Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05003 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/13/2023

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 5003  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING EDUCATION FUNDING IN CONNECTICUT.  
 
SUMMARY 
The bill makes significant changes to five major education funding 
grant programs: (1) Education Cost Sharing (ECS), (2) interdistrict 
magnet schools, (3) regional agricultural science and technology centers 
(i.e., “vo-ag centers”), (4) Open Choice enrollment, and (5) state charter 
schools. 
The bill changes the statutory schedule for ECS grant increases. 
Under the bill, towns that the ECS grant formula currently underfunds 
are fully funded sooner than under current law, by FY 25 rather than by 
FY 28. It maintains (1) the scheduled ECS reductions for overfunded 
towns and (2) a minimum of at least the previous year’s ECS grant for 
any alliance district town. 
The bill eliminates, beginning with FY 25, the existing magnet school, 
vo-ag center, and Open Choice grant programs and replaces them with 
new grants under the choice program, which the bill creates.  
The choice program grant provides funding for local or regional 
boards of education (i.e., “school boards”) that operate a magnet school, 
a vo-ag center, or host students through Open Choice interdistrict 
school attendance program. The bill also creates a separate grant for any 
magnet school operated by an entity that is not a board of education, 
such as an independent institution of higher education.   
The bill uses student need weightings in the choice program grants 
and the non-board of education magnet school grants that mirror the 
weighting used in existing law for ECS and charter school grants: 
additional weight for those eligible for free or reduced priced meals or 
free milk (FRPM), or designated as an English language learner. So,  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JM 	Page 2 	4/13/23 
 
these grants give added funding for students that meet those criteria. 
Also beginning in FY 25, the bill generally prohibits magnet schools 
and vo-ag centers from charging tuition to the towns that send students 
to magnet schools or vo-ag programs. The bill specifies that the new 
grant must give at least an amount of state funds that is equal to what a 
magnet school operator or vo-ag center received in FY 24, both from the 
state and from tuition from sending districts (i.e., a “hold harmless” 
provision). 
Under existing law, the per-student state charter school grant 
increased in FY 23. The bill requires additional increases for FYs 24 and 
25, with state charters receiving full funding in FY 25.  
The bill adds a cost-of-living increase, starting in FY 26, for the 
foundation amount used to calculate grants for non-board of education 
magnet schools and state charter schools based on an annual percent 
increase in personal income or inflation, whichever is greater. 
It requires the State Department of Education (SDE), annually 
starting by February 1, 2024, to calculate and give to the relevant 
operators or towns certain estimates for the various grants under the 
bill. 
The bill also: 
1. creates a commission to study various educational issues 
including (a) funding for local school districts, charter schools, 
and magnet schools as provided under the bill; (b) the alliance 
district plan process; and (c) charter school grade expansion (§ 
11);  
2. explicitly places charter schools under the educational interests 
of the state law that includes a complaint process if a party 
believes the school is not meeting the educational interests of the 
state (§§ 12 & 13); and 
3. renames and revises the alliance district program (renamed 
educational reform districts and legacy alliance districts) (§§ 14- 2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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16).  
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024, except the provisions on (1) changing 
to the ECS funding schedule, increasing the charter school grant, and 
placing charter schools under the educational interests of the state are 
effective July 1, 2023, and (2) SDE’s duty to calculate estimates of the 
choice grants and creating the commission are upon passage. 
§ 1 — ECS GRANT SCHEDULE 
By law, the ECS grant has a multi-year schedule with incremental 
increases for towns that are underfunded and incremental decreases, or 
years with no change in funding, for overfunded towns. 
When determining ECS grant increases or decreases, the formula 
uses a town’s “grant adjustment,” which is the absolute value of the 
difference between a town’s ECS grant amount for the previous year 
and its fully funded grant amount. So, for underfunded towns, the grant 
adjustment is the amount needed to be fully funded; for overfunded 
towns, it is the amount the town is funded in excess of its fully funded 
grant. 
Under current law, underfunded towns receive ECS funding 
increases in each of FYs 24-27 and are fully funded in FY 28. Under the 
bill, these towns receive the existing scheduled increase for FY 24 (the 
previous year’s amount plus 20% of its grant adjustment). In FY 25, the 
bill begins fully funding these towns each year, rather than giving the 
previous year’s amount plus a certain percentage of its grant 
adjustment.  
Under the bill, the scheduled ECS reductions for overfunded towns 
are not changed and towns that are alliance districts, if overfunded, 
continue to be funded at the same level. (Beginning in FY 25, the bill 
renames alliance districts, as “legacy alliance districts” and “educational 
reform districts” (see §§ 14-16, and BACKGROUND).) 
Some towns are overfunded due primarily to the years when the state 
froze the level of funding for all towns even when some towns’ student 
enrollment dropped. A town with declining enrollment generally  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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receives less funding when the formula is updated with new enrollment 
figures. 
§ 2 — CHOICE PROGRAM GRANTS 
Beginning with FY 25, the bill annually provides choice program 
grants for vo-ag centers, the Open Choice program, and two different 
interdistrict magnet school grants, based on who is operating the 
magnet school. The state’s vo-ag centers serve high school students from 
multiple sending towns and provide an agricultural career education in 
addition to the comprehensive high school education. Open Choice is 
an interdistrict enrollment program that allows students in urban 
centers to attend school in suburban districts and vice versa. 
One magnet school grant is for school board-operated magnets and 
the other is for operators that are not school boards, such as an 
independent institution of higher education.  
Grant Student Weights 
For choice program grants, the bill creates the choice program grant 
formula, which applies weights for certain students, such as whether the 
students are (1) from families that qualify for FRPM or (2) English 
language learners.  
The weights increase the grant amounts for those students because 
the grant amount is produced by multiplying the need student number 
by the foundation number. For example, the bill provides for a 30% 
weighting for student poverty (i.e., students that qualify for FRPM) for 
each of these grants. If 100 students from a district qualify, then, for 
grant purposes, those students count as 130 students. This increases the 
grant as the weighted number becomes the new student number that is 
multiplied by the foundation amount (see below).    
Host Magnet and Vo-Ag Grants  
Under the bill grants for the magnets operated by a school board (i.e., 
a host magnet) and vo-ag center use similar factors.  
Beginning with FY 25, the magnet operator or the vo-ag center get 
grants that are the sum of (1) the sending town adjustment factors for  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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each sending town added together and (2) the number of in-district 
students for the choice program multiplied by the applicable per-
student grant amount (magnet or vo-ag). The sending town is the 
student’s town of residence that would otherwise be responsible for 
educating the student. 
Sending Town Adjustment Factor. The sending town adjustment 
factor is the number of the town’s resident choice program students 
multiplied by the greater of the sending town’s (1) weighted funding 
amount per pupil or (2) total revenue per pupil. The “weighted funding 
amount per pupil” is (1) the foundation amount multiplied by a town’s 
total need students for the fiscal year before the grant payment year and 
(2) the resulting product is divided by the number of a town’s resident 
students. The “total revenue per pupil” is the combined per-pupil 
amount of state grants and tuition received for choice students for FY 
24. This means the FY 24 amounts become the hold harmless minimum 
for these grants.  
Additional Definitions 
Additionally, the bill defines the following terms for purposes of the 
new grants: 
1. the “foundation” amount is $11,525, which is the same as in ECS 
law, although the bill includes an annual personal income or 
inflation adjustment for magnet school operators that are not a 
board of education, see below; 
2. “total need students” means a (a) student poverty weighting (as 
under ECS law) of 30% of students eligible for FRPM plus 15% of 
any FRPM-eligible students above 60% of the total number of 
resident students and (b) 25% of the number of students 
identified as English language learners; 
3. “resident students” means generally the number of students in a 
town enrolled in its public schools at the town’s expense as of 
October 1 of each year (as under the ECS law); and 
4. “resident choice program students” means the number of part- 2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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time and full-time students of a town enrolled or participating in 
a particular choice program. 
Non-Board of Education Magnet Schools 
For this grant, a magnet school operator is defined as an entity that is 
(1) not a board of education (presumably, this includes regional 
educational services centers (RESCs)); (2) a nonprofit private institution 
of higher education that has its main campus in the state; or (3) a third-
party nonprofit corporation that the education commissioner approves. 
Under the bill, starting in FY 25, these operators are entitled to a grant 
that equals the product of the foundation and its total magnet school 
program need students, with the added requirement that the grant 
cannot be less than the magnet operator received for the total revenue 
per pupil for FY 24 (this is similar to the total revenue per pupil hold 
harmless provision included in the “sending town adjustment factor” 
mentioned above). 
The bill creates a formula for calculating total magnet school program 
needs students that (1) counts full- and part-time students at the magnet 
schools, (2) generally uses the ECS student weighting percentages, and 
(3) includes a Sheff region additional student weighting. The foundation 
component for this grant also has an annual cost-of-living factor that 
potentially increases the foundation from one year to the next. 
Student Weighting. The student need weighting reflects the ECS 
formula weighting as follows: (1) student poverty weighting is 30% of 
students eligible for FRPM plus an additional 15% of any FRPM-eligible 
students above 60% of the total number of resident students and (2) a 
25% weighting for the number of students who are identified English 
language learners. 
The bill adds additional student weighting for magnet schools that 
are helping the state meet its obligations under the Sheff v. O’Neill 
desegregation court decision and related agreements or orders (see 
BACKGROUND) . This additional weighting is reduced over a six-year 
period from an initial 30% to 20% as shown in the table below.  
  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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Table: Additional Weighting for Students Attending Sheff Magnets 
FY 
Weighting 
Percentage 
25 	30% 
26 	28% 
27 	26% 
28 	24% 
29 	22% 
30 and beyond 	20% 
 
Foundation Annual Adjustments Starting in FY 26 for Magnet 
Schools. The bill adds a foundation cost-of-living increase for magnet 
school operators that are not a local or regional board of education, 
based on the annual percent increase in personal income or inflation, 
whichever is greater, starting in FY 26. For FY 26, the cost-of-living 
adjustment is $11,525, adjusted by the appropriate annual percent 
increase, and for FY 27 and each following year, it is the previous year’s 
amount adjusted by the appropriate annual percent increase.  
The bill uses the following statutory definitions for these terms: 
1. “increase in personal income” is the compound annual growth 
rate of personal income in Connecticut over the previous five 
calendar years, using federal Bureau of Economic Analysis data; 
and 
2. “increase in inflation” is the increase in the consumer price index 
for all urban consumers, for all items except food and energy, 
during the prior year, using federal Bureau of Labor Statistics 
data (CGS § 2-33a). 
Open Choice Program 
Under the bill, beginning in FY 25, any receiving district that accepts 
students in the Open Choice program will be entitled to a grant in the 
amount of the sum of the sending town adjustment factor for each 
sending town.  
§ 3 — ECS, CHOICE PROGRAM, AND CHARTER S CHOOL GRANT 
ESTIMATES  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill tasks SDE, starting by February 1, 2024, with annually 
calculating and giving the relevant operators or towns estimates for the 
following grants for the next fiscal year: 
1. each choice program grant established under the bill (SDE must 
notify each local and regional board of education and magnet 
school program operator that is not a local or regional board of 
education) and 
2. fully funded ECS grants (SDE must notify each town). 
The bill also requires SDE, annually starting by February 1, 2024, to 
(1) calculate the product of the foundation and the total charter need 
students for each state charter school fiscal authority for the next fiscal 
year and (2) notify each fiscal authority of the result. 
For each of these calculations, the bill requires SDE to calculate 
estimates for the next fiscal year using data collected during the current 
one. 
§§ 4 & 5 — ELIMINATING CURRENT MAGNET SC HOOL GRANT 
PROGRAMS AND TUITION 
The bill eliminates, beginning with FY 25, the existing per-student 
magnet school grants and replaces them with the grants created in the 
bill (see § 2). Under current law, a magnet school generally receives a 
$3,060 grant for each student from the district that hosts the school 
(home district) and, depending on the type of magnet school, one of the 
grants listed in the table below for students from sending towns. In 
addition to repealing the $3,060 grant for host district students, the bill 
repeals all the magnet school grants shown in this table for students 
from sending districts. 
Table: Magnet School Grants Repealed Under the Bill 
Type of Magnet  Bill § Current Law Amount for 
Sending Students 
Non-Sheff host magnet 	4(c)(1) 	$7,227 
Non-Sheff RESC magnet with 
less than 55% enrollment from 
one town 
4(c)(3)(A) 	8,058  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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Type of Magnet  Bill § Current Law Amount for 
Sending Students 
Non-Sheff RESC magnet with 
55% or more of enrollment from 
one town 
4(c)(3)(B) 	7,227 
RESC magnet that began 
operations in the 2001-2002 
school year and meets certain 
other criteria (i.e., former Edison 
Magnet in Meriden) 
4(c)(3)(C)(ii) Maximum 8,344 (lower for some 
students depending on certain 
factors, such as where they live) 
Sheff host magnet 	4(c)(3)(F) 	13,315 
RESC magnet enrolling less than 
60% of its students from Hartford 
(i.e., Sheff magnet) 
4(c)(3)(D)(i) 	10,652 
RESC magnet enrolling less than 
50% of its students from Hartford 
(i.e., Sheff magnet) 
4(c)(3)(D)(ii) 	8,058  
 (for half of the non-Hartford 
students enrolled over 50% of 
total enrollment) 
10,652  
(for all the other students) 
Magnet operated by independent 
institution of higher education 
and that meets certain criteria 
(Goodwin University) 
4(c)(3)(E) 65% of the 10,652 grant for 
students enrolled in both 
semesters each year 
32.5% of 10,652 for those 
enrolled in one semester a year 
Greater Hartford Academy of the 
Arts 
4(c)(3)(H) 65% of 8,058 (the grant for 
RESC magnets with less than 
55% from a single town) 
 
The bill specifies that beginning with FY 25 magnet school operators 
are entitled to the new grant as determined under the bill (see § 2).  
Tuition Ban and Exception to the Ban 
Starting in FY 25, the bill generally prohibits magnet schools from 
charging tuition to the towns that send students to the magnets for 
grades K to 12. This applies to all the magnet operators: (1) local or 
regional boards of education; (2) RESCs; (3) independent higher 
education institutions; and (4) any third-party, nonprofit corporation 
the education commissioner approves. 
Beginning with FY 26, the bill allows any magnet school operator that  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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is not a board of education (i.e., a RESC, independent higher education 
institution, or approved nonprofit) to charge tuition to a sending town’s 
board of education if the operator’s state grant under the bill is not 
calculated using the foundation number adjusted for an increase in 
personal income or inflation, as the bill requires. However, the tuition 
cannot exceed the difference between the amount the operator would be 
entitled to receive under the bill using the foundation adjustment 
calculation and the amount they will receive. (The bill does not require 
SDE to notify magnet school operators when the income/inflation 
adjustment is not made, so it is unclear how they would know they are 
authorized to charge tuition.) 
Whenever one of these operators opts to start charging tuition, it 
must notify SDE of the (1) per-student and total tuition charged for the 
fiscal year, (2) total amount charged to each sending town, and (3) 
school boards for the sending towns that were charged.  
The bill requires SDE to annually develop a report of the tuition 
charged and submit it annually to the Appropriations and Education 
committees by January 1.  
Magnet Students and ECS 
Under the bill, magnet school students are counted in the town where 
they reside for the student count for ECS grants, which codifies current 
practice. 
§ 6 — CHARTER SCHOOL GRANT INCREASES 
The bill increases the per-student state charter school grant for FYs 24 
and 25, with state charters receiving full funding in FY 25. By law, the 
grants go to the charter school’s governing authority. 
Charter Grant Factors 
By law, the state charter grant has the same student need weighting 
percentages with the same factors (FRPM and English learner status) 
that are used in existing ECS law and in the bill for choice grants.  
Under current law, the increase in the state grant is a percentage of a 
school’s charter grant adjustment, which is the absolute value of the  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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difference between the (1) foundation ($11,525) and (2) charter full 
weighted funding per student for the state charter schools under a 
governing authority’s control for the school year.  
The “charter full weighted funding per student” is a value calculated 
as (1) the product of the total charter need students and the foundation, 
divided by (2) the number of enrolled students under the charter school 
governing authority’s control for the school year. 
Grant Increases 
The current (FY 23) per-student grant for charter school governing 
authorities is the foundation amount plus 25.42% of its charter grant 
adjustment. Under the bill, the per-student grant is: 
1. for FY 24, the foundation plus 36.08% of its charter grant 
adjustment and 
2. for FY 25 and each year after, the product of the foundation and 
the school’s total charter need students (i.e., full funding under 
the formula). 
Foundation Annual Adjustments Starting in FY 26 for Charter 
Schools. The bill adds a foundation cost-of-living increase for charter 
school governing authorities based on an annual percent increase in 
personal income or inflation, whichever is greater, starting in FY 26 and 
for each following year (this is the same method for non-board of 
education magnet school annual adjustments in § 2). 
§§ 7-9 — ELIMINATING CURRENT VO-AG CENTER GRANTS AND 
TUITION  
Beginning with FY 25, the bill repeals the current $5,200 per-student 
state grant for vo-ag centers and replaces it with the vo-ag choice grant 
the bill creates (§ 2). The bill also repeals related supplementary grants 
for vo-ag centers ranging from $60 to $500 per student. 
Under current law, a vo-ag center can charge the sending towns 
tuition for the students they send to the program, but it caps tuition at 
59.2% of the foundation ($11,525) used for ECS, resulting in a maximum  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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tuition of $6,823. The bill prohibits a vo-ag center from charging this 
tuition starting July 1, 2024. However, it maintains a current provision 
that allows tuition for educating special education students but only if, 
and in the amount, the cost exceeds the state grant received for the 
student under the bill. 
The bill repeals the requirement that a sending district provide 
students in their district an equivalent number of seats from one year to 
the next to enroll in the vo-ag program. Current law requires the 
districts to (1) make available at least the same number of seats as stated 
in any written agreement or, in the absence of one, the average number 
enrolled over the last three years and (2) specifically for each ninth-
grade class, make available either the agreement number or the average 
number who enrolled in ninth grade in the last three years. 
The bill also (1) repeals the mandate on districts that send students to 
a vo-ag program to pay tuition and (2) specifies that for a town’s student 
count for the ECS grant, a student enrolled in a vo-ag center is counted 
in the town where the student resides, which codifies current practice. 
§ 10 — ELIMINATING CURRENT OPEN CHOICE G RANT 
SCHEDULE 
Beginning in FY 25, the bill replaces the current Open Choice grant 
schedule with the grant created in the bill (§ 2). Open Choice is a 
voluntary inter-district attendance program that allows students 
generally from the Hartford, New Haven, and Bridgeport districts to 
attend suburban school districts, and vice versa, on a space-available 
basis. SDE provides a per-student grant for school districts that receive 
Open Choice students. 
Under current law, the grants range from $3,000 to $8,000 per student, 
with larger grants for districts that enroll a higher percentage of Open 
Choice students. For example, a district receives $3,000 per student if 
Open Choice students are less than 2% of its student population. The 
grant amount increases incrementally until, at the highest amount, a 
district receives $8,000 per student if Open Choice students are at least 
4% of the student population.   2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill relatedly repeals the additional $2,000 per-student grant 
given to receiving school districts for each out-of-district student who 
resides in the Hartford region (i.e., the Sheff region) and attends school 
in a receiving district under the program (see BACKGROUND).  
§ 11 — COMMISSION TO STUDY EDUCATION FUNDING A ND 
ACCOUNTABILITY MEASU RES  
The bill creates the Building Educational Responsibility with Greater 
Improvement Networks Commission to study various educational 
issues including funding for local school districts, charter schools, and 
magnet schools as provided under the bill (§ 2) and accountability 
measures for alliance districts (educational reform districts and legacy 
alliance districts, under the bill) and charter schools. 
The commission study must be presented in two separate parts. The 
first part examines school district, charter school, and magnet school 
funding entitlements and must include, at a minimum: 
1. the compensation, benefits, retention, and recruitment of 
teachers, paraprofessionals, and social workers;  
2. restrictions on the use of, and reporting requirements for, any 
additional funds received under the bill, both ECS funds and the 
new grants; and 
3. optimal class sizes.  
The second part of the study focuses on alliance districts and charter 
schools.  
For alliance districts, the study must, at a minimum, include an 
analysis of how school boards develop alliance district plans and how 
they are reviewed and approved by the education commissioner, and 
recommendations for narrowing the focus of or replacing the plans. The 
study must also consider the following: 
1. possibly eliminating the withholding of a portion of an alliance 
district’s ECS grant,  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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2. the feasibility of creating independent financial audits of the 
expenditures under the entire budget of an alliance district’s 
school board, 
3. the feasibility of requiring alliance district school boards to hold 
hearings on interventions and make annual evaluations of any 
new programming established in the school district,  
4. setting guidelines for the hiring of nonclassroom personnel, and  
5. interventions that SDE may take in regard to the operations in 
an alliance district.  
For charter schools, the study must include, at a minimum: 
1. the feasibility of a full grade expansion of existing charters, 
including grade expansion;  
2. an examination of the impact of moratoriums on any new charter 
school approval, as well as new magnet school program 
approval; and  
3. a consideration of the duration of a charter’s validity and the 
State Board of Education’s (SBE) standards used to determine 
whether to renew a charter. 
Task Force Membership 
Under the bill, the education commissioner and the Office of Policy 
and Management secretary, or their respective designees, are members. 
The table below shows the 16 additional members, what authority 
appoints them, and any required organizational affiliations.  
Table: Task Force to Study Education Funding Membership and Appointing Authority 
Appointing Authority 
(Appointments) 
Member Organization or Position 
House speaker 
(three) 
• Connecticut Association of Public School 
Superintendents representative 
• Connecticut Council of Administrators of Special 
Education representative 
• RESC Alliance representative  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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Appointing Authority 
(Appointments) 
Member Organization or Position 
Senate president pro 
tempore 
(three)  
• Connecticut Association of Boards of Education 
representative  
• Special Education Equity for Kids representative  
• Center for Children’s Advocacy representative 
House majority leader 
(three) 
• Connecticut School Counselor Association 
representative 
• Connecticut Education Association representative  
• Superintendent of an alliance district 
Senate majority leader 
(three) 
• American Federation of Teachers-Connecticut 
representative 
• ConnCAN representative  
• School and State Finance Project representative 
House minority leader 
(two) 
• Connecticut Association of School Administrators 
representative  
• Connecticut Association of School Business Officials 
representative 
Senate minority leader 
(two) 
• Connecticut Charter School Association 
representative  
• Executive director of an agricultural science and 
technology education center 
 
Organizational Matters and Report Deadline 
The bill requires all initial commission appointments to be made 
within 30 days after the bill’s effective date and any subsequent vacancy 
to be filled by the appointing authority. The House speaker and Senate 
president pro tempore must select the chairpersons from among the 
commission members.  
The bill requires the chairpersons to schedule the commissioner’s first 
meeting, which must be held within 60 days after the bill’s effective 
date. The Education Committee’s administrative staff must serve as the 
task force’s administrative staff.  
The commission must submit the first part of its study, with findings 
and recommendations, to the Education and Appropriations 
committees by February 1, 2024. It must submit the second and final part 
of the study to the Education Committee by January 15, 2025.  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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It terminates when it submits the last report or July 1, 2025, whichever 
is later. 
§§ 12 & 13 — CHARTER SCHOO LS AND THE EDUCATION AL 
INTERESTS OF THE STATE 
By law, charter schools are required to follow all federal and state 
laws governing public schools, with limited exceptions. The bill 
explicitly adds that state laws governing public schools includes the 
educational interests of the state. It also allows complaints to be brought 
to SBE in situations where a resident or a parent alleges the failure or 
inability of a charter school to implement the educational interests of the 
state. This complaint provision currently applies to local and regional 
boards of education. 
The existing exceptions allow (1) charter schools to seek an 
enrollment lottery waiver from SBE to pursue a school that has a special 
student body such as (a) students with a history of behavioral and social 
difficulties, (b) English language learners, or (c) students of a single 
gender and (2) the commissioner to waiver certain teacher certification 
requirements for charter school staff. 
Educational Interests of the State and Complaint Process 
By law, the educational interests of the state include the requirement 
to implement the educational state mandates and that each: 
1. child must have equal opportunity to receive a suitable program 
of educational experiences as prescribed in law;  
2. school district must finance, at a reasonable level at least equal to 
the minimum budget requirement required by state law, an 
educational program designed to provide suitable educational 
experiences; and 
3. school district shall provide educational opportunities for its 
students to interact with students and teachers from other racial, 
ethnic, and economic backgrounds and may provide these 
opportunities with students from other communities.   2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
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Complaints must be made to SBE in writing and SBE may initiate a 
complaint on its own. If after an investigation, during which the school 
board or charter school is given the opportunity to present its case, SBE 
can require the school board or charter to develop and plan to address 
the situation or take other reasonable steps.  
§§ 14-16 — RENAMING THE ALLIAN CE DISTRICTS 
Beginning in FY 25, the bill renames the alliance districts and revises 
the alliance district program. The term “educational reform district” 
replaces “alliance district” and the bill reduces the number of districts 
with this designation from 36 to 20. Also, “legacy alliance district” 
means a school district for a town that was designated as an alliance 
district for the fiscal years ending June 30, 2013, to June 30, 2024, 
inclusive. This means the legacy alliance districts include all the 
educational reform districts and the 16 other districts that are no longer 
designated alliance districts. 
Under current law, an alliance district is a school district that is 
among the towns with the 33 lowest accountability index (AI) scores as 
calculated by SDE. Additionally, the law required the education 
commissioner to designate 36 alliance districts for the five-year period 
from FYs 23-27. (The additional three included were the three districts 
that had been in the 33 lowest, but with the last AI scores, they were no 
longer among the 33 lowest.)    
The bill requires the education commissioner to designate as 
educational reform districts the districts among the towns with the 20 
lowest AI scores for two-year period, beginning with FY 25. It also 
repeals the current definition of “educational reform district,” which is 
an alliance district that is among the 10 lowest AI scores in the state.  
Under this program, the comptroller withholds from an alliance 
district town any increase in ECS funds that exceed the amount the town 
received in 2012 (the year the program began). But, for districts 
designated as alliance districts for the first time for FY 23, the 
comptroller must withhold ECS funds over the FY 22 amount. The 
comptroller transfers the money to the education commissioner to  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JM 	Page 18 	4/13/23 
 
withhold until she approves the district’s alliance district application 
and plan to improve academic performance.  
Under the bill beginning with FY 25 and for each following year, the 
amount withheld for the 20 educational reform districts will be the 
amount of ECS funds they are entitled to that exceed the amount the 
town received in 2012. The 16 districts that are no longer designated as  
alliance districts  will not have funds withheld. 
Existing law requires the alliance districts to spend their alliance 
funds (1) according to the plan submitted with the application; (2) on 
the minority candidate certification, retention, and residency program; 
(3) on ECS spending requirements; and (4) for any other items allowed 
under SDE guidelines. 
The bill also allows a school district that has not been designated an 
educational reform district, but is among the 50 towns with the lowest 
AI scores, to request technical assistance or other interventions from 
SDE in order to provide student academic support services.  
Conforming Changes for ECS and PILOT Funds (§§ 15 & 16) 
The bill makes conforming changes by making the same name change 
to two laws that reference alliance districts (and otherwise keeps the 
provisions unchanged): 
1. the ECS funding provision that requires a town designated as a 
legacy alliance district or an educational reform district to have a 
minimum base aid ratio of 10%, guaranteeing a minimum amount 
of aid; and 
2.  the payment in lieu of taxes (PILOT) provision for a town 
designated as a legacy alliance district or an educational reform 
district. 
BACKGROUND 
Related Bills 
sSB 1028 (File 440), favorably reported out by the Education 
Committee, sunsets one targeted magnet school grant.  2023HB-05003-R000575-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JM 	Page 19 	4/13/23 
 
sSB 1, favorably reported out by the Education Committee, removes 
the five-year term on the alliance district designation and allows for the 
designation of additional alliance districts.  
Accountability Index Score 
The “accountability index score” for a school district or an individual 
school is the score resulting from multiple weighted measures that (1) 
include the mastery test scores (i.e., the performance index score) and 
high school graduation rates and (2) may include academic growth over 
time, attendance and chronic absenteeism, postsecondary education 
and career readiness, enrollment in and graduation from higher 
education institutions and postsecondary education programs, civics 
and arts education, and physical fitness (CGS § 10-223e(a)). 
Sheff v. O’Neill State Supreme Court Decision  
In this 1996 decision, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that the 
state had a constitutional obligation to remedy the educational 
inequities in the Hartford schools caused by racial and ethnic isolation 
(Sheff v. O’Neill, 238 Conn. 1 (1996)). The court ordered the state 
legislature and the governor to craft a solution and legislation was 
passed to create voluntary desegregation in Hartford by creating 
magnet schools and using other programs, such as Open Choice. 
Sheff Region 
This region includes the school districts for the towns of Avon, 
Bloomfield, Canton, East Granby, East Hartford, East Windsor, 
Ellington, Farmington, Glastonbury, Granby, Hartford, Manchester, 
Newington, Rocky Hill, Simsbury, South Windsor, Suffield, Vernon, 
West Hartford, Wethersfield, Windsor, and Windsor Locks. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Education Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 44 Nay 0 (03/24/2023)