California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2226 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Amended IN Assembly May 16, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2226Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, Ting, and Valencia)(Coauthors: Senators Blakespear and Dodd)February 07, 2024An act to amend, repeal, and add Sections 48010 and 48011 of, and to add Section 48001 to, the Education Code, relating to kindergarten. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2226, as amended, Muratsuchi. Elementary education: kindergarten.Under existing law, a person between 6 and 18 years of age who is not exempted by law is subject to compulsory full-time education. Existing law excludes a child under 6 years of age from the public schools, subject to specified exceptions.Existing law requires a school district maintaining a kindergarten to admit a child who will have their 5th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year. Existing law also requires a child who will have their 6th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year to be admitted to the first grade of an elementary school. Existing law authorizes a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district to be ready for first-grade work to be admitted to the first grade, as specified.This bill, beginning with the 202627 school year, would require a child to have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade at a public elementary school, except for a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and is judged to be ready for first-grade work, as specified, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point 5-percentage-point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.(b)(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 48010 is added to the Education Code, to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 48011 is added to the Education Code, to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
1+CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2226Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, and Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Blakespear)February 07, 2024 An act to amend, repeal, and add Sections 48010 and 48011 of, and to add Section 48001 to, the Education Code, relating to kindergarten. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2226, as introduced, Muratsuchi. Elementary education: kindergarten.Under existing law, a person between 6 and 18 years of age who is not exempted by law is subject to compulsory full-time education. Existing law excludes a child under 6 years of age from the public schools, subject to specified exceptions.Existing law requires a school district maintaining a kindergarten to admit a child who will have their 5th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year. Existing law also requires a child who will have their 6th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year to be admitted to the first grade of an elementary school. Existing law authorizes a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district to be ready for first-grade work to be admitted to the first grade, as specified.This bill, beginning with the 202627 school year, would require a child to have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade at a public elementary school, except for a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and is judged to be ready for first-grade work, as specified, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 48010 is added to the Education Code, to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year. A(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 48011 is added to the Education Code, to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly May 16, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2226Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, Ting, and Valencia)(Coauthors: Senators Blakespear and Dodd)February 07, 2024An act to amend, repeal, and add Sections 48010 and 48011 of, and to add Section 48001 to, the Education Code, relating to kindergarten. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2226, as amended, Muratsuchi. Elementary education: kindergarten.Under existing law, a person between 6 and 18 years of age who is not exempted by law is subject to compulsory full-time education. Existing law excludes a child under 6 years of age from the public schools, subject to specified exceptions.Existing law requires a school district maintaining a kindergarten to admit a child who will have their 5th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year. Existing law also requires a child who will have their 6th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year to be admitted to the first grade of an elementary school. Existing law authorizes a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district to be ready for first-grade work to be admitted to the first grade, as specified.This bill, beginning with the 202627 school year, would require a child to have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade at a public elementary school, except for a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and is judged to be ready for first-grade work, as specified, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2226Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, and Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Blakespear)February 07, 2024 An act to amend, repeal, and add Sections 48010 and 48011 of, and to add Section 48001 to, the Education Code, relating to kindergarten. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2226, as introduced, Muratsuchi. Elementary education: kindergarten.Under existing law, a person between 6 and 18 years of age who is not exempted by law is subject to compulsory full-time education. Existing law excludes a child under 6 years of age from the public schools, subject to specified exceptions.Existing law requires a school district maintaining a kindergarten to admit a child who will have their 5th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year. Existing law also requires a child who will have their 6th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year to be admitted to the first grade of an elementary school. Existing law authorizes a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district to be ready for first-grade work to be admitted to the first grade, as specified.This bill, beginning with the 202627 school year, would require a child to have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade at a public elementary school, except for a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and is judged to be ready for first-grade work, as specified, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Amended IN Assembly May 16, 2024
65
7-Amended IN Assembly May 16, 2024
6+
7+
88
99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1010
1111 Assembly Bill
1212
1313 No. 2226
1414
15-Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, Ting, and Valencia)(Coauthors: Senators Blakespear and Dodd)February 07, 2024
15+Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, and Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Blakespear)February 07, 2024
1616
17-Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, Ting, and Valencia)(Coauthors: Senators Blakespear and Dodd)
17+Introduced by Assembly Member Muratsuchi(Principal coauthor: Senator Rubio)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gipson, McCarty, Blanca Rubio, and Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Blakespear)
1818 February 07, 2024
1919
2020 An act to amend, repeal, and add Sections 48010 and 48011 of, and to add Section 48001 to, the Education Code, relating to kindergarten.
2121
2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2323
2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2525
26-AB 2226, as amended, Muratsuchi. Elementary education: kindergarten.
26+AB 2226, as introduced, Muratsuchi. Elementary education: kindergarten.
2727
2828 Under existing law, a person between 6 and 18 years of age who is not exempted by law is subject to compulsory full-time education. Existing law excludes a child under 6 years of age from the public schools, subject to specified exceptions.Existing law requires a school district maintaining a kindergarten to admit a child who will have their 5th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year. Existing law also requires a child who will have their 6th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year to be admitted to the first grade of an elementary school. Existing law authorizes a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district to be ready for first-grade work to be admitted to the first grade, as specified.This bill, beginning with the 202627 school year, would require a child to have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade at a public elementary school, except for a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and is judged to be ready for first-grade work, as specified, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
2929
3030 Under existing law, a person between 6 and 18 years of age who is not exempted by law is subject to compulsory full-time education. Existing law excludes a child under 6 years of age from the public schools, subject to specified exceptions.
3131
3232 Existing law requires a school district maintaining a kindergarten to admit a child who will have their 5th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year. Existing law also requires a child who will have their 6th birthday on or before September 1 of the school year to be admitted to the first grade of an elementary school. Existing law authorizes a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district to be ready for first-grade work to be admitted to the first grade, as specified.
3333
3434 This bill, beginning with the 202627 school year, would require a child to have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade at a public elementary school, except for a child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and is judged to be ready for first-grade work, as specified, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.
3535
3636 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
3737
3838 This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
3939
4040 ## Digest Key
4141
4242 ## Bill Text
4343
44-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point 5-percentage-point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.(b)(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 48010 is added to the Education Code, to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 48011 is added to the Education Code, to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
44+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 48010 is added to the Education Code, to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year. A(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.SEC. 6. Section 48011 is added to the Education Code, to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
4545
4646 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4747
4848 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4949
50-SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point 5-percentage-point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.
50+SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.
5151
52-SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point 5-percentage-point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.
52+SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.(2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.(3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.(4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.
5353
5454 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5555
5656 ### SECTION 1.
5757
5858 (1) Kindergarten prepares children academically and socially for future academic success. Considerable research shows that children who attend kindergarten receive significant benefits. Achievement and opportunity gaps begin as early as kindergarten, and children who attend preschool perform better than those who do not. Kindergarten becomes even more important for children who do not attend preschool, as kindergarten is where they learn important academic and social skills before entering the first grade.
5959
6060 (2) In comparing the long-term outcomes of children born in states with mandatory kindergarten attendance to states with voluntary kindergarten attendance, children who attend kindergarten are more likely to go to college and earn higher wages, and are less likely to experience poverty as adults.
6161
6262 (3) The benefits of an increased availability of kindergarten are also substantially larger for children who are Hispanic, Black, English language learners, and from immigrant households and lower income families.
6363
6464 (4) A 2011 study, Who Benefits From Kindergarten? Evidence From the Introduction of State Subsidization, shows that children from lower income families who attend kindergarten are less likely to be below grade level throughout their academic careers and earn 5 percent higher wages as adults. Kindergarten helps to level the playing field for children who are less likely to receive high-quality childcare or preschool. Hispanic children with access to kindergarten are also 17 percent less likely to be below grade level for their age, and earn wages 5 percent higher as adults.
6565
66-(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point 5-percentage-point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.
66+(5) According to a 2019 study, The Returns of an Additional Year of Schooling: The Case of State-Mandated Kindergarten, Black and Hispanic children subjected to compulsory kindergarten experience a 5-percentage point increase in college completion relative to White children. They also experience a nearly 7-percent increase in wages and income relative to White children. There are similar differential impacts on education and income for women. These findings are extremely important given the presence of large education and earning gaps between Hispanic, Black, and White adults, and between men and women.
6767
6868 (b) It is the intent of the Legislature to maintain parental choice in determining the best option for their childs education. A parent or legal guardian of a pupil eligible for kindergarten maintains the discretion to enroll the pupil in either public school kindergarten or private school kindergarten, which includes home schooling, before enrolling the pupil in the first grade of a public elementary school.
6969
7070 (c) It is the intent of the Legislature that the age of compulsory education in California remain at six years of age.
7171
72-SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.(b)(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
72+SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
7373
7474 SEC. 2. Section 48001 is added to the Education Code, to read:
7575
7676 ### SEC. 2.
7777
78-48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.(b)(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
78+48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
7979
80-48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.(b)(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
80+48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
8181
82-48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.(b)(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
82+48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
8383
8484
8585
8686 48001. (a) Beginning with the 202627 school year, except as provided in Section 48011, a child shall have completed one year of kindergarten before that child may be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school.
8787
88-(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to, commencing with the 202627 school year, fund kindergarten as a mandatory grade in order to (1) ensure that all pupils have access to quality early educational opportunities to narrow the achievement gap at school entry and (2) reduce the costs of special education and other interventions required for pupils who enroll in first grade without having completed kindergarten and, as a result, do not have the necessary skills for academic success.
88+(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
8989
90-(b)
91-
92-
93-
94-(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
95-
96-SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
90+SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
9791
9892 SEC. 3. Section 48010 of the Education Code is amended to read:
9993
10094 ### SEC. 3.
10195
102-48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
96+48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
10397
104-48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
98+48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
10599
106-48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
100+48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
107101
108102
109103
110-48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:
104+48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child will have his or her their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:
111105
112106 (1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.
113107
114108 (2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.
115109
116110 (3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.
117111
118112 (4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.
119113
120114 (b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.
121115
122116 (c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
123117
124118 SEC. 4. Section 48010 is added to the Education Code, to read:48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
125119
126120 SEC. 4. Section 48010 is added to the Education Code, to read:
127121
128122 ### SEC. 4.
129123
130124 48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
131125
132126 48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
133127
134128 48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:(1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.(2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.(3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.(4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.(b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
135129
136130
137131
138132 48010. (a) A child shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, during the first month of a school year if the child has completed one year of kindergarten and will have their sixth birthday on or before one of the following dates:
139133
140134 (1) December 2 of the 201112 school year.
141135
142136 (2) November 1 of the 201213 school year.
143137
144138 (3) October 1 of the 201314 school year.
145139
146140 (4) September 1 of the 201415 school year and each school year thereafter.
147141
148142 (b) For good cause, the governing board of a school district or the governing body of a charter school may permit a child of proper age to be admitted to a class after the first school month of the school term.
149143
150144 (c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
151145
152-SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
146+SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year. A(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
153147
154148 SEC. 5. Section 48011 of the Education Code is amended to read:
155149
156150 ### SEC. 5.
157151
158-48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
152+48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year. A(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
159153
160-48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
154+48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year. A(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
161155
162-48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
156+48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year. A(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
163157
164158
165159
166-48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.
160+48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year therein, year, shall be admitted to the first grade of an a public elementary school school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.
167161
168-(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.
162+ A
163+
164+
165+
166+(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California and who is judged by the administration of the school district, district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board of Education, state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the school administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in a another public school of another district school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, he or she the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the district school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the district school entered.
169167
170168 (c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2026, and, as of January 1, 2027, is repealed.
171169
172170 SEC. 6. Section 48011 is added to the Education Code, to read:48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
173171
174172 SEC. 6. Section 48011 is added to the Education Code, to read:
175173
176174 ### SEC. 6.
177175
178176 48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
179177
180178 48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
181179
182180 48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.(b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.(c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
183181
184182
185183
186184 48011. (a) A child who, consistent with Section 48000, has been admitted to the kindergarten maintained by a private or a public school in California or any other state, and who has completed one school year, shall be admitted to the first grade of a public elementary school, including a charter school, unless the parent or guardian of the child and the administration of the school district or charter school agree that the child may continue in kindergarten for not more than an additional school year.
187185
188186 (b) A child who has been lawfully admitted to a public school kindergarten or a private school kindergarten in California, but has not yet completed one school year, and who is judged by the administration of the school district or charter school, in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the state board, to be ready for first-grade work may be admitted to the first grade at the discretion of the administration of the school district or charter school and with the consent of the childs parent or guardian if the child is at least five years of age. When a child has been legally enrolled in another public school, including a charter school, within or out of the state, the child may be admitted to school and placed in the grade of enrollment in the school of former attendance, at the discretion of the school administration of the school entered.
189187
190188 (c) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2026.
191189
192190 SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
193191
194192 SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
195193
196194 SEC. 7. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
197195
198196 ### SEC. 7.