Texas 2017 85th Regular

Texas House Bill HB4092 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/10/2017

                    85R4806 JRJ-F
 By: Davis of Harris H.B. No. 4092


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to authorization by the Texas Higher Education
 Coordinating Board for certain public junior colleges to offer
 baccalaureate degree programs.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 130.0012, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a), (b), (d), (e), (g), and (h) and adding
 Subsections (e-1), (f-1), (g-1), and (g-2) to read as follows:
 (a)  The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board may
 [shall] authorize public junior colleges to offer baccalaureate
 degree programs in the fields of applied science, [and] applied
 technology, and nursing under this section. Offering a
 baccalaureate degree program under this section does not otherwise
 alter the role and mission of a public junior college.
 (b)  The coordinating board:
 (1)  shall authorize baccalaureate degree programs in
 the fields of applied science and applied technology at each public
 junior college that previously participated in a pilot project to
 offer baccalaureate degree programs; and
 (2)  may authorize baccalaureate degree programs at one
 or more public junior colleges that offer a degree program in the
 fields of applied science, applied technology, or nursing and have
 demonstrated a workforce need.
 (d)  A public junior college offering a baccalaureate degree
 program under this section may not offer more than three [five]
 baccalaureate degree programs at any time.  The degree programs are
 subject to the continuing approval of the coordinating board.
 (e)  In determining whether a public junior college may offer
 [what] baccalaureate degree programs and what degree programs may
 [are to] be offered, the coordinating board shall:
 (1)  apply the same criteria and standards the
 coordinating board uses to approve baccalaureate degree programs at
 general academic teaching institutions;
 (2)  consider the following factors:
 (A) [(1)]  the workforce need for the degree
 programs in the region served by the junior college;
 (B) [(2)]  how those degree programs would
 complement the other programs and course offerings of the junior
 college and whether the associate degree program offered by the
 junior college in the same field has been successful;
 (C) [(3)]  whether those degree programs would
 unnecessarily duplicate the degree programs offered by other
 institutions of higher education; and
 (D) [(4)]  the ability of the junior college to
 support the degree programs with student enrollment [program] and
 the adequacy of the junior college's facilities, faculty,
 administration, libraries, and other resources, including evidence
 provided to the coordinating board and the Texas Board of Nursing
 that a public junior college seeking approval of a baccalaureate
 degree program in nursing has secured adequate long-term clinical
 space; and
 (3)  ensure the program would not draw faculty employed
 by a neighboring institution offering a similar program.
 (e-1)  A public junior college may offer a baccalaureate
 degree program under this section only if its junior college
 district had a taxable property valuation amount of not less than
 $10 billion in the preceding year.
 (f-1)  The coordinating board shall establish minimum
 admission standards for students enrolling in a baccalaureate
 degree program in nursing offered by a public junior college under
 this section.
 (g)  Except as provided by Subsection (g-1), a degree program
 created under this section may be funded solely by a public junior
 college's proportionate share of state appropriations under
 Section 130.003, local funds, and private sources. This subsection
 does not require the legislature to appropriate state funds to
 support a degree program created under this section.
 (g-1)  Notwithstanding Subsection (g), in [In] its
 recommendations to the legislature relating to state funding for
 public junior colleges, the coordinating board shall recommend that
 a public junior college that previously participated in a pilot
 project to offer baccalaureate degree programs receive
 substantially the same state support for junior-level and
 senior-level courses in the fields of applied science and applied
 technology offered under this section as that provided to a general
 academic teaching institution for substantially similar courses.
 For purposes of this subsection, in [In] determining the contact
 hours attributable to students enrolled in a junior-level or
 senior-level course in the field of applied science or applied
 technology offered under this section used to determine a public
 junior college's proportionate share of state appropriations under
 Section 130.003, the coordinating board shall weigh those contact
 hours as necessary to provide the junior college the appropriate
 level of state support to the extent state funds for those courses
 are included in the appropriations. This subsection does not
 prohibit the legislature from directly appropriating state funds to
 support junior-level and senior-level courses to which this
 subsection applies [offered under this section].
 (g-2)  A public junior college may not charge a student
 enrolled in a baccalaureate degree program offered under this
 section tuition and fees in an amount that exceeds the amount of
 tuition and fees charged by the junior college to a similarly
 situated student who is enrolled in an associate degree program in a
 corresponding field.
 (h)  Each biennium, each [Each] public junior college
 offering a baccalaureate degree program under this section shall
 conduct a review of each baccalaureate degree program offered and
 prepare a [biennial] report on the operation, quality, and
 effectiveness of those [the junior college's baccalaureate] degree
 programs. A [and shall deliver a] copy of the report shall be
 delivered to the coordinating board in the form and at the time
 determined by the coordinating board.
 SECTION 2.  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, 2017.