Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06880 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/11/2023

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 6880  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING ASSORTED REVISIONS AND ADDITIONS 
TO THE EDUCATION STATUTES.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes the following unrelated changes in the education 
statutes: 
1. requires local and regional boards of education (“boards of 
education”) to make curriculum approved by their school district 
curriculum committee, as well as all associated curriculum 
materials, available to parents and guardians under the 
requirements of the federal Protection of Pupil Rights 
Amendment (see BACKGROUND) (§ 1); 
2. requires boards of education to post a notice online and in the 
school cafeteria or other central areas of food consumption in 
each school that states that the lunch, breakfast, and other school-
provided meals comply with federal nutritional value 
requirements (see BACKGROUND) (§ 2); 
3. allows any parent under age 17, rather than only a mother, to 
request permission from the local or regional board of education 
to attend adult education classes (§ 3); 
4. (a) requires the State Department of Education (SDE), when 
developing a plan for a statewide remote learning school, to 
narrow the range of students eligible to enroll and (b) extends the 
deadline to submit the statewide remote learning plan to 
legislative committees (§ 4); 
5. requires boards of education conducting a regular or special 
board meeting to make the agenda or any associated documents  2023HB-06880-R010757-BA.DOCX 
 
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that members will review at the meeting available for public 
inspection and post them on the board’s website (§ 5); 
6. requires the education commissioner to appoint a parent 
advisory committee and a separate teacher advisory committee 
to address SDE’s policy development and implementation (§ 6); 
7. requires in-service trainings for teachers, administrators, and 
certified pupil personnel to include emergency responses to 
students who have a seizure in a school (§ 7); 
8. requires SDE to support after school grant recipients in new, 
specified ways and allows the department to increase the amount 
it retains from the appropriation for this grant program (§ 8); 
9. extends the deadline for boards of education to begin providing 
free menstrual products in restrooms by one year, from 
September 1, 2023, to September 1, 2024 (§ 9); and 
10. expands the Connecticut Teachers’ Retirement System to cover 
teachers employed by an interdistrict magnet school operated by 
(1) a private higher education institution’s board of governors; 
(2) an SDE-approved, third-party nonprofit corporation; or (3) 
Goodwin University Magnet Schools, Inc. and Goodwin 
University Educational Services, Inc., specifically (§§ 10 & 11). 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2023 
§ 4 — ELIGIBILITY FOR STATEWIDE REMOTE L EARNING SCHOOL 
Under current law, SDE must develop a plan to create and implement 
a statewide remote learning school for grades kindergarten to 12. When 
making the plan, the department must estimate the number of 
Connecticut students who may be eligible to enroll. The bill limits 
eligibility to those Connecticut students who are unable to attend school 
in-person due to a medical condition or vaccination status.  
The bill also extends the deadline for submitting the plan, draft 
requests for proposals, and any legislation recommendations from July  2023HB-06880-R010757-BA.DOCX 
 
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1, 2023, to January 1, 2024. By law, SDE must submit these items to the 
Appropriations and Education committees.  
§ 6 — PARENT AND TEACHER ADVISORY COMMIT TEES 
The bill creates advisory committee duties, membership 
requirements, term length, and compensation. 
Duties  
Under the bill, both the parent advisory committee and the teacher 
advisory committee have the following duties: 
1. advise SDE’s commissioner, administrators, and staff; 
2. hold meetings at least quarterly and at least twice in-person each 
year; 
3. make recommendations on topics determined with department 
administrators, including teacher recruitment, special education, 
testing and assessment, equitable teacher distribution, teacher 
diversity, school safety, and social and emotional learning;  
4. submit annual reports summarizing the committee’s work to 
SDE; and  
5. consult with department administrators on the report or any 
recommendations produced, as needed. 
Membership 
The bill requires the committees to each have at least 10 members. 
The education commissioner must appoint the members from a pool of 
applications submitted to SDE using an application process she 
determines. When appointing members, the commissioner must aim to 
create committees that represent the (1) diversity of Connecticut’s 
teachers and students and (2) areas of expertise designated by 
department administrators. She must also consult with any existing 
parent advisory committee and teacher advisory committee.  
The commissioner must only appoint members who have the 
following qualifications:  2023HB-06880-R010757-BA.DOCX 
 
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1. an understanding of current issues in public education; 
2. experience working in educational policy; 
3. either an exceptional instructional practice with an ability to 
engage students as a teacher, or a demonstrated history of 
holding parent leadership roles in schools or advocacy groups; 
and 
4. applied to SDE’s Talent Office for membership on one of these 
committees. 
Teacher Advisory Committee Members. For the teacher 
committee, the members must also be regular or special education 
teachers in Connecticut. At least five of them must have also been 
members of the Connecticut Teacher of the Year Council as a finalist or 
semifinalist in any year. 
Parent Advisory Committee Members. For the parent committee, 
the members must also include members who represent urban, 
suburban, and rural school districts and elementary, middle, and high 
schools.  
Term Length 
Under the bill, for the initial appointments to both committees, at 
least five members of each committee serve a one-year term from the 
appointment date, and the remaining five members serve a two-year 
term. After the initial terms expire, members must be appointed for two-
year terms from the date of appointment. 
The bill allows members to be appointed for more than one term but 
requires them to reapply for each new term. It also requires members to 
continue to serve until their successors are appointed. The education 
commissioner must fill any vacancy that occurs before a term’s 
expiration by choosing from the committee’s existing applicant pool. 
The new member then serves for the balance of the unexpired term. 
Compensation  2023HB-06880-R010757-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill requires the parent and teacher advisory groups’ members to 
serve without compensation, but SDE must reimburse for the following, 
if funds are available: 
1. members’ expenses necessarily incurred in performing their 
duties and 
2. local or regional board of educations’ payments to substitute 
teachers who cover for teachers who are members of an advisory 
group, while performing advisory committee duties. 
§ 7 — IN-SERVICE TRAINING TOPIC 
By law, boards of education must have an in-service training 
program for their teachers, administrators, and certified pupil 
personnel; paraprofessional and noncertified employees may also 
participate voluntarily. Current law requires training on eight topics, 
and the bill adds a ninth: emergency response to students who 
experience a seizure in a school. This training must at least include (1) 
recognizing seizure signs and symptoms, (2) appropriate steps for 
seizure first aid, (3) information about seizure action plans for students, 
and (4) administering seizure rescue medication or prescribed Vagus 
Nerve Stimulator magnet electrical stimulation for those authorized to 
administer medication under state law. 
§ 8 — SUPPORT FOR AFTER SCHOOL GRANT REC IPIENTS 
By law, SDE may administer an after school grant program to support 
programs for students in grades kindergarten through 12 that offer 
educational, enrichment, and recreational activities for children and 
have a parent involvement component. Local and regional boards of 
education, municipalities, and nonprofit organizations are eligible 
recipients (CGS § 10-16x(a)). 
Current law requires SDE to give after school grant recipients 
technical assistance, evaluation, program monitoring, professional 
development, and accreditation support. The bill requires the 
department to collaborate with regional educational service centers to 
give the recipients (and, for some forms, applicants) more specific and  2023HB-06880-R010757-BA.DOCX 
 
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targeted forms of support by doing the following: 
1. monitoring and evaluating programs and activities, 
2. conducting a comprehensive evaluation of programs’ 
effectiveness, 
3. implementing risk assessments, 
4. providing technical assistance and training to eligible applicants, 
and 
5. ensuring program activities are aligned with state academic 
standards. 
The bill also allows SDE to increase the percentage of appropriated 
grant funds it retains, from 4% to 7.5%, to provide this support.  
§§ 10 & 11 — ADDITIONS TO THE TEACHERS’ RETIREMENT 
SYSTEM 
By law, teachers employed at a “public school,” as defined in state 
law, may participate in the Connecticut Teachers’ Retirement System 
(TRS). The bill adds to the definition of “public school” any interdistrict 
magnet school that is operated by (1) a private higher education 
institution’s board of governors or (2) an SDE-approved, third-party 
nonprofit corporation, so long as the magnet school is classified as a 
public school by the Teachers’ Retirement Board (TRB). 
The bill also requires the TRB to (1) classify as public schools all 
schools operated by Goodwin University Magnet Schools, Inc. and 
Goodwin University Educational Services, Inc. and (2) admit each 
teacher employed at them. 
BACKGROUND 
Legislative History 
The House referred the bill (File 590) to the Appropriations 
Committee, which reported a substitute that eliminates provisions (1) 
requiring, rather than allowing, SDE to allocate funds to the State 
Educational Resource Center (SERC) and (2) remov ing certain  2023HB-06880-R010757-BA.DOCX 
 
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restrictions and state oversight on SERC real estate, contracting, and 
procurement transactions.  
Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment (PPRA) 
PPRA, in part, gives parents and guardians the right to inspect 
instructional material used by the school district as part of their 
student’s educational curriculum (excluding academic tests and 
assessments) (20 U.S.C. § 1232h). 
Federal Nutritional Meal Requirements 
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has established nutritional 
standards for the national school lunch and breakfast programs (7 C.F.R. 
Parts 210 and 220). 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Education Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 44 Nay 0 (03/24/2023) 
 
Appropriations Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 53 Nay 0 (05/01/2023)