1 of 1 SENATE DOCKET, NO. 2288 FILED ON: 1/20/2023 SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 343 The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _________________ PRESENTED BY: Pavel M. Payano _________________ To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General Court assembled: The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying bill: An Act establishing an education-to-career data center. _______________ PETITION OF: NAME:DISTRICT/ADDRESS :Pavel M. PayanoFirst Essex 1 of 10 SENATE DOCKET, NO. 2288 FILED ON: 1/20/2023 SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 343 By Mr. Payano, a petition (accompanied by bill, Senate, No. 343) of Pavel M. Payano for legislation to establish an education-to-career data center. Education. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _______________ In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court (2023-2024) _______________ An Act establishing an education-to-career data center. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows: 1 SECTION 1. The General Laws are hereby amended by inserting after chapter 7D the 2following chapter:- 3 Chapter 7E. Education-to-Career Data Center 4 Section 1. Definitions 5 As used in this chapter, the following words shall, unless the context clearly requires 6otherwise, have the following meanings:— 7 “Board”, the board of the Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data Center established 8pursuant to section 4. 9 “Center”, the Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data Center established pursuant to 10section 2. 11 “Data element”, a variable or field in an administrative database or record. 2 of 10 12 “Data provider”, the public agency that provides data elements to the data system. 13 “Data requests in the public interest”, requests for data that enable families, educators, 14public agencies, researchers and policymakers to make appropriate choices and investments or 15provide appropriate interventions to improve educational and workforce outcomes for all 16individuals. 17 “Data system”, the Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data System established pursuant 18to section 2. 19 “De-identification”, the removal of an individual’s name, address, employer, date of 20birth, social security number, driver’s license number and other personal information from a data 21record. Data shall be considered “de-identified” only if satisfying the standard for de- 22identification set forth in 45 CFR § 164.514(b)(1) or (2) and 34 CFR § 99.31(b)(1). 23 “Longitudinal data set”, a data set containing information on individuals from various 24public and private sources over multiple periods of time. 25 “Research-practice partnerships”, collaborative, long-term relationships between 26researchers and practitioners that are designed to increase educational or workforce outcomes. 27 “Secure data enclave”, a secure, remotely accessible environment to aggregate and 28analyze personal data, as set forth in M.G.L c. 66A, without transferring the underlying data. 29 “Strategic initiative”, a major initiative to increase educational or workforce outcomes 30that receives funding from the commonwealth over multiple years or entails substantial changes 31to policy or practice. 32 Section 2. The Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data Center 3 of 10 33 (a) The Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data Center is hereby established within the 34Executive Office of Technology Services and Security. The center’s purpose is to build and 35operate the Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data System pursuant to section 3. 36 (b) The center shall be headed by an executive director who shall report to the secretary 37of information technology services and security. In selecting the executive director, the secretary 38shall consult with the board. The executive director shall be the chief executive, administrative 39and operational officer of the center; shall direct and supervise the administrative affairs and the 40general management of the center and shall attend the meetings of the board. The executive 41director may appoint and remove such employees deemed necessary to perform the duties of the 42center. 43 (c) The center may receive funding for its operations from state appropriations, federal 44grants, and any other grants or contributions from public agencies or other entities. 45 (d) The duties of the center shall be to: 46 (1) Oversee and maintain the data system. 47 (2) Develop de-identification processes. 48 (3) Regularly audit and ensure compliance with the Family Education Rights and Privacy 49Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1232g, the Federal Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, the Fair Information Practices 50Act, M.G.L. c. 66A, the state unemployment insurance statute, M.G.L. c. 151A, § 46, the 51security breach statute, M.G.L. c 93H, the workforce development statute, M.G.L c. 23H § 6(b), 52and all other state and federal data privacy laws without limitation. 4 of 10 53 (4) Work with public agencies to define statewide education, workforce development, 54and employment metrics and ensure the integrity and quality of data collected. 55 (5) Produce standard reports and build and maintain data query tools, reducing 56duplication of effort for agency staff and providing the public with one location to access 57education and workforce data. 58 (6) Facilitate research requests, ensuring that research complies with all state and federal 59law related to individual privacy, including by building and maintaining a secure data enclave. 60 (e) Pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1232g, the center shall be considered an authorized 61representative of the state department of elementary and secondary education, the state 62department of higher education, and the state department of unemployment assistance under 63applicable state and federal statutes for purposes of accessing and compiling student record and 64wage data for research purposes. 65 Section 3. Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data System 66 (a) There is hereby established the Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data System for 67the purpose of providing reliable and actionable information on education and workforce 68outcomes. Information contained in the data system shall be used to: 69 (1) address disparities in educational and workforce outcomes; 70 (2) support student guidance and informed student and family decision-making; 71 (3) foster continuous improvement and accountability for educational and workforce 72outcomes; and 5 of 10 73 (4) ensure efficient utilization of public and private resources devoted to furthering 74educational and workforce outcomes. 75 (b) The data system shall employ technologies to accomplish the following: 76 (1) enable the ongoing creation, management, and monitoring of longitudinal data sets in 77a manner that protects individual privacy; 78 (2) facilitate utilization of longitudinal data sets and reduce the administrative burden on 79public agency staff responsible for producing reports and fulfilling data requests in a timely 80manner, including by providing a public platform for querying the data and building custom 81reports; 82 (3) provide access to actionable data for use by students, families, counselors, educators, 83and workforce development providers; and 84 (4) enable academic, nonprofit and governmental research to enhance the development of 85policies focused on educational and workforce outcomes. 86 (c) At least once per year, the following public agencies shall provide data to the data 87system: 88 (1) department of early education and care; 89 (2) department of elementary and secondary education; 90 (3) department of higher education; 91 (4) department of unemployment assistance; and 6 of 10 92 (5) Any other public agencies that the executive director, subject to the review of the 93board, identifies as appropriate for ongoing incorporation into the data system. 94 (d) The executive director may incorporate additional data elements from any public 95agency or private entity into the data system. 96 (e) Ownership of data provided to the data system shall be retained by the providing 97entity. 98 (f) At all times, the data system shall act in furtherance of the public good and shall be 99held accountable thereto. 100 Section 4. Board of the Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data Center 101 (a) The Massachusetts Education-to-Career Data Center shall be governed by a 15- 102member board composed of the secretary of information technology services and security or 103their designee, who shall serve as chair; the secretary of education or their designee; the secretary 104of labor and workforce development or their designee; the secretary of health and human 105services or their designee; the commissioner of early education and care or their designee; the 106commissioner of elementary and secondary education or their designee; the commissioner of 107higher education or their designee; the director of the department of unemployment assistance or 108their designee; the undersecretary of housing and community development or their designee; 109three members of the public appointed by the speaker of the house; and three members of the 110public appointed by the senate president. 111 (b) In appointing members of the public to the board, the speaker and senate president 112shall strive to ensure that the governing board represents the racial and ethnic diversity of the 7 of 10 113commonwealth and includes persons with experience in data security, quantitative research and 114helping students and families consume education data. A member of the public shall serve a term 115of no more than three years and shall not serve more than two consecutive terms or more than six 116years. For the first appointments of members of the public, to create staggered terms, the speaker 117and senate president shall appoint one member of the public to serve a one-year term, one 118member of the public to serve a two-year term, and one member of the public to serve a three- 119year term. 120 (c) The governing board shall develop and revise, from time to time, a self-governance 121process to ensure that it, among other actions, convenes on a regular basis, but no less than 122quarterly; and posts and archives video recording of all board meetings on the center’s public 123website. 124 (d) The governing board shall be responsible for the strategic direction and 125implementation of the data system, including, but not limited to: 126 (1) ensuring the data system is serving its intended purpose by providing an annual report 127to the Governor and the legislature, including the number of research requests approved and 128denied, the number of unique visitors to online data access tools maintained by the center, an 129annual budget recommendation for the center, and legislative recommendations to adjust the data 130system’s mission or operation to improve educational and workforce outcomes; 131 (2) establishing a research agenda that balances strategic initiatives, research priorities for 132data providers, legislative requests, research-practice partnerships, and data requests from 133outside researchers and the public; 8 of 10 134 (3) adopting best practice policies related to privacy and security, including creating 135policies, in accordance with federal and state law and regulation, related to data de-identification 136as well as governing the collection and use of personally identifiable information from data 137providers, which may include the creation of an “opt out” policy for students and families; 138 (4) adopting and adjusting as necessary a data dictionary, data standards, and security 139protocols to ensure interoperability between the data system and other state data systems using 140the same source data; 141 (5) expanding the collected data set by approving additional data providers or requesting 142additional data points from data providers, consistent with all applicable laws; and 143 (6) creating, and revising from time to time, a data request process for use by researchers 144and policymakers, that: 145 (i) maintains compliance with federal and state laws to protect individual privacy, 146including by allowing any data provider to exclude its data elements from a request if the data 147provider determines that access to the data element conflicts with its statutory requirements to 148protect individual privacy; and giving data providers the opportunity to review and approve the 149public release of research products derived from their data elements to ensure that the research 150products conform with statutory requirements to protect individual privacy; and 151 (ii) facilitates the timely approval of data requests in the public interest, as defined 152pursuant to section 1, to generate information that is not otherwise available via public query 153tools or published reports; and 9 of 10 154 (iii) provides a clear and publicly accessible record of all data requests approved, denied, 155or withdrawn, including by issuing a clear written explanation for the determination when a 156request is denied. 157 Section 5. Strategic Initiatives 158 (a) The board may determine that a strategic initiative of the commonwealth merits 159enhanced data collection or evaluation, or both. 160 (b) At such time, the executive director shall appoint a special committee with two co- 161chairs. One co-chair shall be a member of the board that represents an agency involved in the 162strategic initiative or their designee. The second co-chair shall be an academic researcher who is 163not principally employed by the commonwealth. The special committee shall include at least five 164members, inclusive of the co-chairs. At least three of the members shall have expertise in 165statistical methods for program and policy evaluation. 166 (c) Over the life of the strategic initiative, the special committee shall recommend 167evaluation methods. To the extent that these methods require additional data elements, the 168executive director and board shall direct said agencies to prioritize the integration of these data 169elements into the data system. 170 Section 6. Research-Practice Partnerships 171 A municipality or group of municipalities of the commonwealth may create research- 172practice partnerships to improve their understanding of education and workforce outcomes at the 173local or regional level. The center shall support these efforts by developing policies and 10 of 10 174procedures to link local data to the data system, in compliance with all state and federal laws to 175protect individual privacy. 176 SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon its passage.