California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB486 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 486 CHAPTER 666 An act to amend Sections 1703, 1909, 12501, 14022.3, 17406, 19301, 19302, 19306, 19320, 19320.5, 19321, 19322, 19323, 19324, 19325, 19326, 19330, 33004, 33501, 35028, 35143, 35253, 41601, 41608, 41840, 41962, 41976, 42238.5, 42639, 44843, 45113, 45301, 49180, 49430.7, 49534, 49556, 51796, 51796.2, 51797, 52500.1, 52501, 52501.5, 52502, 52505, 52511, 52515, 52517, 52523, 52540, 52552, 52570, 52572, 52610.5, 52616, 52616.4, 52616.18, 52653, 52656, 56333, and 84906 of, to amend the heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of, and to amend the heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of, Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of, to repeal Sections 41976.2, 41976.5, 46190, 46192, 46300.4, 52510, 52512, 52513, 52516, 52518, 52519, 52520, 52522, 52522.2, 52525, 52541, 52542, 52543, 52544, 52553, 52554, 52556, 52571, 52614, 52615, 52616.2, 52616.5, 52616.16, 52616.17, 52616.19, 52616.20, 52616.21, 52616.24, and 52617 of, and to repeal Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of, to repeal Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of, and to repeal Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of, Division 4 of Title 2 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to elementary and secondary education. [ Approved by Governor October 08, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State October 08, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 486, Committee on Education. Elementary and secondary education: omnibus bill. (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state. Under that system, various persons have specified duties and powers relating to the operation of elementary and secondary schools, including, among others, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents of schools, county auditors, and city, district, deputy, associate, or assistant superintendents of schools.This bill would replace gendered terms with nongendered terms and make various other nonsubstantive changes to provisions related to those persons.(2) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to adopt a resolution that, among other things: (A) declares its intention to enter into a lease or agreement relating to school property, (B) includes specified information about the property, and (C) fixes a time for a public meeting of the governing board of the school district at which sealed proposals to enter a lease or agreement with the school district will be received from any person, firm, or corporation, and considered by the governing board of the school district, as specified.Existing law, notwithstanding the provision described above, authorizes the governing board of a school district to lease real property for a minimum rental of $1 per year if the instrument by which this property is leased requires the lessee to construct, or provide for the construction of, a building to be used by the school district and requires the title to the building to vest in the school district at the end of the lease.Existing law, until July 1, 2022, requires the instrument created pursuant to these provisions to be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, as specified. Existing law authorizes a school district, for purposes of using preconstruction services, to enter into an instrument before written approval is obtained from the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect under specified circumstances. Existing law authorizes a school district to identify specific types of subcontractors required to be included in a proposal, and imposes specified other procedural requirements on awarding construction subcontracts of a certain value.This bill would instead make the provisions described above inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them as of January 1, 2028.(3) Existing law establishes the California State Library as a division within the State Department of Education. Existing law requires the State Librarian to be in charge of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the State Librarian, among other things, to appoint assistants as necessary and to keep in order and repair the books and property of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the department to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers.This bill would revise various provisions pertaining to the California State Library and the powers and duties of the State Librarian. Among other revisions, the bill would instead authorize the State Librarian to appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary for the purposes of carrying out these provisions and to purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to digitally preserve books and other physical materials and to provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection. The bill would establish the California State Library as an agency in state government. The bill would transfer authorization from the department to the State Librarian to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials excluding textbooks and to authorize these books and materials to be placed in the California State Librarys circulation for use by all patrons with print disabilities.(4) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service, whereby classified service employees are designated as permanent employees after serving a prescribed period of probation not to exceed 6 months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. In a school district that has adopted a merit system, existing law authorizes the personnel commission to establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes.This bill would require, in order to receive permanent classified service status, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to serve in a probationary status for not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(5) Existing law requires the governing board of each school district to hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, existing law requires the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the date upon which a governing board member elected at that election takes office. Existing law requires the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held during the same 15-day period on the calendar. Existing law requires the day and time of the annual meeting to be selected by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period.This bill would instead require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the 2nd Friday in December following the regular election, require the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held on any date in December before December 21, and require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the day and time of the annual organizational meeting to be selected by the governing board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period or, in a year in which no regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the governing board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the annual organizational meeting.(6) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months, and describes the period from July 1 to December 31, inclusive, as the first period report for the first principal apportionment and the period from July 1 to April 15, inclusive, as the 2nd period report for the 2nd principal apportionment. Existing law requires a county superintendent of schools to report the average daily attendance for the school and classes maintained by the county superintendent and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Existing law requires the days of attendance in classes for adults and regional occupational centers programs to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under these provisions and prescribes a formula for calculating average daily attendance for those schools and classes.This bill would instead require the days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under those provisions and under that prescribed formula. The bill would make other changes and repeal several laws relating to the calculation of average daily attendance in classes, courses, and programs for adults.(7) As a condition of receipt of reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, existing law requires a local educational agency to comply with specified nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.This bill would update a cross-reference to require, as a condition of receipt of certain reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, a local educational agency to comply with those nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.(8) Existing law requires the department to formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. Existing law requires these programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. Existing law requires nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis, requires the State Board of Education to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects, and requires the state board to approve projects upon recommendation of the department.The bill would instead authorize the department to formulate the basic elements of those nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis. The bill would instead authorize the state board to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. The bill would no longer require the state board to approve nutrition education projects upon recommendation of the department.(9) Existing law requires a school district or county superintendent of schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide each needy pupil with one nutritionally adequate free or reduced-price meal during each schoolday, as provided. Existing law requires the Superintendent to supervise the implementation of these and other provisions relating to meals for needy pupils and to investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds noncompliance, existing law requires the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance to the Attorney General. Existing law requires the Attorney General to conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. Existing law requires the Attorney General to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance when the action is requested by the Superintendent.If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools is noncompliant with those provisions relating to meals for needy pupils, this bill would instead require the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance and conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The bill would instead require the Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance.(10) Existing law establishes the Instructional School Gardens Program for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens. Under existing law, a school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a 3-year grant to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. Existing law requires the Superintendent to convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens, as specified, and requires the working group to advise the Superintendent, as provided. Existing law requires the California Integrated Waste Management Board to give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the Instructional School Gardens Program.This bill would instead make these requirements of the Superintendent, the working group, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board under the Instructional School Gardens Program optional.(11) Existing law establishes, within the department, the California Fresh Start Pilot Program to encourage public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide fruits and vegetables to pupils, and to promote the consumption of nutritious fruits and vegetables by schoolage children, as provided.This bill would repeal the California Fresh Start Pilot Program.(12) Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools to establish and maintain classes for adults, as specified. Existing law authorizes specified classes and courses to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for apportionment purposes from the adult education fund. These classes and courses include, among others: (A) adult programs in parenting and classes in child growth and development, parent child relationships, and parenting, (B) adult programs in elementary and secondary basic skills and other courses and classes required for a high school diploma, (C) adult education programs in English as a 2nd language, (D) adult education programs for immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, and workforce preparation classes in certain basic skills and other classes required for preparation to participate in job specific technical training, (E) adult education programs for older adults, (F) adult programs in home economics, and (G) adult programs in health and safety education. Existing law prohibits state apportionment from the adult education fund from being made for any other courses or classes.This bill would instead authorize, for purposes of apportionments from the adult education fund, (A) programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate, (B) programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation, and (C) programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce or primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school. This bill would make other changes to, and repeal several laws governing, adult education programs, courses, and classes.(13) Existing law requires a pupil to be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services. To be eligible for special education and related services, existing law requires a language, speech, and hearing specialist to assess and determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using spoken language results from articulation disorders, abnormal voice, fluency difficulties, inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of spoken language, or hearing loss.This bill would instead require a speech-language pathologist to determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using language results from speech sound disorder, voice disorder, fluency disorder, language disorder, or hearing impairment or deafness.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. Section 1703 of the Education Code is amended to read:1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.SEC. 2. Section 1909 of the Education Code is amended to read:1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.SEC. 3. Section 12501 of the Education Code is amended to read:12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.SEC. 4. Section 14022.3 of the Education Code is amended to read:14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.SEC. 5. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 2 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 3 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.SEC. 7. The heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 7. California State LibrarySEC. 8. The heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: Article 1. General ProvisionsSEC. 9. Section 19301 of the Education Code is amended to read:19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.SEC. 10. Section 19302 of the Education Code is amended to read:19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.SEC. 11. Section 19306 of the Education Code is amended to read:19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.SEC. 12. Section 19320 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.SEC. 13. Section 19320.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.SEC. 14. Section 19321 of the Education Code is amended to read:19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.SEC. 15. Section 19322 of the Education Code is amended to read:19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.SEC. 16. Section 19323 of the Education Code is amended to read:19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.SEC. 17. Section 19324 of the Education Code is amended to read:19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.SEC. 18. Section 19325 of the Education Code is amended to read:19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.SEC. 19. Section 19326 of the Education Code is amended to read:19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.SEC. 20. Section 19330 of the Education Code is amended to read:19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.SEC. 21. Section 33004 of the Education Code is amended to read:33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.SEC. 22. Section 33501 of the Education Code is amended to read:33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.SEC. 23. Section 35028 of the Education Code is amended to read:35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.SEC. 24. Section 35143 of the Education Code is amended to read:35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.SEC. 25. Section 35253 of the Education Code is amended to read:35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt. SEC. 26. Section 41601 of the Education Code is amended to read:41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.SEC. 27. Section 41608 of the Education Code is amended to read:41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.SEC. 28. Section 41840 of the Education Code is amended to read:41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.SEC. 29. Section 41962 of the Education Code is amended to read:41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.SEC. 30. Section 41976 of the Education Code is amended to read:41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.SEC. 31. Section 41976.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 32. Section 41976.5 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 33. Section 42238.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.SEC. 34. Section 42639 of the Education Code is amended to read:42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.SEC. 35. Section 44843 of the Education Code is amended to read:44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.SEC. 36. Section 45113 of the Education Code is amended to read:45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.SEC. 37. Section 45301 of the Education Code is amended to read:45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.SEC. 38. Section 46190 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 39. Section 46192 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 40. Section 46300.4 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 41. Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 42. Section 49180 of the Education Code is amended to read:49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.SEC. 43. Section 49430.7 of the Education Code is amended to read:49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.SEC. 44. Section 49534 of the Education Code is amended to read:49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.SEC. 45. Section 49556 of the Education Code is amended to read:49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.SEC. 46. Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 47. Section 51796 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).SEC. 48. Section 51796.2 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.SEC. 49. Section 51797 of the Education Code is amended to read:51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.SEC. 50. Section 52500.1 of the Education Code is amended to read:52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.SEC. 51. Section 52501 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.SEC. 52. Section 52501.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.SEC. 53. Section 52502 of the Education Code is amended to read:52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.SEC. 54. Section 52505 of the Education Code is amended to read:52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.SEC. 55. Section 52510 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 56. Section 52511 of the Education Code is amended to read:52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.SEC. 57. Section 52512 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 58. Section 52513 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 59. Section 52515 of the Education Code is amended to read:52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.SEC. 60. Section 52516 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 61. Section 52517 of the Education Code is amended to read:52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.SEC. 62. Section 52518 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 63. Section 52519 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 64. Section 52520 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 65. Section 52522 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 66. Section 52522.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 67. Section 52523 of the Education Code is amended to read:52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.SEC. 68. Section 52525 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 69. Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 70. Section 52540 of the Education Code is amended to read:52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.SEC. 71. Section 52541 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 72. Section 52542 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 73. Section 52543 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 74. Section 52544 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 75. Section 52552 of the Education Code is amended to read:52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.SEC. 76. Section 52553 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 77. Section 52554 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 78. Section 52556 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 79. Section 52570 of the Education Code is amended to read:52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.SEC. 80. Section 52571 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 81. Section 52572 of the Education Code is amended to read:52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.SEC. 82. Section 52610.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.SEC. 83. Section 52614 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 84. Section 52615 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 85. Section 52616 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.SEC. 86. Section 52616.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 87. Section 52616.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.SEC. 88. Section 52616.5 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 89. Section 52616.16 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 90. Section 52616.17 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 91. Section 52616.18 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.SEC. 92. Section 52616.19 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 93. Section 52616.20 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 94. Section 52616.21 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 95. Section 52616.24 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 96. Section 52617 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 97. Section 52653 of the Education Code is amended to read:52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.SEC. 98. Section 52656 of the Education Code is amended to read:52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.SEC. 99. Section 56333 of the Education Code is amended to read:56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.SEC. 100. Section 84906 of the Education Code is amended to read:84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.SEC. 101. Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
1+Enrolled September 13, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 08, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021 Amended IN Senate September 03, 2021 Amended IN Senate August 16, 2021 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2021 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 486Introduced by Committee on Education (Assembly Members ODonnell (Chair), Kiley (Vice Chair), Bennett, Megan Dahle, Lee, McCarty, and Quirk-Silva)February 08, 2021 An act to amend Sections 1703, 1909, 12501, 14022.3, 17406, 19301, 19302, 19306, 19320, 19320.5, 19321, 19322, 19323, 19324, 19325, 19326, 19330, 33004, 33501, 35028, 35143, 35253, 41601, 41608, 41840, 41962, 41976, 42238.5, 42639, 44843, 45113, 45301, 49180, 49430.7, 49534, 49556, 51796, 51796.2, 51797, 52500.1, 52501, 52501.5, 52502, 52505, 52511, 52515, 52517, 52523, 52540, 52552, 52570, 52572, 52610.5, 52616, 52616.4, 52616.18, 52653, 52656, 56333, and 84906 of, to amend the heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of, and to amend the heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of, Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of, to repeal Sections 41976.2, 41976.5, 46190, 46192, 46300.4, 52510, 52512, 52513, 52516, 52518, 52519, 52520, 52522, 52522.2, 52525, 52541, 52542, 52543, 52544, 52553, 52554, 52556, 52571, 52614, 52615, 52616.2, 52616.5, 52616.16, 52616.17, 52616.19, 52616.20, 52616.21, 52616.24, and 52617 of, and to repeal Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of, to repeal Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of, and to repeal Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of, Division 4 of Title 2 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to elementary and secondary education.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 486, Committee on Education. Elementary and secondary education: omnibus bill. (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state. Under that system, various persons have specified duties and powers relating to the operation of elementary and secondary schools, including, among others, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents of schools, county auditors, and city, district, deputy, associate, or assistant superintendents of schools.This bill would replace gendered terms with nongendered terms and make various other nonsubstantive changes to provisions related to those persons.(2) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to adopt a resolution that, among other things: (A) declares its intention to enter into a lease or agreement relating to school property, (B) includes specified information about the property, and (C) fixes a time for a public meeting of the governing board of the school district at which sealed proposals to enter a lease or agreement with the school district will be received from any person, firm, or corporation, and considered by the governing board of the school district, as specified.Existing law, notwithstanding the provision described above, authorizes the governing board of a school district to lease real property for a minimum rental of $1 per year if the instrument by which this property is leased requires the lessee to construct, or provide for the construction of, a building to be used by the school district and requires the title to the building to vest in the school district at the end of the lease.Existing law, until July 1, 2022, requires the instrument created pursuant to these provisions to be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, as specified. Existing law authorizes a school district, for purposes of using preconstruction services, to enter into an instrument before written approval is obtained from the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect under specified circumstances. Existing law authorizes a school district to identify specific types of subcontractors required to be included in a proposal, and imposes specified other procedural requirements on awarding construction subcontracts of a certain value.This bill would instead make the provisions described above inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them as of January 1, 2028.(3) Existing law establishes the California State Library as a division within the State Department of Education. Existing law requires the State Librarian to be in charge of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the State Librarian, among other things, to appoint assistants as necessary and to keep in order and repair the books and property of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the department to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers.This bill would revise various provisions pertaining to the California State Library and the powers and duties of the State Librarian. Among other revisions, the bill would instead authorize the State Librarian to appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary for the purposes of carrying out these provisions and to purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to digitally preserve books and other physical materials and to provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection. The bill would establish the California State Library as an agency in state government. The bill would transfer authorization from the department to the State Librarian to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials excluding textbooks and to authorize these books and materials to be placed in the California State Librarys circulation for use by all patrons with print disabilities.(4) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service, whereby classified service employees are designated as permanent employees after serving a prescribed period of probation not to exceed 6 months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. In a school district that has adopted a merit system, existing law authorizes the personnel commission to establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes.This bill would require, in order to receive permanent classified service status, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to serve in a probationary status for not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(5) Existing law requires the governing board of each school district to hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, existing law requires the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the date upon which a governing board member elected at that election takes office. Existing law requires the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held during the same 15-day period on the calendar. Existing law requires the day and time of the annual meeting to be selected by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period.This bill would instead require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the 2nd Friday in December following the regular election, require the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held on any date in December before December 21, and require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the day and time of the annual organizational meeting to be selected by the governing board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period or, in a year in which no regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the governing board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the annual organizational meeting.(6) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months, and describes the period from July 1 to December 31, inclusive, as the first period report for the first principal apportionment and the period from July 1 to April 15, inclusive, as the 2nd period report for the 2nd principal apportionment. Existing law requires a county superintendent of schools to report the average daily attendance for the school and classes maintained by the county superintendent and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Existing law requires the days of attendance in classes for adults and regional occupational centers programs to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under these provisions and prescribes a formula for calculating average daily attendance for those schools and classes.This bill would instead require the days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under those provisions and under that prescribed formula. The bill would make other changes and repeal several laws relating to the calculation of average daily attendance in classes, courses, and programs for adults.(7) As a condition of receipt of reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, existing law requires a local educational agency to comply with specified nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.This bill would update a cross-reference to require, as a condition of receipt of certain reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, a local educational agency to comply with those nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.(8) Existing law requires the department to formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. Existing law requires these programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. Existing law requires nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis, requires the State Board of Education to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects, and requires the state board to approve projects upon recommendation of the department.The bill would instead authorize the department to formulate the basic elements of those nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis. The bill would instead authorize the state board to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. The bill would no longer require the state board to approve nutrition education projects upon recommendation of the department.(9) Existing law requires a school district or county superintendent of schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide each needy pupil with one nutritionally adequate free or reduced-price meal during each schoolday, as provided. Existing law requires the Superintendent to supervise the implementation of these and other provisions relating to meals for needy pupils and to investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds noncompliance, existing law requires the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance to the Attorney General. Existing law requires the Attorney General to conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. Existing law requires the Attorney General to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance when the action is requested by the Superintendent.If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools is noncompliant with those provisions relating to meals for needy pupils, this bill would instead require the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance and conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The bill would instead require the Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance.(10) Existing law establishes the Instructional School Gardens Program for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens. Under existing law, a school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a 3-year grant to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. Existing law requires the Superintendent to convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens, as specified, and requires the working group to advise the Superintendent, as provided. Existing law requires the California Integrated Waste Management Board to give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the Instructional School Gardens Program.This bill would instead make these requirements of the Superintendent, the working group, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board under the Instructional School Gardens Program optional.(11) Existing law establishes, within the department, the California Fresh Start Pilot Program to encourage public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide fruits and vegetables to pupils, and to promote the consumption of nutritious fruits and vegetables by schoolage children, as provided.This bill would repeal the California Fresh Start Pilot Program.(12) Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools to establish and maintain classes for adults, as specified. Existing law authorizes specified classes and courses to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for apportionment purposes from the adult education fund. These classes and courses include, among others: (A) adult programs in parenting and classes in child growth and development, parent child relationships, and parenting, (B) adult programs in elementary and secondary basic skills and other courses and classes required for a high school diploma, (C) adult education programs in English as a 2nd language, (D) adult education programs for immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, and workforce preparation classes in certain basic skills and other classes required for preparation to participate in job specific technical training, (E) adult education programs for older adults, (F) adult programs in home economics, and (G) adult programs in health and safety education. Existing law prohibits state apportionment from the adult education fund from being made for any other courses or classes.This bill would instead authorize, for purposes of apportionments from the adult education fund, (A) programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate, (B) programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation, and (C) programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce or primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school. This bill would make other changes to, and repeal several laws governing, adult education programs, courses, and classes.(13) Existing law requires a pupil to be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services. To be eligible for special education and related services, existing law requires a language, speech, and hearing specialist to assess and determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using spoken language results from articulation disorders, abnormal voice, fluency difficulties, inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of spoken language, or hearing loss.This bill would instead require a speech-language pathologist to determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using language results from speech sound disorder, voice disorder, fluency disorder, language disorder, or hearing impairment or deafness.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. Section 1703 of the Education Code is amended to read:1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.SEC. 2. Section 1909 of the Education Code is amended to read:1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.SEC. 3. Section 12501 of the Education Code is amended to read:12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.SEC. 4. Section 14022.3 of the Education Code is amended to read:14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.SEC. 5. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 2 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 3 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.SEC. 7. The heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 7. California State LibrarySEC. 8. The heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: Article 1. General ProvisionsSEC. 9. Section 19301 of the Education Code is amended to read:19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.SEC. 10. Section 19302 of the Education Code is amended to read:19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.SEC. 11. Section 19306 of the Education Code is amended to read:19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.SEC. 12. Section 19320 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.SEC. 13. Section 19320.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.SEC. 14. Section 19321 of the Education Code is amended to read:19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.SEC. 15. Section 19322 of the Education Code is amended to read:19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.SEC. 16. Section 19323 of the Education Code is amended to read:19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.SEC. 17. Section 19324 of the Education Code is amended to read:19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.SEC. 18. Section 19325 of the Education Code is amended to read:19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.SEC. 19. Section 19326 of the Education Code is amended to read:19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.SEC. 20. Section 19330 of the Education Code is amended to read:19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.SEC. 21. Section 33004 of the Education Code is amended to read:33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.SEC. 22. Section 33501 of the Education Code is amended to read:33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.SEC. 23. Section 35028 of the Education Code is amended to read:35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.SEC. 24. Section 35143 of the Education Code is amended to read:35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.SEC. 25. Section 35253 of the Education Code is amended to read:35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt. SEC. 26. Section 41601 of the Education Code is amended to read:41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.SEC. 27. Section 41608 of the Education Code is amended to read:41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.SEC. 28. Section 41840 of the Education Code is amended to read:41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.SEC. 29. Section 41962 of the Education Code is amended to read:41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.SEC. 30. Section 41976 of the Education Code is amended to read:41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.SEC. 31. Section 41976.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 32. Section 41976.5 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 33. Section 42238.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.SEC. 34. Section 42639 of the Education Code is amended to read:42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.SEC. 35. Section 44843 of the Education Code is amended to read:44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.SEC. 36. Section 45113 of the Education Code is amended to read:45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.SEC. 37. Section 45301 of the Education Code is amended to read:45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.SEC. 38. Section 46190 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 39. Section 46192 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 40. Section 46300.4 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 41. Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 42. Section 49180 of the Education Code is amended to read:49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.SEC. 43. Section 49430.7 of the Education Code is amended to read:49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.SEC. 44. Section 49534 of the Education Code is amended to read:49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.SEC. 45. Section 49556 of the Education Code is amended to read:49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.SEC. 46. Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 47. Section 51796 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).SEC. 48. Section 51796.2 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.SEC. 49. Section 51797 of the Education Code is amended to read:51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.SEC. 50. Section 52500.1 of the Education Code is amended to read:52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.SEC. 51. Section 52501 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.SEC. 52. Section 52501.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.SEC. 53. Section 52502 of the Education Code is amended to read:52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.SEC. 54. Section 52505 of the Education Code is amended to read:52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.SEC. 55. Section 52510 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 56. Section 52511 of the Education Code is amended to read:52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.SEC. 57. Section 52512 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 58. Section 52513 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 59. Section 52515 of the Education Code is amended to read:52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.SEC. 60. Section 52516 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 61. Section 52517 of the Education Code is amended to read:52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.SEC. 62. Section 52518 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 63. Section 52519 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 64. Section 52520 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 65. Section 52522 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 66. Section 52522.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 67. Section 52523 of the Education Code is amended to read:52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.SEC. 68. Section 52525 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 69. Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 70. Section 52540 of the Education Code is amended to read:52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.SEC. 71. Section 52541 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 72. Section 52542 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 73. Section 52543 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 74. Section 52544 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 75. Section 52552 of the Education Code is amended to read:52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.SEC. 76. Section 52553 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 77. Section 52554 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 78. Section 52556 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 79. Section 52570 of the Education Code is amended to read:52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.SEC. 80. Section 52571 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 81. Section 52572 of the Education Code is amended to read:52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.SEC. 82. Section 52610.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.SEC. 83. Section 52614 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 84. Section 52615 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 85. Section 52616 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.SEC. 86. Section 52616.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 87. Section 52616.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.SEC. 88. Section 52616.5 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 89. Section 52616.16 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 90. Section 52616.17 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 91. Section 52616.18 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.SEC. 92. Section 52616.19 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 93. Section 52616.20 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 94. Section 52616.21 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 95. Section 52616.24 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 96. Section 52617 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 97. Section 52653 of the Education Code is amended to read:52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.SEC. 98. Section 52656 of the Education Code is amended to read:52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.SEC. 99. Section 56333 of the Education Code is amended to read:56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.SEC. 100. Section 84906 of the Education Code is amended to read:84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.SEC. 101. Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
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3- Assembly Bill No. 486 CHAPTER 666 An act to amend Sections 1703, 1909, 12501, 14022.3, 17406, 19301, 19302, 19306, 19320, 19320.5, 19321, 19322, 19323, 19324, 19325, 19326, 19330, 33004, 33501, 35028, 35143, 35253, 41601, 41608, 41840, 41962, 41976, 42238.5, 42639, 44843, 45113, 45301, 49180, 49430.7, 49534, 49556, 51796, 51796.2, 51797, 52500.1, 52501, 52501.5, 52502, 52505, 52511, 52515, 52517, 52523, 52540, 52552, 52570, 52572, 52610.5, 52616, 52616.4, 52616.18, 52653, 52656, 56333, and 84906 of, to amend the heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of, and to amend the heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of, Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of, to repeal Sections 41976.2, 41976.5, 46190, 46192, 46300.4, 52510, 52512, 52513, 52516, 52518, 52519, 52520, 52522, 52522.2, 52525, 52541, 52542, 52543, 52544, 52553, 52554, 52556, 52571, 52614, 52615, 52616.2, 52616.5, 52616.16, 52616.17, 52616.19, 52616.20, 52616.21, 52616.24, and 52617 of, and to repeal Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of, to repeal Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of, and to repeal Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of, Division 4 of Title 2 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to elementary and secondary education. [ Approved by Governor October 08, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State October 08, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 486, Committee on Education. Elementary and secondary education: omnibus bill. (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state. Under that system, various persons have specified duties and powers relating to the operation of elementary and secondary schools, including, among others, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents of schools, county auditors, and city, district, deputy, associate, or assistant superintendents of schools.This bill would replace gendered terms with nongendered terms and make various other nonsubstantive changes to provisions related to those persons.(2) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to adopt a resolution that, among other things: (A) declares its intention to enter into a lease or agreement relating to school property, (B) includes specified information about the property, and (C) fixes a time for a public meeting of the governing board of the school district at which sealed proposals to enter a lease or agreement with the school district will be received from any person, firm, or corporation, and considered by the governing board of the school district, as specified.Existing law, notwithstanding the provision described above, authorizes the governing board of a school district to lease real property for a minimum rental of $1 per year if the instrument by which this property is leased requires the lessee to construct, or provide for the construction of, a building to be used by the school district and requires the title to the building to vest in the school district at the end of the lease.Existing law, until July 1, 2022, requires the instrument created pursuant to these provisions to be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, as specified. Existing law authorizes a school district, for purposes of using preconstruction services, to enter into an instrument before written approval is obtained from the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect under specified circumstances. Existing law authorizes a school district to identify specific types of subcontractors required to be included in a proposal, and imposes specified other procedural requirements on awarding construction subcontracts of a certain value.This bill would instead make the provisions described above inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them as of January 1, 2028.(3) Existing law establishes the California State Library as a division within the State Department of Education. Existing law requires the State Librarian to be in charge of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the State Librarian, among other things, to appoint assistants as necessary and to keep in order and repair the books and property of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the department to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers.This bill would revise various provisions pertaining to the California State Library and the powers and duties of the State Librarian. Among other revisions, the bill would instead authorize the State Librarian to appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary for the purposes of carrying out these provisions and to purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to digitally preserve books and other physical materials and to provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection. The bill would establish the California State Library as an agency in state government. The bill would transfer authorization from the department to the State Librarian to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials excluding textbooks and to authorize these books and materials to be placed in the California State Librarys circulation for use by all patrons with print disabilities.(4) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service, whereby classified service employees are designated as permanent employees after serving a prescribed period of probation not to exceed 6 months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. In a school district that has adopted a merit system, existing law authorizes the personnel commission to establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes.This bill would require, in order to receive permanent classified service status, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to serve in a probationary status for not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(5) Existing law requires the governing board of each school district to hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, existing law requires the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the date upon which a governing board member elected at that election takes office. Existing law requires the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held during the same 15-day period on the calendar. Existing law requires the day and time of the annual meeting to be selected by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period.This bill would instead require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the 2nd Friday in December following the regular election, require the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held on any date in December before December 21, and require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the day and time of the annual organizational meeting to be selected by the governing board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period or, in a year in which no regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the governing board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the annual organizational meeting.(6) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months, and describes the period from July 1 to December 31, inclusive, as the first period report for the first principal apportionment and the period from July 1 to April 15, inclusive, as the 2nd period report for the 2nd principal apportionment. Existing law requires a county superintendent of schools to report the average daily attendance for the school and classes maintained by the county superintendent and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Existing law requires the days of attendance in classes for adults and regional occupational centers programs to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under these provisions and prescribes a formula for calculating average daily attendance for those schools and classes.This bill would instead require the days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under those provisions and under that prescribed formula. The bill would make other changes and repeal several laws relating to the calculation of average daily attendance in classes, courses, and programs for adults.(7) As a condition of receipt of reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, existing law requires a local educational agency to comply with specified nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.This bill would update a cross-reference to require, as a condition of receipt of certain reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, a local educational agency to comply with those nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.(8) Existing law requires the department to formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. Existing law requires these programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. Existing law requires nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis, requires the State Board of Education to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects, and requires the state board to approve projects upon recommendation of the department.The bill would instead authorize the department to formulate the basic elements of those nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis. The bill would instead authorize the state board to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. The bill would no longer require the state board to approve nutrition education projects upon recommendation of the department.(9) Existing law requires a school district or county superintendent of schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide each needy pupil with one nutritionally adequate free or reduced-price meal during each schoolday, as provided. Existing law requires the Superintendent to supervise the implementation of these and other provisions relating to meals for needy pupils and to investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds noncompliance, existing law requires the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance to the Attorney General. Existing law requires the Attorney General to conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. Existing law requires the Attorney General to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance when the action is requested by the Superintendent.If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools is noncompliant with those provisions relating to meals for needy pupils, this bill would instead require the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance and conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The bill would instead require the Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance.(10) Existing law establishes the Instructional School Gardens Program for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens. Under existing law, a school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a 3-year grant to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. Existing law requires the Superintendent to convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens, as specified, and requires the working group to advise the Superintendent, as provided. Existing law requires the California Integrated Waste Management Board to give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the Instructional School Gardens Program.This bill would instead make these requirements of the Superintendent, the working group, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board under the Instructional School Gardens Program optional.(11) Existing law establishes, within the department, the California Fresh Start Pilot Program to encourage public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide fruits and vegetables to pupils, and to promote the consumption of nutritious fruits and vegetables by schoolage children, as provided.This bill would repeal the California Fresh Start Pilot Program.(12) Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools to establish and maintain classes for adults, as specified. Existing law authorizes specified classes and courses to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for apportionment purposes from the adult education fund. These classes and courses include, among others: (A) adult programs in parenting and classes in child growth and development, parent child relationships, and parenting, (B) adult programs in elementary and secondary basic skills and other courses and classes required for a high school diploma, (C) adult education programs in English as a 2nd language, (D) adult education programs for immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, and workforce preparation classes in certain basic skills and other classes required for preparation to participate in job specific technical training, (E) adult education programs for older adults, (F) adult programs in home economics, and (G) adult programs in health and safety education. Existing law prohibits state apportionment from the adult education fund from being made for any other courses or classes.This bill would instead authorize, for purposes of apportionments from the adult education fund, (A) programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate, (B) programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation, and (C) programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce or primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school. This bill would make other changes to, and repeal several laws governing, adult education programs, courses, and classes.(13) Existing law requires a pupil to be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services. To be eligible for special education and related services, existing law requires a language, speech, and hearing specialist to assess and determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using spoken language results from articulation disorders, abnormal voice, fluency difficulties, inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of spoken language, or hearing loss.This bill would instead require a speech-language pathologist to determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using language results from speech sound disorder, voice disorder, fluency disorder, language disorder, or hearing impairment or deafness.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Enrolled September 13, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 08, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021 Amended IN Senate September 03, 2021 Amended IN Senate August 16, 2021 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2021 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 486Introduced by Committee on Education (Assembly Members ODonnell (Chair), Kiley (Vice Chair), Bennett, Megan Dahle, Lee, McCarty, and Quirk-Silva)February 08, 2021 An act to amend Sections 1703, 1909, 12501, 14022.3, 17406, 19301, 19302, 19306, 19320, 19320.5, 19321, 19322, 19323, 19324, 19325, 19326, 19330, 33004, 33501, 35028, 35143, 35253, 41601, 41608, 41840, 41962, 41976, 42238.5, 42639, 44843, 45113, 45301, 49180, 49430.7, 49534, 49556, 51796, 51796.2, 51797, 52500.1, 52501, 52501.5, 52502, 52505, 52511, 52515, 52517, 52523, 52540, 52552, 52570, 52572, 52610.5, 52616, 52616.4, 52616.18, 52653, 52656, 56333, and 84906 of, to amend the heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of, and to amend the heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of, Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of, to repeal Sections 41976.2, 41976.5, 46190, 46192, 46300.4, 52510, 52512, 52513, 52516, 52518, 52519, 52520, 52522, 52522.2, 52525, 52541, 52542, 52543, 52544, 52553, 52554, 52556, 52571, 52614, 52615, 52616.2, 52616.5, 52616.16, 52616.17, 52616.19, 52616.20, 52616.21, 52616.24, and 52617 of, and to repeal Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of, to repeal Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of, and to repeal Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of, Division 4 of Title 2 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to elementary and secondary education.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 486, Committee on Education. Elementary and secondary education: omnibus bill. (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state. Under that system, various persons have specified duties and powers relating to the operation of elementary and secondary schools, including, among others, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents of schools, county auditors, and city, district, deputy, associate, or assistant superintendents of schools.This bill would replace gendered terms with nongendered terms and make various other nonsubstantive changes to provisions related to those persons.(2) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to adopt a resolution that, among other things: (A) declares its intention to enter into a lease or agreement relating to school property, (B) includes specified information about the property, and (C) fixes a time for a public meeting of the governing board of the school district at which sealed proposals to enter a lease or agreement with the school district will be received from any person, firm, or corporation, and considered by the governing board of the school district, as specified.Existing law, notwithstanding the provision described above, authorizes the governing board of a school district to lease real property for a minimum rental of $1 per year if the instrument by which this property is leased requires the lessee to construct, or provide for the construction of, a building to be used by the school district and requires the title to the building to vest in the school district at the end of the lease.Existing law, until July 1, 2022, requires the instrument created pursuant to these provisions to be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, as specified. Existing law authorizes a school district, for purposes of using preconstruction services, to enter into an instrument before written approval is obtained from the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect under specified circumstances. Existing law authorizes a school district to identify specific types of subcontractors required to be included in a proposal, and imposes specified other procedural requirements on awarding construction subcontracts of a certain value.This bill would instead make the provisions described above inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them as of January 1, 2028.(3) Existing law establishes the California State Library as a division within the State Department of Education. Existing law requires the State Librarian to be in charge of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the State Librarian, among other things, to appoint assistants as necessary and to keep in order and repair the books and property of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the department to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers.This bill would revise various provisions pertaining to the California State Library and the powers and duties of the State Librarian. Among other revisions, the bill would instead authorize the State Librarian to appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary for the purposes of carrying out these provisions and to purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to digitally preserve books and other physical materials and to provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection. The bill would establish the California State Library as an agency in state government. The bill would transfer authorization from the department to the State Librarian to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials excluding textbooks and to authorize these books and materials to be placed in the California State Librarys circulation for use by all patrons with print disabilities.(4) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service, whereby classified service employees are designated as permanent employees after serving a prescribed period of probation not to exceed 6 months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. In a school district that has adopted a merit system, existing law authorizes the personnel commission to establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes.This bill would require, in order to receive permanent classified service status, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to serve in a probationary status for not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(5) Existing law requires the governing board of each school district to hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, existing law requires the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the date upon which a governing board member elected at that election takes office. Existing law requires the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held during the same 15-day period on the calendar. Existing law requires the day and time of the annual meeting to be selected by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period.This bill would instead require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the 2nd Friday in December following the regular election, require the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held on any date in December before December 21, and require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the day and time of the annual organizational meeting to be selected by the governing board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period or, in a year in which no regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the governing board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the annual organizational meeting.(6) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months, and describes the period from July 1 to December 31, inclusive, as the first period report for the first principal apportionment and the period from July 1 to April 15, inclusive, as the 2nd period report for the 2nd principal apportionment. Existing law requires a county superintendent of schools to report the average daily attendance for the school and classes maintained by the county superintendent and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Existing law requires the days of attendance in classes for adults and regional occupational centers programs to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under these provisions and prescribes a formula for calculating average daily attendance for those schools and classes.This bill would instead require the days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under those provisions and under that prescribed formula. The bill would make other changes and repeal several laws relating to the calculation of average daily attendance in classes, courses, and programs for adults.(7) As a condition of receipt of reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, existing law requires a local educational agency to comply with specified nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.This bill would update a cross-reference to require, as a condition of receipt of certain reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, a local educational agency to comply with those nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.(8) Existing law requires the department to formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. Existing law requires these programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. Existing law requires nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis, requires the State Board of Education to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects, and requires the state board to approve projects upon recommendation of the department.The bill would instead authorize the department to formulate the basic elements of those nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis. The bill would instead authorize the state board to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. The bill would no longer require the state board to approve nutrition education projects upon recommendation of the department.(9) Existing law requires a school district or county superintendent of schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide each needy pupil with one nutritionally adequate free or reduced-price meal during each schoolday, as provided. Existing law requires the Superintendent to supervise the implementation of these and other provisions relating to meals for needy pupils and to investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds noncompliance, existing law requires the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance to the Attorney General. Existing law requires the Attorney General to conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. Existing law requires the Attorney General to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance when the action is requested by the Superintendent.If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools is noncompliant with those provisions relating to meals for needy pupils, this bill would instead require the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance and conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The bill would instead require the Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance.(10) Existing law establishes the Instructional School Gardens Program for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens. Under existing law, a school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a 3-year grant to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. Existing law requires the Superintendent to convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens, as specified, and requires the working group to advise the Superintendent, as provided. Existing law requires the California Integrated Waste Management Board to give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the Instructional School Gardens Program.This bill would instead make these requirements of the Superintendent, the working group, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board under the Instructional School Gardens Program optional.(11) Existing law establishes, within the department, the California Fresh Start Pilot Program to encourage public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide fruits and vegetables to pupils, and to promote the consumption of nutritious fruits and vegetables by schoolage children, as provided.This bill would repeal the California Fresh Start Pilot Program.(12) Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools to establish and maintain classes for adults, as specified. Existing law authorizes specified classes and courses to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for apportionment purposes from the adult education fund. These classes and courses include, among others: (A) adult programs in parenting and classes in child growth and development, parent child relationships, and parenting, (B) adult programs in elementary and secondary basic skills and other courses and classes required for a high school diploma, (C) adult education programs in English as a 2nd language, (D) adult education programs for immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, and workforce preparation classes in certain basic skills and other classes required for preparation to participate in job specific technical training, (E) adult education programs for older adults, (F) adult programs in home economics, and (G) adult programs in health and safety education. Existing law prohibits state apportionment from the adult education fund from being made for any other courses or classes.This bill would instead authorize, for purposes of apportionments from the adult education fund, (A) programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate, (B) programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation, and (C) programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce or primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school. This bill would make other changes to, and repeal several laws governing, adult education programs, courses, and classes.(13) Existing law requires a pupil to be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services. To be eligible for special education and related services, existing law requires a language, speech, and hearing specialist to assess and determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using spoken language results from articulation disorders, abnormal voice, fluency difficulties, inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of spoken language, or hearing loss.This bill would instead require a speech-language pathologist to determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using language results from speech sound disorder, voice disorder, fluency disorder, language disorder, or hearing impairment or deafness.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Assembly Bill No. 486 CHAPTER 666
5+ Enrolled September 13, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 08, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021 Amended IN Senate September 03, 2021 Amended IN Senate August 16, 2021 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2021 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2021
66
7- Assembly Bill No. 486
7+Enrolled September 13, 2021
8+Passed IN Senate September 08, 2021
9+Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021
10+Amended IN Senate September 03, 2021
11+Amended IN Senate August 16, 2021
12+Amended IN Senate June 09, 2021
13+Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2021
814
9- CHAPTER 666
15+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
16+
17+ Assembly Bill
18+
19+No. 486
20+
21+Introduced by Committee on Education (Assembly Members ODonnell (Chair), Kiley (Vice Chair), Bennett, Megan Dahle, Lee, McCarty, and Quirk-Silva)February 08, 2021
22+
23+Introduced by Committee on Education (Assembly Members ODonnell (Chair), Kiley (Vice Chair), Bennett, Megan Dahle, Lee, McCarty, and Quirk-Silva)
24+February 08, 2021
1025
1126 An act to amend Sections 1703, 1909, 12501, 14022.3, 17406, 19301, 19302, 19306, 19320, 19320.5, 19321, 19322, 19323, 19324, 19325, 19326, 19330, 33004, 33501, 35028, 35143, 35253, 41601, 41608, 41840, 41962, 41976, 42238.5, 42639, 44843, 45113, 45301, 49180, 49430.7, 49534, 49556, 51796, 51796.2, 51797, 52500.1, 52501, 52501.5, 52502, 52505, 52511, 52515, 52517, 52523, 52540, 52552, 52570, 52572, 52610.5, 52616, 52616.4, 52616.18, 52653, 52656, 56333, and 84906 of, to amend the heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of, and to amend the heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of, Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of, to repeal Sections 41976.2, 41976.5, 46190, 46192, 46300.4, 52510, 52512, 52513, 52516, 52518, 52519, 52520, 52522, 52522.2, 52525, 52541, 52542, 52543, 52544, 52553, 52554, 52556, 52571, 52614, 52615, 52616.2, 52616.5, 52616.16, 52616.17, 52616.19, 52616.20, 52616.21, 52616.24, and 52617 of, and to repeal Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of, to repeal Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of, and to repeal Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of, Division 4 of Title 2 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to elementary and secondary education.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor October 08, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State October 08, 2021. ]
1427
1528 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1629
1730 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1831
1932 AB 486, Committee on Education. Elementary and secondary education: omnibus bill.
2033
2134 (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state. Under that system, various persons have specified duties and powers relating to the operation of elementary and secondary schools, including, among others, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents of schools, county auditors, and city, district, deputy, associate, or assistant superintendents of schools.This bill would replace gendered terms with nongendered terms and make various other nonsubstantive changes to provisions related to those persons.(2) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to adopt a resolution that, among other things: (A) declares its intention to enter into a lease or agreement relating to school property, (B) includes specified information about the property, and (C) fixes a time for a public meeting of the governing board of the school district at which sealed proposals to enter a lease or agreement with the school district will be received from any person, firm, or corporation, and considered by the governing board of the school district, as specified.Existing law, notwithstanding the provision described above, authorizes the governing board of a school district to lease real property for a minimum rental of $1 per year if the instrument by which this property is leased requires the lessee to construct, or provide for the construction of, a building to be used by the school district and requires the title to the building to vest in the school district at the end of the lease.Existing law, until July 1, 2022, requires the instrument created pursuant to these provisions to be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, as specified. Existing law authorizes a school district, for purposes of using preconstruction services, to enter into an instrument before written approval is obtained from the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect under specified circumstances. Existing law authorizes a school district to identify specific types of subcontractors required to be included in a proposal, and imposes specified other procedural requirements on awarding construction subcontracts of a certain value.This bill would instead make the provisions described above inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them as of January 1, 2028.(3) Existing law establishes the California State Library as a division within the State Department of Education. Existing law requires the State Librarian to be in charge of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the State Librarian, among other things, to appoint assistants as necessary and to keep in order and repair the books and property of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the department to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers.This bill would revise various provisions pertaining to the California State Library and the powers and duties of the State Librarian. Among other revisions, the bill would instead authorize the State Librarian to appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary for the purposes of carrying out these provisions and to purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to digitally preserve books and other physical materials and to provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection. The bill would establish the California State Library as an agency in state government. The bill would transfer authorization from the department to the State Librarian to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials excluding textbooks and to authorize these books and materials to be placed in the California State Librarys circulation for use by all patrons with print disabilities.(4) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service, whereby classified service employees are designated as permanent employees after serving a prescribed period of probation not to exceed 6 months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. In a school district that has adopted a merit system, existing law authorizes the personnel commission to establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes.This bill would require, in order to receive permanent classified service status, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to serve in a probationary status for not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(5) Existing law requires the governing board of each school district to hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, existing law requires the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the date upon which a governing board member elected at that election takes office. Existing law requires the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held during the same 15-day period on the calendar. Existing law requires the day and time of the annual meeting to be selected by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period.This bill would instead require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the 2nd Friday in December following the regular election, require the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held on any date in December before December 21, and require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the day and time of the annual organizational meeting to be selected by the governing board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period or, in a year in which no regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the governing board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the annual organizational meeting.(6) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months, and describes the period from July 1 to December 31, inclusive, as the first period report for the first principal apportionment and the period from July 1 to April 15, inclusive, as the 2nd period report for the 2nd principal apportionment. Existing law requires a county superintendent of schools to report the average daily attendance for the school and classes maintained by the county superintendent and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Existing law requires the days of attendance in classes for adults and regional occupational centers programs to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under these provisions and prescribes a formula for calculating average daily attendance for those schools and classes.This bill would instead require the days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under those provisions and under that prescribed formula. The bill would make other changes and repeal several laws relating to the calculation of average daily attendance in classes, courses, and programs for adults.(7) As a condition of receipt of reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, existing law requires a local educational agency to comply with specified nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.This bill would update a cross-reference to require, as a condition of receipt of certain reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, a local educational agency to comply with those nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.(8) Existing law requires the department to formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. Existing law requires these programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. Existing law requires nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis, requires the State Board of Education to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects, and requires the state board to approve projects upon recommendation of the department.The bill would instead authorize the department to formulate the basic elements of those nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis. The bill would instead authorize the state board to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. The bill would no longer require the state board to approve nutrition education projects upon recommendation of the department.(9) Existing law requires a school district or county superintendent of schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide each needy pupil with one nutritionally adequate free or reduced-price meal during each schoolday, as provided. Existing law requires the Superintendent to supervise the implementation of these and other provisions relating to meals for needy pupils and to investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds noncompliance, existing law requires the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance to the Attorney General. Existing law requires the Attorney General to conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. Existing law requires the Attorney General to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance when the action is requested by the Superintendent.If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools is noncompliant with those provisions relating to meals for needy pupils, this bill would instead require the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance and conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The bill would instead require the Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance.(10) Existing law establishes the Instructional School Gardens Program for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens. Under existing law, a school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a 3-year grant to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. Existing law requires the Superintendent to convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens, as specified, and requires the working group to advise the Superintendent, as provided. Existing law requires the California Integrated Waste Management Board to give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the Instructional School Gardens Program.This bill would instead make these requirements of the Superintendent, the working group, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board under the Instructional School Gardens Program optional.(11) Existing law establishes, within the department, the California Fresh Start Pilot Program to encourage public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide fruits and vegetables to pupils, and to promote the consumption of nutritious fruits and vegetables by schoolage children, as provided.This bill would repeal the California Fresh Start Pilot Program.(12) Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools to establish and maintain classes for adults, as specified. Existing law authorizes specified classes and courses to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for apportionment purposes from the adult education fund. These classes and courses include, among others: (A) adult programs in parenting and classes in child growth and development, parent child relationships, and parenting, (B) adult programs in elementary and secondary basic skills and other courses and classes required for a high school diploma, (C) adult education programs in English as a 2nd language, (D) adult education programs for immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, and workforce preparation classes in certain basic skills and other classes required for preparation to participate in job specific technical training, (E) adult education programs for older adults, (F) adult programs in home economics, and (G) adult programs in health and safety education. Existing law prohibits state apportionment from the adult education fund from being made for any other courses or classes.This bill would instead authorize, for purposes of apportionments from the adult education fund, (A) programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate, (B) programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation, and (C) programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce or primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school. This bill would make other changes to, and repeal several laws governing, adult education programs, courses, and classes.(13) Existing law requires a pupil to be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services. To be eligible for special education and related services, existing law requires a language, speech, and hearing specialist to assess and determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using spoken language results from articulation disorders, abnormal voice, fluency difficulties, inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of spoken language, or hearing loss.This bill would instead require a speech-language pathologist to determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using language results from speech sound disorder, voice disorder, fluency disorder, language disorder, or hearing impairment or deafness.
2235
2336 (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and secondary education in this state. Under that system, various persons have specified duties and powers relating to the operation of elementary and secondary schools, including, among others, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents of schools, county auditors, and city, district, deputy, associate, or assistant superintendents of schools.
2437
2538 This bill would replace gendered terms with nongendered terms and make various other nonsubstantive changes to provisions related to those persons.
2639
2740 (2) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to adopt a resolution that, among other things: (A) declares its intention to enter into a lease or agreement relating to school property, (B) includes specified information about the property, and (C) fixes a time for a public meeting of the governing board of the school district at which sealed proposals to enter a lease or agreement with the school district will be received from any person, firm, or corporation, and considered by the governing board of the school district, as specified.
2841
2942 Existing law, notwithstanding the provision described above, authorizes the governing board of a school district to lease real property for a minimum rental of $1 per year if the instrument by which this property is leased requires the lessee to construct, or provide for the construction of, a building to be used by the school district and requires the title to the building to vest in the school district at the end of the lease.
3043
3144 Existing law, until July 1, 2022, requires the instrument created pursuant to these provisions to be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, as specified. Existing law authorizes a school district, for purposes of using preconstruction services, to enter into an instrument before written approval is obtained from the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect under specified circumstances. Existing law authorizes a school district to identify specific types of subcontractors required to be included in a proposal, and imposes specified other procedural requirements on awarding construction subcontracts of a certain value.
3245
3346 This bill would instead make the provisions described above inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them as of January 1, 2028.
3447
3548 (3) Existing law establishes the California State Library as a division within the State Department of Education. Existing law requires the State Librarian to be in charge of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the State Librarian, among other things, to appoint assistants as necessary and to keep in order and repair the books and property of the California State Library. Existing law authorizes the department to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers.
3649
3750 This bill would revise various provisions pertaining to the California State Library and the powers and duties of the State Librarian. Among other revisions, the bill would instead authorize the State Librarian to appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary for the purposes of carrying out these provisions and to purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to digitally preserve books and other physical materials and to provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection. The bill would establish the California State Library as an agency in state government. The bill would transfer authorization from the department to the State Librarian to contract with local entities within the state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services and to establish and operate library service centers. The bill would authorize the State Librarian to consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials excluding textbooks and to authorize these books and materials to be placed in the California State Librarys circulation for use by all patrons with print disabilities.
3851
3952 (4) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service, whereby classified service employees are designated as permanent employees after serving a prescribed period of probation not to exceed 6 months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. In a school district that has adopted a merit system, existing law authorizes the personnel commission to establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes.
4053
4154 This bill would require, in order to receive permanent classified service status, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to serve in a probationary status for not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.
4255
4356 (5) Existing law requires the governing board of each school district to hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, existing law requires the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the date upon which a governing board member elected at that election takes office. Existing law requires the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held during the same 15-day period on the calendar. Existing law requires the day and time of the annual meeting to be selected by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period.
4457
4558 This bill would instead require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the annual organizational meeting to be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the 2nd Friday in December following the regular election, require the annual organizational meeting in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted to be held on any date in December before December 21, and require, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the day and time of the annual organizational meeting to be selected by the governing board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period or, in a year in which no regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the governing board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the annual organizational meeting.
4659
4760 (6) Existing law requires the governing board of a school district to report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months, and describes the period from July 1 to December 31, inclusive, as the first period report for the first principal apportionment and the period from July 1 to April 15, inclusive, as the 2nd period report for the 2nd principal apportionment. Existing law requires a county superintendent of schools to report the average daily attendance for the school and classes maintained by the county superintendent and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Existing law requires the days of attendance in classes for adults and regional occupational centers programs to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under these provisions and prescribes a formula for calculating average daily attendance for those schools and classes.
4861
4962 This bill would instead require the days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities to be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under those provisions and under that prescribed formula. The bill would make other changes and repeal several laws relating to the calculation of average daily attendance in classes, courses, and programs for adults.
5063
5164 (7) As a condition of receipt of reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, existing law requires a local educational agency to comply with specified nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.
5265
5366 This bill would update a cross-reference to require, as a condition of receipt of certain reimbursement for free and reduced-price meals, a local educational agency to comply with those nutrition-related prohibitions and requirements.
5467
5568 (8) Existing law requires the department to formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. Existing law requires these programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. Existing law requires nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis, requires the State Board of Education to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects, and requires the state board to approve projects upon recommendation of the department.
5669
5770 The bill would instead authorize the department to formulate the basic elements of those nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in nutrition education programs. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and to be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education. The bill would instead authorize nutrition education programs to be maintained on a project approval basis. The bill would instead authorize the state board to establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. The bill would no longer require the state board to approve nutrition education projects upon recommendation of the department.
5871
5972 (9) Existing law requires a school district or county superintendent of schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide each needy pupil with one nutritionally adequate free or reduced-price meal during each schoolday, as provided. Existing law requires the Superintendent to supervise the implementation of these and other provisions relating to meals for needy pupils and to investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds noncompliance, existing law requires the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance to the Attorney General. Existing law requires the Attorney General to conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. Existing law requires the Attorney General to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance when the action is requested by the Superintendent.
6073
6174 If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools is noncompliant with those provisions relating to meals for needy pupils, this bill would instead require the Superintendent to certify the noncompliance and conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The bill would instead require the Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, to seek injunctive relief to secure compliance.
6275
6376 (10) Existing law establishes the Instructional School Gardens Program for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens. Under existing law, a school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a 3-year grant to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. Existing law requires the Superintendent to convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens, as specified, and requires the working group to advise the Superintendent, as provided. Existing law requires the California Integrated Waste Management Board to give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the Instructional School Gardens Program.
6477
6578 This bill would instead make these requirements of the Superintendent, the working group, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board under the Instructional School Gardens Program optional.
6679
6780 (11) Existing law establishes, within the department, the California Fresh Start Pilot Program to encourage public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, to provide fruits and vegetables to pupils, and to promote the consumption of nutritious fruits and vegetables by schoolage children, as provided.
6881
6982 This bill would repeal the California Fresh Start Pilot Program.
7083
7184 (12) Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools to establish and maintain classes for adults, as specified. Existing law authorizes specified classes and courses to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for apportionment purposes from the adult education fund. These classes and courses include, among others: (A) adult programs in parenting and classes in child growth and development, parent child relationships, and parenting, (B) adult programs in elementary and secondary basic skills and other courses and classes required for a high school diploma, (C) adult education programs in English as a 2nd language, (D) adult education programs for immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, and workforce preparation classes in certain basic skills and other classes required for preparation to participate in job specific technical training, (E) adult education programs for older adults, (F) adult programs in home economics, and (G) adult programs in health and safety education. Existing law prohibits state apportionment from the adult education fund from being made for any other courses or classes.
7285
7386 This bill would instead authorize, for purposes of apportionments from the adult education fund, (A) programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate, (B) programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a 2nd language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation, and (C) programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce or primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school. This bill would make other changes to, and repeal several laws governing, adult education programs, courses, and classes.
7487
7588 (13) Existing law requires a pupil to be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services. To be eligible for special education and related services, existing law requires a language, speech, and hearing specialist to assess and determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using spoken language results from articulation disorders, abnormal voice, fluency difficulties, inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of spoken language, or hearing loss.
7689
7790 This bill would instead require a speech-language pathologist to determine that a pupils difficulty in understanding or using language results from speech sound disorder, voice disorder, fluency disorder, language disorder, or hearing impairment or deafness.
7891
7992 ## Digest Key
8093
8194 ## Bill Text
8295
8396 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1703 of the Education Code is amended to read:1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.SEC. 2. Section 1909 of the Education Code is amended to read:1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.SEC. 3. Section 12501 of the Education Code is amended to read:12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.SEC. 4. Section 14022.3 of the Education Code is amended to read:14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.SEC. 5. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 2 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 3 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.SEC. 7. The heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 7. California State LibrarySEC. 8. The heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: Article 1. General ProvisionsSEC. 9. Section 19301 of the Education Code is amended to read:19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.SEC. 10. Section 19302 of the Education Code is amended to read:19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.SEC. 11. Section 19306 of the Education Code is amended to read:19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.SEC. 12. Section 19320 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.SEC. 13. Section 19320.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.SEC. 14. Section 19321 of the Education Code is amended to read:19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.SEC. 15. Section 19322 of the Education Code is amended to read:19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.SEC. 16. Section 19323 of the Education Code is amended to read:19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.SEC. 17. Section 19324 of the Education Code is amended to read:19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.SEC. 18. Section 19325 of the Education Code is amended to read:19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.SEC. 19. Section 19326 of the Education Code is amended to read:19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.SEC. 20. Section 19330 of the Education Code is amended to read:19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.SEC. 21. Section 33004 of the Education Code is amended to read:33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.SEC. 22. Section 33501 of the Education Code is amended to read:33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.SEC. 23. Section 35028 of the Education Code is amended to read:35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.SEC. 24. Section 35143 of the Education Code is amended to read:35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.SEC. 25. Section 35253 of the Education Code is amended to read:35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt. SEC. 26. Section 41601 of the Education Code is amended to read:41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.SEC. 27. Section 41608 of the Education Code is amended to read:41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.SEC. 28. Section 41840 of the Education Code is amended to read:41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.SEC. 29. Section 41962 of the Education Code is amended to read:41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.SEC. 30. Section 41976 of the Education Code is amended to read:41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.SEC. 31. Section 41976.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 32. Section 41976.5 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 33. Section 42238.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.SEC. 34. Section 42639 of the Education Code is amended to read:42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.SEC. 35. Section 44843 of the Education Code is amended to read:44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.SEC. 36. Section 45113 of the Education Code is amended to read:45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.SEC. 37. Section 45301 of the Education Code is amended to read:45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.SEC. 38. Section 46190 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 39. Section 46192 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 40. Section 46300.4 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 41. Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 42. Section 49180 of the Education Code is amended to read:49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.SEC. 43. Section 49430.7 of the Education Code is amended to read:49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.SEC. 44. Section 49534 of the Education Code is amended to read:49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.SEC. 45. Section 49556 of the Education Code is amended to read:49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.SEC. 46. Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 47. Section 51796 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).SEC. 48. Section 51796.2 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.SEC. 49. Section 51797 of the Education Code is amended to read:51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.SEC. 50. Section 52500.1 of the Education Code is amended to read:52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.SEC. 51. Section 52501 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.SEC. 52. Section 52501.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.SEC. 53. Section 52502 of the Education Code is amended to read:52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.SEC. 54. Section 52505 of the Education Code is amended to read:52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.SEC. 55. Section 52510 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 56. Section 52511 of the Education Code is amended to read:52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.SEC. 57. Section 52512 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 58. Section 52513 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 59. Section 52515 of the Education Code is amended to read:52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.SEC. 60. Section 52516 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 61. Section 52517 of the Education Code is amended to read:52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.SEC. 62. Section 52518 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 63. Section 52519 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 64. Section 52520 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 65. Section 52522 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 66. Section 52522.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 67. Section 52523 of the Education Code is amended to read:52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.SEC. 68. Section 52525 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 69. Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 70. Section 52540 of the Education Code is amended to read:52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.SEC. 71. Section 52541 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 72. Section 52542 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 73. Section 52543 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 74. Section 52544 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 75. Section 52552 of the Education Code is amended to read:52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.SEC. 76. Section 52553 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 77. Section 52554 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 78. Section 52556 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 79. Section 52570 of the Education Code is amended to read:52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.SEC. 80. Section 52571 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 81. Section 52572 of the Education Code is amended to read:52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.SEC. 82. Section 52610.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.SEC. 83. Section 52614 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 84. Section 52615 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 85. Section 52616 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.SEC. 86. Section 52616.2 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 87. Section 52616.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.SEC. 88. Section 52616.5 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 89. Section 52616.16 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 90. Section 52616.17 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 91. Section 52616.18 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.SEC. 92. Section 52616.19 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 93. Section 52616.20 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 94. Section 52616.21 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 95. Section 52616.24 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 96. Section 52617 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 97. Section 52653 of the Education Code is amended to read:52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.SEC. 98. Section 52656 of the Education Code is amended to read:52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.SEC. 99. Section 56333 of the Education Code is amended to read:56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.SEC. 100. Section 84906 of the Education Code is amended to read:84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.SEC. 101. Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
8497
8598 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
8699
87100 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
88101
89102 SECTION 1. Section 1703 of the Education Code is amended to read:1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.
90103
91104 SECTION 1. Section 1703 of the Education Code is amended to read:
92105
93106 ### SECTION 1.
94107
95108 1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.
96109
97110 1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.
98111
99112 1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.
100113
101114
102115
103116 1703. The county superintendent of schools may, with the approval of the county board of education and in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt, employ qualified personnel to provide for the coordination of courses of study, guidance services, health services, school library services, special education, and attendance activities among the school districts under the county superintendents jurisdiction. The regulations of the Superintendent adopted pursuant to this section shall be adopted with the advice of an advisory committee to include county superintendents of schools, which the Superintendent may by this provision appoint.
104117
105118 SEC. 2. Section 1909 of the Education Code is amended to read:1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.
106119
107120 SEC. 2. Section 1909 of the Education Code is amended to read:
108121
109122 ### SEC. 2.
110123
111124 1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.
112125
113126 1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.
114127
115128 1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:(1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.(2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.(3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.
116129
117130
118131
119132 1909. (a) From funds appropriated for allocation pursuant to Sections 2558 and 41841.5, for each county superintendent of schools who maintained schools or classes for adults in correctional facilities in the 198182 fiscal year pursuant to Section 1906, and who continues to maintain those schools or classes in each fiscal year thereafter, the Superintendent shall allow in the 198283 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, an amount equal to the actual current expenses of the program, but not to exceed an amount determined as follows:
120133
121134 (1) Compute the prior year statewide average local control funding formula per unit of average daily attendance for adults, increased by a relevant cost-of-living allowance prescribed in the annual Budget Act.
122135
123136 (2) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (1) by the average daily attendance of the schools or classes in the current fiscal year.
124137
125138 (3) Multiply the product determined in paragraph (2) for each fiscal year by 0.8.
126139
127140 (b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for the 199394 and 199495 fiscal years, in no event shall the amount allowed to a county superintendent of schools for each unit of average daily attendance pursuant to that subdivision exceed the statewide average revenue limit at which adults in correctional facilities were funded in the 199293 fiscal year, as adjusted by any cost-of-living adjustment pursuant to Section 42238.1.
128141
129142 SEC. 3. Section 12501 of the Education Code is amended to read:12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.
130143
131144 SEC. 3. Section 12501 of the Education Code is amended to read:
132145
133146 ### SEC. 3.
134147
135148 12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.
136149
137150 12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.
138151
139152 12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.
140153
141154
142155
143156 12501. The designated state official for this state shall be the Superintendent. The Superintendent shall enter into contracts pursuant to Article III of the agreement only with the approval of the specific text of the contract by the state board.
144157
145158 SEC. 4. Section 14022.3 of the Education Code is amended to read:14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.
146159
147160 SEC. 4. Section 14022.3 of the Education Code is amended to read:
148161
149162 ### SEC. 4.
150163
151164 14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.
152165
153166 14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.
154167
155168 14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:(1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.(b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.
156169
157170
158171
159172 14022.3. (a) For purposes of calculating increases in enrollment pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution, the term enrollment for school districts, community college districts, and state agencies providing direct elementary and secondary level instructional services means the sum of the following:
160173
161174 (1) Second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 42238.5, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.
162175
163176 (2) Annual average daily attendance for county offices of education, as calculated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41601, and as adjusted for any average daily attendance audit findings.
164177
165178 (b) Any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be based upon actual data from prior years. For the next succeeding year, any determination or computation of enrollment for purposes of this section shall be the estimated enrollment, adjusted as actual data become available.
166179
167180 SEC. 5. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 2 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
168181
169182 SEC. 5. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 2 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:
170183
171184 ### SEC. 5.
172185
173186 17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
174187
175188 17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
176189
177190 17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:(A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.(B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.(C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).(D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.(E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.(F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:(i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.(ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.(iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.(iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.(v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.(G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.(3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.(4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:(i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.(ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.(iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).(5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.(b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.(2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.(c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:(A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.(B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.(C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.(D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.(2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:(A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.(B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
178191
179192
180193
181194 17406. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to a person, firm, or corporation real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee therein to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.
182195
183196 (2) An instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be awarded based on a competitive solicitation process to the proposer providing the best value to the school district, taking into consideration the proposers demonstrated competence and professional qualifications necessary for the satisfactory performance of the services required. Before awarding an instrument pursuant to this section, the governing board of the school district shall adopt and publish required procedures and guidelines for evaluating the qualifications of proposers that ensure the best value selections by the school district are conducted in a fair and impartial manner. These procedures and guidelines shall be mandatory for the school district when awarding an instrument pursuant to this section. The required procedures shall include, at a minimum, the following:
184197
185198 (A) The school district shall prepare a request for sealed proposals from qualified proposers. The school district shall include in the request for sealed proposals an estimate of price of the project, a clear, precise description of any preconstruction services that may be required and the facilities to be constructed, the key elements of the instrument to be awarded, a description of the format that proposals shall follow and the elements they shall contain, the standards the school district will use in evaluating proposals, the date on which proposals are due, and the timetable the school district will follow in reviewing and evaluating proposals.
186199
187200 (B) The school district shall give notice of the request for sealed proposals in the manner of notice provided in Section 20112 of the Public Contract Code and in a trade paper of general circulation published in the county where the project is located, with the latest notice published at least 10 days before the date for receipt of the proposals.
188201
189202 (C) A proposer shall be prequalified in accordance with subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code in order to submit a proposal. If used, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing subcontractors shall be subject to the same prequalification requirements for prospective bidders described in subdivisions (b) to (m), inclusive, of Section 20111.6 of the Public Contract Code, including the requirement for the completion and submission of a standardized prequalification questionnaire and financial statement that is verified under oath and is not a public record. These prequalification requirements shall be included in an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1).
190203
191204 (D) The request for sealed proposals shall identify all criteria that the school district will consider in evaluating the proposals and qualifications of the proposers, including relevant experience, safety record, price proposal, and other factors specified by the school district. The price proposal shall include, at the school districts discretion, either a lump-sum price for the instrument to be awarded or the proposers proposed fee to perform the services requested, including the proposers proposed fee to perform preconstruction services or any other work related to the facilities to be constructed, as requested by the school district. The request for proposals shall specify whether each criterion will be evaluated pass-fail or will be scored as part of the best value score, and whether proposers must achieve any minimum qualification score for award of the instrument under this section.
192205
193206 (E) For each scored criterion, the school district shall identify the methodology and rating or weighting system that will be used by the school district in evaluating the criterion, including the weight assigned to the criterion and any minimum acceptable score.
194207
195208 (F) Proposals shall be evaluated and the instrument awarded under this section in the following manner:
196209
197210 (i) All proposals received shall be reviewed to determine those that meet the format requirements and the standards specified in the request for sealed proposals.
198211
199212 (ii) The school district shall evaluate the qualifications of the proposers based solely upon the criteria and evaluation methodology set forth in the request for sealed proposals, and shall assign a best value score to each proposal. Once the evaluation is complete, all responsive proposals shall be ranked from the highest best value to the lowest best value to the school district.
200213
201214 (iii) The award of the instrument shall be made by the governing board of the school district to the responsive proposer whose proposal is determined, in writing by the governing board of the school district, to be the best value to the school district.
202215
203216 (iv) If the selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the second highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district. If the second selected proposer refuses or fails to execute the tendered instrument, the governing board of the school district may award the instrument to the proposer with the third highest best value score if the governing board of the school district deems it to be for the best interest of the school district.
204217
205218 (v) Notwithstanding any other law, upon issuance of a contract award, the school district shall publicly announce its award, identifying the entity to which the award is made, along with a statement regarding the basis of the award. The statement regarding the school districts contract award and the contract file shall provide sufficient information to satisfy an external audit.
206219
207220 (G) The governing board of the school district, at its discretion, may reject all proposals and request new proposals.
208221
209222 (3) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the price proposal is not a lump sum for the instrument awarded, the successful proposer shall provide the school district with objectively verifiable information of its costs to perform the services requested under the instrument and shall select subcontractors as set forth in paragraph (4). Once any preconstruction services are completed and subcontractors are selected, and upon approval of the plans and specifications for work on the site by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect, if required, the successful proposer and the school district shall finalize the price for the services to be provided under the instrument. The successful proposer shall provide the school district with written rationale for the price, and the school district shall approve or reject the final price at a public meeting before the successful proposer may proceed with any further work under the instrument. The contract file shall include documentation sufficient to support the final price determination.
210223
211224 (4) (A) The school district, in the request for sealed proposals, may identify specific types of subcontractors that must be included in the proposal. All subcontractors that are identified in the proposal shall be afforded the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).
212225
213226 (B) Following the award of an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) and for subcontractors not identified in the proposal, the successful proposer shall proceed as follows in awarding construction subcontracts with a value exceeding one-half of 1 percent of the price allocable to construction work:
214227
215228 (i) Provide public notice of availability of work to be subcontracted in accordance with the publication requirements applicable to the competitive bidding process of the school district, including a fixed date and time on which qualifications statements, bids, or proposals will be due.
216229
217230 (ii) Establish reasonable qualification criteria and standards.
218231
219232 (iii) Award the subcontract either on a best value basis or to the lowest responsible bidder. The process may include prequalification or short-listing. The process shall not apply to subcontractors listed in the original proposal. Subcontractors awarded construction subcontracts under this subdivision shall be afforded all the protections of the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 4100) of Part 1 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code).
220233
221234 (5) Paragraph (2) shall not preclude a school district from segregating the request for proposals into a request for qualifications, followed by a request for proposals with price information from the proposers deemed most qualified by the school district, provided that the procedures specified in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) are otherwise followed.
222235
223236 (b) (1) Notwithstanding Sections 17297 and 17402, for purposes of using preconstruction services, a school district may enter into an instrument created pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) before written approval by the Department of General Services Division of the State Architect only if the instrument provides that no work for which a contractor is required to be licensed in accordance with Article 5 (commencing with Section 7065) of Chapter 9 of Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code and for which Division of the State Architect approval is required can be performed before receipt of the required Division of the State Architect approval.
224237
225238 (2) This subdivision does not waive the requirements of Section 17072.30 or Section 17074.16, or any other applicable requirements of Chapter 12.5 (commencing with Section 17070.10) of Part 10.
226239
227240 (c) A rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) as it reads on the day that the lease is entered into shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.
228241
229242 (d) (1) This subdivision shall apply to a project for the construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any structure, building, or other improvement of any kind that was leased through an instrument pursuant to this section before July 1, 2015. If at any time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction because it fails to fall within the competitive bidding exception pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), as it read on December 31, 2016, the contractor who entered into the instrument with the school district may be paid the reasonable cost, specifically excluding profit, of the labor, equipment, materials, and services furnished by the contractor before the date of the determination that the instrument is invalid if all of the following conditions, as determined by the court, are met:
230243
231244 (A) The contractor proceeded with construction, alteration, repair, or improvement based upon a good faith belief that the instrument was valid.
232245
233246 (B) The school district has reasonably determined that the work performed is satisfactory.
234247
235248 (C) Contractor fraud did not occur in the obtaining or performance of the instrument.
236249
237250 (D) The instrument does not otherwise violate state law related to the construction or leasing of public works of improvement.
238251
239252 (2) In no event shall payment to the contractor pursuant to this section exceed either of the following:
240253
241254 (A) The contractors costs as included in the instrument plus the cost of any approved change orders.
242255
243256 (B) The lease payments made, less profit, at the point in time the instrument is determined to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction.
244257
245258 (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), this subdivision shall not affect any protest and legal proceedings, whether contractual, administrative, or judicial, to challenge the award of the public works contract, nor affect any rights under Section 337.1 or 337.15 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
246259
247260 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2028, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
248261
249262 SEC. 6. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 3 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.
250263
251264 SEC. 6. Section 17406 of the Education Code, as amended by Section 3 of Chapter 521 of the Statutes of 2016, is amended to read:
252265
253266 ### SEC. 6.
254267
255268 17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.
256269
257270 17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.
258271
259272 17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.(b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.
260273
261274
262275
263276 17406. (a) Notwithstanding Section 17417, the governing board of a school district may let, for a minimum rental of one dollar ($1) a year, to any person, firm, or corporation any real property that belongs to the school district if the instrument by which this property is let requires the lessee to construct on the demised premises, or provide for the construction thereon of, a building or buildings for the use of the school district during the term of the lease, and provides that title to that building shall vest in the school district at the expiration of that term. The instrument may provide for the means or methods by which that title shall vest in the school district before the expiration of that term, and shall contain other terms and conditions as the governing board of the school district may deem to be in the best interest of the school district.
264277
265278 (b) Any rental of property that complies with subdivision (a) shall be deemed to have thereby required the payment of adequate consideration for purposes of Section 6 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.
266279
267280 (c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2027.
268281
269282 SEC. 7. The heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 7. California State Library
270283
271284 SEC. 7. The heading of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 19300) of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read:
272285
273286 ### SEC. 7.
274287
275288 CHAPTER 7. California State Library
276289
277290 CHAPTER 7. California State Library
278291
279292 CHAPTER 7. California State Library
280293
281294 CHAPTER 7. California State Library
282295
283296 SEC. 8. The heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read: Article 1. General Provisions
284297
285298 SEC. 8. The heading of Article 1 (commencing with Section 19300) of Chapter 7 of Part 11 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education Code is amended to read:
286299
287300 ### SEC. 8.
288301
289302 Article 1. General Provisions
290303
291304 Article 1. General Provisions
292305
293306 Article 1. General Provisions
294307
295308 Article 1. General Provisions
296309
297310 SEC. 9. Section 19301 of the Education Code is amended to read:19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.
298311
299312 SEC. 9. Section 19301 of the Education Code is amended to read:
300313
301314 ### SEC. 9.
302315
303316 19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.
304317
305318 19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.
306319
307320 19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.
308321
309322
310323
311324 19301. There is in the state government an agency known as the California State Library.
312325
313326 SEC. 10. Section 19302 of the Education Code is amended to read:19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.
314327
315328 SEC. 10. Section 19302 of the Education Code is amended to read:
316329
317330 ### SEC. 10.
318331
319332 19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.
320333
321334 19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.
322335
323336 19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.
324337
325338
326339
327340 19302. The California State Library is under the control of an executive who shall be a technically trained librarian and shall be known as the State Librarian.
328341
329342 SEC. 11. Section 19306 of the Education Code is amended to read:19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.
330343
331344 SEC. 11. Section 19306 of the Education Code is amended to read:
332345
333346 ### SEC. 11.
334347
335348 19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.
336349
337350 19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.
338351
339352 19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.
340353
341354
342355
343356 19306. The State Librarian shall nominate a Deputy State Librarian to be appointed by, and hold office at the pleasure of, the Governor.
344357
345358 SEC. 12. Section 19320 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.
346359
347360 SEC. 12. Section 19320 of the Education Code is amended to read:
348361
349362 ### SEC. 12.
350363
351364 19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.
352365
353366 19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.
354367
355368 19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:(a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.(b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.(c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.(d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.(e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.(f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.(g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.(h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.(i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.(j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.(k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.(l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.(m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.(n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.(o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.
356369
357370
358371
359372 19320. The State Librarian may do all of the following:
360373
361374 (a) Make rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of the California State Library.
362375
363376 (b) Appoint or employ civil service personnel as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
364377
365378 (c) Sell or exchange duplicate copies of books.
366379
367380 (d) Purchase and maintain materials and equipment as necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services consistent with well-established library standards.
368381
369382 (e) Prescribe rules and regulations permitting persons other than Members of the Legislature and other state officers to have the use of books from the California State Library.
370383
371384 (f) Collect and preserve statistics and other information pertaining to libraries, which shall be available to other libraries within the state applying for the information.
372385
373386 (g) Establish, in the State Librarians discretion, deposit stations in various parts of the state, under the control of an officer or employee of the California State Library. A book shall not be kept permanently away from the main library, which may be required for official use. Books and other materials that are not required by law to be delivered to or filed with another agency from public libraries and other cultural heritage institutions of the state may be accepted for deposit, under agreements entered into by the State Librarian and the libraries or institutions concerned, whereby materials that should be preserved but are rarely used in the region may be stored and made available for use under the same conditions that apply to materials in the California State Library. Cultural heritage institutions include, but are not limited to, archives, galleries, historical societies, libraries, museums, and tribal nations.
374387
375388 (h) Collect, preserve, and disseminate information regarding the history of the state, including materials that represent the stories of Californians in an equal, diverse, and inclusive manner.
376389
377390 (i) Authorize the California State Library to serve as regional library for the blind and print disabled, in cooperation with the Library of Congress.
378391
379392 (j) Give advisory, consultive, and technical assistance with respect to public libraries to librarians and library authorities, and assist all other authorities, state and local, in assuming their full responsibility for library services.
380393
381394 (k) Authorize the California State Library to serve as the central reference and research library for the departments of state government and maintain adequate legislative reference and research library services for the Legislature, and to maintain and make accessible, through digital or physical means, the publications created by state government.
382395
383396 (l) Acquire, organize, and supply books and other library informational and reference materials to supplement the collections of other public libraries of the state with the more technical, scientific, and scholarly works, to the end that through an established interlibrary loan system, the people of the state shall have access to the full range of reference and informational materials.
384397
385398 (m) Make studies and surveys of public library needs and adopt rules and regulations for the allocation of federal funds to public libraries.
386399
387400 (n) Contract, at the State Librarians discretion, with other public libraries in the state to give public services of the types referred to in subdivisions (g) and (l), when service by contract appears to be a needed supplement to the facilities and services carried on directly by the California State Library.
388401
389402 (o) Digitally preserve books and other physical materials and provide a digital platform to expand access to the California State Librarys collection.
390403
391404 SEC. 13. Section 19320.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.
392405
393406 SEC. 13. Section 19320.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:
394407
395408 ### SEC. 13.
396409
397410 19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.
398411
399412 19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.
400413
401414 19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.
402415
403416
404417
405418 19320.5. The State Librarian may employ consultants to provide technical assistance to public libraries in the development and enhancement of library services.
406419
407420 SEC. 14. Section 19321 of the Education Code is amended to read:19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.
408421
409422 SEC. 14. Section 19321 of the Education Code is amended to read:
410423
411424 ### SEC. 14.
412425
413426 19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.
414427
415428 19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.
416429
417430 19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:(a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.(b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.(c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.(d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.
418431
419432
420433
421434 19321. The State Librarian shall also do all of the following:
422435
423436 (a) Purchase books, maps, engravings, paintings, furniture, and other materials and equipment necessary to carry out California State Library programs and services.
424437
425438 (b) Number and stamp all books and maps belonging to the library, or otherwise indicate ownership of them, and keep a catalog thereof.
426439
427440 (c) Have bound all books and papers that require binding.
428441
429442 (d) Keep a register of all books taken from the library.
430443
431444 SEC. 15. Section 19322 of the Education Code is amended to read:19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.
432445
433446 SEC. 15. Section 19322 of the Education Code is amended to read:
434447
435448 ### SEC. 15.
436449
437450 19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.
438451
439452 19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.
440453
441454 19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:(a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.(b) Establish and operate library service centers.
442455
443456
444457
445458 19322. The State Librarian may do both of the following:
446459
447460 (a) Contract directly with counties, cities, or districts within this state, agencies of the state, and agencies of the United States government for the purpose of providing library services.
448461
449462 (b) Establish and operate library service centers.
450463
451464 SEC. 16. Section 19323 of the Education Code is amended to read:19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.
452465
453466 SEC. 16. Section 19323 of the Education Code is amended to read:
454467
455468 ### SEC. 16.
456469
457470 19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.
458471
459472 19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.
460473
461474 19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.
462475
463476
464477
465478 19323. The State Librarian shall make available in the state on a loan basis to blind or print disabled persons, or to persons with a disability that prevents them from reading conventional printed materials, audio recordings of books and other related materials. The materials to be made into audio recordings shall be selected by the California State Library on the same basis as the California State Librarys collection development plan, which shall be posted on the California State Librarys internet website.
466479
467480 SEC. 17. Section 19324 of the Education Code is amended to read:19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.
468481
469482 SEC. 17. Section 19324 of the Education Code is amended to read:
470483
471484 ### SEC. 17.
472485
473486 19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.
474487
475488 19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.
476489
477490 19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.
478491
479492
480493
481494 19324. The State Librarian may consider for rendering into embossed braille any print books and other materials, excluding textbooks, requested by an eligible patron with print disabilities. Consideration of the patrons request shall be dependent upon available staffing, resources, and technical proficiency at the time of the request. Books and other materials rendered into embossed braille pursuant to this section may be placed in the California State Librarys circulating collection for use by all patrons with print disabilities.
482495
483496 SEC. 18. Section 19325 of the Education Code is amended to read:19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.
484497
485498 SEC. 18. Section 19325 of the Education Code is amended to read:
486499
487500 ### SEC. 18.
488501
489502 19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.
490503
491504 19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.
492505
493506 19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:(a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.(b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.
494507
495508
496509
497510 19325. The State Librarian may provide the following:
498511
499512 (a) Toll-free and local telephone services for registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled, in order to enable those persons to have direct patron access to library services.
500513
501514 (b) Toll-free and local telephone access to telephonic reading systems for individuals with print disabilities who are registered patrons of the federally designated regional libraries for the blind and print disabled.
502515
503516 SEC. 19. Section 19326 of the Education Code is amended to read:19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.
504517
505518 SEC. 19. Section 19326 of the Education Code is amended to read:
506519
507520 ### SEC. 19.
508521
509522 19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.
510523
511524 19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.
512525
513526 19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.(b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.(c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:(1) The Governor.(2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.(3) The Speaker of the Assembly.(4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.(d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.
514527
515528
516529
517530 19326. (a) The State Librarian may annually award a gold medal for excellence in the humanities and science to an individual or organization for publication of a work that has enriched the collection of the California State Library and enriched the state by significantly contributing to the intellectual, cultural, and scientific knowledge of the people of the state.
518531
519532 (b) The award shall formally be known as the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science.
520533
521534 (c) To assist in making the selection of a recipient of the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science, the State Librarian shall consult an advisory panel consisting of one representative from each of the following:
522535
523536 (1) The Governor.
524537
525538 (2) The President pro Tempore of the Senate.
526539
527540 (3) The Speaker of the Assembly.
528541
529542 (4) The Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court.
530543
531544 (d) The State Librarian may seek private contributions to defray the cost of awarding the California State Library Gold Medal for Excellence in the Humanities and Science and related expenses.
532545
533546 SEC. 20. Section 19330 of the Education Code is amended to read:19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.
534547
535548 SEC. 20. Section 19330 of the Education Code is amended to read:
536549
537550 ### SEC. 20.
538551
539552 19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.
540553
541554 19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.
542555
543556 19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.
544557
545558
546559
547560 19330. Books may be taken from the California State Library by the Members of the Legislature and by other state officers during regular office hours.
548561
549562 SEC. 21. Section 33004 of the Education Code is amended to read:33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.
550563
551564 SEC. 21. Section 33004 of the Education Code is amended to read:
552565
553566 ### SEC. 21.
554567
555568 33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.
556569
557570 33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.
558571
559572 33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.
560573
561574
562575
563576 33004. The Superintendent shall be secretary and shall act as executive officer of the state board. The Superintendent shall have charge of all its correspondence and shall keep a record of its proceedings.
564577
565578 SEC. 22. Section 33501 of the Education Code is amended to read:33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.
566579
567580 SEC. 22. Section 33501 of the Education Code is amended to read:
568581
569582 ### SEC. 22.
570583
571584 33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.
572585
573586 33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.
574587
575588 33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:(a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.(b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.
576589
577590
578591
579592 33501. The following definitions apply to educational advisory bodies created by this chapter:
580593
581594 (a) An educational policy advisory commission is an advisory body to the state board composed of professional and lay members, as defined by this code. These groups are established to advise the state board within the general policy areas to which they are charged. The Superintendent or the Superintendents representative shall serve as executive secretary to each educational policy advisory commission.
582595
583596 (b) An educational advisory committee is an advisory body to the Superintendent composed of any combination of educational specialists, technical experts, or specially qualified members of the public that is established to advise the Superintendent on the administration of programs with which the Superintendent is charged, and serves at the Superintendents pleasure.
584597
585598 SEC. 23. Section 35028 of the Education Code is amended to read:35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.
586599
587600 SEC. 23. Section 35028 of the Education Code is amended to read:
588601
589602 ### SEC. 23.
590603
591604 35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.
592605
593606 35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.
594607
595608 35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.
596609
597610
598611
599612 35028. A person shall not be eligible to hold a position as city superintendent, district superintendent, deputy superintendent, associate superintendent, or assistant superintendent of schools unless the person is the holder of both a valid school administration certificate and a valid teachers certificate, unless the person is employed as a deputy, associate, or assistant superintendent in a purely clerical capacity.
600613
601614 SEC. 24. Section 35143 of the Education Code is amended to read:35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.
602615
603616 SEC. 24. Section 35143 of the Education Code is amended to read:
604617
605618 ### SEC. 24.
606619
607620 35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.
608621
609622 35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.
610623
611624 35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.(b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.(c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.(d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.(e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.(f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.
612625
613626
614627
615628 35143. (a) The governing board of each school district shall hold an annual organizational meeting. In a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, the meeting shall be held on a day within a 15-day period that commences with the second Friday in December following the regular election. Organizational meetings in years in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted shall be held on any date in December, but no later than December 20. Unless otherwise provided by rule of the governing board, the day and time of the annual meeting shall be selected, in a year in which a regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its regular meeting held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, or in a year in which no such regular election for governing board members is conducted, by the board at its last regular meeting held immediately before the organizational meeting. The board shall notify the county superintendent of schools of the day and time selected. The clerk of the board shall, within 15 days before the date of the annual meeting, notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time selected for the meeting.
616629
617630 (b) If the board fails to select a day and time for the meeting, the county superintendent of schools having jurisdiction over the district shall, before the first day of such 15-day period and after the regular meeting of the board held immediately before the first day of such 15-day period, designate the day and time of the annual meeting. The day designated shall be within the 15-day period. The county superintendent of schools shall notify in writing all members and members-elect of the date and time.
618631
619632 (c) At the annual meeting the governing board of each high school district, union high school district, and joint union high school district shall organize by electing a president from its members and a clerk.
620633
621634 (d) At the annual meeting each city board of education shall organize by electing a president from its members.
622635
623636 (e) At the annual meeting the governing board of each other type of school district, except a community college district, shall elect one of its members clerk of the district.
624637
625638 (f) As an alternative to the procedures set forth in this section, a city board of education whose members are elected in accordance with a city charter for terms of office commencing in December, may hold its annual organizational meeting required in this section between December 15 and January 14, inclusive, as provided in rules and regulations that shall be adopted by such board. At the annual meeting the city board of education shall organize by electing a president and vice president from its members who shall serve in such office during the period January 15 next to the following January 14, unless removed from such office by majority vote of all members of the city board of education.
626639
627640 SEC. 25. Section 35253 of the Education Code is amended to read:35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
628641
629642 SEC. 25. Section 35253 of the Education Code is amended to read:
630643
631644 ### SEC. 25.
632645
633646 35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
634647
635648 35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
636649
637650 35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
638651
639652
640653
641654 35253. Whenever the destruction of records of a school district is not otherwise authorized or provided for by law, the governing board of the district may destroy those records of the school district in accordance with regulations of the Superintendent that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
642655
643656 SEC. 26. Section 41601 of the Education Code is amended to read:41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.
644657
645658 SEC. 26. Section 41601 of the Education Code is amended to read:
646659
647660 ### SEC. 26.
648661
649662 41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.
650663
651664 41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.
652665
653666 41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:(a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.(b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.(c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.
654667
655668
656669
657670 41601. For purposes of this chapter, the governing board of each school district shall report to the Superintendent during each fiscal year the average daily attendance of the school district for all full school months during (1) the period between July 1 and December 31, inclusive, to be known as the first period report for the first principal apportionment, and (2) the period between July 1 and April 15, inclusive, to be known as the second period report for the second principal apportionment. Each county superintendent of schools shall report the average daily attendance for the schools and classes maintained by the county superintendent of schools and the average daily attendance for the county school tuition fund. Each report shall be prepared in accordance with instructions on forms prescribed and furnished by the Superintendent. Average daily attendance shall be computed in the following manner:
658671
659672 (a) The average daily attendance in the regular elementary, middle, and high schools, including continuation schools and classes, opportunity schools and classes, and special day classes, maintained by the school districts shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance allowed in all full school months in each period by the number of days the schools are actually taught in all full school months in each period, excluding Saturdays or Sundays and excluding weekend makeup classes pursuant to Section 37223.
660673
661674 (b) The attendance for schools and classes maintained by a county superintendent of schools and the county school tuition fund shall be reported in the same manner as reported by school districts. The average daily attendance in special education classes operated by county superintendents of schools shall be determined in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance in all other schools and classes maintained by the county superintendents of schools shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 70, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175. For attendance in special classes and centers pursuant to Section 56364 or Section 56364.2, as applicable, the average daily attendance shall be reported by the county superintendents of schools, but credited for local control funding formula purposes to the school district in which the pupil resides.
662675
663676 (c) The days of attendance in classes for adults in correctional facilities shall be reported in the same manner as all other attendance under subdivision (a). The average daily attendance for adults in correctional facilities shall be determined by dividing the total number of days of attendance in all full school months in the first period by a divisor of 85, in the second period by 135, and at annual time by 175.
664677
665678 SEC. 27. Section 41608 of the Education Code is amended to read:41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.
666679
667680 SEC. 27. Section 41608 of the Education Code is amended to read:
668681
669682 ### SEC. 27.
670683
671684 41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.
672685
673686 41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.
674687
675688 41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.
676689
677690
678691
679692 41608. For purposes of computation of allowances and apportionments from the State School Fund, whenever computations of apportionments based on average daily attendance are made for high school districts only the attendance in all classes of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, and in all types of ungraded classes that have been reported as attached to, or as a part of, a school that maintains any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, shall be included.
680693
681694 SEC. 28. Section 41840 of the Education Code is amended to read:41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.
682695
683696 SEC. 28. Section 41840 of the Education Code is amended to read:
684697
685698 ### SEC. 28.
686699
687700 41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.
688701
689702 41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.
690703
691704 41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.
692705
693706
694707
695708 41840. A school district or county superintendent of schools may only claim average daily attendance for apportionment purposes for schools or classes maintained for adults in correctional facilities if those classes meet the requirements of Section 41976.
696709
697710 SEC. 29. Section 41962 of the Education Code is amended to read:41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.
698711
699712 SEC. 29. Section 41962 of the Education Code is amended to read:
700713
701714 ### SEC. 29.
702715
703716 41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.
704717
705718 41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.
706719
707720 41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.
708721
709722
710723
711724 41962. School districts may apply for severance aid as provided in this article on forms provided by the Superintendent, and in accordance with regulations that the Superintendent is authorized to adopt.
712725
713726 SEC. 30. Section 41976 of the Education Code is amended to read:41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.
714727
715728 SEC. 30. Section 41976 of the Education Code is amended to read:
716729
717730 ### SEC. 30.
718731
719732 41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.
720733
721734 41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.
722735
723736 41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:(a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.(b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.(c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.(d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.(e) Programs for adults with disabilities.(f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.(g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.
724737
725738
726739
727740 41976. For purposes of this chapter, the following classes and courses are authorized to be offered by school districts and county superintendents of schools for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, apportionment purposes from the adult education fund:
728741
729742 (a) Programs for adults in elementary and secondary basic skills, including programs leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.
730743
731744 (b) Programs for adult immigrants who are eligible for educational services in citizenship, English as a second language, immigrant integration, and workforce preparation.
732745
733746 (c) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce.
734747
735748 (d) Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist and support elementary and secondary school pupils to succeed academically in school.
736749
737750 (e) Programs for adults with disabilities.
738751
739752 (f) Programs for adults in career technical education that are short term in nature and have high employment potential.
740753
741754 (g) Programs for adults offering preapprenticeship training activities conducted in coordination with one or more apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards for the occupation and geographic area.
742755
743756 SEC. 31. Section 41976.2 of the Education Code is repealed.
744757
745758 SEC. 31. Section 41976.2 of the Education Code is repealed.
746759
747760 ### SEC. 31.
748761
749762
750763
751764 SEC. 32. Section 41976.5 of the Education Code is repealed.
752765
753766 SEC. 32. Section 41976.5 of the Education Code is repealed.
754767
755768 ### SEC. 32.
756769
757770
758771
759772 SEC. 33. Section 42238.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
760773
761774 SEC. 33. Section 42238.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:
762775
763776 ### SEC. 33.
764777
765778 42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
766779
767780 42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
768781
769782 42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).(1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.(2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).(A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).(B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).(b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.(c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.(d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
770783
771784
772785
773786 42238.5. (a) For purposes of Section 42238, the fiscal year average daily attendance shall be computed pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2).
774787
775788 (1) The second principal apportionment regular average daily attendance for either the current or prior fiscal year, whichever is greater. However, prior fiscal year average daily attendance shall be adjusted for any loss or gain of average daily attendance due to a reorganization or transfer of territory.
776789
777790 (2) Any school district that elects to receive funding pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280) shall compute its units of average daily attendance for purposes of Section 42238 by subtracting the amount determined in subparagraph (B) from the amount determined in subparagraph (A).
778791
779792 (A) The units of average daily attendance computed pursuant to paragraph (1).
780793
781794 (B) The units of average daily attendance resulting from pupils attending schools funded pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 42280).
782795
783796 (b) For purposes of this article, regular average daily attendance shall be the base revenue limit average daily attendance, excluding summer school average daily attendance.
784797
785798 (c) For purposes of this section, for the 199899 fiscal year only, the prior year average daily attendance shall be the 199798 regular average daily attendance, excluding absences excused pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 46010, as that subdivision read on July 1, 1996.
786799
787800 (d) Commencing with the 201314 fiscal year, this section shall be used only for purposes of allocating revenues received pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.
788801
789802 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2033, and, as of January 1, 2034, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2034, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
790803
791804 SEC. 34. Section 42639 of the Education Code is amended to read:42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.
792805
793806 SEC. 34. Section 42639 of the Education Code is amended to read:
794807
795808 ### SEC. 34.
796809
797810 42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.
798811
799812 42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.
800813
801814 42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.(b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.(c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.
802815
803816
804817
805818 42639. (a) The county auditor may examine each order and requisition on school district funds transmitted to the auditor by the county superintendent of schools. If the auditor allows the order and requisition, the auditor shall endorse thereon examined and allowed, and shall date, number, and sign it, whereupon it shall become a warrant on the county treasurer. The auditor shall detach any bill attached to the requisition, and shall number the bill, giving it the same number that the auditor gives the warrant, and file it in the auditors office. The auditor shall thereupon return the order, requisition, and warrant to the county superintendent of schools who shall transmit it to the governing board of the school district for issuance to the payee or to the payees order.
806819
807820 (b) A requisition of the county superintendent of schools, whether based upon written order of the governing board of a school district or authorized by law, shall constitute full authority for the signature for allowance of the requisition by the county auditor as a warrant on the county treasurer, and no other authority shall be necessary or required for such action by the county auditor.
808821
809822 (c) Requisition, as used in this section, includes any order or demand signed by the county superintendent of schools directing the county auditor to draw the auditors warrant on the county treasurer.
810823
811824 SEC. 35. Section 44843 of the Education Code is amended to read:44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
812825
813826 SEC. 35. Section 44843 of the Education Code is amended to read:
814827
815828 ### SEC. 35.
816829
817830 44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
818831
819832 44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
820833
821834 44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
822835
823836
824837
825838 44843. The county superintendent of schools shall be given immediate notice in writing by the governing board of the school district of the employment of persons for positions requiring certification qualifications. The notice shall include, but not be limited to, such data as may be prescribed by the Superintendent, in regulations that the Superintendent may by this provision adopt.
826839
827840 SEC. 36. Section 45113 of the Education Code is amended to read:45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.
828841
829842 SEC. 36. Section 45113 of the Education Code is amended to read:
830843
831844 ### SEC. 36.
832845
833846 45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.
834847
835848 45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.
836849
837850 45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.(b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.(c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.(d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.(e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.(2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.(3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.(g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).(h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.
838851
839852
840853
841854 45113. (a) The governing board of a school district shall prescribe written rules and regulations governing the personnel management of the classified service. These written rules and regulations shall be printed and made available to employees in the classified service, the public, and those concerned with the administration of this section, whereby these employees are designated as permanent employees of the school district after serving a prescribed period of probation that shall not exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer. However, a full-time peace officer or public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, to be designated as a permanent employee of the school district, shall serve a probationary period of not less that one year of paid service from their date of appointment to that full-time position. A permanent employee who accepts a promotion and fails to complete the probationary period for that promotional position, shall be employed in the classification from which the employee was promoted.
842855
843856 (b) An employee designated as a permanent employee shall be subject to disciplinary action only for cause as prescribed by rule or regulation of the governing board of the school district, but the governing boards determination of the sufficiency of the cause for disciplinary action shall be conclusive.
844857
845858 (c) The governing board of a school district shall adopt rules of procedure for disciplinary proceedings that shall contain a provision for informing the employee by written notice of the specific charges against the employee, a statement of the employees right to a hearing on those charges, and the time within which the hearing may be requested that shall be not less than five days after service of the notice to the employee, and a card or paper, the signing and filing of which shall constitute a demand for hearing, and a denial of all charges. The burden of proof shall remain with the governing board of the school district, and any rule or regulation to the contrary is void.
846859
847860 (d) Disciplinary action shall not be taken for any cause that arose before the employees becoming permanent, nor for any cause that arose more than two years preceding the date of the filing of the notice of cause unless the cause was concealed or not disclosed by the employee when it could be reasonably assumed that the employee should have disclosed the facts to the employing school district.
848861
849862 (e) This section shall not be construed to prohibit the governing board of a school district, pursuant to the terms of an agreement with an employee organization under Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, from delegating its authority to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against classified employees, excluding peace officers as defined in Section 830.32 of the Penal Code, to an impartial third-party hearing officer. However, the governing board of the school district shall retain authority to review the determination under the standards set forth in Section 1286.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
850863
851864 (f) (1) A governing board of a school district shall delegate its authority to a judge, as defined in Section 44990, to determine whether sufficient cause exists for disciplinary action against a classified employee involving allegations of egregious misconduct, as defined in Section 44932, and involving a minor, as defined in Section 44990. The judges ruling shall be binding upon all parties.
852865
853866 (2) A judge authorized under this subdivision to conduct a hearing involving allegations as described in Section 44010 or 44011, or as described in Sections 11165.2 to 11165.6, inclusive, of the Penal Code, shall conduct that hearing in accordance with Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4 and Section 49077.
854867
855868 (3) The term representative of the respondent, within the meaning of Article 3.3 (commencing with Section 44990) of Chapter 4, shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, an exclusive labor representative.
856869
857870 (g) This section applies only to school districts not incorporating the merit system as outlined in Article 6 (commencing with Section 45240).
858871
859872 (h) To the extent that this section, as amended by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019, conflicts with a provision of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by a public school employer and an exclusive bargaining representative before January 1, 2020, pursuant to Chapter 10.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code, the changes made to this section by Chapter 542 of the Statutes of 2019 shall not apply to the school district until expiration or renewal of that collective bargaining agreement.
860873
861874 SEC. 37. Section 45301 of the Education Code is amended to read:45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.
862875
863876 SEC. 37. Section 45301 of the Education Code is amended to read:
864877
865878 ### SEC. 37.
866879
867880 45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.
868881
869882 45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.
870883
871884 45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.(b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.
872885
873886
874887
875888 45301. (a) A person who has served an initial probationary period in a class not to exceed six months or 130 days of paid service, whichever is longer, as prescribed by the rules of the commission shall be deemed to be in the permanent classified service, except that the commission may establish a probationary period in a class not to exceed one year for classes designated by the commission as executive, administrative, or police classes. To receive permanent classified service status, each full-time peace officer and public safety dispatcher employed by a school district operating a dispatch center certified by the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training shall serve in a probationary status for a period not less than one year from their date of appointment to that full-time position.
876889
877890 (b) An employee shall not attain permanent status in the classified service until the employee has completed a probationary period in a class. In any case the rules of the commission may provide for the exclusion of time while employees are on a leave of absence. The rights of appeal from disciplinary action before attainment of permanent status in the classified service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Section 45305.
878891
879892 SEC. 38. Section 46190 of the Education Code is repealed.
880893
881894 SEC. 38. Section 46190 of the Education Code is repealed.
882895
883896 ### SEC. 38.
884897
885898
886899
887900 SEC. 39. Section 46192 of the Education Code is repealed.
888901
889902 SEC. 39. Section 46192 of the Education Code is repealed.
890903
891904 ### SEC. 39.
892905
893906
894907
895908 SEC. 40. Section 46300.4 of the Education Code is repealed.
896909
897910 SEC. 40. Section 46300.4 of the Education Code is repealed.
898911
899912 ### SEC. 40.
900913
901914
902915
903916 SEC. 41. Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
904917
905918 SEC. 41. Article 5 (commencing with Section 46351) of Chapter 3 of Part 26 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
906919
907920 ### SEC. 41.
908921
909922
910923
911924 SEC. 42. Section 49180 of the Education Code is amended to read:49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.
912925
913926 SEC. 42. Section 49180 of the Education Code is amended to read:
914927
915928 ### SEC. 42.
916929
917930 49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.
918931
919932 49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.
920933
921934 49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.
922935
923936
924937
925938 49180. If upon inspection or investigation a supervisor of attendance, probation officer, or officer of the Superintendent determines that a person is in violation of any statutory provision or rule or regulation relating to the employment of minors, the Superintendent shall report the violation to the Labor Commissioner. The report shall be made within 48 hours, and shall be in writing, setting forth the fact that the Superintendent has good cause to believe that a statutory provision or rule or regulation is being violated by the person. Upon receipt of the report of violation, the Director of Industrial Relations shall make an inspection or investigation of the violation and shall take action as provided in Section 1287 of the Labor Code.
926939
927940 SEC. 43. Section 49430.7 of the Education Code is amended to read:49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
928941
929942 SEC. 43. Section 49430.7 of the Education Code is amended to read:
930943
931944 ### SEC. 43.
932945
933946 49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
934947
935948 49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
936949
937950 49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:(1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.(2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.(3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.(b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:(1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:(1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.(2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.(3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.(4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.(d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.(e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
938951
939952
940953
941954 49430.7. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:
942955
943956 (1) Child development program means a program operated pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 8200) of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1.
944957
945958 (2) School means a school operated and maintained by a school district or county office of education, or a charter school.
946959
947960 (3) School district means a school district, charter school, or county office of education.
948961
949962 (b) As a condition of receipt of state meal reimbursement funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), for meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a school or school district shall comply with all of the following requirements and prohibitions:
950963
951964 (1) Follow the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.
952965
953966 (2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school or school district.
954967
955968 (3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.
956969
957970 (4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat that is prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.
958971
959972 (c) For meals and food items sold as part of the free and reduced-price meal programs, a child development program is encouraged to comply with all of the following guidelines:
960973
961974 (1) Meet developmentally and programmatically appropriate meal pattern and the United States Department of Agriculture meal pattern.
962975
963976 (2) Not sell or serve a food item that has in any way been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried by a school, school district, or child development program.
964977
965978 (3) Not sell or serve a food item containing artificial trans fat. A food item contains artificial trans fat if it contains vegetable shortening, margarine, or any kind of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, unless the manufacturers documentation or the label required on the food, pursuant to applicable federal and state law, lists the trans fat content as less than 0.5 grams per serving.
966979
967980 (4) Not sell or serve a food item that, as part of the manufacturing process, has been deep fried, par fried, or flash fried in an oil or fat prohibited by this paragraph. Oils and fats prohibited by this paragraph include, but are not limited to, palm, coconut, palm kernel, and lard, typically solid at room temperature and are known to negatively impact cardiovascular health. Oils permitted by this provision include, but are not limited to, canola, safflower, sunflower, corn, olive, soybean, peanut, or a blend of these oils, typically liquid at room temperature and are known for their positive cardiovascular benefit.
968981
969982 (d) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to Article 10 (commencing with Section 49530), schools and school districts shall provide the department with an annual certification of compliance with this section.
970983
971984 (e) This section shall become operative only upon an appropriation for its purposes in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
972985
973986 SEC. 44. Section 49534 of the Education Code is amended to read:49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.
974987
975988 SEC. 44. Section 49534 of the Education Code is amended to read:
976989
977990 ### SEC. 44.
978991
979992 49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.
980993
981994 49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.
982995
983996 49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.(b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.(c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.
984997
985998
986999
9871000 49534. (a) The department may formulate the basic elements of nutrition education programs for child nutrition entities participating in programs established under this article. Such programs may coordinate classroom instruction with the food service program and may be of sufficient variety and flexibility to meet the needs of pupils in the total spectrum of education, including early childhood, elementary and secondary schools, special education classes and programs, and child development programs.
9881001
9891002 (b) Nutrition education programs may be maintained on a project approval basis. The state board may establish rules and regulations for nutrition education projects. County offices of education may apply for and receive funds on behalf of school districts under their jurisdiction in order to implement projects.
9901003
9911004 (c) Projects may include, but need not be limited to, innovative ways to coordinate the school meal service program with the nutrition education program; development of community resources for purposes of nutrition education; instructional programs for teachers, parents, food service employees; and training and usage of paraprofessionals to assist the instructional staff.
9921005
9931006 SEC. 45. Section 49556 of the Education Code is amended to read:49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.
9941007
9951008 SEC. 45. Section 49556 of the Education Code is amended to read:
9961009
9971010 ### SEC. 45.
9981011
9991012 49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.
10001013
10011014 49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.
10021015
10031016 49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.
10041017
10051018
10061019
10071020 49556. The Superintendent shall supervise the implementation of this article and shall investigate acts of alleged noncompliance. If the Superintendent finds that a school district or county superintendent of schools has failed to comply with this article, the Superintendent shall certify the noncompliance. The Superintendent shall conduct an investigation as may be necessary to document the noncompliance. The Superintendent, in the Superintendents discretion, shall seek injunctive relief to secure compliance with this article.
10081021
10091022 SEC. 46. Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
10101023
10111024 SEC. 46. Article 11.5 (commencing with Section 49565) of Chapter 9 of Part 27 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
10121025
10131026 ### SEC. 46.
10141027
10151028
10161029
10171030 SEC. 47. Section 51796 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).
10181031
10191032 SEC. 47. Section 51796 of the Education Code is amended to read:
10201033
10211034 ### SEC. 47.
10221035
10231036 51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).
10241037
10251038 51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).
10261039
10271040 51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.(b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:(1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.(2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.(3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.(c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.(d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).(2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).
10281041
10291042
10301043
10311044 51796. (a) The Instructional School Gardens Program is hereby established for the promotion, creation, and support of instructional school gardens through the allocation of grants, and through technical assistance provided, to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. The program shall be administered by the department.
10321045
10331046 (b) The Superintendent may convene an interagency working group on instructional school gardens that may include, but not be limited to, representatives of the department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The working group may advise the Superintendent on the following:
10341047
10351048 (1) Effective and efficient means of encouraging school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education to develop and maintain a quality instructional school garden program.
10361049
10371050 (2) The availability of state and nonstate resources and technical assistance to help school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in establishing and maintaining instructional school gardens.
10381051
10391052 (3) Public and private partnerships available to assist school districts, charter schools, and county offices of education in using instructional school gardens to complement the academic program of participating schools.
10401053
10411054 (c) The Superintendent may establish an advisory group involving other agencies and groups with expertise in instructional school gardens, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Education Interagency Network. The purpose of the advisory group is to support program efforts through technical assistance, resources, in-kind support, site visits, and other related efforts.
10421055
10431056 (d) (1) The Superintendent shall use existing resources to comply with subdivisions (b) and (c).
10441057
10451058 (2) The Department of Food and Agriculture, the State Department of Public Health, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board shall use existing resources to comply with subdivision (b).
10461059
10471060 SEC. 48. Section 51796.2 of the Education Code is amended to read:51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.
10481061
10491062 SEC. 48. Section 51796.2 of the Education Code is amended to read:
10501063
10511064 ### SEC. 48.
10521065
10531066 51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.
10541067
10551068 51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.
10561069
10571070 51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.(b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.
10581071
10591072
10601073
10611074 51796.2. (a) A school district, charter school, or county office of education may apply to the Superintendent for funding for a three-year grant under this article in a manner determined by the Superintendent, in order to develop and maintain an instructional school garden. The application, at a minimum, shall indicate the school or schools at which the instructional school gardens are, or are to be, located; the grade level or grade levels to be targeted; the potential number of classes within the grade levels and number of pupils who would use the instructional school gardens; and the intended items of expenditure for any funds received. The application also shall include an explanation of the six-month reporting requirement specified in Section 51796.5.
10621075
10631076 (b) The Superintendent shall distribute the grants applied for pursuant to subdivision (a) to school districts, charter schools, or county offices of education. Each grant shall be not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per schoolsite, except that a district, charter school, or county office of education that applies on behalf of at least one schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils may receive a grant of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) per schoolsite with an enrollment of 1,000 or more pupils.
10641077
10651078 SEC. 49. Section 51797 of the Education Code is amended to read:51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.
10661079
10671080 SEC. 49. Section 51797 of the Education Code is amended to read:
10681081
10691082 ### SEC. 49.
10701083
10711084 51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.
10721085
10731086 51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.
10741087
10751088 51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.
10761089
10771090
10781091
10791092 51797. During its annual discretionary grant funding process, the California Integrated Waste Management Board may give preferential consideration to providing an appropriate level of funding to the program established pursuant to this article.
10801093
10811094 SEC. 50. Section 52500.1 of the Education Code is amended to read:52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.
10821095
10831096 SEC. 50. Section 52500.1 of the Education Code is amended to read:
10841097
10851098 ### SEC. 50.
10861099
10871100 52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.
10881101
10891102 52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.
10901103
10911104 52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.(b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:(1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.(2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.(c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.
10921105
10931106
10941107
10951108 52500.1. (a) Adult schools shall consist of programs, courses, and classes for adults. Minors may be admitted to those programs, courses, and classes pursuant to governing board policy and this section.
10961109
10971110 (b) Eligibility of high school pupils for enrollment in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be limited to pupils who meet both of the following conditions:
10981111
10991112 (1) High school pupils who enroll in adult education programs, courses, and classes pursuant to Section 41976, except that high school pupils shall not be counted for adult education apportionment purposes.
11001113
11011114 (2) High school pupils who have completed a counseling session that involved the pupil, a certificated representative of the high school, and the pupils parent or guardian, and who have a school record that contains written documentation of the session and a statement that the pupil is voluntarily enrolling in the adult education program, course, or class, and that enrollment in an adult education program, course, or class will enhance the pupils progress toward meeting the educational requirements for graduation from high school. Commencing July 1, 1994, a school district shall not enroll high school pupils pursuant to this subdivision unless the school district complies with the conditions set forth in this subdivision.
11021115
11031116 (c) Money for the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education programs, courses, and classes described in this section. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in this section are from another allowable fund source or sources.
11041117
11051118 SEC. 51. Section 52501 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.
11061119
11071120 SEC. 51. Section 52501 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11081121
11091122 ### SEC. 51.
11101123
11111124 52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.
11121125
11131126 52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.
11141127
11151128 52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.
11161129
11171130
11181131
11191132 52501. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools shall have power with the approval of the department to establish and maintain classes for adults, except programs and classes in outdoor science education and conservation education, as the term is employed in Section 8760, for the purpose of providing instruction in classes and courses defined in Section 41976.
11201133
11211134 SEC. 52. Section 52501.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.
11221135
11231136 SEC. 52. Section 52501.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11241137
11251138 ### SEC. 52.
11261139
11271140 52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.
11281141
11291142 52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.
11301143
11311144 52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.
11321145
11331146
11341147
11351148 52501.5. Revenue derived from the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be expended for other than adult education purposes.
11361149
11371150 SEC. 53. Section 52502 of the Education Code is amended to read:52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.
11381151
11391152 SEC. 53. Section 52502 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11401153
11411154 ### SEC. 53.
11421155
11431156 52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.
11441157
11451158 52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.
11461159
11471160 52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.
11481161
11491162
11501163
11511164 52502. The governing board of a high school district or unified school district may establish classes for adults. If these classes result in enrollment in any school year of 500 or more students, such districts shall establish an adult school for the administration of the program, if one is not established. This section shall not prohibit the governing board of a high school district or unified school district from establishing an adult school at an enrollment threshold in classes for adults lower than 500 students for any school year.
11521165
11531166 SEC. 54. Section 52505 of the Education Code is amended to read:52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.
11541167
11551168 SEC. 54. Section 52505 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11561169
11571170 ### SEC. 54.
11581171
11591172 52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.
11601173
11611174 52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.
11621175
11631176 52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.
11641177
11651178
11661179
11671180 52505. Such classes may be convened at such hours and for such length of time during the day or evening and at such period and for such length of time during the school year as may be determined by the governing authority. The governing board of any high school district or unified school district may provide for the maintenance of these classes.
11681181
11691182 SEC. 55. Section 52510 of the Education Code is repealed.
11701183
11711184 SEC. 55. Section 52510 of the Education Code is repealed.
11721185
11731186 ### SEC. 55.
11741187
11751188
11761189
11771190 SEC. 56. Section 52511 of the Education Code is amended to read:52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.
11781191
11791192 SEC. 56. Section 52511 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11801193
11811194 ### SEC. 56.
11821195
11831196 52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.
11841197
11851198 52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.
11861199
11871200 52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.
11881201
11891202
11901203
11911204 52511. Whenever the governing board of a school district maintaining an adult school or classes for adults is unable to maintain the school or classes in the school district because of its inability to secure a teacher or teachers, or because of lack of facilities, the board may, with the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent, maintain the school or classes of the school district elsewhere than within the school district or contract for instruction of the students in such school or classes with the governing board of another school district.
11921205
11931206 SEC. 57. Section 52512 of the Education Code is repealed.
11941207
11951208 SEC. 57. Section 52512 of the Education Code is repealed.
11961209
11971210 ### SEC. 57.
11981211
11991212
12001213
12011214 SEC. 58. Section 52513 of the Education Code is repealed.
12021215
12031216 SEC. 58. Section 52513 of the Education Code is repealed.
12041217
12051218 ### SEC. 58.
12061219
12071220
12081221
12091222 SEC. 59. Section 52515 of the Education Code is amended to read:52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.
12101223
12111224 SEC. 59. Section 52515 of the Education Code is amended to read:
12121225
12131226 ### SEC. 59.
12141227
12151228 52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.
12161229
12171230 52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.
12181231
12191232 52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.
12201233
12211234
12221235
12231236 52515. State funds shall not be apportioned to a school district unless the courses have been approved by the department pursuant to Section 41976.
12241237
12251238 SEC. 60. Section 52516 of the Education Code is repealed.
12261239
12271240 SEC. 60. Section 52516 of the Education Code is repealed.
12281241
12291242 ### SEC. 60.
12301243
12311244
12321245
12331246 SEC. 61. Section 52517 of the Education Code is amended to read:52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.
12341247
12351248 SEC. 61. Section 52517 of the Education Code is amended to read:
12361249
12371250 ### SEC. 61.
12381251
12391252 52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.
12401253
12411254 52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.
12421255
12431256 52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:(1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.(2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.(b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.
12441257
12451258
12461259
12471260 52517. (a) A high school or unified school district shall report for attendance in a class if either of the following occurs:
12481261
12491262 (1) The school district receives full compensation for the class from any public or private agency, individual, or group of individuals, except fees authorized by Section 52612.
12501263
12511264 (2) The class is not located in a facility clearly identified in a manner, and established by appropriate procedures, to ensure that attendance in the class is open to the general public, unless the class is authorized pursuant to Section 52570 or located in a state hospital.
12521265
12531266 (b) The state board may adopt regulations as may be necessary to enforce this section.
12541267
12551268 SEC. 62. Section 52518 of the Education Code is repealed.
12561269
12571270 SEC. 62. Section 52518 of the Education Code is repealed.
12581271
12591272 ### SEC. 62.
12601273
12611274
12621275
12631276 SEC. 63. Section 52519 of the Education Code is repealed.
12641277
12651278 SEC. 63. Section 52519 of the Education Code is repealed.
12661279
12671280 ### SEC. 63.
12681281
12691282
12701283
12711284 SEC. 64. Section 52520 of the Education Code is repealed.
12721285
12731286 SEC. 64. Section 52520 of the Education Code is repealed.
12741287
12751288 ### SEC. 64.
12761289
12771290
12781291
12791292 SEC. 65. Section 52522 of the Education Code is repealed.
12801293
12811294 SEC. 65. Section 52522 of the Education Code is repealed.
12821295
12831296 ### SEC. 65.
12841297
12851298
12861299
12871300 SEC. 66. Section 52522.2 of the Education Code is repealed.
12881301
12891302 SEC. 66. Section 52522.2 of the Education Code is repealed.
12901303
12911304 ### SEC. 66.
12921305
12931306
12941307
12951308 SEC. 67. Section 52523 of the Education Code is amended to read:52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.
12961309
12971310 SEC. 67. Section 52523 of the Education Code is amended to read:
12981311
12991312 ### SEC. 67.
13001313
13011314 52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.
13021315
13031316 52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.
13041317
13051318 52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:(a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.(b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.(c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.(d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.(2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.(3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.(4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.(e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:(1) Physical education.(2) Drivers training and education.(3) Visual and performing arts.(4) Band.(5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.(6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs. (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.(g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.(h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.
13061319
13071320
13081321
13091322 52523. Adult education programs, courses, and classes shall not be used to supplant the regular high school curriculum for high school pupils enrolled in adult education. Adult education shall supplement and enrich the high school pupils educational experiences. Therefore, adult education, at a minimum, shall meet the following criteria:
13101323
13111324 (a) All programs, courses, and classes conducted as adult education shall be open to adults and listed in the school districts catalog of adult education classes provided to the public and shall be under the supervision and jurisdiction of the adult education administrator as determined by the governing board of the school district. Adults shall have priority over other students for admission to any adult education class if those adults enroll not later than the regular enrollment period for those classes. The enrollment period shall be published in the course catalog. A course required by the school district for high school graduation or necessary for pupils to maintain satisfactory academic progress shall not be offered exclusively through the adult education program. An adult for purposes of this section is a person 18 years of age or older or other person who is not concurrently enrolled in a regular high school program.
13121325
13131326 (b) Each adult education teacher, whether part time or full time, under contract status or in an hourly position, shall be part of the adult school faculty and shall be under the direct supervision of the authorized adult education administrator.
13141327
13151328 (c) Enrollment of high school pupils shall be voluntary on the part of the pupil taking the class. Before enrollment by a high school pupil in an adult education program, class, or course, the pupil shall have documentation of the counseling session held pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 52500.1.
13161329
13171330 (d) Enrollment of a high school pupil in an adult education program, course, or class shall be for sound educational purposes, including, but not limited to, the following:
13181331
13191332 (1) The adult education program, course, or class is not offered in the regular high school curriculum.
13201333
13211334 (2) The adult education program, course, or class is needed by the pupil to make up deficient credits for graduation from high school.
13221335
13231336 (3) The adult education program, course, or class allows the pupil to gain vocational and technical skills beyond that provided by the regular high schools vocational and technical education program.
13241337
13251338 (4) The adult education program, course, or class supplements and enriches the high school pupils educational experience.
13261339
13271340 (e) A high school pupil shall not be enrolled for apportionment purposes in an adult education program, course, or class that would be considered any of the following:
13281341
13291342 (1) Physical education.
13301343
13311344 (2) Drivers training and education.
13321345
13331346 (3) Visual and performing arts.
13341347
13351348 (4) Band.
13361349
13371350 (5) Preparation of a school yearbook or school newspaper.
13381351
13391352 (6) Training for, or participation in, athletic camps, cheerleading or spirit organizations, student government, or extracurricular student clubs.
13401353
13411354 (f) The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that further defines the purposes set forth in subdivision (d) and the courses set forth in subdivision (e). The Superintendent is authorized to issue, at any time, rules and regulations instead of the program advisory.
13421355
13431356 (g) Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of an adult education program, course, and class described in subdivision (e). A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for pupils under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education program, course, or class described in subdivision (e) are from another allowable fund source or sources.
13441357
13451358 (h) Students enrolled in adult education programs, courses, and classes shall be assigned a statewide student identifier consistent with the identifiers assigned to pupils in K12 education programs, if the student is not already identified by a social security number in the data system of the adult school or other local educational agency providing the adult education programs, courses, or classes. Adult schools shall share the assigned identifiers with the California Community Colleges for inclusion in the student data system.
13461359
13471360 SEC. 68. Section 52525 of the Education Code is repealed.
13481361
13491362 SEC. 68. Section 52525 of the Education Code is repealed.
13501363
13511364 ### SEC. 68.
13521365
13531366
13541367
13551368 SEC. 69. Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
13561369
13571370 SEC. 69. Article 2 (commencing with Section 52530) of Chapter 10 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code is repealed.
13581371
13591372 ### SEC. 69.
13601373
13611374
13621375
13631376 SEC. 70. Section 52540 of the Education Code is amended to read:52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
13641377
13651378 SEC. 70. Section 52540 of the Education Code is amended to read:
13661379
13671380 ### SEC. 70.
13681381
13691382 52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
13701383
13711384 52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
13721385
13731386 52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
13741387
13751388
13761389
13771390 52540. Upon application of 20 or more persons above 18 years of age residing in a high school district who cannot speak, read, or write the English language to a degree of proficiency equal to that required for the completion of grade 8 of the elementary schools, the governing board of the high school district shall establish classes in English. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
13781391
13791392 SEC. 71. Section 52541 of the Education Code is repealed.
13801393
13811394 SEC. 71. Section 52541 of the Education Code is repealed.
13821395
13831396 ### SEC. 71.
13841397
13851398
13861399
13871400 SEC. 72. Section 52542 of the Education Code is repealed.
13881401
13891402 SEC. 72. Section 52542 of the Education Code is repealed.
13901403
13911404 ### SEC. 72.
13921405
13931406
13941407
13951408 SEC. 73. Section 52543 of the Education Code is repealed.
13961409
13971410 SEC. 73. Section 52543 of the Education Code is repealed.
13981411
13991412 ### SEC. 73.
14001413
14011414
14021415
14031416 SEC. 74. Section 52544 of the Education Code is repealed.
14041417
14051418 SEC. 74. Section 52544 of the Education Code is repealed.
14061419
14071420 ### SEC. 74.
14081421
14091422
14101423
14111424 SEC. 75. Section 52552 of the Education Code is amended to read:52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
14121425
14131426 SEC. 75. Section 52552 of the Education Code is amended to read:
14141427
14151428 ### SEC. 75.
14161429
14171430 52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
14181431
14191432 52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
14201433
14211434 52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
14221435
14231436
14241437
14251438 52552. Upon application of 25 or more persons desiring training for citizenship and residing in a high school district, the governing board of the high school district shall establish special classes in training for citizenship. Upon demand, the governing board of the high school district may establish the classes with a lesser number of applicants. These classes may be offered directly by the high school district or in partnership with another public adult education provider.
14261439
14271440 SEC. 76. Section 52553 of the Education Code is repealed.
14281441
14291442 SEC. 76. Section 52553 of the Education Code is repealed.
14301443
14311444 ### SEC. 76.
14321445
14331446
14341447
14351448 SEC. 77. Section 52554 of the Education Code is repealed.
14361449
14371450 SEC. 77. Section 52554 of the Education Code is repealed.
14381451
14391452 ### SEC. 77.
14401453
14411454
14421455
14431456 SEC. 78. Section 52556 of the Education Code is repealed.
14441457
14451458 SEC. 78. Section 52556 of the Education Code is repealed.
14461459
14471460 ### SEC. 78.
14481461
14491462
14501463
14511464 SEC. 79. Section 52570 of the Education Code is amended to read:52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.
14521465
14531466 SEC. 79. Section 52570 of the Education Code is amended to read:
14541467
14551468 ### SEC. 79.
14561469
14571470 52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.
14581471
14591472 52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.
14601473
14611474 52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.
14621475
14631476
14641477
14651478 52570. The governing board of a school district maintaining secondary schools or a county superintendent of schools, shall have the power, with the approval of the department, to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities. These classes shall be directed to providing instruction in civic education, career technical education, work readiness, independent living skills, community access and integration, communication and social skills, literacy, and academics. These classes shall conform to standards of attendance, curriculum, and administration established by the department.
14661479
14671480 SEC. 80. Section 52571 of the Education Code is repealed.
14681481
14691482 SEC. 80. Section 52571 of the Education Code is repealed.
14701483
14711484 ### SEC. 80.
14721485
14731486
14741487
14751488 SEC. 81. Section 52572 of the Education Code is amended to read:52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.
14761489
14771490 SEC. 81. Section 52572 of the Education Code is amended to read:
14781491
14791492 ### SEC. 81.
14801493
14811494 52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.
14821495
14831496 52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.
14841497
14851498 52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.
14861499
14871500
14881501
14891502 52572. The governing board of a school district or the county superintendent of schools authorized by this article to establish special classes for adults designed to serve the educational needs of adults with disabilities may contract to provide those classes by any adjacent high school district or unified school district, subject to the approval of the Superintendent. Any contract entered into pursuant to this section shall be for a term of not to exceed one year but may be renewed or revised and renewed annually.
14901503
14911504 SEC. 82. Section 52610.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.
14921505
14931506 SEC. 82. Section 52610.5 of the Education Code is amended to read:
14941507
14951508 ### SEC. 82.
14961509
14971510 52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.
14981511
14991512 52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.
15001513
15011514 52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.
15021515
15031516
15041517
15051518 52610.5. Notwithstanding Section 52610, any minor, regardless of age, who is pregnant or is a parent actively engaged in raising one or more of the minors children, is eligible to enroll in any adult education course or class described in Section 41976. Money under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall not be used to support the costs of adult education courses or classes described in Section 41976. A school district shall clearly demonstrate that the costs of instruction for persons under 18 years of age enrolled in an adult education course or class described in Section 41976 are from another allowable fund source or sources.
15061519
15071520 SEC. 83. Section 52614 of the Education Code is repealed.
15081521
15091522 SEC. 83. Section 52614 of the Education Code is repealed.
15101523
15111524 ### SEC. 83.
15121525
15131526
15141527
15151528 SEC. 84. Section 52615 of the Education Code is repealed.
15161529
15171530 SEC. 84. Section 52615 of the Education Code is repealed.
15181531
15191532 ### SEC. 84.
15201533
15211534
15221535
15231536 SEC. 85. Section 52616 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.
15241537
15251538 SEC. 85. Section 52616 of the Education Code is amended to read:
15261539
15271540 ### SEC. 85.
15281541
15291542 52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.
15301543
15311544 52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.
15321545
15331546 52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.
15341547
15351548
15361549
15371550 52616. Money derived under the Adult Education Program, established pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, shall be deposited in a separate fund of the school district to be known as the adult education fund. Money in the school districts adult education fund shall be expended only for adult education purposes. Except for moneys received pursuant to the local control funding formula, moneys received for programs for specifically designated pupils shall not be expended for adult education.
15381551
15391552 SEC. 86. Section 52616.2 of the Education Code is repealed.
15401553
15411554 SEC. 86. Section 52616.2 of the Education Code is repealed.
15421555
15431556 ### SEC. 86.
15441557
15451558
15461559
15471560 SEC. 87. Section 52616.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.
15481561
15491562 SEC. 87. Section 52616.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:
15501563
15511564 ### SEC. 87.
15521565
15531566 52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.
15541567
15551568 52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.
15561569
15571570 52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:(1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.(2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:(i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.(ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:(I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.(II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.(IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).(V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.(iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:(I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:(ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.(ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.(ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).(id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.(iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.(v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.(b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.(d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.
15581571
15591572
15601573
15611574 52616.4. (a) Money in the Adult Education Fund of a school district may be expended only for the following charges:
15621575
15631576 (1) Direct instructional costs relating directly to the adult education program, including, but not limited to, the salaries and benefits of adult education teachers and aides, textbooks, instructional supplies, travel and conference expenses for employees who work in the adult education program, and repair, maintenance, acquisition, and replacement of instructional equipment used in the adult education program.
15641577
15651578 (2) (A) Direct support costs for the adult education program. For purposes of this section, direct support costs means:
15661579
15671580 (i) Instructional administration and instructional media costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this subparagraph, instructional administration costs include the documented costs of individuals who, regardless of specific job title, administer the districts adult education program.
15681581
15691582 (ii) School administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that represent the activities of individuals whose employment by the school district is exclusively in support of the adult education program, or school administration and pupil services costs that are supported by auditable documentation and that meet all of the following conditions:
15701583
15711584 (I) Those costs are able to be identified in a separate contract with the adult education program.
15721585
15731586 (II) The administration and services are provided exclusively to adult students and only for the period identified in the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).
15741587
15751588 (III) The services are provided during a time that is different than when services to pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, are provided, and the administration is provided after 4:00 p.m.
15761589
15771590 (IV) The persons who provide the services and administration to adult students report to the adult education director during the period of the contract made pursuant to subclause (I).
15781591
15791592 (V) The person providing the administration immediately supervises the adult school personnel.
15801593
15811594 (iii) Plant maintenance and operations costs, including costs for facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at a particular site as follows:
15821595
15831596 (I) For facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, the costs that are supported by auditable documentation. For purposes of this clause, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a childcare program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.
15841597
15851598 (II) For facilities that are used by more than one program, including the adult education program, a district may charge the Adult Education Fund for an amount attributable to the adult education program, but this charge shall not exceed the amount derived from the following calculation:
15861599
15871600 (ia) Calculate, according to the general description in the California School Accounting Manual, the prorated number of classroom units that the adult education program uses for instructional and childcare purposes.
15881601
15891602 (ib) Calculate the total number of classroom units in the district.
15901603
15911604 (ic) Divide the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ia) by the amount calculated in sub-subclause (ib).
15921605
15931606 (id) Multiply the quotient calculated in sub-subclause (ic) by the districts total plant maintenance and operations costs.
15941607
15951608 (iv) Facilities costs for nondistrict-owned facilities that exclusively house adult education programs, including, but not limited to, costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site. For purposes of this subparagraph, a facility that houses an adult education program and a regional occupational center or program or a child care program, or both, is a facility that exclusively houses an adult education program.
15961609
15971610 (v) Facilities costs for the acquisition of facilities originally acquired by adult education programs, or for the restoration of those facilities, including costs for debt service for the acquisition or restoration of a facility, including the costs of facilities that are used to provide childcare services to the children of the students attending the adult education program at the same site.
15981611
15991612 (B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), auditable documentation means time reports and other contemporaneous records that establish the time that individual employees spend working for the adult education program, and the documentation that supports nonpersonnel costs substantiating that the adult education program received the service, supply, or equipment. That documentation shall comply with the documentation requirements set forth in the California School Accounting Manual published pursuant to Section 41010.
16001613
16011614 (b) If the department and the Department of Finance concur that a school district has violated this section, the Superintendent shall direct that school district to transfer double the amount improperly transferred to the school districts general fund from that fund to the school districts Adult Education Fund for the subsequent fiscal year, which amount shall be used for the improvement of the school districts adult education program. If the school district fails to make that transfer as directed, the Superintendent shall reduce the school districts regular apportionment determined pursuant to Section 42238.02, as implemented by Section 42238.03, by that amount, and that shall be used for improvement of the school districts adult education program.
16021615
16031616 (c) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section that responsible school district officials be held fully accountable for the accounting and reporting of adult education programs and that minor and inadvertent instances of noncompliance be resolved in a fair and equitable manner to the satisfaction of the Superintendent and the Department of Finance.
16041617
16051618 (d) The Superintendent, with the approval of the Department of Finance, may waive up to the full transfer amount in subdivision (b) if the Superintendent determines that the noncompliance involved is minor or inadvertent, or both.
16061619
16071620 SEC. 88. Section 52616.5 of the Education Code is repealed.
16081621
16091622 SEC. 88. Section 52616.5 of the Education Code is repealed.
16101623
16111624 ### SEC. 88.
16121625
16131626
16141627
16151628 SEC. 89. Section 52616.16 of the Education Code is repealed.
16161629
16171630 SEC. 89. Section 52616.16 of the Education Code is repealed.
16181631
16191632 ### SEC. 89.
16201633
16211634
16221635
16231636 SEC. 90. Section 52616.17 of the Education Code is repealed.
16241637
16251638 SEC. 90. Section 52616.17 of the Education Code is repealed.
16261639
16271640 ### SEC. 90.
16281641
16291642
16301643
16311644 SEC. 91. Section 52616.18 of the Education Code is amended to read:52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.
16321645
16331646 SEC. 91. Section 52616.18 of the Education Code is amended to read:
16341647
16351648 ### SEC. 91.
16361649
16371650 52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.
16381651
16391652 52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.
16401653
16411654 52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:(1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.(2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.(b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.
16421655
16431656
16441657
16451658 52616.18. (a) Commencing July 1, of each fiscal year, notwithstanding that a school district was not authorized to operate an adult education program pursuant to Section 41976, a school district may apply to the department for initial program approval and funding to begin any adult education programs specified in Section 41976 provided the school district meets both of the following criteria:
16461659
16471660 (1) The school district did not operate nor claim state apportionment for an adult education program in the prior fiscal year.
16481661
16491662 (2) The school district has participated in the appropriate local adult education consortium, approved pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 84900) of Chapter 5 of Part 50 of Division 7 of Title 3, and the applicable adult education plan approved pursuant to that article for adult education activities and services.
16501663
16511664 (b) The Superintendent may approve the program funding on the basis of the school districts documented need for adult education programs. The Superintendent shall issue a program advisory that sets forth the criteria of need that a school district is required to document.
16521665
16531666 SEC. 92. Section 52616.19 of the Education Code is repealed.
16541667
16551668 SEC. 92. Section 52616.19 of the Education Code is repealed.
16561669
16571670 ### SEC. 92.
16581671
16591672
16601673
16611674 SEC. 93. Section 52616.20 of the Education Code is repealed.
16621675
16631676 SEC. 93. Section 52616.20 of the Education Code is repealed.
16641677
16651678 ### SEC. 93.
16661679
16671680
16681681
16691682 SEC. 94. Section 52616.21 of the Education Code is repealed.
16701683
16711684 SEC. 94. Section 52616.21 of the Education Code is repealed.
16721685
16731686 ### SEC. 94.
16741687
16751688
16761689
16771690 SEC. 95. Section 52616.24 of the Education Code is repealed.
16781691
16791692 SEC. 95. Section 52616.24 of the Education Code is repealed.
16801693
16811694 ### SEC. 95.
16821695
16831696
16841697
16851698 SEC. 96. Section 52617 of the Education Code is repealed.
16861699
16871700 SEC. 96. Section 52617 of the Education Code is repealed.
16881701
16891702 ### SEC. 96.
16901703
16911704
16921705
16931706 SEC. 97. Section 52653 of the Education Code is amended to read:52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.
16941707
16951708 SEC. 97. Section 52653 of the Education Code is amended to read:
16961709
16971710 ### SEC. 97.
16981711
16991712 52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.
17001713
17011714 52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.
17021715
17031716 52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:(a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.(b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.(c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.(d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.
17041717
17051718
17061719
17071720 52653. School districts that receive funding pursuant to Section 52656 shall provide the following:
17081721
17091722 (a) Classes and courses offered pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976.
17101723
17111724 (b) Services that were reimbursable under the provisions of SLIAG in the 199192 fiscal year, including, but not limited to, instruction in English as a second language, citizenship, basic skills, and ancillary services such as outreach and counseling.
17121725
17131726 (c) Services to develop the work and educational skills needed by the immigrant in the workplace, including, but not limited to, the communication, computational, problem solving, and interpersonal skills needed to succeed in the workplace.
17141727
17151728 (d) Services that enable immigrants to access educational services and economic development services available to all Californians.
17161729
17171730 SEC. 98. Section 52656 of the Education Code is amended to read:52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.
17181731
17191732 SEC. 98. Section 52656 of the Education Code is amended to read:
17201733
17211734 ### SEC. 98.
17221735
17231736 52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.
17241737
17251738 52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.
17261739
17271740 52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.(b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.(c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.
17281741
17291742
17301743
17311744 52656. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, school districts that received apportionment for extraordinary needs in English as a second language and basic skills from Provision (4) of Schedule (a) of Item 6110-156-001 of the Budget Act of 1991 for the 199192 fiscal year shall continue to receive those funds in the school districts adult block entitlement in the 199293 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter.
17321745
17331746 (b) Commencing in the 199394 fiscal year, school districts that receive an apportionment from subdivision (a) shall give priority to eligible immigrants in need of courses pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 41976 and Section 52653.
17341747
17351748 (c) School districts are not restricted by this chapter from providing classes for immigrants pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 41976 with other funds for adult education that are available to the district.
17361749
17371750 SEC. 99. Section 56333 of the Education Code is amended to read:56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.
17381751
17391752 SEC. 99. Section 56333 of the Education Code is amended to read:
17401753
17411754 ### SEC. 99.
17421755
17431756 56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.
17441757
17451758 56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.
17461759
17471760 56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:(a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.(b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.(c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.(d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.(e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.
17481761
17491762
17501763
17511764 56333. A pupil shall be assessed as having a language or speech disorder that makes the pupil eligible for special education and related services when the pupil demonstrates difficulty understanding or using language to such an extent that it adversely affects the pupils educational performance and cannot be corrected without special education and related services. In order to be eligible for special education and related services, difficulty in understanding or using language shall be assessed by a speech-language pathologist who determines that such difficulty results from any of the following disorders:
17521765
17531766 (a) Speech sound disorder, characterized by deficits in the pupils production of speech sounds that significantly interferes with communication and attracts adverse attention.
17541767
17551768 (b) Voice disorder, characterized by persistent, deficits in voice quality, pitch, intensity, or resonance. A medical examination shall be conducted, where appropriate.
17561769
17571770 (c) Fluency disorder, characterized by persistent deficits in the flow of verbal expression to such a degree that these difficulties adversely affect communication between the pupil and listener.
17581771
17591772 (d) Language disorder, characterized by inappropriate or inadequate acquisition, comprehension, or expression of language such that the pupils language performance level is found to be significantly below the language performance level of the pupils peers.
17601773
17611774 (e) Hearing impairment or deafness that contributes to or results in a language or speech disorder and significantly affects educational performance.
17621775
17631776 SEC. 100. Section 84906 of the Education Code is amended to read:84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.
17641777
17651778 SEC. 100. Section 84906 of the Education Code is amended to read:
17661779
17671780 ### SEC. 100.
17681781
17691782 84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.
17701783
17711784 84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.
17721785
17731786 84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).(2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).(3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.(B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.(b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:(1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.(2) A list of the following:(A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.(B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.(3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).(4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.(5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.(6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).(7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.(8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:(A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.(B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.(D) Collection and availability of data.(9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.(c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.
17741787
17751788
17761789
17771790 84906. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201920 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program for a fiscal year, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved three-year adult education plan that addresses a three-year fiscal planning cycle. The plan shall be updated at least once each year based on available data pertaining to the requirements of subdivision (b).
17781791
17791792 (2) For the 201819 fiscal year, as a condition of receipt of an apportionment of funds from this program, the members of a consortium shall have a consortium-approved adult education plan that satisfies subdivision (c).
17801793
17811794 (3) (A) Before establishing a career technical education training program, each member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, shall conduct a job market study of the labor market area in which it proposes to establish the career technical education training program or rely upon the most recent job market study of the labor market area conducted by the local workforce development board. The study shall use local labor market information and consider a supply analysis of existing career technical education training programs for adults maintained by high schools, community colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the geographic area to ensure that the anticipated employment demand for adults enrolled in the proposed training program justifies the establishment of the proposed courses of instruction.
17821795
17831796 (B) After completing the job market study and before establishing the career technical education training program, the governing body of a member of a local adult education consortium, or the consortium as a whole, as applicable, shall determine if the job market study justifies the proposed career technical education program.
17841797
17851798 (b) An adult education plan shall include all of the following:
17861799
17871800 (1) An evaluation of the educational needs of adults in the region.
17881801
17891802 (2) A list of the following:
17901803
17911804 (A) Entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region.
17921805
17931806 (B) Entities that are impacted by, or that have a fundamental interest in, the provision of those services.
17941807
17951808 (3) A description of the services provided by entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2).
17961809
17971810 (4) An evaluation of current levels and types of education and workforce services for adults in the region.
17981811
17991812 (5) An evaluation of the funds available to the members of the consortium and the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), including funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article.
18001813
18011814 (6) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to address the educational needs identified pursuant to paragraph (1).
18021815
18031816 (7) Actions that the members of the consortium will take to improve the effectiveness of their services.
18041817
18051818 (8) Actions that the members of the consortium, the entities listed pursuant to paragraph (2), and other interested parties will take to improve integration of services and to improve transitions into postsecondary education and the workforce, including actions related to all of the following:
18061819
18071820 (A) Placement of adults seeking education and workforce services into adult education programs.
18081821
18091822 (B) Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.
18101823
18111824 (C) Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults.
18121825
18131826 (D) Collection and availability of data.
18141827
18151828 (9) A description of the alignment of adult education services supported by this program with those described in other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
18161829
18171830 (10) A description of the ways in which each of the entities identified in paragraph (2) contributed to the development of the plan.
18181831
18191832 (c) For the 201516, 201617, 201718, and 201819 fiscal years, a regional plan developed pursuant to Section 84830 shall satisfy the requirements of this section.
18201833
18211834 SEC. 101. Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
18221835
18231836 SEC. 101. Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
18241837
18251838 ### SEC. 101.
18261839
18271840 131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
18281841
18291842 131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
18301843
18311844 131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.(6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
18321845
18331846
18341847
18351848 131052. In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:
18361849
18371850 (1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5, 2249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037, 4191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the Business and Professions Code.
18381851
18391852 (2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.
18401853
18411854 (3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241, 49030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.
18421855
18431856 (4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
18441857
18451858 (5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909 of the Family Code.
18461859
18471860 (6) Sections 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700, 5701, 5701.5, 7115, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.
18481861
18491862 (7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code. For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government Code, the term State Department of Health Services is hereby deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.
18501863
18511864 (8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457, 1505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87, 2002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24, 11839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30, 11839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961, 18897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134, 26155, 26200, and 26203.
18521865
18531866 (B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4, 4.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.
18541867
18551868 (C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of Division 101.
18561869
18571870 (D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.
18581871
18591872 (E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182, 104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317, 104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350, 105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.
18601873
18611874 (F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770, 108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500, 112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850, 114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880, 115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366, 116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924, and 119300.
18621875
18631876 (G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395, 120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340, 121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.
18641877
18651878 (H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter 3, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part 7, and Part 8 of Division 106.
18661879
18671880 (9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10, 10123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.
18681881
18691882 (10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1, 6359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.
18701883
18711884 (11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515, 7518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990 of the Penal Code.
18721885
18731886 (12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.
18741887
18751888 (13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830, 43210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.
18761889
18771890 (14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.
18781891
18791892 (15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.
18801893
18811894 (16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863, 30461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
18821895
18831896 (17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.
18841897
18851898 (18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle Code.
18861899
18871900 (19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909, and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become inoperative on June 30, 2012.
18881901
18891902 (20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392, 13392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528, 13529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554, 13554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827, 13830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864, 13868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887, 13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3, 13896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898, 14011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026, 14027, and 14029 of the Water Code.