Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2890 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/01/2019

                    86R11630 GCB-F
 By: J. Johnson of Dallas H.B. No. 2890


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the terminology used to refer to an individualized
 education program team.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 5.001, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subdivision (5-a) and adding Subdivision (5-b) to read as
 follows:
 (5-a)  "Individualized education program team" has the
 meaning assigned by 20 U.S.C. Section 1414(d)(1)(B).
 (5-b)  "Mental health condition" means an illness,
 disease, or disorder, other than epilepsy, dementia, substance
 abuse, or intellectual disability, that:
 (A)  substantially impairs a person's thought,
 perception of reality, emotional process, or judgment; or
 (B)  grossly impairs behavior as demonstrated by
 recent disturbed behavior.
 SECTION 2.  Subchapter A, Chapter 7, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 7.011 to read as follows:
 Sec. 7.011.  USE OF TERMINOLOGY CONSISTENT WITH INDIVIDUALS
 WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION ACT. (a)  The legislature and the Texas
 Legislative Council are directed, with respect to drafting or
 amending any new or existing statute or resolution, and the
 commissioner, the agency, and all other state agencies are
 directed, with respect to the proposing, adopting, or amending of
 new or existing rules and the producing of state agency reference
 materials or publications, including electronic media, to avoid
 using the phrases "admission, review, and dismissal committee" or
 "ARD committee."
 (b)  In enacting, revising, proposing, adopting, amending,
 or producing new or existing statutes, resolutions, rules, or state
 agency materials, the legislature, the Texas Legislative Council,
 the commissioner, the agency, and all other state agencies are
 directed to replace, as appropriate, the phrases described in
 Subsection (a) with the preferred phrases "individualized
 education program team" or "IEP team."
 (c)  A statute, resolution, or rule is not invalid solely
 because it does not employ this section's preferred phrases.
 SECTION 3.  Section 25.007(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  In recognition of the challenges faced by students who
 are homeless or in substitute care, the agency shall assist the
 transition of students who are homeless or in substitute care from
 one school to another by:
 (1)  ensuring that school records for a student who is
 homeless or in substitute care are transferred to the student's new
 school not later than the 10th working day after the date the
 student begins enrollment at the school;
 (2)  developing systems to ease transition of a student
 who is homeless or in substitute care during the first two weeks of
 enrollment at a new school;
 (3)  developing procedures for awarding credit,
 including partial credit if appropriate, for course work, including
 electives, completed by a student who is homeless or in substitute
 care while enrolled at another school;
 (4)  developing procedures to ensure that a new school
 relies on decisions made by the previous school regarding placement
 in courses or educational programs of a student who is homeless or
 in substitute care and places the student in comparable courses or
 educational programs at the new school, if those courses or
 programs are available;
 (5)  promoting practices that facilitate access by a
 student who is homeless or in substitute care to extracurricular
 programs, summer programs, credit transfer services, electronic
 courses provided under Chapter 30A, and after-school tutoring
 programs at nominal or no cost;
 (6)  establishing procedures to lessen the adverse
 impact of the movement of a student who is homeless or in substitute
 care to a new school;
 (7)  entering into a memorandum of understanding with
 the Department of Family and Protective Services regarding the
 exchange of information as appropriate to facilitate the transition
 of students in substitute care from one school to another;
 (8)  encouraging school districts and open-enrollment
 charter schools to provide services for a student who is homeless or
 in substitute care in transition when applying for admission to
 postsecondary study and when seeking sources of funding for
 postsecondary study;
 (9)  requiring school districts, campuses, and
 open-enrollment charter schools to accept a referral for special
 education services made for a student who is homeless or in
 substitute care by a school previously attended by the student, and
 to provide comparable services to the student during the referral
 process or until the new school develops an individualized
 education program for the student;
 (10)  requiring school districts, campuses, and
 open-enrollment charter schools to provide notice to the child's
 educational decision-maker and caseworker regarding events that
 may significantly impact the education of a child, including:
 (A)  requests or referrals for an evaluation under
 Section 504, Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794), or
 special education under Section 29.003;
 (B)  individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] meetings;
 (C)  manifestation determination reviews required
 by Section 37.004(b);
 (D)  any disciplinary actions under Chapter 37 for
 which parental notice is required;
 (E)  citations issued for Class C misdemeanor
 offenses on school property or at school-sponsored activities;
 (F)  reports of restraint and seclusion required
 by Section 37.0021; and
 (G)  use of corporal punishment as provided by
 Section 37.0011;
 (11)  developing procedures for allowing a student who
 is homeless or in substitute care who was previously enrolled in a
 course required for graduation the opportunity, to the extent
 practicable, to complete the course, at no cost to the student,
 before the beginning of the next school year;
 (12)  ensuring that a student who is homeless or in
 substitute care who is not likely to receive a high school diploma
 before the fifth school year following the student's enrollment in
 grade nine, as determined by the district, has the student's course
 credit accrual and personal graduation plan reviewed;
 (13)  ensuring that a student in substitute care who is
 in grade 11 or 12 be provided information regarding tuition and fee
 exemptions under Section 54.366 for dual-credit or other courses
 provided by a public institution of higher education for which a
 high school student may earn joint high school and college credit;
 (14)  designating at least one agency employee to act
 as a liaison officer regarding educational issues related to
 students in the conservatorship of the Department of Family and
 Protective Services; and
 (15)  providing other assistance as identified by the
 agency.
 SECTION 4.  Section 25.043(h), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (h)  This section does not affect:
 (1)  a right or obligation under Subchapter A, Chapter
 29, or under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20
 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.) regarding the individual placement
 decisions of an individualized education program team [the school
 district admission, review, and dismissal committee]; or
 (2)  the right of a school district or teacher to remove
 a student from a classroom under Chapter 37.
 SECTION 5.  Sections 26.0081(a) and (b), Education Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The agency shall produce and provide to school districts
 sufficient copies of a comprehensive, easily understood document
 that explains the process by which an individualized education
 program is developed for a student in a special education program
 and the rights and responsibilities of a parent concerning the
 process. The document must include information a parent needs to
 effectively participate in an individualized education program
 team [admission, review, and dismissal committee] meeting for the
 parent's child.
 (b)  The agency will ensure that each school district
 provides the document required under this section to the parent as
 provided by 20 U.S.C. Section 1415(b):
 (1)  as soon as practicable after a child is referred to
 determine the child's eligibility for admission into the district's
 special education program, but at least five school days before the
 date of the initial meeting of the individualized education program
 team [admission, review, and dismissal committee]; and
 (2)  at any other time on reasonable request of the
 child's parent.
 SECTION 6.  Section 28.006(g), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (g)  A school district shall notify the parent or guardian of
 each student in kindergarten or first or second grade who is
 determined, on the basis of reading instrument results, to be at
 risk for dyslexia or other reading difficulties. The district
 shall implement an accelerated reading instruction program that
 provides reading instruction that addresses reading deficiencies
 to those students and shall determine the form, content, and timing
 of that program. The individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] of a student who
 participates in a district's special education program under
 Subchapter B, Chapter 29, and who does not perform satisfactorily
 on a reading instrument under this section shall determine the
 manner in which the student will participate in an accelerated
 reading instruction program under this subsection.
 SECTION 7.  Sections 28.0211(i), (i-1), and (i-2), Education
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (i)  The individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal committee] of a student who participates in a
 district's special education program under Subchapter A, Chapter
 29, and who does not perform satisfactorily on an assessment
 instrument specified under Subsection (a) and administered under
 Section 39.023(a) or (b) must meet before the student is
 administered the assessment instrument for the second time.  The
 team [committee] shall determine:
 (1)  the manner in which the student will participate
 in an accelerated instruction program under this section; and
 (2)  whether the student will be promoted in accordance
 with Subsection (i-1) or retained under this section.
 (i-1)  At a meeting of the individualized education program
 team [admission, review, and dismissal committee] of a student
 under Subsection (i), the team [committee] may promote the student
 to the next grade level if the team [committee] concludes that the
 student has made sufficient progress in the measurable academic
 goals contained in the student's individualized education program
 developed under Section 29.005. A school district that promotes a
 student under this subsection is not required to provide an
 additional opportunity for the student to perform satisfactorily on
 the assessment instrument.
 (i-2)  Not later than September 1 of each school year, a
 school district must notify the parent or person standing in
 parental relation to a student enrolled in the district's special
 education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, of the options of
 the individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] under Subsections (i) and (i-1) if the student
 does not perform satisfactorily on an assessment instrument.
 SECTION 8.  Section 28.0213(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  For a student in a special education program under
 Subchapter A, Chapter 29, who does not perform satisfactorily on an
 assessment instrument administered under Section 39.023(a), (b),
 or (c), the student's individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] shall design the
 program to:
 (1)  enable the student to attain a standard of annual
 growth on the basis of the student's individualized education
 program; and
 (2)  if applicable, carry out the purposes of Section
 28.0211.
 SECTION 9.  Sections 28.025(b-11) and (b-14), Education
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (b-11)  In adopting rules under Subsection (b-1), the State
 Board of Education shall allow a student who is unable to
 participate in physical activity due to disability or illness to
 substitute one credit in English language arts, mathematics,
 science, or social studies, one credit in a course that is offered
 for credit as provided by Section 28.002(g-1), or one academic
 elective credit for the physical education credit required under
 Subsection (b-1)(8).  A credit allowed to be substituted under this
 subsection may not also be used by the student to satisfy a
 graduation requirement other than completion of the physical
 education credit.  The rules must provide that the determination
 regarding a student's ability to participate in physical activity
 will be made by:
 (1)  if the student receives special education services
 under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, the student's individualized
 education program team [admission, review, and dismissal
 committee];
 (2)  if the student does not receive special education
 services under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, but is covered by Section
 504, Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794), the
 committee established for the student under that Act; or
 (3)  if a team or a committee [each of the committees]
 described by Subdivision [Subdivisions] (1) or [and] (2) is
 inapplicable, a committee established by the school district of
 persons with appropriate knowledge regarding the student.
 (b-14)  In adopting rules under Subsection (b-1), the State
 Board of Education shall allow a student who, due to disability, is
 unable to complete two courses in the same language in a language
 other than English, as provided under Subsection (b-1)(5), to
 substitute for those credits two credits in English language arts,
 mathematics, science, or social studies or two credits in career
 and technology education, technology applications, or other
 academic electives.  A credit allowed to be substituted under this
 subsection may not also be used by the student to satisfy a
 graduation credit requirement other than credit for completion of a
 language other than English.  The rules must provide that the
 determination regarding a student's ability to participate in
 language-other-than-English courses will be made by:
 (1)  if the student receives special education services
 under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, the student's individualized
 education program team [admission, review, and dismissal
 committee]; or
 (2)  if the student does not receive special education
 services under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, but is covered by Section
 504, Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794), the
 committee established for the student under that Act.
 SECTION 10.  Section 29.001, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 29.001.  STATEWIDE PLAN.  The agency shall develop, and
 modify as necessary, a statewide design, consistent with federal
 law, for the delivery of services to children with disabilities in
 this state that includes rules for the administration and funding
 of the special education program so that a free appropriate public
 education is available to all of those children between the ages of
 three and 21.  The statewide design shall include the provision of
 services primarily through school districts and shared services
 arrangements, supplemented by regional education service
 centers.  The agency shall also develop and implement a statewide
 plan with programmatic content that includes procedures designed
 to:
 (1)  ensure state compliance with requirements for
 supplemental federal funding for all state-administered programs
 involving the delivery of instructional or related services to
 students with disabilities;
 (2)  facilitate interagency coordination when other
 state agencies are involved in the delivery of instructional or
 related services to students with disabilities;
 (3)  periodically assess statewide personnel needs in
 all areas of specialization related to special education and pursue
 strategies to meet those needs through a consortium of
 representatives from regional education service centers, local
 education agencies, and institutions of higher education and
 through other available alternatives;
 (4)  ensure that regional education service centers
 throughout the state maintain a regional support function, which
 may include direct service delivery and a component designed to
 facilitate the placement of students with disabilities who cannot
 be appropriately served in their resident districts;
 (5)  allow the agency to effectively monitor and
 periodically conduct site visits of all school districts to ensure
 that rules adopted under this section are applied in a consistent
 and uniform manner, to ensure that districts are complying with
 those rules, and to ensure that annual statistical reports filed by
 the districts and not otherwise available through the Public
 Education Information Management System under Section 42.006 are
 accurate and complete;
 (6)  ensure that appropriately trained personnel are
 involved in the diagnostic and evaluative procedures operating in
 all districts and that those personnel routinely serve on district
 individualized education program teams [admissions, review, and
 dismissal committees];
 (7)  ensure that an individualized education program
 for each student with a disability is properly developed,
 implemented, and maintained in the least restrictive environment
 that is appropriate to meet the student's educational needs;
 (8)  ensure that, when appropriate, each student with a
 disability is provided an opportunity to participate in career and
 technology and physical education classes, in addition to
 participating in regular or special classes;
 (9)  ensure that each student with a disability is
 provided necessary related services;
 (10)  ensure that an individual assigned to act as a
 surrogate parent for a child with a disability, as provided by 20
 U.S.C. Section 1415(b), is required to:
 (A)  complete a training program that complies
 with minimum standards established by agency rule;
 (B)  visit the child and the child's school;
 (C)  consult with persons involved in the child's
 education, including teachers, caseworkers, court-appointed
 volunteers, guardians ad litem, attorneys ad litem, foster parents,
 and caretakers;
 (D)  review the child's educational records;
 (E)  attend meetings of the child's
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee];
 (F)  exercise independent judgment in pursuing
 the child's interests; and
 (G)  exercise the child's due process rights under
 applicable state and federal law; and
 (11)  ensure that each district develops a process to
 be used by a teacher who instructs a student with a disability in a
 regular classroom setting:
 (A)  to request a review of the student's
 individualized education program;
 (B)  to provide input in the development of the
 student's individualized education program;
 (C)  that provides for a timely district response
 to the teacher's request; and
 (D)  that provides for notification to the
 student's parent or legal guardian of that response.
 SECTION 11.  Section 29.004(a-1), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a-1)  If a school district receives written consent signed
 by a student's parent or legal guardian for a full individual and
 initial evaluation of a student at least 35 but less than 45 school
 days before the last instructional day of the school year, the
 evaluation must be completed and the written report of the
 evaluation must be provided to the parent or legal guardian not
 later than June 30 of that year.  The student's individualized
 education program team [admission, review, and dismissal
 committee] shall meet not later than the 15th school day of the
 following school year to consider the evaluation.  If a district
 receives written consent signed by a student's parent or legal
 guardian less than 35 school days before the last instructional day
 of the school year or if the district receives the written consent
 at least 35 but less than 45 school days before the last
 instructional day of the school year but the student is absent from
 school during that period on three or more days, Subsection (a)(1)
 applies to the date the written report of the full individual and
 initial evaluation is required.
 SECTION 12.  Section 29.008(c), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  When a student, including one for whom the state is
 managing conservator, is placed primarily for care or treatment
 reasons in a private residential facility that operates its own
 private education program, none of the costs may be paid from public
 education funds. If a residential placement primarily for care or
 treatment reasons involves a private residential facility in which
 the education program is provided by the school district, the
 portion of the costs that includes appropriate education services,
 as determined by the individualized education program team [the
 school district's admission, review, and dismissal committee],
 shall be paid from state and federal education funds.
 SECTION 13.  Sections 29.005(a), (b), (b-1), (c), and (g),
 Education Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Before a child is enrolled in a special education
 program of a school district, the district shall establish an
 individualized education program team [a committee] composed of the
 persons required under 20 U.S.C. Section 1414(d) to develop the
 child's individualized education program.  If a team [committee] is
 required to include a regular education teacher, the regular
 education teacher included must, to the extent practicable, be a
 teacher who is responsible for implementing a portion of the
 child's individualized education program.
 (b)  The individualized education program team [committee]
 shall develop the individualized education program by agreement of
 the team [committee] members or, if those persons cannot agree, by
 an alternate method provided by the agency. Majority vote may not
 be used to determine the individualized education program.
 (b-1)  The written statement of the individualized education
 program must document the decisions of the individualized education
 program team [committee] with respect to issues discussed at each
 team [committee] meeting.  The written statement must include:
 (1)  the date of the meeting;
 (2)  the name, position, and signature of each member
 participating in the meeting; and
 (3)  an indication of whether the child's parents, the
 adult student, if applicable, and the administrator agreed or
 disagreed with the decisions of the team [committee].
 (c)  If the individualized education program is not
 developed by agreement, the written statement of the program
 required under 20 U.S.C. Section 1414(d) must include the basis of
 the disagreement.  Each member of the individualized education
 program team [committee] who disagrees with the individualized
 education program developed by the team [committee] is entitled to
 include a statement of disagreement in the written statement of the
 program.
 (g)  The individualized education program team [committee]
 may determine that a behavior improvement plan or a behavioral
 intervention plan is appropriate for a student for whom the team
 [committee] has developed an individualized education program.  If
 the team [committee] makes that determination, the behavior
 improvement plan or the behavioral intervention plan shall be
 included as part of the student's individualized education program
 and provided to each teacher with responsibility for educating the
 student.
 SECTION 14.  Sections 29.011(a) and (a-1), Education Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The commissioner shall by rule adopt procedures for
 compliance with federal requirements relating to transition
 services for students who are enrolled in special education
 programs under this subchapter.  The procedures must specify the
 manner in which a student's individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] must consider, and if
 appropriate, address the following issues in the student's
 individualized education program:
 (1)  appropriate student involvement in the student's
 transition to life outside the public school system;
 (2)  if the student is younger than 18 years of age,
 appropriate involvement in the student's transition by the
 student's parents and other persons invited to participate by:
 (A)  the student's parents; or
 (B)  the school district in which the student is
 enrolled;
 (3)  if the student is at least 18 years of age,
 involvement in the student's transition and future by the student's
 parents and other persons, if the parent or other person:
 (A)  is invited to participate by the student or
 the school district in which the student is enrolled; or
 (B)  has the student's consent to participate
 pursuant to a supported decision-making agreement under Chapter
 1357, Estates Code;
 (4)  appropriate postsecondary education options,
 including preparation for postsecondary-level coursework;
 (5)  an appropriate functional vocational evaluation;
 (6)  appropriate employment goals and objectives;
 (7)  if the student is at least 18 years of age, the
 availability of age-appropriate instructional environments,
 including community settings or environments that prepare the
 student for postsecondary education or training, competitive
 integrated employment, or independent living, in coordination with
 the student's transition goals and objectives;
 (8)  appropriate independent living goals and
 objectives;
 (9)  appropriate circumstances for facilitating a
 referral of a student or the student's parents to a governmental
 agency for services or public benefits, including a referral to a
 governmental agency to place the student on a waiting list for
 public benefits available to the student, such as a waiver program
 established under Section 1915(c), Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
 Section 1396n(c)); and
 (10)  the use and availability of appropriate:
 (A)  supplementary aids, services, curricula, and
 other opportunities to assist the student in developing
 decision-making skills; and
 (B)  supports and services to foster the student's
 independence and self-determination, including a supported
 decision-making agreement under Chapter 1357, Estates Code.
 (a-1)  A student's individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] shall annually review
 the issues described by Subsection (a) and, if necessary, update
 the portions of the student's individualized education program that
 address those issues.
 SECTION 15.  Section 29.0112(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  A school district shall:
 (1)  post the transition and employment guide on the
 district's website if the district maintains a website;
 (2)  provide written information and, if necessary,
 assistance to a student or parent regarding how to access the
 electronic version of the guide at:
 (A)  the first meeting of the student's
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] at which transition is discussed; and
 (B)  the first team [committee] meeting at which
 transition is discussed that occurs after the date on which the
 guide is updated; and
 (3)  on request, provide a printed copy of the guide to
 a student or parent.
 SECTION 16.  Section 29.015(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  A foster parent who will act as a parent of a child with
 a disability as provided by Subsection (a) must complete a training
 program before the next scheduled individualized education program
 team [admission, review, and dismissal committee] meeting for the
 child but not later than the 90th day after the date the foster
 parent begins acting as the parent for the purpose of making special
 education decisions.
 SECTION 17.  Section 29.0151(d), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (d)  A surrogate parent appointed by a district must:
 (1)  be willing to serve in that capacity;
 (2)  exercise independent judgment in pursuing the
 child's interests;
 (3)  ensure that the child's due process rights under
 applicable state and federal laws are not violated;
 (4)  complete a training program that complies with
 minimum standards established by agency rule within the time
 specified in Section 29.015(b);
 (5)  visit the child and the school where the child is
 enrolled;
 (6)  review the child's educational records;
 (7)  consult with any person involved in the child's
 education, including the child's:
 (A)  teachers;
 (B)  caseworkers;
 (C)  court-appointed volunteers;
 (D)  guardian ad litem;
 (E)  attorney ad litem;
 (F)  foster parent; and
 (G)  caregiver; and
 (8)  attend meetings of the child's individualized
 education program team [admission, review, and dismissal
 committee].
 SECTION 18.  Section 29.019(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  Nothing in this section prohibits a school district from
 using individualized education program facilitation as the
 district's preferred method of conducting initial and annual
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] meetings.
 SECTION 19.  Section 29.020(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The agency shall develop rules in accordance with this
 section applicable to the administration of a state individualized
 education program facilitation project.  The program shall include
 the provision of an independent individualized education program
 facilitator to facilitate an individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] meeting with parties
 who are in a dispute about decisions relating to the provision of a
 free appropriate public education to a student with a disability.
 Facilitation implemented under the project must comply with rules
 developed under this subsection.
 SECTION 20.  Section 29.022(l), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (l)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school
 policy relating to the placement, operation, or maintenance of
 video cameras under this section must:
 (1)  include information on how a person may appeal an
 action by the district or school that the person believes to be in
 violation of this section or a policy adopted in accordance with
 this section, including the appeals process under Section 7.057;
 (2)  require that the district or school provide a
 response to a request made under this section not later than the
 seventh school business day after receipt of the request by the
 person to whom it must be submitted under Subsection (a-3) that
 authorizes the request or states the reason for denying the
 request;
 (3)  except as provided by Subdivision (5), require
 that a school or a campus begin operation of a video camera in
 compliance with this section not later than the 45th school
 business day, or the first school day after the 45th school business
 day if that day is not a school day, after the request is authorized
 unless the agency grants an extension of time;
 (4)  permit the parent of a student whose
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] has determined that the student's placement
 for the following school year will be in a classroom or other
 special education setting in which a video camera may be placed
 under this section to make a request for the video camera by the
 later of:
 (A)  the date on which the current school year
 ends; or
 (B)  the 10th school business day after the date
 of the placement determination by the individualized education
 program team [admission, review, and dismissal committee]; and
 (5)  if a request is made by a parent in compliance with
 Subdivision (4), unless the agency grants an extension of time,
 require that a school or campus begin operation of a video camera in
 compliance with this section not later than the later of:
 (A)  the 10th school day of the fall semester; or
 (B)  the 45th school business day, or the first
 school day after the 45th school business day if that day is not a
 school day, after the date the request is made.
 SECTION 21.  Section 29.026(d), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (d)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school may
 not:
 (1)  charge a fee for the program, other than those
 authorized by law for students in public schools;
 (2)  require a parent to enroll a child in the program;
 (3)  allow an individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] to place a student in
 the program without the written consent of the student's parent or
 guardian; or
 (4)  continue the placement of a student in the program
 after the student's parent or guardian revokes consent, in writing,
 to the student's placement in the program.
 SECTION 22.  Section 29.027(d), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (d)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school may
 not:
 (1)  charge a fee for the program, other than those
 authorized by law for students in public schools;
 (2)  require a parent to enroll a child in the program;
 (3)  allow an individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] to place a student in
 the program without the written consent of the student's parent or
 guardian; or
 (4)  continue the placement of a student in the program
 after the student's parent or guardian revokes consent, in writing,
 to the student's placement in the program.
 SECTION 23.  Section 29.305, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 29.305.  LANGUAGE MODE PEERS. If practicable and not in
 conflict with any individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] recommendations, a
 student who is deaf or hard of hearing must have an education in the
 company of a sufficient number of peers using the same language mode
 and with whom the student can communicate directly. If
 practicable, the peers must be of the same or approximately the same
 age and ability.
 SECTION 24.  Section 29.312, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 29.312.  PSYCHOLOGICAL COUNSELING SERVICES.
 Appropriate psychological counseling services for a student who is
 deaf or hard of hearing shall be made available at the student's
 school site in the student's primary mode of communication. In the
 case of a student who is hard of hearing, appropriate auditory
 systems to enhance oral communication shall be used if required by
 the student's individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal committee].
 SECTION 25.  Section 29.314, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 29.314.  TRANSITION INTO REGULAR CLASS. In addition to
 satisfying requirements of the individualized education program
 team [admission, review, and dismissal committee] and to satisfying
 requirements under state and federal law for vocational training,
 each school district shall develop and implement a transition plan
 for the transition of a student who is deaf or hard of hearing into a
 regular class program if the student is to be transferred from a
 special class or center or nonpublic, nonsectarian school into a
 regular class in a public school for any part of the school day. The
 transition plan must provide for activities:
 (1)  to integrate the student into the regular
 education program and specify the nature of each activity and the
 time spent on the activity each day; and
 (2)  to support the transition of the student from the
 special education program into the regular education program.
 SECTION 26.  Section 29.453(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The educational placement of an alleged offender
 resident and the educational services to be provided by a school
 district to the resident shall be determined by the resident's
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] consistent with federal law and regulations
 regarding the placement of students with disabilities in the least
 restrictive environment.  The resident's individualized education
 program team [admission, review, and dismissal committee] shall:
 (1)  inform the resident's interdisciplinary team of a
 determination the team [committee] makes in accordance with this
 subsection; and
 (2)  consult, to the extent practicable, with the
 resident's interdisciplinary team concerning such a determination.
 SECTION 27.  Section 29.454(d), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (d)  Each behavior support specialist shall:
 (1)  ensure that each alleged offender resident
 enrolled in the school district is provided behavior management
 services under a school behavioral intervention plan based on the
 resident's functional behavioral assessment, as described by
 Subsection (c);
 (2)  communicate and coordinate with the resident's
 interdisciplinary team to ensure that behavioral intervention
 actions of the district and of the forensic state supported living
 center do not conflict;
 (3)  in the case of a resident who regresses:
 (A)  ensure that necessary corrective action is
 taken in the resident's individualized education program or school
 behavioral intervention plan, as appropriate; and
 (B)  communicate with the resident's
 interdisciplinary team concerning the regression and encourage the
 team to aggressively address the regression;
 (4)  participate in the resident's individualized
 education program team [admission, review, and dismissal
 committee] meetings in conjunction with:
 (A)  developing and implementing the resident's
 school behavioral intervention plan; and
 (B)  determining the appropriate educational
 placement for each resident, considering all available academic and
 behavioral information;
 (5)  coordinate each resident's school behavioral
 intervention plan with the resident's program of active treatment
 provided by the forensic state supported living center to ensure
 consistency of approach and response to the resident's identified
 behaviors;
 (6)  provide training for school district staff and, as
 appropriate, state supported living center staff in implementing
 behavioral intervention plans for each resident; and
 (7)  remain involved with the resident during the
 school day.
 SECTION 28.  Section 29.455(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  A school district in which alleged offender residents
 are enrolled in school and the forensic state supported living
 center shall enter into a memorandum of understanding to:
 (1)  establish the duties and responsibilities of the
 behavior support specialist to ensure the safety of all students
 and teachers while educational services are provided to a resident
 at a school in the district; and
 (2)  ensure the provision of appropriate facilities for
 providing educational services and of necessary technological
 equipment if a resident's individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] determines that the
 resident must receive educational services at the forensic state
 supported living center.
 SECTION 29.  Section 30.002(c), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  The comprehensive statewide plan for the education of
 children with visual impairments must:
 (1)  adequately provide for comprehensive diagnosis
 and evaluation of each school-age child with a serious visual
 impairment;
 (2)  include the procedures, format, and content of the
 individualized education program for each child with a visual
 impairment;
 (3)  emphasize providing educational services to
 children with visual impairments in their home communities whenever
 possible;
 (4)  include methods to ensure that children with
 visual impairments receiving special education services in school
 districts receive, before being placed in a classroom setting or
 within a reasonable time after placement:
 (A)  evaluation of the impairment; and
 (B)  instruction in an expanded core curriculum,
 which is required for students with visual impairments to succeed
 in classroom settings and to derive lasting, practical benefits
 from the education provided by school districts, including
 instruction in:
 (i)  compensatory skills, such as braille
 and concept development, and other skills needed to access the rest
 of the curriculum;
 (ii)  orientation and mobility;
 (iii)  social interaction skills;
 (iv)  career planning;
 (v)  assistive technology, including
 optical devices;
 (vi)  independent living skills;
 (vii)  recreation and leisure enjoyment;
 (viii)  self-determination; and
 (ix)  sensory efficiency;
 (5)  provide for flexibility on the part of school
 districts to meet the special needs of children with visual
 impairments through:
 (A)  specialty staff and resources provided by the
 district;
 (B)  contractual arrangements with other
 qualified public or private agencies;
 (C)  supportive assistance from regional
 education service centers or adjacent school districts;
 (D)  short-term or long-term services through the
 Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired or related
 facilities or programs; or
 (E)  other instructional and service arrangements
 approved by the agency;
 (6)  include a statewide individualized education
 program [admission, review, and dismissal] process;
 (7)  provide for effective interaction between the
 visually impaired child's classroom setting and the child's home
 environment, including providing for parental training and
 counseling either by school district staff or by representatives of
 other organizations directly involved in the development and
 implementation of the individualized education program for the
 child;
 (8)  require the continuing education and professional
 development of school district staff providing special education
 services to children with visual impairments;
 (9)  provide for adequate monitoring and precise
 evaluation of special education services provided to children with
 visual impairments through school districts; and
 (10)  require that school districts providing special
 education services to children with visual impairments develop
 procedures for assuring that staff assigned to work with the
 children have prompt and effective access directly to resources
 available through:
 (A)  cooperating agencies in the area;
 (B)  the Texas School for the Blind and Visually
 Impaired;
 (C)  the Central Media Depository for specialized
 instructional materials and aids made specifically for use by
 students with visual impairments;
 (D)  sheltered workshops participating in the
 state program of purchases of blind-made goods and services; and
 (E)  related sources.
 SECTION 30.  Section 30.021(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The school district in which a student resides is
 responsible for assuring that a free appropriate public education
 is provided to each district student placed in the regular school
 year program of the school and that all legally required meetings
 for the purpose of developing and reviewing the student's
 individualized educational program are conducted. If the school
 disagrees with a district's individualized education program team
 [committee] recommendation that a student be evaluated for
 placement, initially placed, or continued to be placed at the
 school, the district or the school may seek resolution according to
 a procedure established by the commissioner or through any due
 process hearing to which the district or school is entitled under
 the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section
 1400 et seq.).
 SECTION 31.  Section 30.057(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The Texas School for the Deaf shall provide services in
 accordance with Section 30.051 to any eligible student with a
 disability for whom the school is an appropriate placement if the
 student has been referred for admission:
 (1)  by the school district in which the student
 resides under the student's individualized education program;
 (2)  by the student's parent or legal guardian, or a
 person with legal authority to act in place of the parent or legal
 guardian, or the student, if the student is age 18 or older, at any
 time during the school year, if the referring person chooses the
 school as the appropriate placement for the student rather than the
 placement in the student's local or regional program recommended
 under the student's individualized education program; or
 (3)  by the student's parent or legal guardian through
 the student's individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal] or individualized family service plan
 committee, as an initial referral to special education for students
 who are three years of age or younger.
 SECTION 32.  Section 30A.007(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  For purposes of a policy adopted under Subsection (a),
 the determination of whether or not an electronic course will meet
 the needs of a student with a disability shall be made by the
 student's individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal committee] in a manner consistent with state
 and federal law, including the Individuals with Disabilities
 Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.) and Section 504,
 Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794).
 SECTION 33.  Section 33.081(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  Suspension of a student with a disability that
 significantly interferes with the student's ability to meet regular
 academic standards must be based on the student's failure to meet
 the requirements of the student's individualized education
 program. The determination of whether a disability significantly
 interferes with a student's ability to meet regular academic
 standards must be made by the student's individualized education
 program team [admission, review, and dismissal committee]. For
 purposes of this subsection, "student with a disability" means a
 student who is eligible for a district's special education program
 under Section 29.003(b).
 SECTION 34.  Section 37.001(b-1), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b-1)  The methods adopted under Subsection (a)(8) must
 provide that a student who is enrolled in a special education
 program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, may not be disciplined for
 conduct prohibited in accordance with Subsection (a)(7) until an
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] meeting has been held to review the conduct.
 SECTION 35.  Sections 37.004(a) and (b), Education Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The placement of a student with a disability who
 receives special education services may be made only by a duly
 constituted individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal committee].
 (b)  Any disciplinary action regarding a student with a
 disability who receives special education services that would
 constitute a change in placement under federal law may be taken only
 after the student's individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee] conducts a
 manifestation determination review under 20 U.S.C. Section
 1415(k)(4) and its subsequent amendments. Any disciplinary action
 regarding the student shall be determined in accordance with
 federal law and regulations, including laws or regulations
 requiring the provision of:
 (1)  functional behavioral assessments;
 (2)  positive behavioral interventions, strategies,
 and supports;
 (3)  behavioral intervention plans; and
 (4)  the manifestation determination review.
 SECTION 36.  Section 37.105(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  If a parent or guardian of a child enrolled in a school
 district is refused entry to the district's property under this
 section, the district shall accommodate the parent or guardian to
 ensure that the parent or guardian may participate in the child's
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] or in the child's team established under
 Section 504, Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794), in
 accordance with federal law.
 SECTION 37.  Section 37.307(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The review under Section 37.306 of the placement of a
 student with a disability who receives special education services
 may be made only by a duly constituted individualized education
 program team [admission, review, and dismissal committee].  The
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] may request that the board of trustees convene
 a committee described by Section 37.306(a) to assist the
 individualized education program team [admission, review, and
 dismissal committee] in conducting the review.
 SECTION 38.  Sections 39.023(b), (c), and (d), Education
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (b)  The agency shall develop or adopt appropriate
 criterion-referenced alternative assessment instruments to be
 administered to each student in a special education program under
 Subchapter A, Chapter 29, for whom an assessment instrument adopted
 under Subsection (a), even with allowable accommodations, would not
 provide an appropriate measure of student achievement, as
 determined by the student's individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal committee], including assessment
 instruments approved by the commissioner that measure growth. The
 assessment instruments developed or adopted under this subsection,
 including the assessment instruments approved by the commissioner,
 must, to the extent allowed under federal law, provide a district
 with options for the assessment of students under this subsection.
 The agency may not adopt a performance standard that indicates that
 a student's performance on the alternate assessment does not meet
 standards if the lowest level of the assessment accurately
 represents the student's developmental level as determined by the
 student's individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal committee].
 (c)  The agency shall also adopt end-of-course assessment
 instruments for secondary-level courses in Algebra I, biology,
 English I, English II, and United States history.  The Algebra I
 end-of-course assessment instrument must be administered with the
 aid of technology.  The English I and English II end-of-course
 assessment instruments must each assess essential knowledge and
 skills in both reading and writing in the same assessment
 instrument and must provide a single score.  A school district
 shall comply with State Board of Education rules regarding
 administration of the assessment instruments listed in this
 subsection.  If a student is in a special education program under
 Subchapter A, Chapter 29, the student's individualized education
 program team [admission, review, and dismissal committee] shall
 determine whether any allowable modification is necessary in
 administering to the student an assessment instrument required
 under this subsection.  The State Board of Education shall
 administer the assessment instruments.  The State Board of
 Education shall adopt a schedule for the administration of
 end-of-course assessment instruments that complies with the
 requirements of Subsection (c-3).
 (d)  The commissioner may participate in multistate efforts
 to develop voluntary standardized end-of-course assessment
 instruments.  The commissioner by rule may require a school
 district to administer an end-of-course assessment instrument
 developed through the multistate efforts.  The individualized
 education program team [admission, review, and dismissal
 committee] of a student in a special education program under
 Subchapter A, Chapter 29, shall determine whether any allowable
 modification is necessary in administering to the student an
 end-of-course assessment instrument.
 SECTION 39.  Section 39.025(a-4), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a-4)  The individualized education program team [admission,
 review, and dismissal committee] of a student in a special
 education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, shall determine
 whether, to receive a high school diploma, the student is required
 to achieve satisfactory performance on end-of-course assessment
 instruments.
 SECTION 40.  Section 661.906, Government Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 661.906.  FOSTER PARENTS. A state employee who is a
 foster parent to a child under the conservatorship of the
 Department of Protective and Regulatory Services is entitled to a
 leave of absence without a deduction in salary for the purpose of
 attending:
 (1)  meetings held by the Department of Protective and
 Regulatory Services regarding the child under the foster care of
 the employee; or
 (2)  an individualized education program team
 [admission, review, and dismissal] meeting held by a school
 district regarding the child under the foster care of the employee.
 SECTION 41.  Section 29.301(1), Education Code, is repealed.
 SECTION 42.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.