Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05466 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 07/21/2022

                    O F F I C E O F L E G I S L A T I V E R E S E A R C H 
P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 
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PA 22-116—sHB 5466 
Education Committee 
Appropriations Committee 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING ASSORTED REVISIONS AND ADDITIONS TO 
THE EDUCATION STATUTES 
 
SUMMARY: This act makes the following changes in the education statutes: 
1. requires the Connecticut Prevention Network to report to executive branch 
agencies and the Education Committee about the possibility of creating 
recovery high schools (§ 1); 
2. allows parents and guardians to access the class rank of their minor child 
(i.e., a student under age 18) (§ 2); 
3. extends the special education services and funding task force’s report due 
date by two years, from January 1, 2022, to January 1, 2024 (see 
BACKGROUND) (§ 3);  
4. requires the executive director of the Connecticut Association of Boards of 
Education (CABE), or his designee, to convene a working group to make 
recommendations about consolidating or eliminating obsolete or redundant 
professional development requirements (§ 4); 
5. requires the Office of Early Childhood (OEC) commissioner to include a 
family income provision in state contracts with child care homes and centers 
for disadvantaged children (§ 5); 
6. adds licensed marriage and family therapists (MFTs) to the list of 
professionals about whose employment the State Department of Education 
(SDE) must annually survey school boards, and requires the education 
commissioner to report the survey results and student-to-worker ratio for 
MFTs to the Children’s and Education committees (§ 6); 
7. adds MFTs to the new grant program that SDE must create under PA 22-
80, §§ 4 & 5, to hire and retain more school social workers, school 
psychologists, school counselors, and nurses (§§ 7 & 8); 
8. requires boards of education to provide paraprofessionals with (a) adequate 
notice, and training when requested, before attending planning and 
placement team (PPT) meetings and (b) access to their students' 
individualized education programs (IEPs) (§ 9); 
9. adds new duties for any school counselor hired by a board using SDE’s new 
grant program established under PA 22-47, § 13 (§ 10); and 
10. adds some qualifications for certain members of the task force created by 
PA 22-80, § 11, to study the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic 
Conference’s (CIAC) governance structure and internal procedures (§ 11). 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2022, except provisions on the following topics take 
effect upon passage: the special education funding task force (§ 3), professional 
development working group (§ 4), school district employment survey (§ 6), school  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
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counselor hiring grants (§ 10), and CIAC task force (§ 11). 
 
§ 1 — RECOVERY HIGH SCHOOLS 
 
The act requires the Connecticut Prevention Network to develop a report about 
recovery high schools, if the network is available and willing. According to the act, 
recovery high schools are designed specifically for students in recovery from 
substance use disorder or co-occurring disorders. The network’s report must 
address at least the following topics: (1) how other states have implemented and 
integrated recovery high schools into their public school system and (2) 
recommendations for establishing and implementing these schools in Connecticut. 
The network may consult with regional behavioral health action organizations 
while developing its report. 
By January 1, 2024, the network must submit its findings and recommendations 
to the Department of Education, Department of Mental Health and Addiction 
Services, and the Education Committee. 
 
§ 2 — ACCESS TO STUDENT CLASS RANK 
 
By law, any minor student’s parent or legal guardian may request access to 
educational, medical, or similar records maintained in the student’s record, so long 
as the information is not privileged under state law. The act expands this access to 
include the student’s class rank. By law and unchanged by the act, parents or 
guardians must submit a written request for this information to the board of 
education. 
 
§ 4 — PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKING GROUP 
 
The act requires the CABE executive director, or his designee, to convene a 
nine-member working group, if he is available and willing, to examine and make 
recommendations about consolidating or eliminating obsolete or redundant 
professional development requirements.  
Under the act, the group must consist of the education commissioner, or her 
designee, along with one representative chosen from each of the following 
associations: CABE, Connecticut Association of Public School Superintendents, 
Connecticut Federation of School Administrators, Connecticut Education 
Association, American Federation of Teachers-Connecticut, Connecticut 
Association of School Administrators, Connecticut Association of Schools, and 
Special Education Equity for Kids of Connecticut. 
The group must report to the Education Committee by January 1, 2024, on its 
findings and recommendations for legislation to amend the professional 
development and in-service training laws. 
 
§ 5 — CHILD CARE HOMES AND CENTERS FOR DISADVANTAGED 
CHILDREN 
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By law, the state through the OEC commissioner may enter into contracts that 
provide state financial assistance (i.e., grants) to municipalities, human resource 
development agencies, nonprofit corporations, or group or family child care homes 
for developing and operating child care homes or centers for disadvantaged 
children. Beginning July 1, 2022, the act requires any of these contracts that the 
OEC commissioner enters to include a provision requiring at least 60% of the 
enrolled children to be from families with incomes at or below 75% of the state 
median income. 
 
§§ 6-8 — LICENSED MARRIAGE AND FAMI LY THERAPISTS 
 
School District Employment Survey (§ 6) 
 
PA 22-80, § 3, requires SDE to develop and distribute a survey by July 1, 2023, 
within available appropriations that school districts must annually complete about 
the number of school social workers, psychologists, counselors, and nurses they 
employ. The act adds licensed MFTs’ employment to the survey. Specifically, the 
survey must also include information on (1) the number of MFTs employed and 
assigned to each school in a district; (2) whether any are assigned to more than one 
school, and if so, the geographic area they cover; and (3) an annual estimate of how 
many students received direct services from MFTs during the five-year period 
before the survey is completed.  
After receiving a district’s completed survey, the act requires the education 
commissioner to annually calculate the student-to-worker ratio for the MFTs in 
each school and each district. Beginning by January 1, 2024, the commissioner 
must annually submit a report on the survey’s results and the student-to-worker 
ratios to the Children’s and Education committees. 
 
Grant Program for MFT Hiring and Retention (§ 7) 
 
The act adds MFTs to the new grant program that SDE must create under PA 
22-80, §§ 4 & 5, for FYs 23 to 25 to hire and retain more school social workers, 
school psychologists, school counselors, and nurses.  
Applications. PA 22-80 requires grant applications to be filed with the 
education commissioner when and how she decides. As part of the application, an 
applicant must submit a (1) grant expenditure plan and (2) copy of the completed 
survey school board employment survey. The act adds the following information 
to the plan requirements for grant applications for MFTs: 
1. the number of additional licensed MFTs to be hired;  
2. the number of licensed MFTs being retained who were previously hired 
with the assistance of these grant funds; and  
3. whether the licensed MFTs will conduct student assessments or provide 
services to students based on assessment results, and the type of those 
services. 
Grant Awards. The act requires the commissioner to prioritize school districts 
with large student-to-worker ratios for licensed MFTs when determining whether  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
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to award a grant to an applicant. 
 
Conforming Changes (§ 8) 
 
The act also makes conforming changes to specify that the grant program 
administrator that SDE must hire under PA 22-80, § 5, must also oversee grant 
applications for school boards' employment of licensed MFTs. 
 
§ 9 — PARAPROFESSIONALS AND PPT MEETINGS 
 
Under the act, local and regional boards of education must provide adequate 
advance notice of a PPT meeting to any paraprofessional assigned to a student 
receiving special education services (1) if the parent, guardian, student, or surrogate 
parent has requested his or her attendance and (2) so that he or she may adequately 
prepare. Additionally, if the paraprofessional requests it, a board must provide 
training on his or her role at the meeting. Specifically, these requirements apply to 
PPT meetings where a student’s individualized educational program (IEP) is 
developed, reviewed, or revised. 
The act also requires that the board allow the paraprofessional attending the 
PPT meeting, or any other paraprofessional serving the student, to view the IEP 
that results from the meeting to be able to provide the student with special education 
or related services. 
 
§ 10 — NEW REQUIREMENTS FOR SCHOOL COUNSELOR HIRING 
GRANTS 
 
PA 22-47, § 13, requires SDE to administer a grant program for FYs 23-25 to 
provide funding to boards of education to hire school mental health specialists, 
including school counselors, among others. The act adds a new duty for any school 
counselor hired by a board that receives this grant. Under the act, the counselor 
must provide one-on-one consultations with each student in grades 11 and 12 about 
the completion of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), which 
students must submit to higher education institutions to be eligible for federal, state, 
or institutional aid.  
Additionally under the act, if the employing board can prove to the education 
commissioner that the school district’s FAFSA completion rate has increased by at 
least 5%, then the board will receive a 10% bonus on top of the grant received in 
the fiscal year when the board demonstrated the completion rate increase. 
PA 22-47 also requires boards to submit a plan for grant fund spending when 
they apply for a grant. In addition to the information required under PA 22-47, the 
act requires the plan to describe how the board will implement the FAFSA 
counseling requirements and completion rate demonstration. 
The act also makes conforming and technical changes. 
 
§ 11 — CIAC TASK FORCE MEMBERSHIP 
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The act adds some qualifications for certain members of the task force created 
by PA 22-80, § 11, to study CIAC’s governance structure and internal procedures. 
The act specifies that the (1) House speaker’s appointee must be a coach for a public 
school district that is a member of CIAC; (2) House majority leader’s appointee 
must be an expert in diversity in sports that is a member of CIAC and (3) Senate 
majority leader’s appointee must be an athletic director for a public school district, 
rather than any school district, that is a CIAC member. 
 
BACKGROUND 
 
Special Education Services and Funding Task Force 
 
Existing law requires this task force to study, among other things, (1) the cost 
of providing special education and related services per school district, along with 
its annual percentage increase or decrease; (2) state reimbursement levels to 
districts for these costs; and (3) whether boards of education are providing services 
directly or partnering with regional education service centers, private providers, or 
as part of cooperative arrangements with other districts (PA 21-95, § 3).