoint the chair 2 of any standing or ad hoc committee and each member of the 3 council may serve on a standing or ad hoc committee. 4 (4) Each standing or ad hoc committee may establish 5 procedures for conducting the business of the committee. 6 §41-29-365. 7 (a) The Office of Education and Workforce Statistics 8 is established within the Department of Commerce to manage the 9 activities of the system on behalf of the council. The Office 10 of Education and Workforce Statistics shall be an authorized 11 representative for member agencies of the P-20W Council under 12 applicable state and federal laws and regulations for the 13 purposes of accessing, aggregating, deidentifying, and 14 compiling personally identifiable information for research 15 studies, evaluations, or audits. The director of the office 16 shall manage the office, serving an initial term of four 17 years, and shall be directed by and report to the P-20W 18 Council and shall be administratively supported by the 19 Department of Commerce. The director of the office, who may 20 not serve as a member of the council, shall serve as the 21 executive secretary of the council and shall coordinate and 22 facilitate all meetings and activities of the council and its 23 standing and ad hoc committees. 24 (b) The office shall perform all of the following 25 functions: 26 (1) Implement the directives of the P-20W Council 27 for the operation of the system. Page 20 1 (2) Maintain and implement system data sharing 2 agreements, staff documentation, governance policies, and 3 procedures created by the council and its standing and ad hoc 4 committees. 5 (3) Maintain the daily operation of the system by 6 coordinating with developers, vendors, and partners. 7 (4) Monitor vendor and contractor compliance with 8 P-20W Council policies. 9 (5) Provide the council and its standing and ad hoc 10 committees with documentation regarding any developments, 11 updates, audits, data breaches, funding, and other activities 12 of the system on a regular basis. 13 (6) Provide the council with an annual report, 14 including any activities conducted and changes made, by 15 January 31 of each year. 16 (7) Coordinate research requests, gather data to 17 develop approved reports, and deliver reports to fulfill 18 requests unanimously approved by the P-20W Council. 19 (8) Coordinate regular audits of the system and 20 provide results of audits to the P-20W Council. 21 (9) Maintain compliance with state and federal data 22 privacy laws. 23 (10) Manage the activities of grants associated with 24 the system. 25 (11) Serve as the external representative for the 26 council on matters related to the operation of the system. Page 21 1 (12) Collaborate with the Governor's Office of 2 Education and Workforce Transformation and the Alabama 3 Committee on Credentialing and Career Pathways to manage the 4 annual Governor's Survey of Employer Competencies and produce 5 the competency models and dynamic career pathways, as defined 6 in Section 41-29-352, associated with the regional and 7 statewide in-demand occupations. 8 (13) Conduct research on the impact of state and 9 federal education and training programs, the performance of 10 education and workforce programs, and fulfill unanimously 11 approved information requests. 12 (c) In the event of a data breach, the office is 13 responsible for all of the following actions in compliance 14 with the Alabama Data Breach Notification Act of 2018: 15 (1) Notifying all partner agencies and all 16 potentially affected Alabama residents and employers of an 17 unauthorized release or disclosure of personal identifiable 18 information. A triggering event is considered a data breach 19 when personally identifiable information was or is reasonably 20 believed to have been acquired by an unauthorized individual 21 or entity. 22 (2) Notifying all council members within 24 hours 23 after the discovery of the data breach. 24 (3) Notifying all potentially affected Alabama 25 residents and employers of the data breach in writing, in the 26 most expedient means possible and without unreasonable delay, 27 unless the delay is necessary to comply with a law enforcement Page 22 1 investigation. In no event shall the notification be provided 2 more than 15 days following the discovery of the data breach. 3 (4) Notifying the Attorney General, as required by 4 Section 8-38-6, if the number of individuals required to be 5 notified exceeds one thousand. 6 (5) Including in all written notifications to 7 affected residents and employers, instructions for monitoring 8 their credit reports. 9 (6) Conducting an analysis to assess the level of 10 the data breach and performing tests to ensure that the data 11 breach has been eliminated. 12 (7) Suspending any new data imports from partner 13 agencies until the required analysis and testing has been 14 completed, and providing written assurances, to those partner 15 agencies affected by the data breach, that the data breach is 16 no longer a threat and that a plan is being developed to 17 improve the system to prevent future occurrences. 18 (d) No member of, or designee appointed to, the 19 council or any standing or ad hoc committee of the council may 20 vote or otherwise participate in any discussion or debate on 21 any matter before the council in which he or she, or an 22 immediate family member, has a direct personal or pecuniary 23 interest. A member or designee shall notify the chair of the 24 council in writing of any conflict of interest. 25 (e) No state agency may use data shared by another 26 state agency without the express consent of the agency that 27 owns the data. Page 23 1 (f) Local education agencies, public institutions of 2 higher education, and state agencies shall respond to the data 3 requests and requirements of the P-20W Council and the Office 4 of Education and Workforce Statistics in a timely and complete 5 manner. 6 (g) The Office of Education and Workforce Statistics 7 may provide summary data to a publicly accessible web-based 8 platform that is capable of assisting current and prospective 9 students in making informed decisions about possible 10 postsecondary credential pathways and outcomes. The web-based 11 platform shall not contain personally identifiable 12 information. Any personally identifiable information collected 13 for the purposes of supporting or populating the web-based 14 platform shall be aggregated into summary statistics before 15 the information is used to ensure that the results cannot be 16 used to identify individual students. The web-based platform 17 shall do all of the following: 18 (1) Be capable of searching and comparing available 19 data across multiple programs and institution types. 20 (2) Provide additional information on state-funded 21 financial aid options. 22 (3) Include military enlistment opportunities and 23 benefits information including the Alabama National Guard. 24 (4) Provide information on regional and statewide 25 in-demand occupations. 26 Section 3. Section 41-29-298 is added to the Code of 27 Alabama 1975, to read as follows: Page 24 1 §41-29-298. 2 (a) This section shall be known and may be cited as 3 the Alabama College and Career Readiness Act. 4 (b) For the purposes of this section, the following 5 terms shall have the following meanings: 6 (1) CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION. The term has the 7 same meaning as provided in Section 3 of the Carl D. Perkins 8 Career and Technical Education Act of 2006 (P.L. 115-224). 9 (2) CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION CONCENTRATOR. At 10 the secondary school level, a student who has completed three 11 or more career and technical education courses; or completed 12 at least two courses in a single career and technical 13 education program or program of study; or at the postsecondary 14 level, a postsecondary student or adult who completes either 15 of the following: 16 a. At least 12 academic or career and technical 17 education credits within a single program area sequence that 18 is comprised of 12 or more academic and technical credits and 19 terminates in the award of an industry-recognized credential, 20 a certificate, or a degree. 21 b. A short-term career and technical education 22 program sequence of less than 12 credit units that terminates 23 in the award of an industry-recognized credential, a 24 certificate, or a degree. 25 (3) COOPERATIVE EDUCATION. A method of education for 26 an individual who, through written cooperative arrangements 27 between a school and employer, receives instruction, including Page 25 1 required rigorous and challenging academic courses and related 2 career and technical education instruction, by alternation of 3 study in school with a job in any occupational field, which 4 alternation shall be planned and supervised by the school and 5 employer so that each contributes to the education and 6 employability of the individual; and may include an 7 arrangement in which work periods and school attendance may be 8 on alternate half days, full days, weeks, or other periods of 9 time in fulfilling the cooperative program. The term also 10 includes paid work with the express goal of attaining work 11 experience for the participant where the work performed may 12 not directly relate to the field of study of the student. At 13 the postsecondary level, a cooperative arrangement should 14 provide practical experience in the field of study of the 15 student. 16 (4) INTERNSHIP. Paid or unpaid work experience, 17 usually for a predetermined period of time, that familiarizes 18 potential candidates with the specific industry or the 19 specific employer, or both, who is hosting the intern. An 20 internship is typically a one-time work or service experience 21 related to the major or career goals of the student. An 22 internship involves students working in professional settings 23 under the supervision and monitoring of practicing 24 professionals. The completion of an internship organized by an 25 educational institution may be associated with earning 26 secondary or postsecondary course credit. Page 26 1 (5) ON-THE-JOB LEARNING. Paid work experience with 2 the same characteristics as cooperative education and with the 3 added distinction that the work performed and tasks learned on 4 the job are directly linked to the technical instruction the 5 student is receiving. 6 (6) PREAPPRENTICESHIP. Designed to prepare students 7 to enter and succeed in a registered apprenticeship and 8 ultimately a career. A preapprenticeship program offers 9 participants structured training opportunities to prepare them 10 for entry into a registered apprenticeship program and may 11 provide services that a participant needs to progress into an 12 apprenticeship including, work readiness skills and other 13 wrap-around supports. To be considered a preapprenticeship, 14 training shall be connected to a registered apprenticeship. 15 Participants in a preapprenticeship shall complete on-the-job 16 learning or related technical instruction which shall be 17 counted towards completion of a registered apprenticeship if 18 the preapprentice becomes an apprentice. Preapprenticeship 19 programs shall be certified by the state apprenticeship agency 20 as an indicator of quality and to provide assurance the 21 content has been validated to count towards a registered 22 apprenticeship program. 23 (7) REGISTERED APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAM. A plan 24 containing all terms and conditions for the qualification, 25 recruitment, selection, employment, and training of 26 apprentices, as required under 29 C.F.R. Parts 29 and 30, and Page 27 1 rules adopted by the Alabama Office of Apprenticeship, 2 including rules requiring a written apprenticeship agreement. 3 (8) STATE APPRENTICESHIP AGENCY. The Alabama Office 4 of Apprenticeship. 5 (c) Commencing with the 2023-2024 school year, 6 students in public schools shall earn one or more of the 7 following college or career readiness indicators, and any 8 additional college and career readiness indicators approved by 9 the State Board of Education, before graduation: 10 (1) Earning a benchmark score in any subject area on 11 the ACT college entrance exam. 12 (2) Earning a qualifying score of three or higher on 13 an advanced placement exam. 14 (3) Earning a qualifying score of four or higher on 15 an international baccalaureate exam. 16 (4) Earning college credit while in high school. 17 (5) Earning a silver or gold level on the ACT 18 WorkKeys Exam. 19 (6) Registration in a school youth registered 20 apprenticeship program. 21 (7) Completing a certified preapprenticeship 22 program. 23 (8) Earning a career technical industry credential 24 listed on the compendium of valuable credentials of the 25 Alabama Committee on Credentialing and Career Pathways. 26 (9) Being accepted into the military before 27 graduation. Page 28 1 (10) Attaining career and technical education 2 concentrator status. 3 (d) The State Superintendent of Education shall 4 require career coaches funded through the Career Coaches 5 Initiative of the state Career Tech Initiative supported by 6 the Education Trust Fund, as defined and described in Chapter 7 13 of Title 16 and Chapter 9 of Title 29, Code of Alabama 8 1975, to satisfy or surpass annual targets, established by the 9 State Superintendent of Education and the Chair of the Alabama 10 Workforce Council, to increase the number of employer 11 placements for students participating in an internship, 12 cooperative education, on-the-job learning, preapprenticeship, 13 or registered apprenticeship programs recognized by the state 14 apprenticeship agency that are aligned to an occupation listed 15 on a regional or statewide list of in-demand occupations 16 adopted by the Alabama Committee on Credentialing and Career 17 Pathways. 18 (e) Commencing with the 2023-2024 school year, the 19 career preparedness course required for graduation from public 20 K-12 schools shall include all of the following: 21 (1) Exploration of the in-demand jobs in the state 22 as identified annually by the Alabama Committee on 23 Credentialing and Career Pathways. 24 (2) Completion of the Alabama Works financial 25 literacy module approved by the State Superintendent of 26 Education and the Chair of the Alabama Workforce Council. Page 29 1 (3) A work-based learning experience aligned to the 2 Alabama Committee on Credentialing and Career Pathways list of 3 in-demand occupations. 4 (4) Establishment of a state college and career 5 exploration tool account for each participating student. 6 (5) Completion of a workforce preparedness module 7 approved by the Alabama Workforce Council that is focused on 8 employability skills, resume and interview success, and 9 securing postsecondary and workforce opportunities post high 10 school. 11 (f) The State Superintendent of Education and the 12 Chair of the Alabama Workforce Council shall collaborate to 13 implement the modifications and customization of the career 14 preparedness course to meet the needs of each of the seven 15 workforce regions of the state. 16 (g) On or before December 30, 2022, the career 17 preparedness course of study shall be revised to reflect the 18 provisions of this subsection. Thereafter, the career 19 preparedness course of study shall be revised every seven 20 years. 21 Section 4. The appointing authorities for the 22 Alabama Workforce Council Committee on Credential Quality and 23 Transparency and the P-20W Council shall coordinate their 24 appointments to assure the Alabama Workforce Council Committee 25 on Credential Quality and Transparency and the P-20W Council 26 membership is inclusive and reflects the racial, gender, 27 geographic, urban, rural, and economic diversity of the state. Page 30 1 Section 5. Although this bill would have as its 2 purpose or effect the requirement of a new or increased 3 expenditure of local funds, the bill is excluded from further 4 requirements and application under Amendment 621, as amended 5 by Amendment 890, now appearing as Section 111.05 of the 6 Official Recompilation of the Constitution of Alabama of 1901, 7 as amended, because the bill defines a new crime or amends the 8 definition of an existing crime. 9 Section 6. This act shall become effective on the 10 first day of the third month following its passage and 11 approval by the Governor, or its otherwise becoming law. Page 31 1 2 House of Representatives3 Read for the first time and re-4 5 ferred to the House of Representa- 6 tives committee on Education Policy ....................................7 .......02-FEB-22 8 Read for the second time and placed9 on the calendar 1 amendment ......10 .......09-FEB-22 11 Read for the third time and passed12 as amended.........................13 .......15-FEB-22 Yeas 98, Nays 2, Abstains 014 15 16 Jeff Woodard 17 Clerk 18 Page 32