Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB1935 House Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    81R22236 KSD-D
 By: Villarreal, Guillen, Rodriguez H.B. No. 1935
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 1935:
 By: Brown of Brazos C.S.H.B. No. 1935


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the establishment of the Texas Adult Career Education
 Grant Program to support community-based initiatives that assist
 unemployed and underemployed adults in receiving postsecondary
 education necessary to obtain employment in local, high-demand
 occupations.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Chapter 403, Government Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter O to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER O.  OTHER PROGRAMS ADMINISTERED BY COMPTROLLER
 Sec. 403.351.  TEXAS ADULT CAREER EDUCATION GRANT PROGRAM.
 (a)  In this section, "nonprofit organization" means an
 organization exempt from federal income taxation under Section
 501(a), Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as an organization described
 by Section 501(c)(3) of that code.
 (b)  The comptroller shall establish and administer the
 Texas Adult Career Education Grant Program to provide grants to
 eligible nonprofit organizations that apply to the comptroller in
 the manner prescribed by the comptroller.  The purpose of the
 program is to provide grants to enable eligible nonprofit
 organizations, in partnership with public junior colleges, to
 administer community-based initiatives that:
 (1)  are designed to provide unemployed and
 underemployed adults with the postsecondary education necessary to
 obtain living-wage careers in high-demand occupations in the local
 community; and
 (2)  use methodologies proven to achieve measurable
 results in developing the skill sets of unemployed and
 underemployed adults to enable those persons and their families to
 achieve financial independence.
 (c)  To be eligible for a grant under this section, a
 nonprofit organization must:
 (1)  be governed by a board or other governing
 structure that includes recognized community leaders of
 broad-based community organizations and members of the local
 business community; and
 (2)  demonstrate to the satisfaction of the comptroller
 that the organization's programs have achieved the following
 measures of success among program participants to the extent
 applicable to the types of programs conducted or to be conducted by
 the organization:
 (A)  above average completion of developmental
 education among public junior college students;
 (B)  above average persistence rates among public
 junior college students;
 (C)  above average certificate or degree
 completion rates within a three-year period among first-time
 demographically comparable public junior college students;
 (D)  increased reading and mathematics
 performance;
 (E)  employment at an average full-time starting
 wage that is:
 (i)  at least 50 percent of the local median
 household income; and
 (ii)  equal to or greater than the
 prevailing wage for the occupation entered; and
 (F)  increased tax receipts and decreased
 reliance on public assistance as a result of employment
 opportunities created through program participation sufficient to
 offset the amount of public money used to finance the
 organization's programs.
 (d) A grant received under this section may be used only:
 (1) to support programs that:
 (A)  prepare unemployed or underemployed adults
 for career employment in private and public sector jobs that are
 identified by local businesses as being in high demand and that
 provide a living wage, health benefits, and opportunities for
 career advancement;
 (B)  assist unemployed or underemployed adults in
 earning transferable degree credits at public junior colleges;
 (C)  provide unemployed or underemployed adults
 with an educational path to the completion of a certificate or
 degree program at a public junior college that is based on each
 individual's academic need at the time of enrollment, including
 adult education, high school equivalency certificate preparation,
 literacy and English as a second language classes, developmental
 education, and transferable degree credit course work; and
 (D)  provide unemployed or underemployed adults
 with child care, counseling, case management, mentoring,
 transportation, emergency assistance, financial assistance toward
 the cost of tuition, fees, and books, and other assistance; and
 (2)  as state matching funds used to match local public
 or private funding to support programs described by Subdivision
 (1).
 (e)  From grant money received by a nonprofit organization
 under this section, the organization may not spend more than $3,000
 in a calendar year on a single individual receiving assistance
 under a program described by Subsection (d)(1).
 (f)  The comptroller shall adopt rules for the
 administration of this section.
 SECTION 2. As soon as practicable after the effective date
 of this Act, the comptroller of public accounts shall adopt rules
 for the administration of the Texas Adult Career Education Grant
 Program under Section 403.351, Government Code, as added by this
 Act.
 SECTION 3. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2009.