California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2480 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly March 19, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2480Introduced by Assembly Member Voepel(Coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)February 14, 2018 An act to add Sections 17053.99 and 23699 to the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation, to take effect immediately, tax levy. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2480, as amended, Voepel. Income taxes: credit: Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
1+CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2480Introduced by Assembly Member VoepelFebruary 14, 2018 An act to add Sections 17053.99 and 23699 to the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation, to take effect immediately, tax levy. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2480, as introduced, Voepel. Income taxes: credit: Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly March 19, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2480Introduced by Assembly Member Voepel(Coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)February 14, 2018 An act to add Sections 17053.99 and 23699 to the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation, to take effect immediately, tax levy. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2480, as amended, Voepel. Income taxes: credit: Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2480Introduced by Assembly Member VoepelFebruary 14, 2018 An act to add Sections 17053.99 and 23699 to the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation, to take effect immediately, tax levy. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2480, as introduced, Voepel. Income taxes: credit: Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly March 19, 2018
65
7-Amended IN Assembly March 19, 2018
6+
7+
88
99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
1010
1111 Assembly Bill No. 2480
1212
13-Introduced by Assembly Member Voepel(Coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)February 14, 2018
13+Introduced by Assembly Member VoepelFebruary 14, 2018
1414
15-Introduced by Assembly Member Voepel(Coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)
15+Introduced by Assembly Member Voepel
1616 February 14, 2018
1717
1818 An act to add Sections 17053.99 and 23699 to the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation, to take effect immediately, tax levy.
1919
2020 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2121
2222 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2323
24-AB 2480, as amended, Voepel. Income taxes: credit: Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.
24+AB 2480, as introduced, Voepel. Income taxes: credit: Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.
2525
26-The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.
26+The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.
2727
2828 The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law allow various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws.
2929
30-This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.
30+This bill, for each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, would allow a credit in an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization that provides scholarships to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school, as defined, during the taxable year, not to exceed a specified amount. The bill would impose specified duties on the Franchise Tax Board, the State Department of Education, and the Employment Development Department in administering the credits.
3131
3232 This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.
3333
3434 ## Digest Key
3535
3636 ## Bill Text
3737
38-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
38+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
3939
4040 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4141
4242 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4343
4444 SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.
4545
4646 SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.
4747
4848 SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Scholarship Tax Credit Program Act.
4949
5050 ### SECTION 1.
5151
52-SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
52+SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
5353
5454 SEC. 2. Section 17053.99 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:
5555
5656 ### SEC. 2.
5757
58-17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
58+17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
5959
60-17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
60+17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
6161
62-17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
62+17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements. (B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools. (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards. (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable. (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship. (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
6363
6464
6565
66-17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.
66+17053.99. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the net tax, as defined in Section 17039, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers net tax for the taxable year.
6767
6868 (b) For purposes of this section:
6969
70-(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.
70+(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.
7171
7272 (2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:
7373
74-(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.
74+(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.
7575
76-(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).
76+(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).
7777
7878 (B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.
7979
8080 (3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.
8181
82-(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.
82+(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.
8383
8484 (5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files an income tax return in this state and is not claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by any other taxpayer.
8585
8686 (6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.
8787
8888 (7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.
8989
9090 (c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:
9191
9292 (1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.
9393
9494 (2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
9595
9696 (3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.
9797
9898 (4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.
9999
100100 (5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.
101101
102102 (6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.
103103
104104 (7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.
105105
106106 (8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.
107107
108-(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.
108+(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.
109109
110110 (9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.
111111
112112 (10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:
113113
114114 (A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.
115115
116116 (B) Low-income students.
117117
118118 (11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.
119119
120120 (d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:
121121
122122 (1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.
123123
124124 (2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.
125125
126126 (3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.
127127
128128 (4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.
129129
130130 (5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.
131131
132132 (6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.
133133
134134 (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.
135135
136-(8) Provide the parents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.
136+(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.
137137
138138 (9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.
139139
140140 (10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.
141141
142142 (11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.
143143
144144 (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:
145145
146146 (A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.
147147
148148 (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.
149149
150150 (C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.
151151
152152 (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.
153153
154154 (13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:
155155
156-(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.
156+(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.
157157
158-(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.
158+(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.
159159
160160 (e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:
161161
162162 (1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.
163163
164164 (2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.
165165
166-(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.
166+(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.
167167
168168 (f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:
169169
170170 (1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.
171171
172172 (2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).
173173
174174 (3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.
175175
176176 (4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.
177177
178178 (B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.
179179
180180 (5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.
181181
182182 (g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:
183183
184184 (1) Collect all test results.
185185
186186 (2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.
187187
188188 (h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the net tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the net tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.
189189
190190 (i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.
191191
192192 (j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.
193193
194194 (k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
195195
196-SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
196+SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
197197
198198 SEC. 3. Section 23699 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:
199199
200200 ### SEC. 3.
201201
202-23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
202+23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
203203
204-23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
204+23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
205205
206-23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
206+23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.(b) For purposes of this section:(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.(2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).(B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.(3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.(5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.(6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.(7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.(c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.(2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.(3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.(4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.(5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.(6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.(7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.(8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.(9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.(10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:(A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.(B) Low-income students.(11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.(d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:(1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.(2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.(3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.(5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.(6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.(7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.(9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.(10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.(11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.(12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:(A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.(B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.(C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.(D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.(13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.(e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:(1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.(2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.(f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:(1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.(2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).(3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.(4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.(B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.(5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.(g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:(1) Collect all test results.(2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.(h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.(i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.(j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
207207
208208
209209
210-23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, 2019, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.
210+23699. (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2018, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer as a credit against the tax, as defined in Section 23036, an amount equal to the total contributions made to a scholarship granting organization during the taxable year, not to exceed 100 percent of the qualified taxpayers tax for the taxable year.
211211
212212 (b) For purposes of this section:
213213
214-(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic a qualified school.
214+(1) Educational scholarship means a grant made to an eligible student to cover all or part of the tuition and fees, including transportation to a qualified school outside of the eligible students resident school district, at either a public or nonpublic qualified school.
215215
216216 (2) (A) Eligible student means either of the following:
217217
218-(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.
218+(i) A student who is a member of a household whose total annual income during the calendar year before he or she receives an educational scholarship from a scholarship granting organization does not exceed an amount equal to two and one-half times the income standard used to qualify for a free or reduced lunch price under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.), who was eligible to attend a public school in the semester preceding receipt of the educational scholarship or is attending school in California for the first time, and who resides in California while receiving the educational scholarship.
219219
220-(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price reduced-price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).
220+(ii) A student who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1751 et seq.).
221221
222222 (B) A student remains an eligible student under this section until he or she graduates high school or reaches 21 years of age, regardless of household income.
223223
224224 (3) Parent means a parent, a legal guardian, a conservator, a person acting as a parent of a child, or any other person with legal authority to act on behalf of the child.
225225
226-(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic private elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic private schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.
226+(4) Qualified school means a public elementary or secondary school located in California that is outside of the eligible students resident school district or a nonpublic elementary or secondary school in California that complies with the requirements of this section. A qualified school shall comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a school.
227227
228228 (5) Qualified taxpayer means a taxpayer who files a franchise tax return in this state.
229229
230230 (6) Scholarship granting organization means an organization that complies with the requirements of this section and provides educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools of their parents choice.
231231
232232 (7) Test means either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or a nationally norm-referenced test chosen by the qualifying school.
233233
234234 (c) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the scholarship granting organization does all of the following:
235235
236236 (1) Notifies the Franchise Tax Board of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools.
237237
238238 (2) Provides the Franchise Tax Board with a letter of determination from the Internal Revenue Service of tax-exempt status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
239239
240240 (3) Provides the qualified taxpayer with a Franchise Tax Board-approved receipt substantiating the contribution made by the qualified taxpayer to the scholarship granting organization.
241241
242242 (4) Ensures that at least 90 percent of its revenue from donations is expended on educational scholarships.
243243
244244 (5) Spends a portion of expenditures each year on educational scholarships for students eligible under clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) equal to the percentage of low-income eligible students in the county where the scholarship granting organization expends the majority of its educational scholarships.
245245
246246 (6) Cooperates with the Franchise Tax Board, or its designee, in conducting criminal background checks of all of its employees and board members and excludes from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds.
247247
248248 (7) Ensures that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and may be used at any qualified school that accepts the eligible student according to a parents wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship may be prorated.
249249
250250 (8) (A) Demonstrates its financial accountability to the Franchise Tax Board by submitting a financial information report, conducted by a certified public accountant, that complies with uniform financial accounting standards and is certified by an auditor as free of material misstatements.
251251
252-(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report reports submitted pursuant to this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.
252+(B) If a scholarship granting organization provides five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or more in scholarships to eligible students through this program, it shall provide to the Franchise Tax Board a report on the results of an annual financial audit of the organization or its relevant accounts and records pertaining to credit eligibility donations conducted by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, government auditing standards, and rules promulgated by the Franchise Tax Board. The audit report shall include a report on financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Audit reports shall be provided to the Franchise Tax Board within 180 days after completion of the scholarship granting organizations fiscal year. The Franchise Tax Board shall review all audit report submitted pursuant this paragraph. The Franchise Tax Board shall require any significant items that were omitted in violation of a rule adopted by the Franchise Tax Board. The items shall be provided within 45 days of the date of the request.
253253
254254 (9) Ensures that educational scholarships are not provided to eligible students to attend a qualified school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization.
255255
256256 (10) Prioritize the awarding of scholarships to first-time recipients in the following order:
257257
258258 (A) Siblings of students who are currently receiving a scholarship.
259259
260260 (B) Low-income students.
261261
262262 (11) Grant only one year of scholarship in one approval process.
263263
264264 (d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless a qualified school that accepts educational scholarships from a scholarship granting organization does all of the following:
265265
266266 (1) Complies with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to schools.
267267
268268 (2) Obtains a valid occupancy permit for its grounds if required by its municipality.
269269
270270 (3) Certifies that it will not discriminate in accordance with Section 1981 of Title 42 of the United States Code.
271271
272272 (4) Provides academic accountability to the parent of eligible students who receive educational scholarships by regularly reporting to the parent on the students progress.
273273
274274 (5) Exclude from employment any person not permitted by law to work in a school.
275275
276276 (6) Annually administer either the Standardized Testing and Reporting Program or national norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in math and language arts, and may provide for value-added assessment, to all participating students in grades that require testing under accountability testing laws for schools.
277277
278278 (7) Pay for the tests of scholarship students with the scholarship moneys distributed by the scholarship granting organizations.
279279
280-(8) Provide theparents parent of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.
280+(8) Provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the results of the tests on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing after January 1, 2018.
281281
282282 (9) Provide the test results to the State Department of Education on an annual basis.
283283
284284 (10) Report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level, and race.
285285
286286 (11) Provide rates of high school graduation for participating students to the State Department of Education in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.
287287
288288 (12) Provide the results from an annual parental satisfaction survey, including information about the number of years that the parents child has participated in the scholarship program to the State Department of Education. The annual satisfaction survey shall ask parents of eligible students receiving educational scholarships to express:
289289
290290 (A) Their satisfaction with their childs academic achievement, including academic achievement at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus academic achievement at the school previously attended, if applicable.
291291
292292 (B) Their satisfaction with school safety at the school their child attends including school safety at the school their child attended through the scholarship program versus safety at the school previously attended, if applicable.
293293
294294 (C) Whether their child would have been able to attend their school of choice without the scholarship.
295295
296296 (D) Their opinions on other topics, items, or issues that the State Department of Education determines would elicit information about the effectiveness of the scholarship program.
297297
298298 (13) If a private school receives donations of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more during the school year, the private school shall demonstrate its financial accountability by either of the following:
299299
300-(A) Filing a surety bond with the Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.
300+(A) Filing a surety bond with Franchise Tax Board, payable to the State of California, in an amount equal to the aggregate amount of contributions expected to be received during the school year.
301301
302-(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with the Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.
302+(B) Filing financial information prior to the school year with Franchise Tax Board that demonstrates the financial viability of the scholarship granting organization.
303303
304304 (e) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, a scholarship granting organization shall report to the Franchise Tax Board the following information prepared by a certified public accountant regarding the previous calendar years educational scholarships:
305305
306306 (1) The name and address of the scholarship granting organization.
307307
308308 (2) The total number and dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year.
309309
310-(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price reduced-price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.
310+(3) The total number and dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year, the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous year to eligible students qualifying for the federal free and reduced price lunch program, and the percentage of first-time recipients of educational scholarships who were continuously enrolled in a public school during the previous year.
311311
312312 (f) For purposes of this section, the Franchise Tax Board shall do all of the following:
313313
314314 (1) Provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a qualified taxpayer to indicate the value of a received contribution. The Franchise Tax Board shall require a qualified taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming a credit under this section.
315315
316316 (2) Provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required by paragraph (8) of subdivision (d).
317317
318318 (3) Conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if in possession of evidence of fraud.
319319
320320 (4) (A) Bar a scholarship granting organization from being a scholarship granting organization if the Franchise Tax Board establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally failed to comply with the requirements of this section.
321321
322322 (B) If the Franchise Tax Board bars a scholarship granting organization, it shall notify any affected eligible students and his or her parent of this decision as soon as possible.
323323
324324 (5) Ensure compliance with privacy laws.
325325
326326 (g) The State Department of Education shall do the following:
327327
328328 (1) Collect all test results.
329329
330330 (2) Provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public on its Internet Web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program, and race of the student.
331331
332332 (h) In the case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax, the excess may be carried over to reduce the tax in the following year, and the succeeding year if necessary, until the credit is exhausted.
333333
334334 (i) Any deduction otherwise allowed under this part for any amount paid or incurred by the taxpayer upon which the credit is based shall be reduced by the amount of the credit allowed under this section.
335335
336336 (j) The Employment Development Department shall allow a qualified taxpayer to divert a prorated share of state income tax withholdings to a scholarship granting organization of the qualified taxpayers choice, up to the maximum credit allowed by law, including carryover credits.
337337
338338 (k) It is the intent of the Legislature to comply with Section 41.
339339
340340 SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
341341
342342 SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
343343
344344 SEC. 4. This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
345345
346346 ### SEC. 4.