Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB508 Introduced / Bill

Filed 01/29/2019

                    86R3477 KJE-D
 By: Miles S.B. No. 508


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the development of a statewide online education and
 career advising tool and the establishment of a grant program to
 reimburse private employers for paid internships provided to
 certain public school students in career and technology education
 programs.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter A, Chapter 28, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 28.0092 to read as follows:
 Sec. 28.0092.  ONLINE EDUCATION AND CAREER ADVISING TOOL.
 (a) In this section, "institution of higher education" has the
 meaning assigned by Section 61.003.
 (b)  Subject to the availability of federal funding for this
 purpose, the agency shall develop and implement a statewide online
 education and career advising tool to assist children in making
 informed, meaningful, and attainable postsecondary and career
 plans.
 (c)  The online education and career advising tool must
 include:
 (1)  an individualized career pathway generator that
 assists a child in selecting a career and identifying the secondary
 and postsecondary courses the child should take to advance toward
 that career; and
 (2)  information regarding:
 (A)  any local, regional, or statewide
 articulation agreements regarding dual credit programs or the
 transfer of course credit between institutions of higher education;
 (B)  the postsecondary and career options
 associated with each endorsement under Section 28.025(c-1),
 including the dual credit courses related to each endorsement that
 apply toward a certificate or degree program at an institution of
 higher education;
 (C)  any stackable degree programs provided by an
 institution of higher education through which a student may obtain
 a series of credentials as the student progresses through the
 program;
 (D)  existing and anticipated employment
 opportunities statewide and in a child's community, aligned to
 state and regional workforce needs;
 (E)  anticipated earnings in various careers;
 (F)  local, regional, and statewide career
 training and certification programs, including the requirements,
 costs, and available options for those programs; and
 (G)  the time and cost required for and other
 expenses related to various postsecondary and career options.
 (d)  In developing and implementing the online education and
 career advising tool, the agency shall consult with the Texas
 Higher Education Coordinating Board and the Texas Workforce
 Commission.  On request by the agency, the coordinating board and
 the commission shall provide to the agency any data maintained by
 the coordinating board or commission that is necessary to develop
 the tool.
 SECTION 2.  Subchapter F, Chapter 29, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 29.194 to read as follows:
 Sec. 29.194.  GRANT PROGRAM FOR PAID INTERNSHIPS. (a) To
 encourage private entities to participate in providing career and
 technology education to assist public school students in developing
 the knowledge, skills, and competencies necessary for a broad range
 of career opportunities, the commissioner shall establish a
 competitive grant program under which grants are awarded to school
 districts and open-enrollment charter schools for the
 reimbursement of private entities for all or part of the cost of
 providing a paid internship or similar program to a student
 participating in a career and technology education program in the
 district or school.
 (b)  In awarding grants under this section, the commissioner
 shall give preference to school districts and open-enrollment
 charter schools that, as determined by the commissioner:
 (1)  have a high percentage of students who fail to
 perform satisfactorily on relevant state assessments; and
 (2)  serve economically disadvantaged neighborhoods.
 (c)  To be eligible to receive reimbursement under the grant
 program, a paid internship or similar program must:
 (1)  satisfy a curriculum requirement for an
 endorsement adopted by rule under Section 28.025(c-1), or qualify
 as a dual credit course; and
 (2)  pay the student at least the minimum wage required
 by law.
 (d)  The total amount of grants awarded under this section
 may not exceed $5 million in a state fiscal biennium. A grant
 awarded to a school district or open-enrollment charter school may
 not exceed the lesser of:
 (1)  $1 million in a state fiscal biennium; or
 (2)  an amount determined by the commissioner not to
 exceed $2,500 for each participating student enrolled in the
 district or school in the school year in which the grant is awarded.
 (e)  A grant awarded to a school district or open-enrollment
 charter school may only be used to reimburse a private entity for
 all or part of the cost of providing an eligible paid internship or
 similar program to a student participating in a career and
 technology education program in the district or school. A private
 entity may not receive reimbursement under this section for
 providing a paid internship or similar program to a student who is
 related to the owner of the entity within the third degree of
 consanguinity as determined under Subchapter B, Chapter 573,
 Government Code.
 (f)  Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,
 the commissioner, in cooperation with the Texas Workforce
 Commission, shall submit to the governor, the lieutenant governor,
 and the legislature a report on the effectiveness of the grant
 program in creating jobs. The report must include, to the extent
 available:
 (1)  the total number of paid internships or similar
 programs for which a private entity received reimbursement through
 a grant awarded under this section and the total amount of money
 reimbursed for those internships or programs through a grant;
 (2)  the total number of students who completed a paid
 internship or similar program described by Subdivision (1) and were
 subsequently hired for a permanent job in this state by the private
 entity that offered the internship or program;
 (3)  for the permanent jobs described by Subdivision
 (2):
 (A)  the median wage of those jobs;
 (B)  the North American Industry Classification
 System classification of each of those jobs; and
 (C)  the number of those jobs that provide health
 benefits coverage;
 (4)  the number of private entities that offered a paid
 internship or similar program described by Subdivision (1) that are
 historically underutilized businesses, as defined by Section
 2161.001, Government Code, and the total amount of money reimbursed
 through a grant awarded under the grant program for the internship
 or program;
 (5)  demographic information on students participating
 in paid internships or similar programs described by Subdivision
 (1), including the school districts or open-enrollment charter
 schools in which the students are enrolled, to the extent allowed
 under state and federal law; and
 (6)  an assessment of the number of eligible paid
 internships or similar programs that would not have been offered in
 the absence of a reimbursement provided through a grant and the
 total number of students who completed those internships or
 programs, including for each school year in which grants are
 awarded, an estimate of the number of public high school students of
 legal working age who were employed in this state for any period of
 time during that school year outside of a paid internship or similar
 program described by Subdivision (1).
 (g)  The commissioner, in consultation with the Texas
 Workforce Commission, shall adopt rules as necessary to implement
 this section.
 SECTION 3.  Section 42.005, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (g-2) to read as follows:
 (g-2)  The time during which a student participates in a paid
 internship or similar program that is funded in whole or in part
 through a grant awarded under the grant program established by
 Section 29.194 shall be counted as part of the minimum number of
 instructional hours required for a student to be considered a
 full-time student in average daily attendance for purposes of this
 section.
 SECTION 4.  Section 29.194, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, applies beginning with the 2019-2020 school year.
 SECTION 5.  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, 2019.