Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas House Bill HB2485 Comm Sub / Analysis

                    SESSION OF 2024
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON HOUSE BILL NO. 2485
As Amended by House Committee on K-12 
Education Budget
Brief*
HB 2485, as amended, would amend certain enrollment 
determination criteria in the Kansas School Equity and 
Enhancement Act (KSEEA) to require school district 
enrollment to be determined using the current or preceding 
school year beginning school year 2025-2026. Provisions of 
the bill would become effective and be in force from and after 
July 1, 2025, and its publication in the statute book.
Enrollment Determination for State Aid
Under current requirements in KSEEA, school districts 
and the State Department of Education (KSDE) use the 
student enrollment count from the preceding year to 
determine state aid entitlements for the current school year. 
The law further allows any school district that experienced a 
decrease in enrollment between the second-preceding school 
year and the preceding school year would be permitted to use 
the second-preceding year enrollment count.
The law also provides enrollment determination 
provisions specific to school districts that receive federal 
impact aid for the enrollment of military students that 
experience a decrease in enrollment between the second- 
preceding school year and the preceding school year. For 
those school districts, they are permitted to determine 
enrollment using either the second-preceding school year 
enrollment count or the arithmetic mean of the preceding, 
____________________
*Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research 
Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental 
note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at 
http://www.kslegislature.org second-year preceding, and third-year preceding school year 
enrollment counts.
Definition of Enrollment
The bill would amend the definition of “enrollment” under 
the KSEEA to require KSDE and school districts to use the 
greater of the preceding year enrollment for kindergarten and 
grades one through 12 on September 20, as well as current 
year preschool-aged at-risk students or the current year 
enrollment count for these same student groups.
Impact Aid
The bill would also amend the enrollment determination 
requirements specific to those school districts that receive 
federal impact aid. Under the bill, such districts could 
determine enrollment using the current year enrollment count; 
the preceding year enrollment count; or the arithmetic mean 
of the preceding, second-preceding, and third-preceding year 
enrollment counts.
[Note: 2022 HB 2567 amended the KSEEA calculation 
prescribed for local foundation aid by removing federal impact 
aid from the formula.]
Background
The bill was introduced by Representatives Thomas and 
K. Williams. [Note: A companion bill, SB 386, has been 
introduced in the Senate.]
The bill was referred to the House Committee on K-12 
Education Budget, received a hearing on January 22, 2024, 
was withdrawn from the House Committee on February 16, 
2024, and referred to the House Committee on 
Appropriations. The bill was later re-referred to the House 
Committee on K-12 Education Budget on February 19, 2024.
2- 2485 House Committee on K-12 Education Budget
In the House Committee hearing on January 22, 2024,, 
three superintendents (USDs 115, 230, and 335) and a 
school board member (USD 230) provided proponent 
testimony on the bill, as introduced. The representative of 
USD 115 (Nemaha Central Schools) addressed historical and 
recent area school district building closures and the need to 
update the school finance formula to assist districts who 
receive students displaced by school closures. The 
representative of USD 335 (Jackson Heights Schools) 
outlined the impacts created by the closure of a nearby 
district’s school building in February 2023. USD 335 currently 
has 110 students who reside in USD 113 attending its 
schools; 90 of those students were previously attending the 
closed school. Under the existing enrollment count 
calculation, USD 335 carries the cost of the increased 
enrollment without corresponding funding (e.g., transportation 
services and supports and teacher and support staff). The 
representatives of USD 230 (Spring Hill Schools) addressed 
the financial hardship the current distribution (preceding 
year’s enrollment) places on growing districts, including an 
impact on the local tax rate.
Written-only proponent testimony was submitted by the 
superintendents of USD 233 (Olathe Public Schools) and 
USD 380 (Vermillion) and a finance representative for USD 
230. These proponents addressed allowing more timely and 
fair counts to provide services and the need to accommodate 
the educational needs of communities impacted by school 
building closures.
Neutral testimony was provided by a representative of 
the Kansas Association of School Boards that noted support 
for the current year enrollment option for growing districts and 
asked for consideration to allow the two-preceding year “look 
back” for districts experiencing the impacts of enrollment 
declines. The representative requested the removal of 
enrollment count provisions specific to districts with 
attendance center closures in the preceding year.
3- 2485 Neutral written-only testimony submitted by the 
superintendent of USD 445 (Coffeyville Public Schools) 
requested consideration for phased-in implementation, such 
as allowing school districts three enrollment count options in 
FY 2025 and two options (current or preceding year) in FY 
2026.
Opponent testimony was provided by the 
superintendents of USD 396 (Douglass Public Schools) and 
USD 453 (Leavenworth), who stated the bill would impact 
school district budget and hiring decisions. The USD 396 
representative noted the inability to stabilize enrollment over 
multiple years would be detrimental to rural districts and 
those experiencing declining enrollment. The USD 453 
representative noted districts are making hiring decisions this 
spring, and immediate implementation of modifications to 
enrollment count determination for funding could impact those 
decisions and the ability for a district to correctly plan for its 
budget using revenues calculated with the changes proposed 
in the bill.
Written-only opponent testimony was submitted by a 
representative of USD 259 (Wichita Public Schools). The 
testimony indicated the district has negotiated a two-year 
agreement with its teachers and support staff based on the 
current school finance formula (enrollment count 
determination).
On March 4, 2024, the House Committee amended the 
bill to:
●Remove a provision that would have required 
school districts that closed any school building that 
was an attendance center in the preceding school 
year to use only its current year enrollment count;
●Delay the bill’s implementation date by one year 
(provisions would be effective beginning in school 
year 2025-2026); and
●Make technical amendments.
4- 2485 Fiscal Information
A fiscal note on the bill, as amended by House 
Committee, was not immediately available.
Education; Kansas School Equity and Enhancement Act; enrollment count 
determination; current year; preceding year
5- 2485