Rhode Island 2025 Regular Session

Rhode Island House Bill H5979 Compare Versions

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55 2025 -- H 5979
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99 S T A T E O F R H O D E I S L A N D
1010 IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY
1111 JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025
1212 ____________
1313
1414 A N A C T
1515 RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX
1616 RELIEF ACT
1717 Introduced By: Representatives Casey, Phillips, J. Brien, Giraldo, Messier, Alzate,
1818 Stewart, Felix, Slater, and O'Brien
1919 Date Introduced: February 28, 2025
2020 Referred To: House Finance
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2323 It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
2424 SECTION 1. Section 16-7.2-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-7.2 entitled "The 1
2525 Education Equity and Property Tax Relief Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: 2
2626 16-7.2-3. Permanent foundation education aid established. 3
2727 (a) Beginning in the 2012 fiscal year, the following foundation education-aid formula shall 4
2828 take effect. The foundation education aid for each district shall be the sum of the core instruction 5
2929 amount in subsection (a)(1) of this section and the amount to support high-need students in 6
3030 subsection (a)(2) of this section, which shall be multiplied by the district state-share ratio calculated 7
3131 pursuant to § 16-7.2-4 to determine the foundation aid. 8
3232 (1) The core instruction amount shall be an amount equal to a statewide, per-pupil core 9
3333 instruction amount as established by the department of elementary and secondary education, 10
3434 derived from the average of northeast regional expenditure data for the states of Rhode Island, 11
3535 Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire from the National Center for Education Statistics 12
3636 (NCES) that will adequately fund the student instructional needs as described in the basic education 13
3737 program and multiplied by the district average daily membership as defined in § 16-7-22. 14
3838 Expenditure data in the following categories: instruction and support services for students, 15
3939 instruction, general administration, school administration, and other support services from the 16
4040 National Public Education Financial Survey, as published by NCES, and enrollment data from the 17
4141 Common Core of Data, also published by NCES, will be used when determining the core 18
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4545 instruction amount. The core instruction amount will be updated annually. For the purpose of 1
4646 calculating this formula, school districts’ resident average daily membership shall exclude charter 2
4747 school and state-operated school students. 3
4848 (2) The amount to support high-need students beyond the core instruction amount shall be 4
4949 determined by: 5
5050 (i) Multiplying a student success factor of forty percent (40%) by the core instruction per-6
5151 pupil amount described in subsection (a)(1) of this section and applying that amount for each 7
5252 resident child whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of 8
5353 federal poverty guidelines, hereinafter referred to as “poverty status.” By October 1, 2022, as part 9
5454 of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to state fiscal year 2024 and thereafter, the 10
5555 department of elementary and secondary education shall develop and utilize a poverty measure that 11
5656 in the department’s assessment most accurately serves as a proxy for the poverty status referenced 12
5757 in this subsection and does not rely on the administration of school nutrition programs. The 13
5858 department shall utilize this measure in calculations pursuant to this subsection related to the 14
5959 application of the student success factor, in calculations pursuant to § 16-7.2-4 related to the 15
6060 calculation of the state share ratio, and in the formulation of estimates pursuant to subsection (b) 16
6161 below. The department may also include any recommendations which seek to mitigate any 17
6262 disruptions associated with the implementation of this new poverty measure or improve the 18
6363 accuracy of its calculation. Beginning with the FY 2024 calculation, students whose family income 19
6464 is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of federal poverty guidelines will be 20
6565 determined by participation in the supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP). The number 21
6666 of students directly certified through the department of human services shall be multiplied by a 22
6767 factor of 1.6; and 23
6868 (ii) Multiplying a multilingual learner (MLL) factor of twenty percent (20%) by the core 24
6969 instruction per-pupil amount described in subsection (a)(1) of this section, applying that amount 25
7070 for each resident child identified in the three lowest proficiency categories using widely adopted, 26
7171 independent standards and assessments in accordance with subsection (f)(1) of this section and as 27
7272 identified by the commissioner and defined by regulations of the council on elementary and 28
7373 secondary education. Local education agencies shall report annually to the department of 29
7474 elementary and secondary education by September 1, outlining the planned and prior year use of 30
7575 all funding pursuant to this subsection to provide services to MLL students in accordance with 31
7676 requirements set forth by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education. The 32
7777 department shall review the use of funds to ensure consistency with established best practices. 33
7878 (b) The department of elementary and secondary education shall provide an estimate of the 34
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8282 foundation education aid cost as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4. The estimate 1
8383 shall include the most recent data available as well as an adjustment for average daily membership 2
8484 growth or decline based on the prior year experience. 3
8585 (c) In addition, the department shall report updated figures based on the average daily 4
8686 membership as of October 1 by December 1. 5
8787 (d) Local education agencies may set aside a portion of funds received under subsection 6
8888 (a) to expand learning opportunities such as after school and summer programs, full-day 7
8989 kindergarten and/or multiple pathway programs, provided that the basic education program and all 8
9090 other approved programs required in law are funded. 9
9191 (e) The department of elementary and secondary education shall promulgate such 10
9292 regulations as are necessary to implement fully the purposes of this chapter. 11
9393 (f)(1) By October 1, 2023, as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to 12
9494 state fiscal year 2025, the department of elementary and secondary education shall evaluate the 13
9595 number of students by district who qualify as multilingual learner (MLL) students and MLL 14
9696 students whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of federal 15
9797 poverty guidelines. The submission shall also include segmentation of these populations by levels 16
9898 as dictated by the WIDA multilingual learner assessment tool used as an objective benchmark for 17
9999 English proficiency. The department shall also prepare and produce expense data sourced from the 18
100100 uniform chart of accounts to recommend funding levels required to support students at the various 19
101101 levels of proficiency as determined by the WIDA assessment tool. Utilizing this information, the 20
102102 department shall recommend a funding solution to meet the needs of multilingual learners; this may 21
103103 include but not be limited to inclusion of MLL needs within the core foundation formula amount 22
104104 through one or multiple weights to distinguish different students of need or through categorical 23
105105 means. 24
106106 (2) By October 1, 2024, as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to 25
107107 state fiscal year 2026, the department of elementary and secondary education shall develop 26
108108 alternatives to identify students whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent 27
109109 (185%) of federal poverty guidelines through participation in state-administered programs, 28
110110 including, but not limited to, the supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP), and RIteCare 29
111111 and other programs that include the collection of required supporting documentation. The 30
112112 department may also include any recommendations that seek to mitigate any disruptions associated 31
113113 with implementation of this new poverty measure or improve the accuracy of its calculation. 32
114114 (3) The department shall also report with its annual budget request information regarding 33
115115 local contributions to education aid and compliance with §§ 16-7-23 and 16-7-24. The report shall 34
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119119 also compare these local contributions to state foundation education aid by community. The 1
120120 department shall also report compliance to each city or town school committee and city or town 2
121121 council. 3
122122 (g) The department shall review the student success factor of forty percent (40%) provided 4
123123 in subsection (a)(2) of this section to determine whether that weight ensures local education 5
124124 agencies receive the funding necessary to meet students' instructional needs. The department shall 6
125125 complete its review and report its findings to the governor, the president of the senate, and the 7
126126 speaker of the house by October 1, 2025. 8
127127 SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. 9
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134134 EXPLANATION
135135 BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
136136 OF
137137 A N A C T
138138 RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX
139139 RELIEF ACT
140140 ***
141141 This act would require a review by the department of elementary and secondary education 1
142142 of the formula components used to compute the aid needed to support high need students. 2
143143 This act would take effect upon passage. 3
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