Texas 2017 85th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1566 Enrolled / Bill

Filed 05/29/2017

                    S.B. No. 1566


 AN ACT
 relating to certain powers and duties of the board of trustees of an
 independent school district and the governing body of an
 open-enrollment charter school and to abolishing certain county
 boards of education, boards of county school trustees, and offices
 of county school superintendent.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 11.151, Education Code, is amending by
 adding Subsection (f) to read as follows:
 (f)  For purposes of this section, a county board of
 education, as defined by a board of county school trustees, and
 office of county school superintendent in a county with a
 population of 2.2 million or more and that is adjacent to a county
 with a population of more than 800,000 are included within the
 definition of a school district and subject to the oversight of the
 agency.
 SECTION 2.  Section 11.1511, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  The board may require a school district's chief business
 official or curriculum director or a person holding an equivalent
 position to appear at an executive session of the board or to
 testify at a public hearing held by the board. A superintendent may
 not interfere with an appearance or testimony required by the board
 under this subsection.
 SECTION 3.  Section 11.1512, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsections (c-1), (c-2), (c-3),
 and (g) to read as follows:
 (c)  A member of the board of trustees of the district, when
 acting in the member's official capacity, has an inherent right of
 access to information, documents, and records maintained by the
 district, and the district shall provide the information,
 documents, and records to the member without requiring the member
 to submit a public information request under Chapter 552,
 Government Code.  The district shall provide the information,
 documents, and records to the member without regard to whether the
 requested items are the subject of or relate to an item listed on an
 agenda for an upcoming meeting.  The district may withhold or redact
 information, a document, or a record requested by a member of the
 board to the extent that the item is excepted from disclosure or is
 confidential under Chapter 552, Government Code, or other law.
 [This subsection does not require the district to provide
 information, documents, and records that are not subject to
 disclosure under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of
 1974 (20 U.S.C. Section 1232g).]
 (c-1)  Except as otherwise provided by this subsection, a
 district shall provide a member of the board of trustees with
 information, documents, and records requested under Subsection (c)
 not later than the 20th business day after the date the district
 receives the request. The district may take a reasonable
 additional period of time, not to exceed the 30th business day after
 the date the district receives the request, to respond to a request
 if compliance by the 20th business day would be unduly burdensome
 given the amount, age, or location of the requested information.
 The district shall inform the trustee of the reason for the delay in
 providing the requested information and the date by which the
 information will be provided.
 (c-2)  If a district does not provide requested information
 to a member of the board of trustees in the time required under
 Subsection (c-1), the member may bring suit against the district
 for appropriate injunctive relief.  A member who prevails in a suit
 under this subsection is entitled to recover court costs and
 reasonable attorney's fees.  The district shall pay the costs and
 fees from the budget of the superintendent's office.
 (c-3)  A board member shall maintain the confidentiality of
 information, documents, and records received under Subsection (c)
 as required by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974
 (20 U.S.C. Section 1232g) and any other applicable privacy laws.
 (g)  A district shall create a policy on visits to a district
 campus or other facility by a member of the board of trustees of the
 district.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter D, Chapter 11, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 11.1515 and 11.1516 to read as follows:
 Sec. 11.1515.  OVERSIGHT OF ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT. The board
 of trustees of an independent school district or the governing body
 of an open-enrollment charter school shall provide oversight
 regarding student academic achievement and strategic leadership
 for maximizing student performance.
 Sec. 11.1516.  DISTRICT DATA ON ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT.
 (a)  On request by the board of trustees of an independent school
 district, the agency shall create an Internet website that members
 of the board may use to review campus and district academic
 achievement data.  The website must also be made available to
 campuses in a similar manner that access is provided to the board.
 (b)  The Internet website must:
 (1)  include district information, disaggregated by
 campus, grade, sex, race, academic quarter or semester, as
 applicable, and school year, regarding the following:
 (A)  student academic achievement and growth;
 (B)  teacher and student attendance; and
 (C)  student discipline records; and
 (2)  be updated at least once each quarter of the school
 year.
 (c)  The commissioner shall provide information that permits
 a board member to compare the district's academic performance with
 the academic performance of other districts of similar size and
 racial and economic demographics.
 (d)  A district must provide requested information to the
 commissioner for the creation of an Internet website under this
 section.
 (e)  Confidential information received by the commissioner
 under this section from a district remains confidential. The
 commissioner shall design the Internet website to ensure that:
 (1)  public information is made available to the
 public; and
 (2)  information submitted by districts noted as
 confidential is not made available to the public.
 (f)  A request for public information under this section
 shall be submitted to the district that provides the agency with the
 information. The agency may not release information submitted by a
 district that is noted as confidential information.
 (g)  The agency may contract with a private entity as
 necessary to implement this section.
 (h)  The commissioner may adopt rules for the implementation
 of this section.
 SECTION 5.  Section 11.159, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (c) and (d) to read
 as follows:
 (b)  A trustee must complete any training required by the
 State Board of Education. The minutes of the last regular meeting
 of the board of trustees held before an election of trustees [during
 a calendar year] must reflect whether each trustee has met or is
 deficient [delinquent] in meeting the training required for the
 trustee [to be completed] as of the first anniversary of the date of
 the trustee's election or appointment [date of the meeting].  If the
 minutes reflect that a trustee is deficient, the district shall
 post the minutes on the district's Internet website within 10
 business days of the meeting and maintain the posting until the
 trustee meets the requirements.
 (c)  The State Board of Education shall require a trustee to
 complete at least three hours of training every two years on
 evaluating student academic performance. The training must be
 research-based and designed to support the oversight role of the
 board of trustees under Section 11.1515.  A candidate for trustee
 may complete the training up to one year before the candidate is
 elected. A new trustee shall complete the training within 120 days
 after the date of the trustee's election or appointment. A
 returning trustee shall complete the training by the second
 anniversary of the completion of the trustee's previous training.
 (d)  A trustee or candidate for trustee may complete training
 required under Subsection (c) at a regional education service
 center or through another authorized provider.  A provider must
 certify the completion of the training by a trustee or candidate.
 SECTION 6.  Subchapter D, Chapter 11, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 11.182 to read as follows:
 Sec. 11.182.  BOARD IMPROVEMENT AND EVALUATION TOOL.
 (a)  The commissioner shall develop a board of trustees improvement
 and evaluation tool. The evaluation tool must be research-based
 and designed to assist a school district in improving board
 oversight and academic achievement.
 (b)  A board of trustees may determine whether to use the
 evaluation tool, except as required by Section 39.102(a).
 SECTION 7.  Chapter 12A, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Section 12A.0071 to read as follows:
 Sec. 12A.0071.  POSTING OF LOCAL INNOVATION PLAN. (a)  A
 school district designated as a district of innovation shall ensure
 that a copy of the district's current local innovation plan is
 available to the public by posting and maintaining the plan in a
 prominent location on the district's Internet website.
 (b)  Not later than the 15th day after the date on which the
 board of trustees adopts a proposed local innovation plan, adopts a
 proposed amendment of a local innovation plan, or renews a local
 innovation plan, the district shall provide a copy of the current
 local innovation plan to the agency. The agency shall promptly post
 the current local innovation plan on the agency's Internet website.
 SECTION 8.  Subchapter C, Chapter 25, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 25.0822 to read as follows:
 Sec. 25.0822.  PATRIOTIC SOCIETY ACCESS TO STUDENTS.
 (a)  In this section, "patriotic society" means a youth membership
 organization listed in Title 36 of the United States Code with an
 educational purpose that promotes patriotism and civic
 involvement.
 (b)  At the beginning of each school year, the board of
 trustees of an independent school district shall adopt a policy to
 allow the principal of a public school campus to provide
 representatives of a patriotic society with the opportunity to
 speak to students during regular school hours about membership in
 the society and the ways in which membership may promote a student's
 educational interest and level of civic involvement, leading to the
 student's increased potential for self-improvement and ability to
 contribute to improving the student's school and community.
 (c)  The board policy shall give a principal complete
 discretion over the specific date and time of the opportunity
 required to be provided under this section, except that the policy
 shall allow the principal to limit:
 (1)  the opportunity provided to a patriotic society to
 a single school day; and
 (2)  any presentation made to students as a result of
 the opportunity to 10 minutes in length.
 SECTION 9.  Section 26.011, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 26.011.  COMPLAINTS.  (a)  The board of trustees of
 each school district shall adopt a grievance procedure under which
 the board shall address each complaint that the board receives
 concerning violation of a right guaranteed by this chapter.
 (b)  The board of trustees of a school district is not
 required by Subsection (a) or Section 11.1511(b)(13) to address a
 complaint that the board receives concerning a student's
 participation in an extracurricular activity that does not involve
 a violation of a right guaranteed by this chapter.  This subsection
 does not affect a claim brought by a parent under the Individuals
 with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.) or
 a successor federal statute addressing special education services
 for a child with a disability.
 SECTION 10.  Section 29.918, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subsections (d), (e), and (f) to read as follows:
 (d)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school to
 which this section applies shall, in its plan submitted under
 Subsection (a):
 (1)  design a dropout recovery plan that includes
 career and technology education courses or technology applications
 courses that lead to industry or career certification;
 (2)  integrate into the dropout recovery plan
 research-based strategies to assist students in becoming able
 academically to pursue postsecondary education, including:
 (A)  high-quality, college readiness instruction
 with strong academic and social supports;
 (B)  secondary to postsecondary bridging that
 builds college readiness skills, provides a plan for college
 completion, and ensures transition counseling; and
 (C)  information concerning appropriate supports
 available in the first year of postsecondary enrollment to ensure
 postsecondary persistence and success, to the extent funds are
 available for the purpose; and
 (3)  plan to offer advanced academic and transition
 opportunities, including dual credit courses and college
 preparatory courses, such as advanced placement courses.
 (e)  A school district to which this section applies may
 enter into a partnership with a public junior college in accordance
 with Section 29.402 in order to fulfill a plan submitted under
 Subsection (a).
 (f)  Any program designed to fulfill a plan submitted under
 Subsection (a) must comply with the requirements of Sections
 29.081(e) and (f).
 SECTION 11.  Subchapter Z, Chapter 33, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 33.9031 to read as follows:
 Sec. 33.9031.  BEFORE-SCHOOL AND AFTER-SCHOOL PROGRAMS.
 (a)  The board of trustees of a school district may establish
 before-school or after-school programs for students enrolled in
 elementary or middle school grades.  A program established under
 this section may operate before, after, or before and after school
 hours.
 (b)  A student is eligible to participate in a school
 district's before-school or after-school program if the student:
 (1)  is enrolled in a public or private school; or
 (2)  resides within the boundaries of the school
 district.
 (c)  A school district shall conduct a request for proposals
 procurement process to enable the district to determine if
 contracting with a child-care facility that provides a
 before-school or after-school program, as defined by Section
 42.002, Human Resources Code, to provide the district's
 before-school or after-school program would serve the district's
 best interests. Following the request for proposals procurement
 process, the district may enter into a contract with a child-care
 facility or implement a before-school or after-school program
 operated by the district. If the district enters into a contract
 with a child-care facility, the contract must comply with the
 requirements of Section 44.031 and may not exceed a term of three
 years.
 (d)  The board of trustees of a school district may adopt
 rules in accordance with Section 11.165 to provide access to school
 campuses before or after school hours for the purpose of providing a
 before-school or after-school program.
 SECTION 12.  Section 33.908, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 33.908.  GRACE PERIOD POLICY FOR EXHAUSTED OR
 INSUFFICIENT MEAL CARD OR ACCOUNT BALANCE.  The board of trustees of
 a [A] school district that allows students to use a prepaid meal
 card or account to purchase meals served at schools in the district
 [the school] shall adopt a grace period policy regarding the use of
 the cards or accounts.  The policy:
 (1)  must allow a student whose meal card or account
 balance is exhausted or insufficient to continue, for a period
 determined by the board [district], to purchase meals by:
 (A)  accumulating a negative balance on the
 student's card or account; or
 (B)  otherwise receiving an extension of credit
 from the district;
 (2)  must require the district to notify the parent of
 or person standing in parental relation to the student that the
 student's meal card or account balance is exhausted;
 (3)  may not permit the district to charge a fee or
 interest in connection with meals purchased under Subdivision (1);
 and
 (4)  may permit the district to set a schedule for
 repayment on the account balance as part of the notice to the parent
 or person standing in parental relation to the student.
 SECTION 13.  Subchapter C, Chapter 37, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 37.0815 to read as follows:
 Sec. 37.0815.  TRANSPORTATION OR STORAGE OF FIREARM AND
 AMMUNITION BY LICENSE HOLDER IN SCHOOL PARKING AREA.  (a)  A school
 district or open-enrollment charter school may not prohibit a
 person, including a school employee, who holds a license to carry a
 handgun under Subchapter H, Chapter 411, Government Code, from
 transporting or storing a handgun or other firearm or ammunition in
 a locked, privately owned or leased motor vehicle in a parking lot,
 parking garage, or other parking area provided by the district or
 charter school, provided that the handgun, firearm, or ammunition
 is not in plain view.
 (b)  This section does not authorize a person to possess,
 transport, or store a handgun, a firearm, or ammunition in
 violation of Section 37.125 of this code, Section 46.03 or 46.035,
 Penal Code, or other law.
 SECTION 14.  Subchapter A, Chapter 38, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 38.031 to read as follows:
 Sec. 38.031.  NOTICE OF LICE. (a)  The board of trustees of
 an independent school district shall adopt a policy requiring a
 school nurse of a public elementary school who determines or
 otherwise becomes aware that a child enrolled in the school has lice
 shall provide written or electronic notice of that fact to:
 (1)  the parent of the child with lice as soon as
 practicable but not later than 48 hours after the administrator or
 nurse, as applicable, determines or becomes aware of that fact; and
 (2)  the parent of each child assigned to the same
 classroom as the child with lice not later than the fifth school day
 after the date on which the administrator or nurse, as applicable,
 determines or becomes aware of that fact.
 (b)  The notice provided under Subsection (a):
 (1)  must include the recommendations of the Centers
 for Disease Control and Prevention for the treatment and prevention
 of lice; and
 (2)  if the notice is provided under Subsection (a)(2),
 may not identify the child with lice.
 (c)  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary to
 implement this section in a manner that complies with federal law
 regarding confidentiality of student medical or educational
 information, including the Health Insurance Portability and
 Accountability Act of 1996 (42 U.S.C. Section 1320d et seq.) and the
 Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (20 U.S.C.
 Section 1232g), and any state law relating to the privacy of student
 information.
 SECTION 15.  Section 39.102(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  If a school district does not satisfy the accreditation
 criteria under Section 39.052, the academic performance standards
 under Section 39.053 or 39.054, or any financial accountability
 standard as determined by commissioner rule, or if considered
 appropriate by the commissioner on the basis of a special
 accreditation investigation under Section 39.057, the commissioner
 shall take any of the following actions to the extent the
 commissioner determines necessary:
 (1)  issue public notice of the deficiency to the board
 of trustees;
 (2)  order a hearing conducted by the board of trustees
 of the district for the purpose of notifying the public of the
 insufficient performance, the improvements in performance expected
 by the agency, and the interventions and sanctions that may be
 imposed under this section if the performance does not improve;
 (3)  order the preparation of a student achievement
 improvement plan that addresses each academic achievement
 indicator under Section 39.053(c) for which the district's
 performance is insufficient, the submission of the plan to the
 commissioner for approval, and implementation of the plan;
 (4)  order a hearing to be held before the commissioner
 or the commissioner's designee at which the president of the board
 of trustees of the district and the superintendent shall appear and
 explain the district's low performance, lack of improvement, and
 plans for improvement;
 (5)  arrange a monitoring review of the district;
 (6)  appoint an agency monitor to participate in and
 report to the agency on the activities of the board of trustees or
 the superintendent;
 (7)  appoint a conservator to oversee the operations of
 the district;
 (8)  appoint a management team to direct the operations
 of the district in areas of insufficient performance or require the
 district to obtain certain services under a contract with another
 person;
 (9)  if a district has a current accreditation status
 of accredited-warned or accredited-probation, fails to satisfy any
 standard under Section 39.054(e), or fails to satisfy financial
 accountability standards as determined by commissioner rule,
 appoint a board of managers to exercise the powers and duties of the
 board of trustees;
 (10)  if for two consecutive school years, including
 the current school year, a district has received an accreditation
 status of accredited-warned or accredited-probation, has failed to
 satisfy any standard under Section 39.054(e), or has failed to
 satisfy financial accountability standards as determined by
 commissioner rule, revoke the district's accreditation and:
 (A)  order closure of the district and annex the
 district to one or more adjoining districts under Section 13.054;
 or
 (B)  in the case of a home-rule school district or
 open-enrollment charter school, order closure of all programs
 operated under the district's or school's charter; [or]
 (11)  if a district has failed to satisfy any standard
 under Section 39.054(e) due to the district's dropout rates, impose
 sanctions designed to improve high school completion rates,
 including:
 (A)  ordering the development of a dropout
 prevention plan for approval by the commissioner;
 (B)  restructuring the district or appropriate
 school campuses to improve identification of and service to
 students who are at risk of dropping out of school, as defined by
 Section 29.081;
 (C)  ordering lower student-to-counselor ratios
 on school campuses with high dropout rates; and
 (D)  ordering the use of any other intervention
 strategy effective in reducing dropout rates, including mentor
 programs and flexible class scheduling; or
 (12)  order the use of the board improvement and
 evaluation tool as provided by Section 11.182.
 SECTION 16.  Section 39.107(b-1), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b-1)  A campus turnaround plan must include:
 (1)  a detailed description of the academic programs to
 be offered at the campus, including instructional methods, length
 of school day and school year, academic credit and promotion
 criteria, and programs to serve special student populations;
 (2)  the term of the charter, if a district charter is
 to be granted for the campus under Section 12.0522;
 (3)  written comments from the campus-level committee
 established under Section 11.251, if applicable, parents, and
 teachers at the campus; [and]
 (4)  a detailed description of the budget, staffing,
 and financial resources required to implement the plan, including
 any supplemental resources to be provided by the district or other
 identified sources; and
 (5)  a detailed description for developing and
 supporting the oversight of academic achievement and student
 performance by the board of trustees under Section 11.1515.
 SECTION 17.  A person serving on the board of trustees of a
 school district on the effective date of this Act must complete the
 training required by Section 11.159(c), Education Code, as added by
 this Act, not later than September 1, 2018.
 SECTION 18.  (a)  Each county board of education, board of
 county school trustees, and office of county school superintendent
 in a county with a population of 2.2 million or more and that is
 adjacent to a county with a population of more than 800,000 is
 abolished effective November 15, 2017, unless the continuation of
 the county board of education, board of county school trustees, and
 office of county school superintendent is approved by a majority of
 voters at an election held on the November 2017 uniform election
 date in the county in which the county board of education, board of
 county school trustees, and office of county school superintendent
 are located.  Subsections (b)-(q) of this section do not take effect
 in a county if the continuation of the county board of education,
 board of county school trustees, and office of county school
 superintendent is approved at the election held in the county under
 this subsection.
 (a-1)  In an election held in a county under Subsection (a)
 of this section, the ballot shall be printed to permit voting for or
 against the proposition:  "Authorizing the continued operation of
 the county board of education, board of county school trustees, and
 office of the county school superintendent in ____ County and the
 collection of the ____ County school equalization ad valorem tax."
 (b)  Not later than November 15, 2017, a dissolution
 committee shall be formed for each county board of education or
 board of county school trustees to be abolished as provided by
 Subsection (a) of this section.  The dissolution committee is
 responsible for all financial decisions for each county board of
 education or board of county school trustees abolished by this Act,
 including asset distribution and payment of all debt obligations.
 (c)  A dissolution committee required by this Act shall be
 appointed by the comptroller and include:
 (1)  one financial advisor;
 (2)  the superintendent or the superintendent's
 designee of each participating component school district that
 chooses to participate in the dissolution committee;
 (3)  one certified public accountant;
 (4)  one auditor who holds a license or other
 professional credential;
 (5)  one bond counsel who holds a license or other
 professional credential; and
 (6)  one additional representative appointed by the
 commissioner of education.
 (d)  A dissolution committee created under this Act is
 subject to the open meetings requirements under Chapter 551,
 Government Code, and public information requirements under Chapter
 552, Government Code.
 (e)  Members of a dissolution committee may not receive
 compensation but are entitled to reimbursement for actual and
 necessary expenses incurred in performing the functions of the
 dissolution committee.
 (f)  Subject to the other requirements of this Act, the
 dissolution committee shall determine the manner in which all
 assets, liabilities, contracts, and services of the county board of
 education or board of county school trustees abolished by this Act
 are divided, transferred, or discontinued.  The dissolution
 committee shall create a sinking fund to deposit all money received
 in the abolishment of each county board of education or board of
 county school trustees for the payment of all debts of the county
 board of education or board of county school trustees.
 (g)  The dissolution committee shall continue providing
 transportation services to participating component school
 districts for the 2017-2018 school year.  The dissolution committee
 shall maintain current operations and personnel needed to provide
 the transportation services.
 (h)  At the end of the 2017-2018 school year all school
 buses, vehicles, and bus service centers shall be transferred to
 participating component school districts in proportionate shares
 equal to the amount of buses currently assigned to each district.
 The dissolution committee shall audit and confirm assignment of
 buses by vehicle identification numbers or some other agreed upon
 means assigned to applicable districts.  Final distribution and
 assignment of these assets will be not later than September 1, 2018,
 at no cost to the districts.
 (i)  The dissolution committee may employ for the 2017-2018
 school year one person to assist in the abolishment of the county
 board of education or board of county school trustees.
 (j)  On November 15, 2017, the participating component
 school district with the largest number of students in average
 daily attendance has the right of first refusal to buy, at fair
 market value, the administrative building of the county board of
 education or board of county school trustees.
 (k)  An ad valorem tax assessed by a county board of
 education or board of county school trustees shall continue to be
 assessed by the county on behalf of the board for the purpose of
 paying the principal of and interest on any bonds issued by the
 county board of education or board of county school trustees until
 all bonds are paid in full.  This subsection applies only to a bond
 issued before the effective date of this Act for which the tax
 receipts were obligated.  On payment of all bonds issued by the
 county board of education or board of county school trustees the ad
 valorem tax may not be assessed.
 (l)  In the manner provided by rule of the commissioner of
 education, the county shall collect and use any delinquent taxes
 imposed by or on behalf of the county board of education or board of
 county school trustees.
 (m)  The dissolution committee shall distribute the assets
 remaining after discharge of the liabilities of the county board of
 education or board of county school trustees to the component
 school districts in the county in proportionate shares equal to the
 proportion that the amount of money a district has submitted to the
 county board of education or board of county school trustees has to
 the total amount of money submitted by all districts.  The
 dissolution committee shall liquidate board assets as necessary to
 discharge board liabilities and facilitate the distribution of
 assets.  A person authorized by the dissolution committee shall
 execute any documents necessary to complete the transfer of assets,
 liabilities, or contracts.
 (n)  The dissolution committee shall encourage the component
 school districts to:
 (1)  continue sharing services received through the
 county board of education or board of county school trustees; and
 (2)  give preference to private sector contractors to
 continue services provided by the county board of education or
 board of county school trustees.
 (o)  The chief financial officer and financial advisor for
 the county board of education or board of county school trustees
 shall provide assistance to the dissolution committee in abolishing
 the county board of education or board of county school trustees.
 (p)  The Texas Education Agency shall provide assistance to a
 dissolution committee in the distribution of assets, liabilities,
 contracts, and services of a county board of education or board of
 county school trustees abolished by this Act.
 (q)  Any dissolution committee created as provided by this
 Act is abolished on the date all debt obligations of the county
 board of education or board of county school trustees are paid in
 full and all assets distributed to component school districts.
 SECTION 19.  Chapter 266 (S.B. 394), Acts of the 40th
 Legislature, Regular Session, 1927 (Article 2700a, Vernon's Texas
 Civil Statutes), is repealed.
 SECTION 20.  Section 25.0822, Education Code, as added by
 this Act, applies beginning with the 2017-2018 school year.
 SECTION 21.  Section 38.031, Education Code, as added by
 this Act, applies beginning with the 2017-2018 school year.
 SECTION 22.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2017.
 ______________________________ ______________________________
 President of the Senate Speaker of the House
 I hereby certify that S.B. No. 1566 passed the Senate on
 April 26, 2017, by the following vote: Yeas 29, Nays 2; and that
 the Senate concurred in House amendments on May 27, 2017, by the
 following vote: Yeas 26, Nays 5.
 ______________________________
 Secretary of the Senate
 I hereby certify that S.B. No. 1566 passed the House, with
 amendments, on May 24, 2017, by the following vote: Yeas 138,
 Nays 4, one present not voting.
 ______________________________
 Chief Clerk of the House
 Approved:
 ______________________________
 Date
 ______________________________
 Governor