Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB986 Introduced / Bill

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                    83R9359 T
 By: Duncan S.B. No. 986


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 Relating to the powers and duties of the board of regents of the
 Texas Tech University System.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter A, is amended to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS
 SECTION 2.  Section 109.001, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  The board is authorized, upon terms and conditions
 acceptable to it, to accept, retain in depositories of its
 choosing, and administer gifts, grants, or donations of any kind,
 from any source, for use by the system or any of the component
 institutions of the system.
 SECTION 3.  Sections 109.21, 109.22, and 109.23, are
 transferred to Subchapter A, Chapter 109, as amended by this Act,
 redesignated as Sections 109.002, 109.003, 109.004, Education
 Code, and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 109.002 [109.21].  BOARD OF REGENTS. The government,
 control, and direction of the policies of the university system and
 the component institutions are vested in a board of nine regents,
 who shall be appointed by the governor with the advice and consent
 of the senate.
 Sec. 109.003 [109.22].  BOARD MEMBERS: TERMS, VACANCIES.
 [Except for the initial appointees, m] Members will hold office for
 [of] terms of six years expiring on January 31 of odd-numbered
 years. [In making the initial appointments, the governor shall
 designate three for terms expiring in 1971, three for terms
 expiring in 1973, and three for terms expiring in 1975]. Any
 vacancy shall be filled for the unexpired portion of the term by
 appointment by the governor with the advice and consent of the
 senate.
 Sec. 109.004 [109.23].  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER:
 SELECTION, DUTIES. The board shall appoint [provide] a chief
 executive officer, who shall devote his attention to the executive
 management of the university system and who shall be directly
 accountable to the board for the conduct of the university system.
 The board, when required by law to be the governing body of any
 other state educational institution or facility, shall also direct
 the chief executive officer to be directly responsible for the
 executive management of that other institution or facility.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapters B and C are amended to read as
 follows:
 SUBCHAPTER B. [ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS]
 [SUBCHAPTER C.] POWERS AND DUTIES
 SECTION 5.  Sections 109.41, 109.42, 109.48, AND 109.54, are
 transferred to Subchapter B, Chapter 109, as amended by this Act,
 redesignated as Sections 109.005, 109.006, 109.007 and 109.008,
 Education Code, and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 109.005 [109.41].  EMINENT DOMAIN. The board of
 regents has the power of eminent domain to acquire land and
 improvements needed to carry out the purposes of the university
 system and the component institutions.
 Sec. 109.006 [109.42].  RESIDENCES FOR CHANCELLOR AND
 PRESIDENTS. The board may purchase a house or may purchase land and
 construct a house suitable for the residence of the chancellor of
 the university system or a president of [the] a component
 university.
 Sec. 109.007 [109.48].  UTILITIES EASEMENTS. On terms,
 conditions, stipulations, and compensation as determined by the
 board, the board may convey, dedicate, or use any other appropriate
 method of conveyance to grant, convey, or dedicate rights, title,
 rights-of-way, or easements involving or in connection with the
 furnishing or providing of electricity, water, sewage disposal,
 natural gas, telephone, telegraph, or other utility service on,
 over, or through the campuses of the Texas Tech University System
 and the component institutions [in Lubbock County]. The chairman
 of the board may execute and deliver conveyances or dedications on
 behalf of [Texas Tech University] the university system and the
 component institutions.
 Sec. 109.008 [109.54].  MANAGEMENT OF LANDS. The board has
 the sole and exclusive management and control of lands set aside and
 appropriated to or acquired by the institutions under its
 governance. The board may lease, sell, exchange, acquire, dispose
 of, and otherwise manage, control, and use the lands in any manner
 and at prices and under terms and conditions the board deems best
 for the interest of the institutions. However, the board may not
 sell any of the original main campus of Texas Tech University
 located in Lubbock, Lubbock County, unless the sale is approved by
 act of the legislature. No grazing lease shall be made for a period
 of more than five years.
 SECTION 6.  Chapter 109, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter E.
 SUBCHAPTER E. TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
 SECTION 7.  Sections 109.01, 109.43, 109.45, and 109.52 are
 transferred to Subchapter E, Chapter 109, as amended by this Act,
 redesignated as Sections 109.01, 109.02, 109.03, and 109.04 and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 109.01.  TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY. Texas Tech University
 is a coeducational institution of higher education located in the
 city of Lubbock.
 Sec. 109.02 [109.43.]  DORMITORIES: RULES AND REGULATIONS.
 The board may adopt rules and regulations it deems advisable
 requiring any class or classes of students to reside in university
 dormitories or other buildings.
 Sec. 109.03 [109.45].  [CITY] MUSEUM. (a) The board may
 establish [rent, lease, or convey, for a sum of money to be
 determined by the board, a part of the campus, not to exceed four
 acres, to the city of Lubbock for the sole purpose of building, with
 bonds or current city taxes, and maintaining with city tax money,] a
 history, science, and art museum.
 (b)  The board may provide [rent or lease] a building or any
 part of a building [on the parcel of land to the city of Lubbock] for
 the sole purpose of maintaining a history, science, and art museum
 [for a sum of money] to [be determined by the board].
 Sec. 109.04 [109.52].  DONATIONS, GIFTS, GRANTS, AND
 ENDOWMENTS. The board may accept donations, gifts, grants, and
 endowments for Texas Tech University to be held for the benefit of
 the institution [in trust] and administered by the board.
 SUBCHAPTER F. MINERAL DEVELOPMENT IN UNIVERSITY LAND
 SECTION 8.  Sections 109.61 through 109.80, Chapter 109,
 Education Code, are redesignated as Sections 109.020 through
 109.040, Education Code and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 109.020. [109.61].  MINERAL LEASES; DISPOSITION OF
 PROCEEDS. (a) The board may lease for oil, gas, sulphur, or other
 mineral development to the highest bidder at public auction all or
 part of the lands under the exclusive control of the board owned by
 the State of Texas and acquired for the use of Texas Tech University
 and its divisions.
 (b)  Any money received by virtue of this section shall be
 deposited in a special fund managed by the board to be known as the
 Texas Tech University special mineral fund. Money in the fund is
 considered to be institutional funds, as defined by Section 51.009,
 of the university and is to be used exclusively for the university
 [and its branches and divisions]. All deposits in and investments
 of the funds shall be made in accordance with Section 51.0031.
 Section 34.017, Natural Resources Code, does not apply to the
 funds.
 Sec. 109.021 [109.62].  MAJORITY OF BOARD TO ACT. A
 majority of the board has power to act in all cases under this
 subchapter except as otherwise provided in this subchapter.
 Sec. 109.022 [109.63].  SUBDIVISION OF LAND; TITLES. (a)
 The board may have the lands surveyed or subdivided into tracts,
 lots, or blocks which, in their judgment, will be most conducive and
 convenient to an advantageous sale or lease of oil, gas, sulphur, or
 other minerals in and under and that may be produced from the lands;
 and the board may make maps and plats which it deems necessary to
 carry out the purposes of this subchapter.
 (b)  The board may obtain authentic abstracts of title to the
 lands from time to time as it deems necessary and may take necessary
 steps to perfect a merchantable title to the lands.
 Sec. 109.023 [109.64].  SALE OF LEASES; ADVERTISEMENTS;
 PAYMENTS. (a) Whenever in the opinion of the board there is a
 demand for the purchase of oil, gas, sulphur, or other mineral
 leases on any tract or part of any tract of land which can be [will]
 reasonably expected to result in [insure] an advantageous sale, the
 board shall place the oil, gas, sulphur, or other mineral leases on
 the land on the market in a tract or tracts, or any part of a tract,
 which the board may designate.
 (b)  The board shall have advertised a brief description of
 the land from which the oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals is
 proposed to be leased. The advertisement shall be made by
 publishing [inserting] in two or more papers of general circulation
 in this state, and in addition, the board may, in its discretion,
 cause the advertisement to be placed in an oil and gas journal
 published in and out of the state. The board may also mail copies of
 the proposals to the county judge of the county where the lands are
 located and to other persons the board believes would be
 interested. The board may specify that publication of the offer by
 electronic means, such as internet posting, shall satisfy the
 requirement for publication of the advertisement in two or more
 papers of general circulation in this state.
 (c)  The board may sell the lease or leases to the highest
 bidder at public auction [at the university in Lubbock at any hour
 between 10 a. m. and 5 p. m.]
 (d)  The highest bidder shall pay to the board on the day of
 the sale 25 percent of the bonus bid, and the balance of the bid
 shall be paid within 24 hours after the bidder is notified that the
 bid has been accepted. Payments shall be made in cash, certified
 check, [or] cashier's check or electronic payment, as the board
 directs. The failure of the bidder to pay the balance of the amount
 bid will forfeit to the board the 25 percent of the bonus bid paid.
 Sec. 109.024 [109.65].  SEPARATE BIDS; MINIMUM ROYALTY;
 DELAY RENTAL. (a) A separate bid shall be made for each tract or
 subdivision of a tract.
 (b)  No bid shall be accepted which offers a royalty of less
 than one-eighth of the gross production of oil, gas, sulphur, and
 other minerals in the land bid upon.  [And] The board may increase
 this minimum royalty [may be increased] at the discretion of the
 board.
 (c)  Every bid shall carry the obligation to pay an amount
 not less than $ 5[1] per acre for delay in drilling or development.
 The amount shall be fixed by the board in advance of the
 advertisement. The delay rental [amount fixed] shall be paid every
 year for five years unless in the meantime production in paying
 quantities is had upon the land or the land is released by the
 lessee.
 Sec. 109.025 [109.66].  REJECTION OF BIDS; WITHDRAWAL OF
 LAND. The board may reject any and all bids and may withdraw any
 land advertised for lease.
 Sec. 109.026 [109.67].  ACCEPTANCE; CONDITIONS AND
 PROVISIONS OF LEASE. (a) If, in the opinion of the board, [any one
 of] the highest bidder[s] has offered a reasonable and proper price
 for any tract, which is not less than the price set by the board, the
 lands advertised may be leased for oil, gas, sulphur, and other
 mineral purposes under the terms of this section and subject to
 regulations prescribed by the board which are not inconsistent with
 the provisions of this section. In the event no bid is accepted by
 the board at public auction, any subsequent procedure for the sale
 of the leases shall be in the manner prescribed in the preceding
 sections.
 (b)  No lease shall be made by the board which will permit the
 drilling or mining for oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals within
 500 [300] feet of any building or structure on the land without the
 consent of the board. In making any lease on any experimental
 station or farm, the lease shall provide that the operations for
 oil, gas, and other minerals shall not in any way interfere with use
 of the land for university purposes and shall not cause the
 abandonment of the property or its use for experimental farm
 purposes. The lease shall also provide that the lessee operating
 the property shall drill and carry on its [his] operations in such a
 way as not to interfere with use's [cause the abandonment] of the
 property for university purposes, and the leased property shall be
 subject to the use by the state for all university purposes[, and
 the board shall continue to operate the university].
 Sec. 109.027 [109.68].  ACCEPTANCE AND FILING OF BIDS;
 YEARLY PAYMENTS; TERMINATION OF LEASE. (a) If the board determines
 that a satisfactory bid has been received for the oil, gas, sulphur,
 or other mineral lands, it shall accept the bid and reject all
 others and shall file the accepted bid in the general land office.
 (b)  [Whenever the royalties shall amount to as much as the
 yearly payments fixed by the board, the yearly payments may be
 discontinued].
 [(c)]  If before the expiration of five years oil, gas,
 sulphur, or other minerals have not been produced in paying
 quantities, the lease shall terminate unless extended as provided
 in Sections 109.029 [109.70] and 109.030 [109.71] of this code.
 Sec. 109.028 [109.69].  AWARD AND FILING OF LEASE. If the
 board determines that a satisfactory bid has been received for the
 oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals, it shall make an award to the
 bidder offering the highest price, and a lease shall be filed in the
 general land office.
 Sec. 109.029 [109.70].  EXPLORATORY TERM OF LEASE;
 EXTENSION; OTHER PROVISIONS. (a) The exploratory term of a lease
 as determined by the board prior to the promulgation of the
 advertisement shall not exceed five years, and each lease shall
 provide that the lease will terminate at the expiration of its
 exploratory term unless by unanimous vote of the board the lease is
 extended for a period not to exceed [of] three years.
 (b)  [The lease may be extended if the board finds that there
 is a likelihood of oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals being
 discovered by the lessees, and that the lessees have proceeded with
 diligence to protect the interest of the state.] If oil, gas,
 sulphur, or other minerals are being produced in paying quantities
 from the premises, the lease shall continue in force and effect as
 long as the oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals are being so
 produced. No extension may be made by the board until the last 30
 days of the original term of the lease.
 (c)  The lease shall include additional provisions and
 regulations prescribed by the board to preserve the interest of the
 state, not inconsistent with the provisions of this subchapter.
 Sec. 109.030 [109.71].  EXTENSION OF LEASES. When in the
 discretion of the board it is deemed for the best interest of the
 state to extend a lease issued by the board, the board may by
 unanimous vote extend the lease for a period not to exceed three
 years, on the condition that the lessee shall continue to pay yearly
 rental as provided in the lease and shall comply with any additional
 terms [which] the board requires [may see fit and proper to demand].
 The board may extend the lease and execute an extension agreement.
 Sec. 109.031 [109.72].  CONTROL OF DRILLING AND PRODUCTION.
 The drilling for and the production of oil, gas, and other minerals
 from the lands shall be governed and controlled by the Railroad
 Commission of Texas and other applicable regulatory bodies which
 govern and control other fields in this state.
 Sec. 109.032 [109.73].  DRILLING OPERATIONS: SUSPENSION OF
 RENT; CONTINUANCE OF LEASE; DUTY TO PREVENT DRAINAGE. (a) If
 during the term of a lease issued under the provisions of this
 subchapter the lessee is engaged in actual drilling operations for
 the discovery of oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals, no rentals
 shall be payable as to the tract on which the operations are being
 conducted as long as the operations are proceeding in a good and
 workmanlike manner in a bona fide attempt to produce oil, gas,
 sulphur or other minerals from the well [faith].
 (b)  In the event oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals are
 discovered in paying quantities on any tract of land covered by a
 lease, then the lease as to that tract shall remain in force as long
 as oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals are produced in paying
 quantities from the tract.
 (c)  In the event of the discovery of oil, gas, sulphur, or
 other minerals on any tract covered by a lease or on any land
 adjoining the tract, the lessee shall conduct such operations as
 may be necessary to prevent drainage from the tract covered by the
 lease to properly develop the same to the extent that a reasonably
 prudent man would do under the same and similar circumstances.
 Sec. 109.033 [109.74].  TITLE TO RIGHTS PURCHASED;
 ASSIGNMENT; RELINQUISHMENT. (a) Title to all rights purchased may
 be held by the lessee [owners] as long as the area produces oil,
 gas, sulphur, or other minerals in paying quantities.
 (b)  All rights purchased may be assigned. All assignments
 shall be filed in the general land office as prescribed by rule,
 accompanied by 10 cents per acre for each acre assigned and the
 filing fee as prescribed by rule. An assignment shall not be
 effective unless filed as required by rule.
 (c)  All rights to all or any part of a leased tract may be
 released to the state at any time by recording a release instrument
 in the county or counties in which the tract is located. Releases
 shall also be filed with the chairman of the board and the general
 land office, accompanied by the filing fee prescribed by rule. A
 release shall not relieve the lessee [owner] of any obligations or
 liabilities incurred prior to the release.
 (d)  The board shall authorize the required infrastructure
 [laying of pipeline and telephone line] and the opening of roads
 deemed reasonably necessary in carrying out the purposes of this
 subchapter.
 Sec. 109.034 [109.75].  PAYMENT OF ROYALTIES; RECORDS;
 REPORT OF RECEIPTS. (a) If oil, gas, or other minerals are
 developed on any of the lands leased by the board, the royalty as
 stipulated in the sale shall be paid to the general land office in
 Austin on or before the last day of each month for the preceding
 month during the life of the rights purchased. The royalty payments
 shall be set aside as specified in Section 109.020 [109.61] and used
 as provided in that section.
 (b)  The royalty paid to the general land office shall be
 accompanied by the sworn statement of the lessee [owner], manager,
 or other authorized agent showing the gross amount of oil, gas,
 sulphur, or other minerals produced and sold off the premises and
 the market value of the minerals, together with a copy of all daily
 gauges, or vats, tanks, gas meter readings, pipeline receipts, gas
 line receipts, and other checks and memoranda of the amounts
 produced and put into pipelines, vats, tanks, or pool and gas lines
 or gas storage. The books and accounts, receipts and discharges of
 all wells, tanks, vats, pools, meters, and pipelines, and all
 contracts and other records pertaining to the production,
 transportation, sale, and marketing of the oil, gas, sulphur, or
 other minerals shall at all times be subject to inspection and
 examination by any member of the board or any duly authorized
 representative of the board.
 (c)  The commissioner of the general land office shall tender
 to the board on or before the 10th day of each month a report of all
 receipts that are collected from the lease or sale of oil, gas,
 sulphur, or other minerals and that are deposited in the special
 fund as provided by Section 109.020 [109.61] during the preceding
 month.
 Sec. 109.035 [109.76].  PROTECTION FROM DRAINAGE;
 FORFEITURE OF RIGHTS. (a) In every case where the area in which
 oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals sold is contiguous or adjacent
 to lands which are not lands belonging to and held by the
 university, the acceptance of the bid and the sale made thereby
 shall constitute an obligation of the lessee [owner] to adequately
 protect the land leased from drainage from the adjacent lands to the
 extent that a reasonably prudent operator would do under the same
 and similar circumstances.
 (b)  In cases where the area in which the oil, gas, sulphur,
 or other minerals sold is contiguous to other lands belonging to and
 held by the university which have been leased or sold at a lesser
 royalty, the lessee [owner] shall protect the land from drainage
 from the lands leased or sold for a lesser royalty.
 (c)  On failure to protect the land from drainage as provided
 in this section, the sale and all rights acquired may be forfeited
 by the board in the manner provided in Section 109.036 [109.77] of
 this code for forfeitures.
 Sec. 109.036 [109.77].  FORFEITURE AND OTHER REMEDIES;
 LIENS. (a) Leases granted under the provisions of this chapter are
 subject to forfeiture by the board by an order entered in the
 minutes of the board reciting the acts or omissions constituting a
 default and declaring a forfeiture.
 (b)  Any of the following acts or omissions constitutes a
 default:
 (1)  the failure or refusal by the lessee [owner] of the
 rights acquired under this chapter to make a payment of a sum due,
 either as rental or royalty on production, within 30 days after the
 payment becomes due;
 (2)  the making of a false return or false report
 concerning production, royalty, drilling, or mining by the lessee
 [owner] or his authorized agent;
 (3)  the failure or refusal of the lessee [owner] or his
 agent to drill an offset well or wells in good faith, as required by
 the lease;
 (4)  the refusal of the lessee [owner] or his agent to
 allow the proper authorities access to the records and other data
 pertaining to the operations authorized in this subchapter;
 (5)  the failure or refusal of the lessee [owner] or his
 authorized agent to give correct information to the proper
 authorities, or to furnish the log of any well within 30 days after
 production is found in paying quantities; or
 (6)  the violation by the lessee [owner] of any
 material term of the lease.
 (c)  The board may, if it so desires, have suit for
 forfeiture instituted through the attorney general.
 (d)  On proper showing by the forfeiting lessee [owner]
 within 30 days after the declaration of forfeiture, the lease may be
 reinstated at the discretion of the board and upon terms prescribed
 by the board.
 (e)  In case of violation by the lessee [owner] of the lease
 contract, the remedy of forfeiture shall not be the exclusive
 remedy, and the state may institute suit for damages or specific
 performance or both.
 (f)  The state shall have a first lien on oil, gas, sulphur,
 or other minerals produced or that may be produced in the leased
 area, and on all rigs, tanks, vats, pipelines, telephone lines, and
 machinery and appliances used in the production and handling of
 oil, gas, sulphur, or other minerals produced, to secure the amount
 due from the lessee [owner of the lease].
 Sec. 109.037 [109.78].  FILING OF DOCUMENTS AND PAYMENT OF
 ROYALTIES, FEES, AND RENTALS. (a) All surveys, files, copies of
 sale and lease contracts, and other records pertaining to the sales
 and leases authorized in this subchapter shall be filed in the
 general land office and shall constitute archives.
 (b)  Payment of all royalties, lease fees, rentals for delay
 in drilling or mining, filing fees for assignments and
 relinquishments, and all other payments shall be made to the
 commissioner of the general land office at Austin. The
 commissioner shall transmit all payments received to the board for
 deposit to the credit of the Texas Tech University special mineral
 fund as provided by Section 109.020 [109.61].
 Sec. 109.038 [109.79].  FORMS, REGULATIONS, RULES, AND
 CONTRACTS. The board shall adopt proper forms, regulations, rules,
 and contracts which, in its judgment, will protect the income from
 lands leased pursuant to this subchapter.
 Sec. 109.039 [109.80].  MANAGEMENT OF SURFACE AND MINERAL
 ESTATES. (a) The board may lease for oil, gas, sulphur, ore,
 water, and other mineral development all land under its exclusive
 control for the use of the university. The board may make and enter
 into pooling agreements, division orders, or other contracts
 necessary in the management and development of its land.
 (b)  All leases, pooling agreements, division orders, or
 other contracts entered into by the board shall be on terms that the
 board considers in the best interest of the university. The board
 may not sell a lease for less than the royalty and rental terms
 demanded at that time by the General Land Office in connection with
 the sale of oil, gas, and other mineral leases of the public lands
 of this state.
 (c)  All money received under the leases and contracts
 executed for the management and development of the land, except
 revenue pledged to the payment of revenue bonds or notes, shall be
 deposited to the credit of a special fund created by the board. The
 board shall designate a depository for the special fund and protect
 the money deposited in it by the pledging of assets of the
 depository in the same manner as is required for the protection of
 public funds. Money deposited in the special fund may be used by
 the board for the administration of the university, for payment of
 principal of and interest on revenue bonds or notes issued by the
 board, and for any other purpose that in the judgment of the board
 may be for the good of the university.
 SECTION 9.  Chapter 110, Education Code, is amended to read
 as follows:
 Sec. 110.01.  SEPARATE INSTITUTION. Texas Tech University
 Health Sciences Center is a separate institution and not a
 department, school, or branch of Texas Tech University but is under
 the direction, management, and control of the Texas Tech University
 System Board of Regents. The center is composed of a medical school
 and other components assigned by law or by the coordinating board.
 Sec. 110.02.  CONCURRENT AND SEPARATE POWERS. The board of
 regents has the same powers of governance, control, jurisdiction,
 and management [direction, management, and control] over the Health
 Sciences Center as they exercise over Texas Tech University System
 and its components. However, the board shall act separately and
 independently on all matters affecting the Health Sciences Center
 as a separate institution.
 Sec. 110.11.  MEDICAL SCHOOL ADMISSION POLICIES. The
 [B]board of [R]regents shall promulgate appropriate rules and
 regulations pertaining to the admission of students to the medical
 school [which will provide for admission of those students to its
 entering class each year who are equally or as well qualified as all
 other students and who have entered a contract with or received a
 commitment for a stipend, grant, loan or scholarship from the State
 Rural Medical Education Board. The State Rural Medical Education
 Board may contract with medical students providing for such
 students to engage in a general or family practice of medicine for
 not less than four years after licensing and a period of medical
 residency, as determined by the rules and regulations established
 by the State Rural Medical Education Board, in cities of Texas which
 have a population of less than 5,000 or in rural areas, as that term
 may be defined by the State Rural Medical Education Board, and said
 Board is hereby given the authority to define and from time to time
 redefine the term rural area, at the time the medical practice is
 commenced. This contract shall provide for a monthly stipend of at
 least $100 to be granted by the State Rural Medical Education Board
 to each person under contract with the State while enrolled as a
 medical school student].
 SECTION 10.  On the effective date of this Act, the following
 provisions of the Education Code are repealed:
 (1)  Section 109.44;
 (2)  Subsections (c), (d), and (e), Section 109.45;
 (3)  Section 109.46;
 (4)  Section 109.47;
 (5)  Section 109.49;
 (6)  Section 110.04; and
 (7)  Section 110.14
 SECTION 11.  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, 2013.