Texas 2023 - 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3589 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 03/06/2023

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                            88R11036 AMF-D
 By: King of Hemphill H.B. No. 3589


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the transfer of the administration of school nutrition
 programs from the Texas Department of Agriculture to the Texas
 Education Agency.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 12.0025, Agriculture Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 12.0025.  NUTRITION PROGRAMS. The department shall
 administer the following federal and state nutrition programs:
 (1)  the commodity supplemental food program under 7
 U.S.C. Section 612c;
 (2)  the food distribution program under 7 U.S.C.
 Section 612c;
 (3)  the emergency food assistance program under 7
 U.S.C. Section 7501 et seq.; and
 (4)  [the school lunch program under 42 U.S.C. Section
 1751 et seq.;
 [(5) the summer food service program under 42 U.S.C.
 Section 1761;
 [(6)] the child and adult care food program under 42
 U.S.C. Section 1766[;
 [(7) the special milk program under 42 U.S.C. Section
 1772; and
 [(8) the school breakfast program under 42 U.S.C.
 Section 1773].
 SECTION 2.  Chapter 38, Education Code, is amended by adding
 Subchapter H to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER H. SCHOOL NUTRITION PROGRAMS
 Sec. 38.401.  SCHOOL NUTRITION PROGRAMS. The agency shall
 administer the following nutrition programs:
 (1)  the school lunch program under 42 U.S.C. Section
 1751 et seq.;
 (2)  the summer food service program under 42 U.S.C.
 Section 1761;
 (3)  the special milk program under 42 U.S.C. Section
 1772; and
 (4)  the school breakfast program under 42 U.S.C.
 Section 1773.
 SECTION 3.  Section 12.0026, Agriculture Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter H, Chapter 38, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 38.402, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 38.402  [12.0026]. INTERAGENCY FARM-TO-SCHOOL
 COORDINATION TASK FORCE.  (a)  To promote a healthy diet for
 schoolchildren and the business of small to mid-sized local farms
 and ranches, the interagency farm-to-school coordination task
 force shall develop and implement a plan to facilitate the
 availability of locally grown food products in public schools.
 (b)  The task force is composed of:
 (1)  a representative of:
 (A)  the agency [department], appointed by the
 commissioner;
 (B)  the Texas Department of Agriculture [Texas
 Education Agency], appointed by the commissioner of agriculture [of
 education]; and
 (C)  the Department of State Health Services,
 appointed by the commissioner of state health services; and
 (2)  at least one representative of each of the
 following groups, appointed by the commissioner:
 (A)  fruit and vegetable producer organizations;
 (B)  school food service organizations;
 (C)  food distribution businesses;
 (D)  child nutrition and advocacy organizations;
 (E)  parent organizations;
 (F)  educational institutions that conduct
 research in the areas of agriculture and nutrition; and
 (G)  health nutrition educators who serve school
 districts.
 (c)  A member of the task force serves at the will of the
 official who appointed the member.
 (d)  The representative of the agency [department] serves as
 presiding officer.  The task force may elect other necessary
 officers from its members.
 (e)  The task force shall meet at the call of the presiding
 officer.
 (f)  The agency whose commissioner appoints a member is
 responsible for the expenses of a member's service on the task
 force.  A member of the task force is not entitled to additional
 compensation for serving on the task force.
 (g)  Each appropriate agency or group represented on the task
 force shall provide the personnel and resources necessary to
 implement a task force measure under this section.
 (h)  The task force shall:
 (1)  design new education resources, or review or
 update existing resources, on nutrition and food education that may
 be used by schools and school districts;
 (2)  expand food-focused experiential education
 programs;
 (3)  offer assistance in identifying funding sources
 and grants that allow schools and school districts to recover the
 costs associated with purchasing locally grown food products;
 (4)  develop a database of available locally grown food
 products for use by school food service agencies that includes
 contact and purchasing information for the products;
 (5)  identify, design, or make available training
 programs to enable local farmers and ranchers to market their
 products to schools and school districts, including programs
 related to:
 (A)  crop production;
 (B)  marketing of crops;
 (C)  postharvest handling of crops;
 (D)  food safety;
 (E)  business management;
 (F)  liability and risk management; and
 (G)  other topics deemed appropriate by the task
 force;
 (6)  advise schools and school districts on methods by
 which a school or school district may improve its facilities to
 allow for the use of minimally processed, fresh, and locally
 produced foods in school meals;
 (7)  provide technical assistance to school food
 service agencies to establish procedures, recipes, menu rotations,
 and other internal processes that accommodate the use of locally
 grown foods in public schools;
 (8)  offer advanced skills development training to
 school food service employees regarding the proper methods of
 handling, preparing, and serving locally grown foods; and
 (9)  conduct any other activity considered by the task
 force as necessary to achieve its goals under this section.
 (i)  The task force may solicit and accept gifts, grants, and
 donations from public and private entities to use for the purposes
 of this section.
 (j)  The task force may use any existing program or procedure
 that it determines to be useful in performing its duties under this
 section.
 SECTION 4.  Section 12.041, Agriculture Code, is transferred
 to Subchapter H, Chapter 38, Education Code, as added by this Act,
 redesignated as Section 38.403, Education Code, and amended to read
 as follows:
 Sec. 38.403  [12.041]. SCHOOL BREAKFAST AND LUNCH PROGRAM.
 (a)  The agency [department], the Department of Agriculture [Texas
 Education Agency], and the Health and Human Services Commission
 shall ensure that applicable information maintained by each entity
 is used on at least a quarterly basis to identify children who are
 categorically eligible for free meals under the national free or
 reduced-price breakfast and lunch program.  In complying with this
 subsection, the agency, department, [agency,] and commission shall
 use information that corresponds to the months of the year in which
 enrollment in the food stamp program is customarily higher than
 average.
 (b)  The agency [department] shall determine the feasibility
 of establishing a process under which school districts verify
 student eligibility for the national free or reduced-price
 breakfast and lunch program through a direct verification process
 that uses information maintained under the food stamp and Medicaid
 programs, as authorized by 42 U.S.C. Section 1758(b)(3), [as
 amended by Section 105(a) of the Child Nutrition and WIC
 Reauthorization Act of 2004 (Pub. L. No. 108-265),] and 7 C.F.R.
 Sections 245.6a(a)(1) and (3) and 245.6a(b)(3). If the agency
 [department] determines the process described by this subsection is
 feasible, the agency [department] may implement the process.
 SECTION 5.  Section 12.0029, Agriculture Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter H, Chapter 38, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 38.404, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 38.404  [12.0029]. SUMMER NUTRITION PROGRAMS.  (a)  In
 this section:
 (1)  "Field office" means a field office of a nutrition
 program administered by the agency [department].
 (2)  "Summer nutrition program" means the summer food
 service program under 42 U.S.C. Section 1761.  The term includes the
 seamless summer option under 42 U.S.C. Section 1761(a)(8).
 (b)  Unless the agency [department] grants a school district
 a waiver under Subsection (f), a district in which 50 percent or
 more of the students are eligible to participate in the national
 free or reduced-price lunch program under 42 U.S.C.  Section 1751 et
 seq. shall provide or arrange for the provision of a summer
 nutrition program for at least 30 days during the period in which
 district schools are recessed for the summer.
 (c)  Not later than October 31 of each year, the agency
 [department] shall notify each school district described by
 Subsection (b) of the district's responsibility concerning
 provision of a summer nutrition program during the next period in
 which school is recessed for the summer.
 (d)  Not later than November 30 of each year, the board of
 trustees of a school district that intends to request a waiver under
 Subsection (e)(2) must send written notice of the district's
 intention to the district's local school health advisory council.
 The notice must include an explanation of the district's reason for
 requesting a waiver of the requirement.
 (e)  Each school district that receives a notice under
 Subsection (c) shall, not later than January 31 of the year
 following the year in which the notice was received:
 (1)  inform the agency [department] in writing that the
 district intends to provide or arrange for the provision of a summer
 nutrition program during the next period in which district schools
 are recessed for the summer; or
 (2)  request in writing that the agency [department]
 grant the district a waiver of the requirement to provide or arrange
 for the provision of a summer nutrition program.
 (f)  The agency [department] may grant a school district a
 waiver of the requirement to provide or arrange for the provision of
 a summer nutrition program only if:
 (1)  the district:
 (A)  provides documentation, verified by the
 agency [department], showing that:
 (i)  there are fewer than 100 children in the
 district currently eligible for the national free or reduced-price
 lunch program;
 (ii)  transportation to enable district
 students to participate in the program is an insurmountable
 obstacle to the district's ability to provide or arrange for the
 provision of the program despite consultation by the district with
 public transit providers;
 (iii)  the district is unable to provide or
 arrange for the provision of a program due to renovation or
 construction of district facilities and the unavailability of an
 appropriate alternate provider or site; or
 (iv)  the district is unable to provide or
 arrange for the provision of a program due to another specified
 extenuating circumstance and the unavailability of an appropriate
 alternate provider or site; and
 (B)  has worked with the field offices to identify
 another possible provider for the program in the district; or
 (2)  the cost to the district to provide or arrange for
 provision of a program would be cost-prohibitive, as determined by
 the agency [department] using the criteria and methodology
 established under Subsection (g).
 (g)  The agency [department] by rule shall establish
 criteria and a methodology for determining whether the cost to a
 school district to provide or arrange for provision of a summer
 nutrition program would be cost-prohibitive for purposes of
 granting a waiver under Subsection (f)(2).
 (h)  A waiver granted under Subsection (f) is for a one-year
 period.
 (i)  If a school district has requested a waiver under
 Subsection (e)(2) and has been unable to provide to the agency
 [department] a list of possible providers for the summer nutrition
 program, the field offices shall continue to attempt to identify an
 alternate provider for the district's summer nutrition program.
 (j)  Not later than December 31 of each even-numbered year,
 the agency [department] shall provide to the legislature by e-mail
 a report that, for each year of the biennium:
 (1)  states the name of each school district that
 receives a notice under Subsection (c) and indicates whether the
 district:
 (A)  has provided or arranged for the provision of
 a summer nutrition program; or
 (B)  has not provided or arranged for the
 provision of a program and did not receive a waiver;
 (2)  identifies the funds, other than federal funds,
 used by school districts and the state in complying with this
 section; and
 (3)  identifies the total amount of any profit made or
 loss incurred through summer nutrition programs under this section.
 (k)  The agency [department] shall post and maintain on the
 agency's [department's] Internet website the most recent report
 required by Subsection (j).
 SECTION 6.  Section 12.0028, Agriculture Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter H, Chapter 38, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 38.405, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 38.405  [12.0028]. LIMITATION ON SANCTIONS IMPOSED ON
 SCHOOL DISTRICTS FOR SALE OF FOODS OF MINIMAL NUTRITIONAL VALUE.
 (a)  The commissioner shall adopt rules determining the minimal
 nutritional value of meals under this section [In this section,
 "food of minimal nutritional value" has the meaning assigned by 7
 C.F.R. Section 210.11(a)(2)].
 (b)  The agency [department] may not impose on a school
 district a sanction, including disallowing meal reimbursement,
 based on the sale to students at a high school of food of minimal
 nutritional value, if the sale is approved in advance by the school
 and is made:
 (1)  outside of a school area designated for food
 service or food consumption or during a period other than a school
 meal service period; and
 (2)  for the purpose of raising money for a student
 organization or activity sponsored or sanctioned by the school or
 the school district in which the school is located.
 SECTION 7.  The change in law made by Section 38.402,
 Education Code, as transferred, redesignated, and amended by this
 Act, applies only to a member of the Interagency Farm-to-Market
 Coordination Task Force appointed on or after the effective date of
 this Act.
 SECTION 8.  All records, contracts, assets, personal
 property, and personnel of the Department of Agriculture associated
 with or engaged in the administration of a nutrition program
 transferred to the Texas Education Agency by this Act are
 transferred to the Texas Education Agency on the effective date of
 this Act.
 SECTION 9.  A rule or form adopted by the Department of
 Agriculture for the administration of a nutrition program
 transferred by this Act is a rule or form of the Texas Education
 Agency until changed by the Texas Education Agency.
 SECTION 10.  (a)  The unobligated and unexpended balance of
 any appropriations made to the Department of Agriculture in
 connection with or relating to a nutrition program transferred
 under this Act, for the state fiscal biennium ending August 31,
 2025, is transferred to the Texas Education Agency for the purpose
 of implementing the powers, duties, and obligations transferred to
 that agency under this Act.
 (b)  The Department of Agriculture shall continue, as
 necessary, to perform the duties and functions being transferred to
 the Texas Education Agency until the transfer of department duties
 and functions is complete.
 SECTION 11.  If, before implementing any provision of this
 Act, an agency of this state determines that a waiver or
 authorization from a federal agency is necessary for implementation
 of that provision, the agency affected by the provision shall
 request the waiver or authorization and may delay the
 implementation of that provision until the waiver or authorization
 is granted.
 SECTION 12.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.