Arizona 2022 2022 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2853 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 06/23/2022

                    Assigned to APPROP 	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Fifth Legislature, Second Regular Session 
 
FACT SHEET FOR H.B. 2853 
 
Arizona empowerment scholarship accounts; appropriation 
Purpose 
Expands empowerment scholarship account (ESA) eligibility, beginning in FY 2023, to an 
Arizona resident who is eligible to enroll in an Arizona public school and does not otherwise 
qualify. Adds to permissible ESA expenditures and modifies certain administration requirements. 
Appropriates $2,200,000 and 26 FTE positions from the state General Fund in FY 2023 to the 
Arizona Department of Education (ADE). 
Background 
A student with an ESA account may use ESA monies for permissible expenses, including: 
1) qualifying tuition or fees; 2) textbooks, curricula and supplementary materials; and  
3) outlined goods and services. A qualified student for an ESA account includes a: 1) child with a 
disability; 2) student  attending a D or F school or school district; 3) previous ESA and Arizona 
Scholarships for Pupils with Disabilities Program recipient; 4) child of a parent in the U.S. Armed 
Forces who is on active duty or was killed in the line of duty; 5) child who is or was a ward of the 
court with a permanent guardian or prospective permanent guardian; 6) sibling of a current or 
previous ESA recipient; 7) resident of an Indian reservation in Arizona; and 8) child of a parent 
who is legally blind, deaf or hard of hearing. An ESA is funded at 90 percent of the Base Support 
Level and charter additional assistance that a student would have been allocated if the student were 
attending a charter school (A.R.S. ยงยง 15-2401 and 15-2402).   
The Joint Legislative Budget Committee fiscal note estimates that the ESA eligibility 
expansions would increase state General Fund K-12 education costs by $33,400,000 in FY 2023, 
$64,500,000 in FY 2023 and $125,400,000 in FY 2021. JLBC notes that these estimates are highly 
speculative as the participation rate among currently ineligible pupils is difficult to know in 
advance (JLBC fiscal note). 
Provisions 
1. Appropriates $2,200,000 and 26 FTE positions from the state General Fund in FY 2023 to 
ADE for ESA administration. 
2. Includes, in qualified student beginning in the FY 2023 school year, unless the context 
otherwise requires, an Arizona resident who: 
a) does not otherwise qualify for an ESA; and 
b) is eligible to enroll in an Arizona public school in a preschool program for children with 
disabilities, a kindergarten program or any of grades 1 through 12. 
3. Deems, as eligible for an ESA, a child who meets one of the qualifying categories and, in lieu 
of meeting outlined attendance requirements, attended a nonpublic school for pupils with 
disabilities in the prior year, if placement was approved by ADE and contracted for by a public 
school district.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2853 
Page 2 
 
 
4. Deems a child eligible to enroll in a kindergarten program for the purposes of meeting school 
attendance eligibility criteria, if the child: 
a) is at least five, and under seven, years of age on January 1 of the current school year; 
b) has not already completed a kindergarten program; and 
c) is not enrolled in grade 1 of a school in the current year. 
5. Reduces the logged instructional hours a qualifying student in Arizona online instruction must 
have received in the current or prior fiscal year to meet school attendance eligibility criteria: 
a) from 200 to 100, for kindergarten students; 
b) from 400 to 200, for student in grades 1 through 3; 
c) from 500 to 250, for students in grades 4 through 6; 
d) from 550 to 275, for students in grades 7 and 8; and 
e) from 500 to 250, for high school students. 
6. Determines that the ESA enrollment parent agreement to not enroll a qualified student in a 
school district or charter school does not: 
a) require a qualified student to withdraw from a public school before enrolling for an ESA if 
the student withdraws before receiving any ESA monies; or 
b) prevent a qualified student from applying in advance for an ESA to be funded beginning 
the following school year. 
7. Adds, to permissible ESA expenditures: 
a) public transportation services in Arizona, including a computer pass or transportation 
network services between the qualified student's residence and school; and 
b) computer hardware and technological devices primarily used for an educational purpose, 
including calculators, personal computers, laptops, tablet devices, microscopes, telescopes 
and printers. 
8. Specifies that permissible computer hardware or technological devices does not include 
entertainment and other primarily noneducational devices, including televisions, telephones, 
video game consoles and accessories, and home theatre and audio equipment. 
9. Removes, from the specified list of prohibited ESA expenditures, consumable educational 
supplies, including paper, pens or markers. 
10. Authorizes, during any period beginning January 1, 2023, in which ADE fails to ensure that a 
contract is in effect with an independent third party for determining whether qualifying 
students with disabilities are eligible to expend ESA monies for outlined educational therapies 
or services: 
a) a county school superintendent to approve a list of independent third parties in the county 
whose evaluation may be used to make the determination; and 
b) if the county school superintendent does not provide the list within 90 days of ADE not 
having a contract in effect, the parent to obtain an independent educational evaluation from 
a qualified examiner to make the determination. 
11. Requires the school district in which the student resides and that serves the student's grade 
level to provide the expense for an independent educational evaluation obtained by a parent 
from a qualified examiner.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2853 
Page 3 
 
 
12. Defines qualified examiner as a licensed physician, psychiatrist or psychologist. 
13. Extends, from 10 days to 15 days, the time frame after notification of an ESA suspension 
within which a parent or qualified student must respond or take corrective action before ADE 
may remove the student from ESA eligibility. 
14. Allows a parent to represent themselves or designate a representative who is not necessarily 
an attorney before an appeals hearing to the State Board of Education of any ADE 
administrative decision relating to ESAs.  
15. Prohibits, from charging for services related to an ESA appeals hearing, a designated 
representative who is not an attorney. 
16. Specifies that a representative participating in the hearing or assisting the ESA holder is not 
grounds for reversing an administrative decision or order, if the supporting evidence is 
substantial, reliable and probative.  
17. Makes technical and conforming changes. 
18. Becomes effective on the general effective date, with retroactive to July 1, 2022. 
House Action  
WM 6/15/22 DP 6-4-0-0 
3
rd
 Read 6/22/22 31-26-3 
Prepared by Senate Research 
June 23, 2022 
LB/ /slp