California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB290 Compare Versions

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11 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 290Introduced by Assembly Member Hoover(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora and Mathis)January 25, 2023An act to amend Sections 53070, 53071, and 53076, of, to amend and repeal Sections 88827, 88828, 88829, 88830, 88831, 88832, and 88833 of, to amend, repeal, and add Sections 53076.4, 88821, 88822, 88823, 88825, and 88826 of, and to add Section 53076.5 to, the Education Code, relating to career technical education.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 290, as introduced, Hoover. Career technical education: California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program: Strong Workforce Program.(1) Existing law establishes the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, administered by the State Department of Education, with the purpose of encouraging, maintaining, and strengthening the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs. Existing law provides, for the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, that $300,000,000 shall be available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. Existing law requires an applicant to demonstrate a proportional dollar-for-dollar match and sets that amount for the 202122 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, at $2 for every $1 received from the program. Existing law prohibits an applicant from being awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.This bill instead would provide, for the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, that $450,000,000 shall be made available to the department upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. The bill would reduce the proportional match for the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, to $1 for regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, and to $1.50 for local educational agencies. The bill would delete the prohibition against an applicant being awarded more than the amount determined by the allocation formula. (2) Existing law requires grant applicants to meet minimum requirements, including, among other things, reporting to the Superintendent of Public Instruction data on the number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.This bill would require applicants to additionally report data on the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of 2 or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline. (3) Existing law requires the Superintendent to take specified actions for purposes of administering the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.This bill would require the Superintendent to establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the State Board of Education, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under the program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, as provided, and to report those recommendations to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024. The bill would require the Superintendent to ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program and other federal and state career technical education programs, as specified.(4) Existing law requires the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to provide technical assistance and support to grant recipients, as provided.This bill would, commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, instead require $12,000,000 to be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways, as provided.(5) Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, as one of the segments of public postsecondary education in this state. Existing law establishes the Strong Workforce Program to provide funding to career technical education regional consortia made up of community college districts, as specified. Existing law also establishes a K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Existing law provides that, commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the program is used to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the program.This bill would, as of July 1, 2024, repeal the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program and would require the administration of any outstanding allocations for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program to be administered by the department pursuant to the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 53070 of the Education Code is amended to read:53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.(b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:(1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).(2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).(3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).(c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e)(f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.SEC. 2. Section 53071 of the Education Code is amended to read:53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:(a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:(A)(i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B)(ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(C)(iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)(iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:(I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(ii)(B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.(2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.(3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).(4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.(c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.(2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.(3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.(4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.(5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.(6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.(7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.(8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.(9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.(10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.(11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.(iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.(iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:(i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.(ii) Whether other metrics should be included.(D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.SEC. 3. Section 53076 of the Education Code is amended to read:53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:(a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.(b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.(B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.(b)(c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.(c)(d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.(d)(e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(e)(f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.(f)(g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.(h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.(g)(i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.SEC. 4. Section 53076.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.(b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 5. Section 53076.4 is added to the Education Code, to read:53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.(b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.(2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.(3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.(4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.(5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.(d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.SEC. 6. Section 53076.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.SEC. 7. Section 88821 of the Education Code is amended to read:88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.(2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 8. Section 88821 is added to the Education Code, to read:88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.(2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 9. Section 88822 of the Education Code is amended to read:88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.(f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.(j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.(k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.(l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 10. Section 88822 is added to the Education Code, to read:88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 11. Section 88823 of the Education Code is amended to read:88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 12. Section 88823 is added to the Education Code, to read:88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 13. Section 88825 of the Education Code is amended to read:88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.(b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 14. Section 88825 is added to the Education Code, to read:88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 15. Section 88826 of the Education Code is amended to read:88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 16. Section 88826 is added to the Education Code, to read:88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 17. Section 88827 of the Education Code is amended to read:88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.(b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.(2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 18. Section 88828 of the Education Code is amended to read:88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:(a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.(b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.(c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:(A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).(3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.(3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.(4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.(5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.(6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.(7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.(8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.(iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) Another form of job training.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.(D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.(E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.(F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 19. Section 88829 of the Education Code is amended to read:88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:(1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.(2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.(3) Career guidance counselors.(4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.(5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.(6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.(b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.(2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.(d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 20. Section 88830 of the Education Code is amended to read:88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.(b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:(A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.(B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.(C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.(D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.(2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.(c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:(1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:(A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.(B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.(2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.(3) Operate within rural school districts.(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 21. Section 88831 of the Education Code is amended to read:88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:(1) School districts.(2) County offices of education.(3) Charter schools.(4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.(b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 22. Section 88832 of the Education Code is amended to read:88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:(a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.(b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 23. Section 88833 of the Education Code is amended to read:88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.(C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.(D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.(E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.(E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.(2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(E) Community college districts.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.(c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.(d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
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33 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 290Introduced by Assembly Member Hoover(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora and Mathis)January 25, 2023An act to amend Sections 53070, 53071, and 53076, of, to amend and repeal Sections 88827, 88828, 88829, 88830, 88831, 88832, and 88833 of, to amend, repeal, and add Sections 53076.4, 88821, 88822, 88823, 88825, and 88826 of, and to add Section 53076.5 to, the Education Code, relating to career technical education.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 290, as introduced, Hoover. Career technical education: California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program: Strong Workforce Program.(1) Existing law establishes the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, administered by the State Department of Education, with the purpose of encouraging, maintaining, and strengthening the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs. Existing law provides, for the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, that $300,000,000 shall be available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. Existing law requires an applicant to demonstrate a proportional dollar-for-dollar match and sets that amount for the 202122 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, at $2 for every $1 received from the program. Existing law prohibits an applicant from being awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.This bill instead would provide, for the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, that $450,000,000 shall be made available to the department upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. The bill would reduce the proportional match for the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, to $1 for regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, and to $1.50 for local educational agencies. The bill would delete the prohibition against an applicant being awarded more than the amount determined by the allocation formula. (2) Existing law requires grant applicants to meet minimum requirements, including, among other things, reporting to the Superintendent of Public Instruction data on the number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.This bill would require applicants to additionally report data on the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of 2 or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline. (3) Existing law requires the Superintendent to take specified actions for purposes of administering the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.This bill would require the Superintendent to establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the State Board of Education, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under the program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, as provided, and to report those recommendations to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024. The bill would require the Superintendent to ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program and other federal and state career technical education programs, as specified.(4) Existing law requires the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to provide technical assistance and support to grant recipients, as provided.This bill would, commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, instead require $12,000,000 to be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways, as provided.(5) Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, as one of the segments of public postsecondary education in this state. Existing law establishes the Strong Workforce Program to provide funding to career technical education regional consortia made up of community college districts, as specified. Existing law also establishes a K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Existing law provides that, commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the program is used to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the program.This bill would, as of July 1, 2024, repeal the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program and would require the administration of any outstanding allocations for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program to be administered by the department pursuant to the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
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99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
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1111 Assembly Bill
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1313 No. 290
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1515 Introduced by Assembly Member Hoover(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora and Mathis)January 25, 2023
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1717 Introduced by Assembly Member Hoover(Coauthors: Assembly Members Flora and Mathis)
1818 January 25, 2023
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2020 An act to amend Sections 53070, 53071, and 53076, of, to amend and repeal Sections 88827, 88828, 88829, 88830, 88831, 88832, and 88833 of, to amend, repeal, and add Sections 53076.4, 88821, 88822, 88823, 88825, and 88826 of, and to add Section 53076.5 to, the Education Code, relating to career technical education.
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2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2626 AB 290, as introduced, Hoover. Career technical education: California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program: Strong Workforce Program.
2727
2828 (1) Existing law establishes the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, administered by the State Department of Education, with the purpose of encouraging, maintaining, and strengthening the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs. Existing law provides, for the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, that $300,000,000 shall be available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. Existing law requires an applicant to demonstrate a proportional dollar-for-dollar match and sets that amount for the 202122 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, at $2 for every $1 received from the program. Existing law prohibits an applicant from being awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.This bill instead would provide, for the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, that $450,000,000 shall be made available to the department upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. The bill would reduce the proportional match for the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, to $1 for regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, and to $1.50 for local educational agencies. The bill would delete the prohibition against an applicant being awarded more than the amount determined by the allocation formula. (2) Existing law requires grant applicants to meet minimum requirements, including, among other things, reporting to the Superintendent of Public Instruction data on the number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.This bill would require applicants to additionally report data on the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of 2 or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline. (3) Existing law requires the Superintendent to take specified actions for purposes of administering the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.This bill would require the Superintendent to establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the State Board of Education, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under the program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, as provided, and to report those recommendations to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024. The bill would require the Superintendent to ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program and other federal and state career technical education programs, as specified.(4) Existing law requires the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to provide technical assistance and support to grant recipients, as provided.This bill would, commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, instead require $12,000,000 to be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways, as provided.(5) Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, as one of the segments of public postsecondary education in this state. Existing law establishes the Strong Workforce Program to provide funding to career technical education regional consortia made up of community college districts, as specified. Existing law also establishes a K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Existing law provides that, commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the program is used to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the program.This bill would, as of July 1, 2024, repeal the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program and would require the administration of any outstanding allocations for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program to be administered by the department pursuant to the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.
2929
3030 (1) Existing law establishes the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, administered by the State Department of Education, with the purpose of encouraging, maintaining, and strengthening the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs. Existing law provides, for the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, that $300,000,000 shall be available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. Existing law requires an applicant to demonstrate a proportional dollar-for-dollar match and sets that amount for the 202122 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, at $2 for every $1 received from the program. Existing law prohibits an applicant from being awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.
3131
3232 This bill instead would provide, for the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, that $450,000,000 shall be made available to the department upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the program. The bill would reduce the proportional match for the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, to $1 for regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, and to $1.50 for local educational agencies. The bill would delete the prohibition against an applicant being awarded more than the amount determined by the allocation formula.
3333
3434 (2) Existing law requires grant applicants to meet minimum requirements, including, among other things, reporting to the Superintendent of Public Instruction data on the number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.
3535
3636 This bill would require applicants to additionally report data on the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of 2 or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.
3737
3838 (3) Existing law requires the Superintendent to take specified actions for purposes of administering the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.
3939
4040 This bill would require the Superintendent to establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the State Board of Education, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under the program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, as provided, and to report those recommendations to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024. The bill would require the Superintendent to ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program and other federal and state career technical education programs, as specified.
4141
4242 (4) Existing law requires the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to provide technical assistance and support to grant recipients, as provided.
4343
4444 This bill would, commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, instead require $12,000,000 to be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways, as provided.
4545
4646 (5) Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, as one of the segments of public postsecondary education in this state. Existing law establishes the Strong Workforce Program to provide funding to career technical education regional consortia made up of community college districts, as specified. Existing law also establishes a K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Existing law provides that, commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the program is used to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the program.
4747
4848 This bill would, as of July 1, 2024, repeal the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program and would require the administration of any outstanding allocations for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program to be administered by the department pursuant to the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program.
4949
5050 ## Digest Key
5151
5252 ## Bill Text
5353
5454 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 53070 of the Education Code is amended to read:53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.(b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:(1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).(2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).(3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).(c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e)(f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.SEC. 2. Section 53071 of the Education Code is amended to read:53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:(a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:(A)(i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B)(ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(C)(iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)(iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:(I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(ii)(B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.(2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.(3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).(4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.(c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.(2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.(3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.(4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.(5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.(6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.(7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.(8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.(9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.(10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.(11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.(iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.(iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:(i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.(ii) Whether other metrics should be included.(D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.SEC. 3. Section 53076 of the Education Code is amended to read:53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:(a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.(b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.(B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.(b)(c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.(c)(d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.(d)(e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(e)(f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.(f)(g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.(h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.(g)(i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.SEC. 4. Section 53076.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.(b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 5. Section 53076.4 is added to the Education Code, to read:53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.(b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.(2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.(3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.(4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.(5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.(d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.SEC. 6. Section 53076.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.SEC. 7. Section 88821 of the Education Code is amended to read:88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.(2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 8. Section 88821 is added to the Education Code, to read:88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.(2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 9. Section 88822 of the Education Code is amended to read:88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.(f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.(j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.(k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.(l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 10. Section 88822 is added to the Education Code, to read:88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 11. Section 88823 of the Education Code is amended to read:88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 12. Section 88823 is added to the Education Code, to read:88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 13. Section 88825 of the Education Code is amended to read:88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.(b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 14. Section 88825 is added to the Education Code, to read:88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 15. Section 88826 of the Education Code is amended to read:88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 16. Section 88826 is added to the Education Code, to read:88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.SEC. 17. Section 88827 of the Education Code is amended to read:88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.(b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.(2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 18. Section 88828 of the Education Code is amended to read:88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:(a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.(b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.(c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:(A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).(3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.(3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.(4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.(5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.(6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.(7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.(8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.(iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) Another form of job training.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.(D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.(E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.(F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 19. Section 88829 of the Education Code is amended to read:88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:(1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.(2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.(3) Career guidance counselors.(4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.(5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.(6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.(b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.(2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.(d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 20. Section 88830 of the Education Code is amended to read:88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.(b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:(A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.(B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.(C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.(D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.(2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.(c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:(1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:(A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.(B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.(2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.(3) Operate within rural school districts.(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 21. Section 88831 of the Education Code is amended to read:88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:(1) School districts.(2) County offices of education.(3) Charter schools.(4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.(b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 22. Section 88832 of the Education Code is amended to read:88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:(a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.(b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.SEC. 23. Section 88833 of the Education Code is amended to read:88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.(C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.(D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.(E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.(E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.(2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(E) Community college districts.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.(c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.(d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
5555
5656 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5757
5858 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5959
6060 SECTION 1. Section 53070 of the Education Code is amended to read:53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.(b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:(1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).(2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).(3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).(c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e)(f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.
6161
6262 SECTION 1. Section 53070 of the Education Code is amended to read:
6363
6464 ### SECTION 1.
6565
6666 53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.(b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:(1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).(2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).(3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).(c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e)(f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.
6767
6868 53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.(b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:(1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).(2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).(3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).(c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e)(f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.
6969
7070 53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.(b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:(1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).(2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).(3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).(c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.(e)(f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.
7171
7272
7373
7474 53070. (a) The California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative with the goal of providing pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, with the knowledge and skills necessary to transition to employment and postsecondary education. The purpose of the competitive program is to encourage, maintain, and strengthen the delivery of high-quality career technical education programs.
7575
7676 (b) The following amounts are hereby appropriated to the department from the General Fund for the program established pursuant to this chapter:
7777
7878 (1) For the 201516 fiscal year, four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).
7979
8080 (2) For the 201617 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000).
8181
8282 (3) For the 201718 fiscal year, two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000).
8383
8484 (c) For the 201819 fiscal year to the 202021 fiscal year, inclusive, one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.
8585
8686 (d) For the 202122 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the 202324 fiscal year, three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.
8787
8888 (e) For the 202425 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, four hundred fifty million dollars ($450,000,000) shall be made available to the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute, for the program established pursuant to this chapter.
8989
9090 (e)
9191
9292
9393
9494 (f) Of the amounts appropriated pursuant to subdivisions (b), (c), (c),(d), and (d), (e), 4 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent in collaboration with the executive director of the state board. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or of any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.
9595
9696 (g) Any funds not allocated in a fiscal year, pursuant to subdivisions (d) and (e), shall be carried forward to the subsequent fiscal year for purposes of this chapter.
9797
9898 SEC. 2. Section 53071 of the Education Code is amended to read:53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:(a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:(A)(i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B)(ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(C)(iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)(iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:(I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(ii)(B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.(2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.(3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).(4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.(c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.(2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.(3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.(4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.(5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.(6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.(7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.(8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.(9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.(10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.(11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.(iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.(iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:(i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.(ii) Whether other metrics should be included.(D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.
9999
100100 SEC. 2. Section 53071 of the Education Code is amended to read:
101101
102102 ### SEC. 2.
103103
104104 53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:(a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:(A)(i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B)(ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(C)(iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)(iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:(I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(ii)(B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.(2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.(3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).(4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.(c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.(2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.(3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.(4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.(5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.(6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.(7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.(8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.(9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.(10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.(11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.(iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.(iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:(i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.(ii) Whether other metrics should be included.(D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.
105105
106106 53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:(a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:(A)(i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B)(ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(C)(iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)(iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:(I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(ii)(B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.(2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.(3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).(4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.(c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.(2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.(3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.(4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.(5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.(6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.(7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.(8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.(9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.(10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.(11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.(iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.(iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:(i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.(ii) Whether other metrics should be included.(D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.
107107
108108 53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:(a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:(A)(i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B)(ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(C)(iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)(iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:(I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(ii)(B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.(2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.(3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).(4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.(c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.(2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.(3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.(4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.(5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.(6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.(7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.(8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.(9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.(10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.(11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.(iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.(iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:(i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.(ii) Whether other metrics should be included.(D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.
109109
110110
111111
112112 53071. The department shall administer this program as a competitive grant program. An applicant shall demonstrate all of the following to be considered for a grant award:
113113
114114 (a) (1) (A) A proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows for any funding that an applicant is determined to be eligible to receive under the allocation formula established pursuant to Section 53076:
115115
116116 (A)
117117
118118
119119
120120 (i) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
121121
122122 (B)
123123
124124
125125
126126 (ii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2016, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
127127
128128 (C)
129129
130130
131131
132132 (iii) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
133133
134134 (D)(i)For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, two dollars ($2)
135135
136136
137137
138138 (iv) For the 201819 to the 2022-23 fiscal years, inclusive, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
139139
140140 (v) For the 202324 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, an applicant shall provide a proportional dollar-for-dollar match as follows:
141141
142142 (I) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or those operated by a county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
143143
144144 (II) For local educational agencies, one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
145145
146146 (ii)
147147
148148
149149
150150 (B) Beginning July 1, 2021, the proportional dollar-for-dollar match shall be encumbered in the fiscal year for which an applicant is applying to receive a grant under the program.
151151
152152 (2) In the event an applicant is unable to fully match the amount of funding that the allocation formula determines that they are eligible to receive, the applicants award shall be reduced to the amount necessary for the applicant to meet the requirements of this subdivision. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be awarded an amount higher than the amount that the allocation formula determines them to be eligible to receive under the program.
153153
154154 (3) That local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the California Partnership Academies, the Agricultural Career Technical Education Incentive Grant, or any other allowable source except as provided in paragraph (4).
155155
156156 (4) That local match shall not include funding from the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program established pursuant to Section 88827, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.
157157
158158 (5) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program or programs for which the applicant was awarded a grant.
159159
160160 (b) A three-year plan for continued financial and administrative support of career technical education programs that demonstrates a financial commitment of no less than the amount expended on those programs in the previous fiscal year. The plan, at a minimum, shall include the identification of available funding within an applicants current or projected budget to continue to support career technical education programs and a written commitment to do so. If an applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of these entities, is applying for grant funding from this program, identification of available funding and a written commitment shall be demonstrated by each participating constituent entity.
161161
162162 (c) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, meets all of the following minimum eligibility standards:
163163
164164 (1) Offers high quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment or industry certification upon graduation from high school, including programs that integrate academic and career technical education and that offer the opportunity for participants to prepare for postsecondary enrollment and to earn postsecondary credits through Advanced Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, or by formal agreement with a postsecondary partner to provide dual enrollment opportunities.
165165
166166 (2) Provides pupils with quality career exploration, guidance, and a continuum of work-based learning opportunities aligned with academic coursework, which may include paid internships.
167167
168168 (3) Provides pupil support services, including counseling and leadership development, to address pupils social, emotional, career, and academic needs.
169169
170170 (4) Provides for system alignment, coherence, and articulation, including ongoing and structural regional or local partnerships with postsecondary educational institutions, documented through formal written agreements allowing for dual enrollment opportunities.
171171
172172 (5) Forms ongoing and meaningful industry and labor partnerships, evidenced by written agreements and through participation on advisory committees and collaboration with business and labor organizations to provide opportunities for pupils to gain access to preapprenticeships, internships, industry certifications, and work-based learning opportunities as well as opportunities for industry to provide input to the career technical education programs and curriculum.
173173
174174 (6) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after school, extended day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, leadership development opportunities, career and technical education student organizations, and other work-based learning opportunities.
175175
176176 (7) Reflects regional or local labor market demands, and focuses on current or emerging high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand occupations, and is informed by the regional plan of the local Strong Workforce Program consortium.
177177
178178 (8) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, or appropriate postsecondary education or training, employment, or a postsecondary degree.
179179
180180 (9) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty, and provides professional development opportunities for any teachers or faculty members supporting pupils in those programs.
181181
182182 (10) Provides opportunities for pupils who are individuals with exceptional needs to participate in all programs.
183183
184184 (11) (A) Reports data to the Superintendent, no later than November 1 of each fiscal year, as a program participation requirement, to allow for an evaluation of the program.
185185
186186 (B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but not be limited to, the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and each of the following metrics:
187187
188188 (i) The high school graduation rate.
189189
190190 (ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework. coursework and the number of pupils completing a career technical education pathway consisting of a sequence of two or more career technical education courses in the same career technical education subject matter discipline.
191191
192192 (iii) The number of pupils meeting academic and career-readiness standards as defined in the College/Career Indicator associated with the California School Dashboard.
193193
194194 (iv) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.
195195
196196 (v) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.
197197
198198 (vi) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:
199199
200200 (I) A postsecondary educational institution.
201201
202202 (II) A state apprenticeship program.
203203
204204 (III) A form of job training other than a state apprenticeship program.
205205
206206 (C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the California Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, established pursuant to Section 12053, shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature as to both of the following topics:
207207
208208 (i) Whether these data metrics remain the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants.
209209
210210 (ii) Whether other metrics should be included.
211211
212212 (D) The department shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (B) available to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, in the manner and form requested by the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, on or before December 30 of each fiscal year to ensure that data is included in the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.
213213
214214 SEC. 3. Section 53076 of the Education Code is amended to read:53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:(a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.(b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.(B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.(b)(c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.(c)(d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.(d)(e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(e)(f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.(f)(g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.(h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.(g)(i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.
215215
216216 SEC. 3. Section 53076 of the Education Code is amended to read:
217217
218218 ### SEC. 3.
219219
220220 53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:(a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.(b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.(B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.(b)(c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.(c)(d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.(d)(e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(e)(f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.(f)(g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.(h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.(g)(i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.
221221
222222 53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:(a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.(b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.(B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.(b)(c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.(c)(d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.(d)(e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(e)(f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.(f)(g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.(h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.(g)(i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.
223223
224224 53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:(a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.(b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.(B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.(2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.(b)(c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.(c)(d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.(d)(e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(e)(f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.(f)(g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.(h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.(g)(i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.
225225
226226
227227
228228 53076. For purposes of administering the program established by this chapter, the Superintendent shall do all of the following:
229229
230230 (a) Determine, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, and make public on a preliminary basis at least 30 days before a regularly scheduled meeting of the state board, the allocation formula, specific funding amounts, the purposes for which grant funds may be used, allowable and nonallowable expenditures, and the number of grants to be awarded. The information specified in this subdivision shall also be provided in writing to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor within 30 days following final approval of the state board.
231231
232232 (b) (1) Establish, in collaboration with the executive director of the state board, a stakeholder workgroup on or before January 31, 2024, to consider and provide recommendations on methods to simplify the allocation of funding under this program and maximize career technical education opportunities for pupils, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
233233
234234 (A) Utilizing the positive considerations to score the applications to determine eligibility and priority, while funding the eligible applicants on the basis of the average daily attendance of the local educational agency or the number of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses.
235235
236236 (B) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education programs at alternative schools, including, but not limited to, court schools, community day schools, and continuation schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.
237237
238238 (C) Setting aside a percentage of the funding allocated pursuant to Section 53070 for career technical education exploration programs at middle schools, aligned to career technical education pathway programs at their relevant feeder high schools, and providing recommended eligibility and outcome metrics for those programs.
239239
240240 (2) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the Superintendent shall report the recommendations of the workgroup to the policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature, the Department of Finance, and the Governor by July 1, 2024.
241241
242242 (b)
243243
244244
245245
246246 (c) Distribute funding on a multiyear schedule, establish a process for monitoring the use of the funding, and, if necessary, cease distribution of funding and recover previously distributed funding in the case of a recipients failure to report the specified data to the Superintendent or comply with a grant prerequisite or minimum standard.
247247
248248 (c)
249249
250250
251251
252252 (d) Annually review grant recipients expenditures on career technical education programs for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the dollar-for-dollar match requirement specified in subdivision (a) of Section 53071. If, pursuant to Section 53076.1, an auditor determines that a grant recipient failed to meet the matching funds requirement, the Superintendent shall reduce the following years grant allocation in an amount equal to the unmet portion of the match requirement, if applicable. The reduction shall not reduce the grant recipients match requirement for the year in which the Superintendent reduces the allocation. If a grant recipient with an audit finding pursuant to Section 53076.1 does not have an allocation in the subsequent year to reduce, the department shall require the recipient to return the unmatched funds identified in the audit finding.
253253
254254 (d)
255255
256256
257257
258258 (e) Require grant recipients to submit program reports pursuant to paragraph (11) of subdivision (c) of Section 53071.
259259
260260 (e)
261261
262262
263263
264264 (f) Manage the grant process, collect pertinent data, and undertake statewide program improvement activities.
265265
266266 (f)
267267
268268
269269
270270 (g) Promote the success of K12 career technical education programs through statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including by facilitating system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels, facilitating the development and delivery of professional development training modules, and supporting school districts in meeting their college indicator and career indicator targets.
271271
272272 (h) Ensure a level of professional staffing within the department that is dedicated to career technical education, sufficient to effectively administer the program established by this chapter, and other federal and state career technical education programs. Staffing at the department shall include state level subject matter experts in key industry sectors who shall be responsible for liaising with regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to Section 53076.4, and providing support to local educational agencies in the establishment and improvement of career technical education programs.
273273
274274 (g)
275275
276276
277277
278278 (i) Ensure that the department fulfills the reporting requirements in Section 53076.5. 53076.2.
279279
280280 SEC. 4. Section 53076.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.(b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
281281
282282 SEC. 4. Section 53076.4 of the Education Code is amended to read:
283283
284284 ### SEC. 4.
285285
286286 53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.(b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
287287
288288 53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.(b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
289289
290290 53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.(b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
291291
292292
293293
294294 53076.4. (a) For purposes of the program established by this chapter, the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established pursuant to Section 88833 shall provide technical assistance and support to recipients of grants pursuant to this chapter in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways consistent with the duties outlined in Section 88833.
295295
296296 (b) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
297297
298298 SEC. 5. Section 53076.4 is added to the Education Code, to read:53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.(b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.(2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.(3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.(4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.(5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.(d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.
299299
300300 SEC. 5. Section 53076.4 is added to the Education Code, to read:
301301
302302 ### SEC. 5.
303303
304304 53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.(b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.(2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.(3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.(4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.(5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.(d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.
305305
306306 53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.(b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.(2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.(3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.(4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.(5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.(d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.
307307
308308 53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.(b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.(2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.(3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.(4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.(5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.(c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.(d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.
309309
310310
311311
312312 53076.4. (a) Commencing with the 202425 fiscal year, and each fiscal year thereafter, twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) shall be made available to the department, subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this section, to provide regional career technical education coordinators for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing all of their career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. The Superintendent shall contract with selected county offices of education to provide regional industry leads, with proven industry expertise in career technical education, to ensure statewide coverage as part of the statewide system of support.
313313
314314 (b) The duties of the regional career technical education coordinators provided pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:
315315
316316 (1) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful outcomes.
317317
318318 (2) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community college Strong Workforce Program consortia, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs.
319319
320320 (3) Acting as the first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry organizations, and employers, with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connections with K12 career technical education programs.
321321
322322 (4) Cultivating collaborative communities within key industry sectors so that local educational agencies and industry organizations can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest.
323323
324324 (5) Ensuring that career technical education classes, programs, and pathways established under this chapter meet the requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 53071.
325325
326326 (c) The distribution of funding for the provision of regional career technical education coordinators shall be determined by the Superintendent on the basis of the average daily attendance of the public schools maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, in the county. To the extent possible, the selection of applicants by the department shall result in an equitable geographic distribution of technical assistance coordinators throughout the state.
327327
328328 (d) Any funds not used for purposes of subdivision (a) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, established pursuant to Section 53070.
329329
330330 SEC. 6. Section 53076.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.
331331
332332 SEC. 6. Section 53076.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:
333333
334334 ### SEC. 6.
335335
336336 53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.
337337
338338 53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.
339339
340340 53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.
341341
342342
343343
344344 53076.5. Notwithstanding any other law, the administration of any outstanding allocations pursuant to Section 88827, as that section read on January 1, 2023, shall be administered by the department pursuant to this chapter, as of July 1, 2024.
345345
346346 SEC. 7. Section 88821 of the Education Code is amended to read:88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.(2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
347347
348348 SEC. 7. Section 88821 of the Education Code is amended to read:
349349
350350 ### SEC. 7.
351351
352352 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.(2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
353353
354354 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.(2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
355355
356356 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.(2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
357357
358358
359359
360360 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
361361
362362 (1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.
363363
364364 (2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.
365365
366366 (3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.
367367
368368 (4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.
369369
370370 (b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a K14 state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.
371371
372372 (c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.
373373
374374 (d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.
375375
376376 (e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:
377377
378378 (1) Any community college district or local educational agency participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.
379379
380380 (2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.
381381
382382 (3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.
383383
384384 (4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.
385385
386386 (5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.
387387
388388 (6) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.
389389
390390 (7) Community college districts, local educational agencies, and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.
391391
392392 (f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:
393393
394394 (1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.
395395
396396 (2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.
397397
398398 (3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.
399399
400400 (4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.
401401
402402 (5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.
403403
404404 (6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.
405405
406406 (7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.
407407
408408 (8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.
409409
410410 (9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.
411411
412412 (10) (A) For the Community College component only, notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:
413413
414414 (i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.
415415
416416 (ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.
417417
418418 (B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or utilize use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.
419419
420420 (C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.
421421
422422 (11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.
423423
424424 (g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:
425425
426426 (1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.
427427
428428 (2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.
429429
430430 (3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.
431431
432432 (B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.
433433
434434 (4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be utilized used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that utilizes uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.
435435
436436 (h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:
437437
438438 (1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).
439439
440440 (2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.
441441
442442 (i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes for the Community College component.
443443
444444 (2) For purposes of the Community College component and in compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate of the for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.
445445
446446 (j) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
447447
448448 SEC. 8. Section 88821 is added to the Education Code, to read:88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.(2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
449449
450450 SEC. 8. Section 88821 is added to the Education Code, to read:
451451
452452 ### SEC. 8.
453453
454454 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.(2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
455455
456456 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.(2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
457457
458458 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.(2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.(3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.(4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.(b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.(c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.(d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.(e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:(1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.(2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.(3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.(4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.(5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.(6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.(7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.(f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:(1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.(2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.(3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.(4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.(5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.(6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.(7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.(8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.(9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.(10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:(i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.(ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.(B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.(C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.(11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.(g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:(1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.(2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.(3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.(4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.(h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:(1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).(2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.(i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.(2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
459459
460460
461461
462462 88821. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
463463
464464 (1) Californias economic competitiveness is fueled, in part, by the strength of its regional economies and its skilled workforce.
465465
466466 (2) Upward social and economic mobility helps keep the states economy diversified and vibrant.
467467
468468 (3) The attainment of industry-valued middle skill credentials serves as a gateway for a large and diverse number of careers in the states economy.
469469
470470 (4) Californias local educational agencies, community college districts, interested public four-year universities, local workforce development boards, economic development and industry leaders, and local civic representatives should collaboratively work together to inform the offerings of courses, programs, pathways, and workforce development opportunities that enable students to access the current and future job market and further social and economic mobility.
471471
472472 (b) The Strong Workforce Program is hereby established as a state education, economic, and workforce development initiative for the purpose of expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees.
473473
474474 (c) To facilitate program coordination and alignment with other workforce training, education, and employment services in the state, the Strong Workforce Program shall operate in a manner that complies with the California Strategic Workforce Development Plan, required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and expand upon existing consortia infrastructure.
475475
476476 (d) To avoid duplication of effort, activities funded under the Strong Workforce Program shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon the activities of existing workforce and education regional partnerships, including those partnership activities that pertain to regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), adult education block grant consortia, and other career technical education programs.
477477
478478 (e) All of the following guiding principles apply to each consortium participating in the Strong Workforce Program:
479479
480480 (1) Any community college district participating in the consortium shall ensure that its career technical education and workforce development courses, credentials, certificates, degrees, programs, and pathway offerings, as applicable, are responsive to the needs of employers, workers, civic leaders, and students.
481481
482482 (2) The consortium shall collaborate with other public institutions, including, but not limited to, local educational agencies, adult education consortia, local workforce development boards, and interested California State University and University of California institutions.
483483
484484 (3) The consortium shall collaborate with civic representatives, representatives from the labor community, and economic development and industry sector leaders within the region.
485485
486486 (4) The consortium shall include collaborating entities and persons identified in this subdivision in planning meetings, provide them with adequate notice of the consortiums proposed decisions, and solicit, consider, and respond to comments from them regarding the consortiums proposed decisions.
487487
488488 (5) Collaborative efforts shall focus upon evidence-based decisionmaking and student success with workforce outcomes aligned with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), and closing labor market and employment gaps. Each consortium shall strive to align programmatic offerings in the most effective and efficient manner to avoid duplication of effort and streamline access to services, and education and training opportunities.
489489
490490 (6) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop long-term partnerships with private sector employers and labor partners to provide coordinated courses, programs, and pathways with employer involvement in the assessment, planning, and development of career technical education courses, programs, and pathways. To the extent practicable, employer partnerships should build upon regional partnerships formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other state or federal programs.
491491
492492 (7) Community college districts and other entities participating in a consortium are encouraged to develop and work closely with public and private organizations that offer workforce development programs and pathways to individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities to provide a comprehensive approach to address workforce readiness and employment.
493493
494494 (f) The chancellors office shall, in consultation with the California Workforce Development Board, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, and its partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), as applicable, develop and implement policies and guidance necessary to implement the Community College component of the Strong Workforce Program, including policies and guidance necessary for consortia, including community college districts and their regional partners, to increase the number of aligned middle skill and career technical education courses, programs, pathways, credentials, certificates, and degrees. No later than June 30, 2017, the chancellors office shall develop and implement policies and guidance pursuant to this subdivision and bring before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges any policies, regulations, and guidance necessary to accomplish all of the following:
495495
496496 (1) Facilitate the development, implementation, and sharing of career technical education effective practices, curriculum models and courses, and community college credentials, certificates, degrees, and programs across regions and among community college districts.
497497
498498 (2) Enable community college districts to develop career technical education and workforce outcomes, and applicable associate degrees and certificates as appropriate.
499499
500500 (3) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used flexibly by participating community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the Strong Workforce Program and related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs.
501501
502502 (4) Encourage local efficiency through coordinated and collaborative regional workforce efforts in which community college districts are partners.
503503
504504 (5) Support curriculum processes to ensure that students are able to efficiently transfer college-level career technical education credits across community college districts and to the California State University and the University of California.
505505
506506 (6) Improve sector-based engagement with employers within a region.
507507
508508 (7) Provide, in partnership with employers, work-based learning opportunities for students that increase their employability and earning potential.
509509
510510 (8) Enable community college districts to facilitate and optimize their resources to support the Strong Workforce Program and other related regional workforce development efforts.
511511
512512 (9) Ensure that community college district Strong Workforce Program expenditures are focused on improving student success with workforce outcomes for all students enrolled in community college career technical education courses, programs, and pathways.
513513
514514 (10) (A) Notwithstanding the June 30, 2017, implementation date specified in this subdivision, develop and implement a plan to streamline the course and curriculum approval process, both at the state and local levels. The plan shall reflect an expedited state approval process for career technical education courses, programs, and certificates, and may include the elimination of an existing state course and program approval process. The plan shall reflect one of the following two options:
515515
516516 (i) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic year and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic year.
517517
518518 (ii) A process of course and curriculum approval that enables community college districts to develop a course or program within one academic semester and to offer that course or program the subsequent academic semester.
519519
520520 (B) The plan described in subparagraph (A) shall also reflect the creation of a process that enables career technical education courses and programs to be portable among community college districts. This process shall enable a community college district to adapt, adopt, or adapt and adopt another community college districts approved career technical education courses, programs, and curriculum within one academic semester and to offer that course or program, or use that curriculum, the subsequent academic semester.
521521
522522 (C) The chancellors office shall consult with the Legislature and the Governor prior to implementing the plan. The plan shall be developed no later than July 1, 2017, and implemented no later than January 1, 2018.
523523
524524 (11) Eliminate barriers to hiring qualified instructors for career technical education courses, including reevaluating the required minimum qualifications for career technical education instructors.
525525
526526 (g) Community college districts are encouraged to expedite the development of targeted credit or noncredit short-term workforce training programs, in accordance with all of the following:
527527
528528 (1) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on economic recovery and result in job placement.
529529
530530 (2) Short-term workforce training programs that focus on the reskilling and upskilling of individuals.
531531
532532 (3) (A) Short-term workforce training programs that have at least one proven employer partner, demonstrate job vacancies, and submit verification to the chancellors office.
533533
534534 (B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), verification includes the projected number of individuals served, completion rates, and job placement rates.
535535
536536 (4) It is the intent of the Legislature that, where possible, short-term noncredit workforce training programs should be used to be responsive to the workforce training needs of employers, with the ability to transition to credit or noncredit courses and programs upon successful completion of a program established pursuant to this subdivision. Colleges are encouraged to develop workforce training that uses competency-based approaches, and applies credit for prior learning where possible.
537537
538538 (h) After June 30, 2017, and only as necessary, the chancellors office may develop and implement revised polices and guidance for the Community College component only, and bring regulations before the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges as necessary for a community college district and its regional partners to accomplish both of the following:
539539
540540 (1) Implement and expand the amount of aligned middle skill and career technical education credentials, certificates, degrees, courses, programs, and pathways in accordance with paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (f).
541541
542542 (2) Implement the recommendations of the Strong Workforce Task Force.
543543
544544 (i) (1) For purposes of this section, the chancellors office shall consider input provided by relevant stakeholders, including the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee, and the California Workforce Development Board, before implementing revised guidance, policies, or regulatory changes.
545545
546546 (2) In compliance with the consultation requirements in Sections 70901 and 70902, the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges shall establish a career technical education subcommittee to provide recommendations on career technical education issues. No less than 70 percent of the subcommittee shall consist of career technical education faculty. The subcommittees charter shall require it to provide assistance to community college districts to ensure that career technical education and its instruction is responsive and aligned to current and emergent industry trends, and ensure that similar courses, programs, and degrees are portable among community college districts.
547547
548548 (j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
549549
550550 SEC. 9. Section 88822 of the Education Code is amended to read:88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.(f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.(j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.(k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.(l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
551551
552552 SEC. 9. Section 88822 of the Education Code is amended to read:
553553
554554 ### SEC. 9.
555555
556556 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.(f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.(j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.(k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.(l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
557557
558558 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.(f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.(j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.(k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.(l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
559559
560560 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.(f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.(j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.(k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.(l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
561561
562562
563563
564564 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:
565565
566566 (a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.
567567
568568 (b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.
569569
570570 (c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts and local educational agencies by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (p). Local educational agencies shall be grouped based on their association with community college districts. In the event that a local educational agency does not fall within the geographical boundaries of any community college district, the local educational agency shall be grouped with the nearest community college district.
571571
572572 (d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.
573573
574574 (e) Community College component means the funding allocated pursuant to Section 88825.
575575
576576 (f) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.
577577
578578 (g) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.
579579
580580 (h) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.
581581
582582 (i) K12 component means funding allocated pursuant to Section 88827.
583583
584584 (j) K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator means an individual serving as an in-region contact to provide technical assistance and support to K12 local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 88833.
585585
586586 (k) K14 Technical Assistance Provider means an individual serving as the in-region contact pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 88833 to provide leadership and technical assistance regionwide on K14 career technical education programs or pathways.
587587
588588 (l) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.
589589
590590 (m) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.
591591
592592 (n) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.
593593
594594 (o) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.
595595
596596 (p) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.
597597
598598 (q) Short-term workforce training program means a 4 to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.
599599
600600 (r) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.
601601
602602 (s) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
603603
604604 SEC. 10. Section 88822 is added to the Education Code, to read:88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
605605
606606 SEC. 10. Section 88822 is added to the Education Code, to read:
607607
608608 ### SEC. 10.
609609
610610 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
611611
612612 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
613613
614614 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.(b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.(c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).(d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.(e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.(f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.(g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.(h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.(j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.(k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.(l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.(m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.(n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.(o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
615615
616616
617617
618618 88822. For purposes of this part, the following terms have the following meanings:
619619
620620 (a) Career pathways means an identified series of positions, work experiences, or educational benchmarks or credentials that offer occupational and financial advancement within a specified career field or related fields over time.
621621
622622 (b) Career technical education credential means a workforce certificate, degree, or industry-recognized credential.
623623
624624 (c) Career Technical Education Regional Consortium, or consortium, means an administrative grouping of community college districts by the Division of Workforce and Economic Development of the chancellors office for the purpose of coordination and joint planning within regions, as defined in subdivision (l).
625625
626626 (d) Chancellors office means the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.
627627
628628 (e) Deputy Sector Navigator means an individual serving as an in-region contact for an industry or occupational cluster, working with the regions colleges and employers to create alignment around and deliver on workforce training and career pathways.
629629
630630 (f) Industry or industry sectors means trade associations or those firms that produce similar products or provide similar services using somewhat similar business processes.
631631
632632 (g) Joint powers authority means an entity established in accordance with Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code for purposes of providing instruction to pupils enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive.
633633
634634 (h) Local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.
635635
636636 (i) Middle skill credential means a certificate, associates degree, or industry-recognized credential that is less than a bachelors degree but more than a high school diploma and facilitates student success with workforce outcomes.
637637
638638 (j) Plan means the regional plan established under this part.
639639
640640 (k) Program means the Strong Workforce Program established under this part.
641641
642642 (l) Region means a geographic area of the state defined by economic and labor market factors containing at least one industry cluster and the cities, counties, community college districts, and local educational agencies, or all of them, in the industry clusters geographic area. To the extent possible, for the purposes of this part, collaborative regions should align with federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional planning unit boundaries specified in the California Strategic Workforce and Development Plan and expand upon existing consortium infrastructure established by the chancellors office.
643643
644644 (m) Short-term workforce training program means a 4- to 12-week program with a proven employer partner designed for targeted reskilling and upskilling that results in job placement.
645645
646646 (n) Strong Workforce Task Force means the Task Force on Workforce, Job Creation and a Strong Economy commissioned by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.
647647
648648 (o) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
649649
650650 SEC. 11. Section 88823 of the Education Code is amended to read:88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
651651
652652 SEC. 11. Section 88823 of the Education Code is amended to read:
653653
654654 ### SEC. 11.
655655
656656 88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
657657
658658 88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
659659
660660 88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
661661
662662
663663
664664 88823. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.
665665
666666 (b) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.
667667
668668 (c) The plan pursuant to subdivision (b) shall include all of the following requirements:
669669
670670 (1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.
671671
672672 (2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.
673673
674674 (3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.
675675
676676 (4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.
677677
678678 (5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
679679
680680 (6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.
681681
682682 (7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
683683
684684 (d) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.
685685
686686 (e) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.
687687
688688 (f) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
689689
690690 (g) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall utilize use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.
691691
692692 (h) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.
693693
694694 (i) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively utilize use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.
695695
696696 (j) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.
697697
698698 (k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
699699
700700 SEC. 12. Section 88823 is added to the Education Code, to read:88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
701701
702702 SEC. 12. Section 88823 is added to the Education Code, to read:
703703
704704 ### SEC. 12.
705705
706706 88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
707707
708708 88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
709709
710710 88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.(b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:(1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.(2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.(4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.(5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.(7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.(d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.(h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.(i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
711711
712712
713713
714714 88823. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, as a condition of receipt of funds allocated pursuant to Section 88825 for a fiscal year, each consortium, in consultation with collaborating entities identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821, shall submit a plan to the chancellors office that has been updated for that fiscal year.
715715
716716 (b) The plan pursuant to subdivision (a) shall include all of the following requirements:
717717
718718 (1) The names of the community college districts participating in the consortium, including the name of the community college identified as the consortiums fiscal agent, and the names of entities collaborating pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 88821.
719719
720720 (2) The governance model for the consortium. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.
721721
722722 (3) An analysis of regional labor market needs informed by a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) economic analysis and other sources as applicable. This analysis shall also include wage data for each industry sector or labor market need identified.
723723
724724 (4) An inventory of regionally prioritized and locally prioritized projects and programs that close relevant labor market and employment gaps.
725725
726726 (5) Measurable regional goals that align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
727727
728728 (6) For regionally prioritized projects and programs, a work plan, spending plan, and budget. The work plan, spending plan, and budget shall identify the amount of funding allocated for one-time and ongoing expenditures.
729729
730730 (7) A description of the alignment of work plans, spending plans, and other education and workforce plans guiding services in the region, including plans pertaining to the building of career pathways and the employment of workforce sector strategies and those plans required pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
731731
732732 (c) Each consortium shall submit a plan by January 31 once every four years and shall annually update the plan by January 31 of each year until the next new plan is submitted.
733733
734734 (d) The chancellors office shall review the plans on a four-year cycle and ensure that annual updates are made by each consortium. The chancellors office shall determine if each consortium has made significant progress in meeting the goals and measures outlined in its plan, and provide technical assistance to a consortium that has not met its goals. The chancellors office is encouraged to provide technical assistance pursuant to this subdivision through the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.
735735
736736 (e) To avoid duplication of effort, plans developed pursuant to this section shall be informed by, aligned with, and expand upon regional plans and planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
737737
738738 (f) Community college districts participating in a consortium shall use their regions plan to inform local campus planning efforts to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and nonpublic resources to ensure that students will achieve successful workforce outcomes.
739739
740740 (g) Community college districts shall meet with the members of their consortium not less than annually to inform on the delivery of career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways within the region.
741741
742742 (h) Each regions plan shall be for the primary purpose of informing the development of strategies related to career technical education and workforce development courses, programs, and pathways. Each regions plan shall reflect strategies to efficiently and effectively use any available public and private resources, including funds for the Career Technical Education Pathways Program established in Part 52 (commencing with Section 88530), in a manner that better aligns career technical education courses, programs, and pathways with the needs of their regional economies.
743743
744744 (i) It is the intent of the Legislature to align community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program. Staff from the chancellors office, the Legislative Analysts Office, and the Department of Finance are requested to investigate the potential consolidation of community college career technical education programs within the Strong Workforce Program.
745745
746746 (j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
747747
748748 SEC. 13. Section 88825 of the Education Code is amended to read:88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.(b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
749749
750750 SEC. 13. Section 88825 of the Education Code is amended to read:
751751
752752 ### SEC. 13.
753753
754754 88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.(b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
755755
756756 88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.(b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
757757
758758 88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.(b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
759759
760760
761761
762762 88825. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only, and applies commencing with the 201718 fiscal year.
763763
764764 (b) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:
765765
766766 (1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.
767767
768768 (2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.
769769
770770 (3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.
771771
772772 (4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.
773773
774774 (5) Cross-training local program staff.
775775
776776 (6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.
777777
778778 (7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.
779779
780780 (c) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.
781781
782782 (2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the Community College component of the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.
783783
784784 (d) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.
785785
786786 (e) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.
787787
788788 (f) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:
789789
790790 (A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.
791791
792792 (B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.
793793
794794 (C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.
795795
796796 (D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.
797797
798798 (2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.
799799
800800 (g) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.
801801
802802 (h) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:
803803
804804 (1) Be a member of a consortium.
805805
806806 (2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.
807807
808808 (3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.
809809
810810 (4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
811811
812812 (5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.
813813
814814 (6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:
815815
816816 (A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.
817817
818818 (B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.
819819
820820 (C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.
821821
822822 (i) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.
823823
824824 (j) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.
825825
826826 (k) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
827827
828828 SEC. 14. Section 88825 is added to the Education Code, to read:88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
829829
830830 SEC. 14. Section 88825 is added to the Education Code, to read:
831831
832832 ### SEC. 14.
833833
834834 88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
835835
836836 88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
837837
838838 88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:(1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.(2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.(3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.(4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.(5) Cross-training local program staff.(6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.(7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.(b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.(2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.(c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.(d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.(2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.(f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.(g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:(1) Be a member of a consortium.(2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.(3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.(4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).(5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.(6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:(A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.(B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.(C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.(h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.(i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.(j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
839839
840840
841841
842842 88825. (a) To promote the success of community college students and the career technical education programs that serve them, up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the Community College component may be allocated by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to a community college district for statewide activities to improve and administer the program, including the facilitation of system, program, and data alignment at the state and regional levels and the implementation of the 25 recommendations presented to the board of governors on January 19 and 20, 2016, by the Strong Workforce Task Force. The chancellors office shall consult with the California Workforce Development Board and other appropriate state agencies on the development of all statewide activities that would be implemented by the selected community college district to facilitate broader workforce and education system alignment. Statewide coordination activities funded out of this allocation may include, but are not limited to, the following activities:
843843
844844 (1) State-level coordination for the development of labor market analyses pertaining to economic and industry trends and jobs projections for the purpose of supporting common regional planning efforts and the alignment of career technical education program offerings with regional labor market dynamics.
845845
846846 (2) Research, evaluation, and technical assistance on the use of effective local and regional policies, best practices, and model partnerships.
847847
848848 (3) Development and prototyping of innovative policies, practices, and coordinated services with local workforce and education partners.
849849
850850 (4) Participation of community college districts in existing regional coalitions and planning efforts.
851851
852852 (5) Cross-training local program staff.
853853
854854 (6) Development and maintenance of a state-level cross-system data reporting mechanism with partners formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) for the purpose of monitoring workforce program outcomes and performance accountability.
855855
856856 (7) Leveraging allocated funds with state and local partners through interagency agreements, memorandums of understanding, or other appropriate mechanisms.
857857
858858 (b) (1) Forty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to the fiscal agents of the consortia for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans.
859859
860860 (2) Sixty percent of the funds apportioned for the program shall be apportioned directly to community college districts in the consortia. Funds apportioned directly to a community college district shall be expended for the purpose of funding regionally prioritized projects and programs within the community college district that meet the needs of local and regional economies, including development of short-term workforce training programs focused on Californias economic recovery from COVID-19 beginning in 2020, as identified in regional plans and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) regional plans. As a condition of receiving direct funding, each community college district shall actively participate in its consortium.
861861
862862 (c) The allocation of funds to a consortium shall be based on a schedule determined by the chancellors office and is effective for the four years of each plan cycle. Within the four-year plan cycle, this schedule may be altered to reflect changes in the statewide allocation for the program as appropriated in the annual Budget Act.
863863
864864 (d) The chancellors office shall provide to the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analysts Office its recommendations for the allocation of funds available for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The department shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.
865865
866866 (e) (1) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated to each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:
867867
868868 (A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.
869869
870870 (B) The proportion of career technical education full-time equivalent students. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.
871871
872872 (C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.
873873
874874 (D) The proportion of successful workforce outcomes as evidenced by the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). This factor shall comprise 17 percent of the allocation formula.
875875
876876 (2) For each four-year plan cycle, the chancellors office shall determine the amount of funds to be allocated directly to each community college district within a consortium based on the weighted factors, specified in subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive, of paragraph (1), in each district within the region.
877877
878878 (f) A consortium shall allocate funds in accordance with its plan and only to community college districts. Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of the consortiums fiscal resources shall be determined exclusively by the community college districts participating in the consortium.
879879
880880 (g) As a condition of receipt of funds under this section, a participating community college district shall comply with all of the following:
881881
882882 (1) Be a member of a consortium.
883883
884884 (2) Participate in regional planning efforts formed pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128) and other efforts that align workforce, employment, and education services.
885885
886886 (3) Work with other consortium members to create and submit a plan to the chancellors office by January 31 of every fourth year of a four-year plan cycle.
887887
888888 (4) Provide accessible performance and labor market data that can be used by community college districts and their regional partners to support the implementation of the program and any related efforts to align regional workforce and education programming with regional labor market needs, including, but not limited to, regional planning efforts established pursuant to the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128).
889889
890890 (5) Include interested public universities and local educational agencies in regional planning.
891891
892892 (6) Certify that the use of funds will meet the intent of the program to accomplish all of the following:
893893
894894 (A) Increase the number of students in quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that will achieve successful workforce outcomes.
895895
896896 (B) Increase the number of quality career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that lead to successful workforce outcomes, or invest in new or emerging career technical education courses, programs, and pathways that may become operative in subsequent years and are likely to lead to successful workforce outcomes.
897897
898898 (C) Address recommendations from the Strong Workforce Task Force, including the recommended provision of student services related to career exploration, job readiness and job placement, and work-based learning.
899899
900900 (h) Funds appropriated to community college districts for the program shall supplement, not supplant, existing funding of community college career technical education programs. This subdivision shall not be interpreted to mean that a participating community college district is prohibited from eliminating or altering existing programs, but the percentage of that community college districts total full-time equivalent students enrolled in career technical education courses relative to the total full-time equivalent students enrolled in the district shall not be reduced from the percentage computed for the 201516 fiscal year.
901901
902902 (i) Programs, courses, or instructional materials developed using funding from the program may be made available to all community college districts, as appropriate, through the online clearinghouse of information created as part of the Institutional Effectiveness Partnership Initiative.
903903
904904 (j) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
905905
906906 SEC. 15. Section 88826 of the Education Code is amended to read:88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
907907
908908 SEC. 15. Section 88826 of the Education Code is amended to read:
909909
910910 ### SEC. 15.
911911
912912 88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
913913
914914 88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
915915
916916 88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.(b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
917917
918918
919919
920920 88826. (a) This section applies to the Community College component only.
921921
922922 (b) The chancellors office shall post on its Internet Web site, internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.
923923
924924 (c) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the Community College component of the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.
925925
926926 (d) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the Community College component of the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:
927927
928928 (A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (c).
929929
930930 (B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).
931931
932932 (C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.
933933
934934 (2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
935935
936936 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
937937
938938 SEC. 16. Section 88826 is added to the Education Code, to read:88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
939939
940940 SEC. 16. Section 88826 is added to the Education Code, to read:
941941
942942 ### SEC. 16.
943943
944944 88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
945945
946946 88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
947947
948948 88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.(b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:(A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).(B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).(C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
949949
950950
951951
952952 88826. (a) The chancellors office shall post on its internet website, for ease of access, all regional plans and their subsequent progress plans, and solicit feedback from each consortium on recommendations they have for overall program improvement.
953953
954954 (b) The chancellors office shall implement performance accountability outcome measures for the program that provide the Governor, the Legislature, and the general public with information that quantifies employer and student outcomes for those participating in the program. These performance accountability measures shall, to the extent possible, align with the performance accountability measures of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128). Outcome measures shall include, to the extent possible, demographic data, to allow policymakers and the general public to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.
955955
956956 (c) (1) Commencing in 2018, the chancellors office shall submit a report on the program to the Governor and the Legislature on or before the January 1 immediately subsequent to the fiscal year which the report addresses. This report shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following:
957957
958958 (A) Data summarizing outcome accountability performance measures collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (b).
959959
960960 (B) A summary of recommendations for program improvement collected by the chancellors office pursuant to subdivision (a).
961961
962962 (C) Recommendations for future allocations to consortiums based upon program outcomes, including, at a minimum, the number of certificates granted to, and wage increases of, students who have completed a career technical education program.
963963
964964 (2) A report to be submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
965965
966966 (d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2024.
967967
968968 SEC. 17. Section 88827 of the Education Code is amended to read:88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.(b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.(2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
969969
970970 SEC. 17. Section 88827 of the Education Code is amended to read:
971971
972972 ### SEC. 17.
973973
974974 88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.(b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.(2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
975975
976976 88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.(b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.(2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
977977
978978 88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.(b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:(A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.(B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.(C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.(2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.(3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.(d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
979979
980980
981981
982982 88827. (a) This section applies to the K12 component only.
983983
984984 (b) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program is provided to create, support, or expand high-quality career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.
985985
986986 (c) (1) Pursuant to subdivision (b), one hundred fifty million dollars ($150,000,000) shall be apportioned by the chancellors office to the fiscal agent of each consortium based on the following weighted factors in each region:
987987
988988 (A) The unemployment rate. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula.
989989
990990 (B) The regions total average daily attendance for pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive. This factor shall comprise 33 percent of the allocation formula. For purposes of this section, average daily attendance shall be those figures that are reported at the time of the second principal apportionment for the previous fiscal year.
991991
992992 (C) The proportion of projected job openings. This factor shall comprise 34 percent of the allocation formula.
993993
994994 (2) Of the amounts apportioned to each consortium pursuant to paragraph (1), 4 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of less than or equal to 140, 8 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 140 and less than or equal to 550, and 88 percent is designated for applicants with total average daily attendance of more than 550, unless otherwise determined by the K12 Selection Committee formed pursuant to Section 88829, in consultation with the consortium. For any applicant consisting of more than one school district, county office of education, charter school, or regional occupational center or program (ROCP) operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, or any combination of those entities, the sum of the average daily attendance for each of the constituent entities shall be used for purposes of this subdivision.
995995
996996 (3) The chancellors office shall provide to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Department of Finance, and the Legislative Analysts Office a schedule of proposed allocations, as determined pursuant to paragraph (1), for each consortium no later than August 30 of each year. The Department of Finance shall approve the allocation plan before the release of funding.
997997
998998 (d) Funds appropriated in the annual Budget Act to support consortia administrative costs shall be apportioned by the chancellors office in an amount equal to 1 percent of each consortiums K12 allocation pursuant to this section to support the costs to administer the regional grant process and to support the duties of the K12 Selection Committee.
999999
10001000 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10011001
10021002 SEC. 18. Section 88828 of the Education Code is amended to read:88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:(a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.(b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.(c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:(A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).(3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.(3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.(4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.(5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.(6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.(7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.(8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.(iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) Another form of job training.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.(D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.(E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.(F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10031003
10041004 SEC. 18. Section 88828 of the Education Code is amended to read:
10051005
10061006 ### SEC. 18.
10071007
10081008 88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:(a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.(b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.(c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:(A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).(3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.(3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.(4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.(5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.(6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.(7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.(8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.(iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) Another form of job training.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.(D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.(E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.(F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10091009
10101010 88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:(a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.(b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.(c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:(A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).(3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.(3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.(4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.(5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.(6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.(7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.(8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.(iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) Another form of job training.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.(D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.(E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.(F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10111011
10121012 88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:(a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.(b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.(c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:(A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.(2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).(3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.(4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.(d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:(1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.(3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.(4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.(5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.(6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.(7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.(8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.(B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:(i) The high school graduation rate.(ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.(iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.(iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.(v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:(I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.(II) A state apprenticeship program.(III) Another form of job training.(C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.(D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.(E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.(F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10131013
10141014
10151015
10161016 88828. This section applies to the K12 component only. Each consortium shall administer a competitive grant program to distribute funding allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 88827 to eligible grant recipients. Consortia are encouraged to collaboratively develop a uniform grant application process that includes a process for grant renewals and for a grant applicant to appeal a grant award decision of the K12 Selection Committee. As part of the application process, each consortium shall ask applicants to indicate whether they have received a grant under the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Chapter 16.5 (commencing with Section 53070) of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2. For each fiscal year, the chancellors office shall work with the State Department of Education to produce a list of grant recipients that receive funding under this program as well as through the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, including the grant amounts awarded through each program and the purpose for which each grant was awarded. Local educational agencies applying to receive a grant from a consortium shall comply with all of the following:
10171017
10181018 (a) The local educational agency shall be located within the geographical boundaries of the consortium, and engage in regional efforts to align workforce, employment, and education services.
10191019
10201020 (b) The local educational agency shall use its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823 to inform their efforts to create, support, implement implement, or expand upon career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways, and to the extent possible, integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to improve the successful outcomes of pupils enrolled in career technical education courses, course sequences, programs, and pathways. To the extent an applicants career technical education program, or programs, offered in the 201819 fiscal year do not align with its consortiums plan developed pursuant to Section 88823, the applicant shall be deemed to meet this requirement by including in its grant application the steps that it will take during the 201819 fiscal year to align its career technical education program, or programs, with its consortiums plan.
10211021
10221022 (c) (1) The local educational agency shall provide matching funds for any grant funding received from this program as follows:
10231023
10241024 (A) For regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, one dollar ($1) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
10251025
10261026 (B) For local educational agencies, two dollars ($2) for every one dollar ($1) received from this program.
10271027
10281028 (2) The local match may include funding from school district and charter school local control funding formula apportionments pursuant to Section 42238.02, the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2, or any other allowable source, except as provided in paragraph (3).
10291029
10301030 (3) The local match described in this subdivision shall not include any funding received by the applicant from the California Career Pathways Trust established pursuant to Section 53010, the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070, or the Career Technical Education Facilities Program established pursuant to Section 17078.72.
10311031
10321032 (4) An applicants matching funds shall be used to support the program, or programs, for which the applicant was awarded a grant.
10331033
10341034 (d) The applicant, or the applicants career technical education program, as applicable, shall meet all of the following minimum eligibility standards:
10351035
10361036 (1) Is informed by, aligned with, and expands upon regional plans and planning efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.
10371037
10381038 (2) Offers high-quality curriculum and instruction aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226, including, but not limited to, providing a coherent sequence of career technical education courses that enable pupils to transition to postsecondary education or training programs that lead to a career pathway or attain employment upon graduation from high school.
10391039
10401040 (3) Provides pupils with quality career exploration and guidance.
10411041
10421042 (4) Provides pupil support services, including, but not limited to, counseling and leadership development.
10431043
10441044 (5) Provides opportunities for pupils to participate in after-school, extended-day, and out-of-school internships, competitions, and other work-based learning opportunities.
10451045
10461046 (6) Leads to an industry-recognized credential or certificate, appropriate postsecondary training or employment, or a postsecondary degree.
10471047
10481048 (7) Is staffed by skilled teachers or faculty and provides professional development opportunities for those teachers or faculty members.
10491049
10501050 (8) (A) Reports data that can be used by policymakers, local educational agencies, community college districts, and their regional partners to support and evaluate the program, including, to the extent possible, demographic data used to evaluate progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion, and earnings of underserved demographic groups.
10511051
10521052 (B) Data reported pursuant to this paragraph shall include, but is not limited to, metrics aligned with the core metrics required by the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (Public Law 113-128), the College/Career Indicator included in the California School Dashboard, and the quality indicators described in the California State Plan for Career Technical Education required by the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), and the following metrics:
10531053
10541054 (i) The high school graduation rate.
10551055
10561056 (ii) The number of pupils completing career technical education coursework.
10571057
10581058 (iii) The number of pupils obtaining an industry-recognized credential, certificate, license, or other measure of technical skill attainment.
10591059
10601060 (iv) The number of former pupils employed and the types of businesses in which they are employed.
10611061
10621062 (v) The number of former pupils enrolled in each of the following:
10631063
10641064 (I) A postsecondary educational institution, disaggregated by public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit institutions.
10651065
10661066 (II) A state apprenticeship program.
10671067
10681068 (III) Another form of job training.
10691069
10701070 (C) No later than November 30 of each fiscal year, the Workforce Pathways Joint Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 12053 shall review the data metrics specified in subparagraph (B) and make recommendations to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature and to the Department of Finance as to whether they are the most appropriate metrics to measure and evaluate program outcomes for both new and renewal applicants, and whether other metrics should be included.
10711071
10721072 (D) Data collected pursuant to this section shall be reported by the grant recipient to the State Department of Education and their K14 Technical Assistance Provider by November 1 immediately following the fiscal year for which the data is being reported. The K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall annually notify the K12 Selection Committee in each region of any grant recipient that fails to provide the required outcome data. The K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, may terminate or rescind contracts and grants from grantees that fail to provide the required outcome-based data pursuant to this paragraph.
10731073
10741074 (E) The State Department of Education shall make the data reported pursuant to subparagraph (D) available to the chancellors office on a date to be jointly determined by the State Department of Education and the chancellors office, to ensure the data is included on the California Community Colleges LaunchBoard data platform.
10751075
10761076 (F) No later than January 31, 2024, and on or before January 31 every five years thereafter, the State Department of Education shall submit a report, pursuant to Section 53076.5 53076.2 and this section, to the Department of Finance, the Governor, and the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature evaluating the progress that local educational agencies have made in expanding the availability of high-quality, industry-valued career technical education and workforce development opportunities; improving coordination and alignment with postsecondary educational institutions and workforce agencies and programs; and, to the extent possible, the progress in closing equity gaps in program access and completion.
10771077
10781078 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10791079
10801080 SEC. 19. Section 88829 of the Education Code is amended to read:88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:(1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.(2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.(3) Career guidance counselors.(4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.(5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.(6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.(b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.(2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.(d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10811081
10821082 SEC. 19. Section 88829 of the Education Code is amended to read:
10831083
10841084 ### SEC. 19.
10851085
10861086 88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:(1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.(2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.(3) Career guidance counselors.(4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.(5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.(6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.(b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.(2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.(d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10871087
10881088 88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:(1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.(2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.(3) Career guidance counselors.(4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.(5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.(6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.(b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.(2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.(d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10891089
10901090 88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:(1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.(2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.(3) Career guidance counselors.(4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.(5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.(6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.(b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.(2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.(d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
10911091
10921092
10931093
10941094 88829. (a) For purposes of awarding grants under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, each consortium shall form a K12 Selection Committee made up of individuals with expertise in K12 career technical education and workforce development. The K12 Selection Committee membership shall be composed of all of the following:
10951095
10961096 (1) Current or former K12 career technical education teachers and administrators.
10971097
10981098 (2) Charter school representatives, including representatives of charter schools operating pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 47612.1.
10991099
11001100 (3) Career guidance counselors.
11011101
11021102 (4) Representatives of industries that are prioritized by the consortium.
11031103
11041104 (5) At least one community college faculty or administrator.
11051105
11061106 (6) Other K12 education stakeholders, or other stakeholders, as determined by the consortium.
11071107
11081108 (b) The K14 Technical Assistance Provider in each consortium shall serve as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.
11091109
11101110 (c) (1) Decisions governing, or relating to, the distribution of fiscal resources for the K12 component shall be made exclusively by the K12 Selection Committee, including selection of grant recipients and specific funding amounts for each grant.
11111111
11121112 (2) The K12 Selection Committee shall annually notify the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Board of Education, the Department of Finance, and the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of both houses of the Legislature of the amount awarded to each grant recipient and the activities to be supported by the grant.
11131113
11141114 (d) To be eligible to receive a grant, a local educational agency with a representative on the K12 Selection Committee shall maintain appropriate and transparent internal controls and processes to ensure that the local educational agency representatives duties and responsibilities are clearly delineated, identified, and distinguished from the duties and responsibilities conferred upon the local educational agency as a grant applicant and recipient.
11151115
11161116 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11171117
11181118 SEC. 20. Section 88830 of the Education Code is amended to read:88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.(b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:(A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.(B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.(C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.(D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.(2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.(c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:(1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:(A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.(B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.(2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.(3) Operate within rural school districts.(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11191119
11201120 SEC. 20. Section 88830 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11211121
11221122 ### SEC. 20.
11231123
11241124 88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.(b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:(A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.(B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.(C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.(D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.(2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.(c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:(1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:(A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.(B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.(2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.(3) Operate within rural school districts.(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11251125
11261126 88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.(b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:(A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.(B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.(C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.(D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.(2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.(c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:(1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:(A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.(B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.(2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.(3) Operate within rural school districts.(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11271127
11281128 88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.(b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:(A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.(B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.(C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.(D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.(2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.(c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:(1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:(A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.(B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.(2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.(3) Operate within rural school districts.(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11291129
11301130
11311131
11321132 88830. (a) When determining grant recipients under the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, the K12 Selection Committee shall consider past performance of grantees before awarding additional funds to those reapplying for grants.
11331133
11341134 (b) (1) The K12 Selection Committee shall give positive consideration to each of the following characteristics in an applicant:
11351135
11361136 (A) Aligned programs serving unduplicated pupils, as defined in Section 42238.02.
11371137
11381138 (B) Programs that the K12 Selection Committee, in consultation with the consortium, determines most effectively meet the needs of the local and regional economies.
11391139
11401140 (C) Programs serving pupil subgroups that have higher than average dropout rates as identified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.
11411141
11421142 (D) Programs located in an area of the state with a high unemployment rate.
11431143
11441144 (2) When determining grant recipients, the K12 Selection Committee shall give greatest weight to the applicant characteristics included in this subdivision.
11451145
11461146 (c) The K12 Selection Committee shall also give positive consideration to programs to the extent they do any of the following:
11471147
11481148 (1) Successfully leverage one or both of the following:
11491149
11501150 (A) Existing structures, requirements, and resources of the federal Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V) (Public Law 115-224), the partnership academies program pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 54690) of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2, or the agricultural career technical education incentive program pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 52460) of Chapter 9 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2.
11511151
11521152 (B) Contributions from industry, labor, and philanthropic sources.
11531153
11541154 (2) Make significant investments in career technical education infrastructure, equipment, and facilities.
11551155
11561156 (3) Operate within rural school districts.
11571157
11581158 (d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11591159
11601160 SEC. 21. Section 88831 of the Education Code is amended to read:88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:(1) School districts.(2) County offices of education.(3) Charter schools.(4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.(b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11611161
11621162 SEC. 21. Section 88831 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11631163
11641164 ### SEC. 21.
11651165
11661166 88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:(1) School districts.(2) County offices of education.(3) Charter schools.(4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.(b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11671167
11681168 88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:(1) School districts.(2) County offices of education.(3) Charter schools.(4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.(b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11691169
11701170 88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:(1) School districts.(2) County offices of education.(3) Charter schools.(4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.(b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11711171
11721172
11731173
11741174 88831. (a) A grant recipient for purposes of the K12 component may consist of one or more, or any combination, of the following:
11751175
11761176 (1) School districts.
11771177
11781178 (2) County offices of education.
11791179
11801180 (3) Charter schools.
11811181
11821182 (4) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education, if the application has the written consent of each participating local educational agency.
11831183
11841184 (b) Each consortium shall work with its K14 Technical Assistance Provider to provide notice to county offices of education, other local educational agencies, middle schools, high schools, and regional occupational centers and programs eligible for grants under this section of the availability of contracts and grants and the process for submitting an application.
11851185
11861186 (c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11871187
11881188 SEC. 22. Section 88832 of the Education Code is amended to read:88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:(a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.(b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11891189
11901190 SEC. 22. Section 88832 of the Education Code is amended to read:
11911191
11921192 ### SEC. 22.
11931193
11941194 88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:(a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.(b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11951195
11961196 88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:(a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.(b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11971197
11981198 88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:(a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.(b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.(c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
11991199
12001200
12011201
12021202 88832. As a condition of receiving funds for purposes of the K12 component, grant recipients shall do both of the following:
12031203
12041204 (a) Certify to the K12 Selection Committee that grant funds received and the matching funds contributed by each local educational agency shall be used solely for the purpose of supporting the program or programs for which the grant is awarded.
12051205
12061206 (b) Make expenditure data on career technical education programs available for purposes of determining if the grant recipients have met the matching funds requirements specified in subdivision (c) of Section 88828, and for monitoring the use of funds provided pursuant to Section 88827.
12071207
12081208 (c) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
12091209
12101210 SEC. 23. Section 88833 of the Education Code is amended to read:88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.(C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.(D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.(E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.(E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.(2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(E) Community college districts.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.(c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.(d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
12111211
12121212 SEC. 23. Section 88833 of the Education Code is amended to read:
12131213
12141214 ### SEC. 23.
12151215
12161216 88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.(C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.(D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.(E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.(E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.(2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(E) Community college districts.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.(c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.(d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
12171217
12181218 88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.(C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.(D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.(E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.(E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.(2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(E) Community college districts.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.(c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.(d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
12191219
12201220 88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.(C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.(D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.(E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.(B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.(C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.(D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.(E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.(2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:(A) School districts.(B) County offices of education.(C) Charter schools.(D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.(E) Community college districts.(3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.(4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.(c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.(d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.(e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.
12211221
12221222
12231223
12241224 88833. (a) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to establish a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator within the geographical boundaries of each community college district, unless otherwise determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office. K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators shall be selected through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
12251225
12261226 (A) Providing technical assistance and support to local educational agencies to implement career technical education courses, programs, and pathways and integrate available local, regional, state, and private resources to ensure that pupils will achieve successful workforce outcomes. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.
12271227
12281228 (B) Collaborating on behalf of the local educational agencies within the region with local community colleges, industry partners, local workforce investment boards, and other relevant agencies or organizations to support and align K12 career technical education programs. As part of this duty, each K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator shall stay current with the needs of K12 career technical education programs and their regional and local labor markets in order to provide guidance, in collaboration with local educational agencies, to the chancellors office, the Strong Workforce regional consortium, and industry representatives.
12291229
12301230 (C) Acting as first point of contact for local educational agencies, industry representatives, and employers with the intent of assisting local educational agencies to respond to industry needs and facilitating industry connection with K12 career technical education programs.
12311231
12321232 (D) Cultivating collaborative communities so that local educational agencies and industry can collaborate and provide peer-to-peer knowledge exchange in areas of common interest to inform the development of high-quality education programs.
12331233
12341234 (E) Working in conjunction with the Deputy Sector Navigators and State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and alignment of career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.
12351235
12361236 (2) An individual associated with any of the following may apply to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator, or any of the following may subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinator:
12371237
12381238 (A) School districts.
12391239
12401240 (B) County offices of education.
12411241
12421242 (C) Charter schools.
12431243
12441244 (D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.
12451245
12461246 (3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.
12471247
12481248 (b) (1) Commencing with the 201819 fiscal year, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall be used to support the activities of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers established under the California Career Pathways Trust. One K14 Technical Assistance Provider shall be selected for each consortium through a competitive process jointly administered by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office, for the provision of technical assistance and support to local educational agencies in implementing career technical education courses, programs, and pathways under both the California Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program established pursuant to Section 53070 and the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program. Duties of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers selected pursuant to this section include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
12491249
12501250 (A) Providing leadership, guidance, and technical assistance to create, support, expand, and improve career technical education opportunities for local educational agencies. As part of this duty, each K14 Technical Assistance Provider, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall ensure that K12 career technical education programs are aligned with the California Career Technical Education Model Curriculum Standards adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 51226.
12511251
12521252 (B) Acting as a liaison between the consortium and the State Department of Education, and serving as a consultant to the K12 Selection Committee.
12531253
12541254 (C) Interacting with the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators, the Deputy Sector Navigators, and the State Department of Education Industry Sector Leads to improve linkages and career education pathways between middle schools, high schools, public postsecondary institutions, and the workforce.
12551255
12561256 (D) Identifying professional development opportunities for the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and educational entities, including educational leaders and counselors.
12571257
12581258 (E) Regularly facilitating the convening of grantees to develop a network of educators to share best practices and cultivate state resources that can be used by agencies charged with providing assistance within the statewide system of support authorized pursuant to Section 52059.5.
12591259
12601260 (2) Any of the following may apply to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider, or subcontract with an individual with expertise in K12 education and workforce development to serve as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider:
12611261
12621262 (A) School districts.
12631263
12641264 (B) County offices of education.
12651265
12661266 (C) Charter schools.
12671267
12681268 (D) Regional occupational centers or programs operated by a joint powers authority or county office of education.
12691269
12701270 (E) Community college districts.
12711271
12721272 (3) The Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall agree upon an outcome-based assessment that allows for an evaluation of the K14 Technical Assistance Providers ability to perform the duties identified in paragraph (1). Data required for purposes of this evaluation shall be submitted by the K14 Technical Assistance Providers to the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office at least annually, commencing in the 201920 fiscal year.
12731273
12741274 (4) In selecting the K14 Technical Assistance Providers, the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the chancellors office shall give priority to applicants who served as a K14 Technical Assistance Provider under the California Career Pathways Trust pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 53015.
12751275
12761276 (c) To promote the successful transition to the K12 Strong Workforce Program, notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), for the 201819 fiscal year only, the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for support of the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and the K14 Technical Assistance Providers shall also be available for the purposes of integrating the K12 component into the regional consortia and hiring and developing the K12 Workforce Pathway Coordinators and K14 Technical Assistance Providers.
12771277
12781278 (d) Any funds not used for the purposes identified in subdivision (a), (b), or (c) shall be added to the amount appropriated in the annual Budget Act for the K12 component of the Strong Workforce Program, and provided to each consortium to create, support, or expand career technical education programs at the K12 level that are aligned with the workforce development efforts occurring through the Strong Workforce Program.
12791279
12801280 (e) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2024, and, as of January 1, 2025, is repealed.