Texas 2025 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB7 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/14/2025

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                    89R19773 TYPED
 By: Leach H.B. No. 7




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to parental rights in public education and to the
 reporting of certain misconduct and child abuse and neglect;
 authorizing an administrative penalty; creating criminal offenses.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 ARTICLE 1. PARENTAL RIGHTS
 SECTION 1.01.  Section 7.057, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a) and (e) and adding Subsections (c-1) and
 (g) to read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (e), a person may
 appeal in writing to the commissioner if the person is aggrieved
 by[:
 [(1)  the school laws of this state; or
 [(2)]  actions or decisions of any school district
 board of trustees that violate:
 (1) [(A)]  the school laws of this state; or
 (2) [(B)]  a provision of a written employment contract
 between the school district and a school district employee, if a
 violation causes or would cause monetary harm to the employee.
 (c-1)  In an appeal against a school district, the
 commissioner may:
 (1)  if the record is insufficient for the commissioner
 to resolve the appeal, remand the case to the district and order an
 investigation and development of the record; or
 (2)  if the commissioner determines that an action or
 decision of the district's board of trustees violated a law or
 provision described by Subsection (a):
 (A)  reverse the case or remand the case to the
 board of trustees for additional proceedings; and
 (B)  order the board of trustees to take
 corrective action the commissioner determines appropriate to
 remedy the violation.
 (e)  This section does not apply to:
 (1)  a case to which Subchapter G, Chapter 21, applies;
 [or]
 (2)  a case involving extracurricular activities; or
 (3)  a student disciplinary action under Chapter 37.
 (g)  The commissioner may adopt rules as necessary to
 implement this section.
 SECTION 1.02.  Subchapter C, Chapter 7, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 7.0571 and 7.0572 to read as follows:
 Sec. 7.0571.  REMAND. (a) In an appeal against a school
 district under Section 7.057, the commissioner may remand the case
 to the district for rehearing under Chapter 26A if the commissioner
 determines that the appeal would have likely succeeded on the
 merits if not for:
 (1)  a fatal procedural error at the district level;
 (2)  failure to allege the correct statutory violation;
 or
 (3)  failure to develop necessary evidence at the
 district level.
 (b)  In remanding a case under Subsection (a), the
 commissioner may:
 (1)  identify specific issues or law for the school
 district to address; and
 (2)  alter the timelines provided under Chapter 26A.
 (c)  A case remanded under this section may be appealed again
 under Section 7.057, and the timelines established by that section
 apply to the appeal unless the commissioner provides for a shorter
 timeline.
 (d)  The commissioner may adopt rules as necessary to
 implement this section.
 Sec. 7.0572.  DISPUTE RESOLUTION FACILITATION. (a) The
 commissioner shall develop a program for the training and review of
 dispute resolution facilitators.
 (b)  The commissioner shall establish requirements for a
 person to qualify as a dispute resolution facilitator under this
 section.
 (c)  In an appeal against a school district under Section
 7.057, the commissioner may refer to dispute resolution
 facilitation under this section a case involving a grievance by a
 parent of or person standing in parental relation to a student
 enrolled in the district arising from the parent's or person's
 status as a parent of or person standing in parental relation to the
 student if:
 (1)  the grievance does not allege:
 (A)  conduct described by Section 7.057(a) or (e);
 or
 (B)  conduct for which Title 1 or 2, other than
 Section 11.151(b), makes a specific decision of the district's
 board of trustees final and unappealable or not subject to review;
 and
 (2)  the commissioner determines that the district's
 conduct should be reviewed for substantial error that is apparent
 from the record.
 (d)  The commissioner shall appoint a dispute resolution
 facilitator to an appeal referred to dispute resolution
 facilitation under Subsection (c). A dispute resolution
 facilitator:
 (1)  shall:
 (A)  propose factual findings related to the
 grievance;
 (B)  consider information provided by the person
 who filed the grievance and the school district;
 (C)  facilitate a resolution between the person
 who filed the grievance and the school district; and
 (D)  if no resolution is possible, render a
 decision that includes findings of fact and conclusions of law; and
 (2)  may recommend a remand of the grievance or grant
 relief or redress to the person who filed the grievance in the same
 manner as the commissioner under Section 7.057.
 (e)  The commissioner may adopt or reject the final
 determination of a dispute resolution facilitator. If the
 commissioner rejects the determination, no decision on the matter
 is issued. If the commissioner adopts the determination, the
 determination is binding on the parties. A determination by the
 commissioner under this subsection is final and may not be
 appealed, including under Section 7.057(d).
 (f)  The school district against which the grievance was
 filed shall pay the cost of the dispute resolution facilitator, the
 hearing room, the certified court reporter at the hearing, and the
 production of any original hearing transcript.
 (g)  Section 7.057(a-1) applies to conduct that may be
 referred to dispute resolution facilitation under Subsection
 (c)(1).
 (h)  The commissioner may adopt rules as necessary to
 implement this section.
 SECTION 1.03.  Subchapter A, Chapter 11, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 11.004 to read as follows:
 Sec. 11.004.  COMPLIANCE WITH MANDATORY POLICY. A school
 district, the district's board of trustees, and the district's
 employees shall implement and comply with each policy the district
 is required to adopt under this code or other law.
 SECTION 1.04.  The heading to Section 11.1518, Education
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 11.1518.  TRUSTEE INFORMATION [POSTED ON WEBSITE].
 SECTION 1.05.  Section 11.1518, Education Code, is amended
 by amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsections (d) and (e) to
 read as follows:
 (c)  Not later than the 30th day after a new person is sworn
 in as a member [Each time there is a change in the membership] of a
 school district's board of trustees, the district shall update the
 information required under Subsection (a) and, as applicable:
 (1)  post the updated information on the district's
 Internet website; or
 (2)  submit the updated information to the agency for
 posting on the agency's Internet website in accordance with
 Subsection (b).
 (d)  A school district shall annually submit to the agency
 the information required under Subsection (a) for each member of
 the district's board of trustees. The information must:
 (1)  identify the member designated as chair; and
 (2)  be updated as required by Subsection (c).
 (e)  The commissioner may adopt rules as necessary to
 implement this section.
 SECTION 1.06.  Section 12A.004(a), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A local innovation plan may not provide for the
 exemption of a district designated as a district of innovation from
 the following provisions of this title:
 (1)  a state or federal requirement applicable to an
 open-enrollment charter school operating under Subchapter D,
 Chapter 12;
 (2)  Subchapters A, C, D, and E, Chapter 11, except that
 a district may be exempt from Sections 11.1511(b)(5) and (14) and
 Section 11.162;
 (3)  the grievance policy under Chapter 26A;
 (4)  state curriculum and graduation requirements
 adopted under Chapter 28; and
 (5) [(4)]  academic and financial accountability and
 sanctions under Chapters 39 and 39A.
 SECTION 1.07.  Section 21.048(c-1), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (c-1)  The results of an examination administered under this
 section are confidential and are not subject to disclosure under
 Chapter 552, Government Code, unless the disclosure is regarding
 notification to a parent of the assignment of an uncertified
 teacher to a classroom as required by Section 26.0083 [21.057].
 SECTION 1.08.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Sections 26.0021 and 26.0022 to read as follows:
 Sec. 26.0021.  PARENTAL RIGHTS INFORMATION. (a) The agency
 shall create and maintain a document that informs a parent of the
 parent's rights regarding the education of the parent's child
 provided under this chapter.
 (b)  The document must:
 (1)  include information regarding accessing the
 contents of this chapter;
 (2)  be made publicly available in a prominent place on
 the Internet website of the agency and each school district; and
 (3)  be provided to parents at the beginning of each
 school year in an electronic or hard copy format.
 Sec. 26.0022.  RIGHT TO SELECT EDUCATIONAL SETTING. A
 parent is entitled to choose the educational setting for the
 parent's child, including public school, private school, or home
 school.
 SECTION 1.09.  Section 26.004(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  A parent is entitled to access to all written records of
 a school district concerning the parent's child, including:
 (1)  attendance records;
 (2)  test scores;
 (3)  grades;
 (4)  disciplinary records;
 (5)  counseling records;
 (6)  psychological records;
 (7)  applications for admission;
 (8)  health and immunization information;
 (9)  teacher and school counselor evaluations;
 (10)  reports of behavioral patterns; [and]
 (11)  records relating to assistance provided for
 learning difficulties, including information collected regarding
 any intervention strategies used with the child; and
 (12)  records relating to library materials checked out
 by the child from a school library.
 SECTION 1.10.  Section 26.006, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
 (g)  Each school district and open-enrollment charter school
 shall post on the home page of the district's or school's Internet
 website a notice stating that a parent of a student enrolled in the
 district or school is entitled to review the materials described by
 Subsection (a)(1) and may request that the district or school make
 the materials available for review as provided by this section.
 SECTION 1.11.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Section 26.0062 to read as follows:
 Sec. 26.0062.  REQUIRED DISCLOSURE REGARDING INSTRUCTIONAL
 PLAN. (a) Each school district shall adopt a policy to make
 available on the district's Internet website at the beginning of
 each semester an instructional plan or course syllabus for each
 class offered in the district for that semester.
 (b)  The policy adopted under Subsection (a) must:
 (1)  require each teacher to provide before the
 beginning of each semester a copy of the teacher's instructional
 plan or course syllabus for each class for which the teacher
 provides instruction to:
 (A)  district administration; and
 (B)  the parent of each student enrolled in the
 class; and
 (2)  provide for additional copies of an instructional
 plan or course syllabus to be made available to a parent of a
 student enrolled in the class on the parent's request.
 SECTION 1.12.  Section 21.057, Education Code, is
 transferred to Chapter 26, Education Code, redesignated as Section
 26.0083, Education Code, and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 26.0083 [21.057].  PARENTAL NOTIFICATION REGARDING
 TEACHER CERTIFICATION. (a) A school district that assigns an
 inappropriately certified or uncertified teacher to the same
 classroom for more than 30 consecutive instructional days during
 the same school year shall provide written notice of the assignment
 to a parent or guardian of each student in that classroom.
 (b)  The superintendent of the school district shall provide
 the notice required by Subsection (a) not later than the 30th
 instructional day after the date of the assignment of the
 inappropriately certified or uncertified teacher.
 (c)  The school district shall:
 (1)  make a good-faith effort to ensure that the notice
 required by this section is provided in a bilingual form to any
 parent or guardian whose primary language is not English;
 (2)  retain a copy of any notice provided under this
 section; and
 (3)  make information relating to teacher
 certification available to the public on request.
 (d)  For purposes of this section, "inappropriately
 certified or uncertified teacher":
 (1)  includes:
 (A)  an individual serving on an emergency
 certificate issued under Section 21.041(b)(2); or
 (B)  an individual who does not hold any
 certificate or permit issued under this chapter and is not employed
 as specified by Subdivision (2)(E); and
 (2)  does not include an individual:
 (A)  who is a certified teacher assigned to teach
 a class or classes outside his or her area of certification, as
 determined by rules proposed by the board in specifying the
 certificate required for each assignment;
 (B)  serving on a certificate issued due to a
 hearing impairment under Section 21.048;
 (C)  serving on a certificate issued pursuant to
 enrollment in an approved alternative certification program under
 Section 21.049;
 (D)  certified by another state or country and
 serving on a certificate issued under Section 21.052;
 (E)  serving on a school district teaching permit
 issued under Section 21.055; or
 (F)  employed under a waiver granted by the
 commissioner pursuant to Section 7.056.
 (e)  This section does not apply if a school is required in
 accordance with Section 1006, Every Student Succeeds Act (20 U.S.C.
 Section 6312(e)(1)(B)(ii)), to provide notice to a parent or
 guardian regarding a teacher who does not meet certification
 requirements at the grade level and subject area in which the
 teacher is assigned, provided the school provides notice as
 required by that Act.
 SECTION 1.13.  Section 26.009, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsections (a-1),
 (a-2), (c), and (d) to read as follows:
 (a)  An employee or contractor of a school district must
 obtain the written consent of a child's parent in the manner
 required by Subsection (a-2) before the employee or contractor may:
 (1)  conduct a psychological or psychiatric
 examination or[,] test[,] or psychological or psychiatric
 treatment, unless the examination, test, or treatment is required
 under Section 38.004 or state or federal law regarding requirements
 for special education; or
 (2)  subject to Subsection (b), make or authorize the
 making of a videotape of a child or record or authorize the
 recording of a child's voice.
 (a-1)  For purposes of Subsection (a):
 (1)  "Psychological or psychiatric examination or
 test" means a method designed to elicit information regarding an
 attitude, habit, trait, opinion, belief, feeling, or mental
 disorder or a condition thought to lead to a mental disorder,
 regardless of the manner in which the method is presented or
 characterized, including a method that is presented or
 characterized as a survey, check-in, or screening or is embedded in
 an academic lesson.
 (2)  "Psychological or psychiatric treatment" means
 the planned, systematic use of a method or technique that is
 designed to affect behavioral, emotional, or attitudinal
 characteristics of an individual or group.
 (a-2)  Written consent for a parent's child to participate in
 a district activity described by Subsection (a) must be obtained
 for each separate activity in which the child participates, and
 each written consent must be signed by the parent and returned to
 the district. A child may not participate in the activity unless
 the district receives the parent's signed written consent to that
 activity.
 (b)  An employee or contractor of a school district is not
 required to obtain the consent of a child's parent before the
 employee or contractor may make a videotape of a child or authorize
 the recording of a child's voice if the videotape or voice recording
 is to be used only for:
 (1)  purposes of safety, including the maintenance of
 order and discipline in common areas of the school or on school
 buses;
 (2)  a purpose related to a cocurricular or
 extracurricular activity;
 (3)  a purpose related to regular classroom
 instruction;
 (4)  media coverage of the school; or
 (5)  a purpose related to the promotion of student
 safety under Section 29.022.
 (c)  A school district shall retain the written informed
 consent of a child's parent obtained under this section as part of
 the child's education records.
 (d)  Nothing in this section may be construed to:
 (1)  require an employee or contractor of a school
 district to obtain the written consent of a child's parent before
 verbally asking the child about the child's general well-being;
 (2)  affect a child's consent to counseling under
 Section 32.004, Family Code; or
 (3)  affect the duty to report child abuse or neglect
 under Chapter 261, Family Code, or an investigation of a report of
 abuse or neglect under that chapter.
 SECTION 1.14.  Section 26.011(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The board of trustees of each school district shall
 adopt a grievance procedure that complies with Chapter 26A under
 which the board shall address each complaint that the board
 receives concerning violation of a right guaranteed by this
 chapter.
 SECTION 1.15.  Subtitle E, Title 2, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 26A to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 26A. GRIEVANCE POLICY
 Sec. 26A.001.  GRIEVANCE POLICY. (a) The board of trustees
 of a school district shall adopt a grievance policy to address
 grievances received by the district.
 (b)  The policy must provide for the following levels of
 review, subject to Subsection (c):
 (1)  review by:
 (A)  the principal of the school district campus
 at which the grievance is filed or the principal's designee; or
 (B)  for a grievance that arises from subject
 matter unrelated to a campus, review by an administrator at the
 school district's central office;
 (2)  if established by the policy, an appeal to an
 administrator at the school district's central office;
 (3)  an appeal to the superintendent of the school
 district or the superintendent's designee; and
 (4)  an appeal to the board of trustees of the school
 district.
 (c)  A review or appeal on a grievance must be conducted by a
 person with the authority to address the grievance unless a
 preliminary hearing is necessary to develop a record or a
 recommendation for the board of trustees of the school district.
 (d)  The board of trustees of a school district may delegate
 the authority to hear and decide a grievance to a committee of at
 least three members composed only of members of the board of
 trustees. For purposes of an appeal to the commissioner under
 Section 7.057, a decision by the committee is a decision of the
 board of trustees.
 (e)  The policy must:
 (1)  prohibit the board of trustees of the school
 district or a district employee from retaliating against a student
 or parent of or person standing in parental relation to a student
 who files a grievance in accordance with the policy;
 (2)  require a person involved in reviewing a grievance
 under the policy to recuse himself or herself from reviewing the
 grievance if the person is the subject of the grievance;
 (3)  provide for a higher level of review under
 Subsection (b) if the person who would otherwise review the
 grievance is required to recuse himself or herself under
 Subdivision (2);
 (4)  provide for the creation and retention of a record
 of each hearing on the grievance, including:
 (A)  documents submitted by the person who filed
 the grievance or determined relevant by school district personnel;
 and
 (B)  a written record of the decision, including
 an explanation of the basis for the decision and an indication of
 each document that supports the decision;
 (5)  allow the person who filed the grievance to
 supplement the record with additional documents or add additional
 claims;
 (6)  allow for a remand to a lower level of review under
 Subsection (b) to develop a record at any time, including at the
 board of trustees level of review;
 (7)  require the school district to direct a grievance
 that is filed with the incorrect administrator to the appropriate
 administrator and consider the grievance filed on the date on which
 the grievance was initially filed; and
 (8)  for a grievance before the board of trustees of the
 school district, require that:
 (A)  the person who filed the grievance be
 provided at least five business days before the date on which the
 meeting to discuss the grievance will be held a description of any
 information the board of trustees intends to rely on that is not
 contained in the record; and
 (B)  the meeting at which the grievance is
 discussed be recorded by video or audio recording or by transcript
 created by a certified court reporter.
 Sec. 26A.002.  TIMELINES FOR FILING AND APPEAL. The policy
 adopted under Section 26A.001 must:
 (1)  provide at least:
 (A)  for a grievance filed by a parent of or person
 standing in parental relation to a student enrolled in the school
 district:
 (i)  60 days to file a grievance from the
 date on which the parent or person knew or had reason to know of the
 facts giving rise to the grievance; or
 (ii)  if the parent or person engaged in
 informal attempts to resolve the grievance, the later of 90 days to
 file a grievance from the date described by Subparagraph (i) or 30
 days to file a grievance from the date on which the district
 provided information to the parent or person regarding how to file
 the grievance; and
 (B)  20 days to file an appeal after the date on
 which a decision on the grievance was made;
 (2)  for a hearing that is not before the board of
 trustees of the school district, require:
 (A)  the district to hold a hearing not later than
 the 10th day after the date on which the grievance or appeal was
 filed; and
 (B)  a written decision to be made not later than
 the 20th day after the date on which the hearing was held that
 includes:
 (i)  any relief or redress to be provided;
 and
 (ii)  information regarding filing an
 appeal, including the timeline to appeal under this section and
 Section 7.057, if applicable; and
 (3)  for a hearing before the board of trustees of the
 school district, require the board of trustees to:
 (A)  hold a meeting to discuss the grievance not
 later than the 60th day after the date on which the previous
 decision on the grievance was made; and
 (B)  make a decision on the grievance not later
 than the 30th day after the date on which the meeting is held under
 Paragraph (A).
 Sec. 26A.003.  POSTING OF PROCEDURES AND FORMS. (a) The
 board of trustees of a school district shall develop, make publicly
 available in a prominent location on the district's Internet
 website, and include in the district's student handbook:
 (1)  procedures for resolving grievances;
 (2)  standardized forms for filing a grievance, a
 notice of appeal, or a request for a hearing under this chapter; and
 (3)  the method by which a grievance may be filed
 electronically.
 (b)  A school district shall ensure that a grievance may be
 submitted electronically at the location on the district's Internet
 website at which the information described by Subsection (a) is
 available.
 (c)  A school district shall submit and make accessible to
 the agency the location on the district's Internet website at which
 the information described by Subsection (a) is available.
 SECTION 1.16.  Section 28.004, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (i-2) to read as follows:
 (i-2)  Before a student may be provided with human sexuality
 instruction, a school district must obtain the written consent of
 the student's parent. A request for written consent under this
 subsection:
 (1)  may not be included with any other notification or
 request for written consent provided to the parent, other than the
 notice provided under Subsection (i); and
 (2)  must be provided to the parent not later than the
 14th day before the date on which the human sexuality instruction
 begins.
 SECTION 1.17.  Section 12A.004(a), Education Code, as
 amended by this Act, applies to a local innovation plan adopted or
 renewed before, on, or after the effective date of this Act.
 SECTION 1.18.  (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) of
 this section, this article applies beginning with the 2025-2026
 school year.
 (b)  The changes in law made by this article apply to an
 appeal filed with the commissioner of education on or after
 September 1, 2025. An appeal filed with the commissioner before
 September 1, 2025, is governed by the law in effect on the date the
 appeal was filed, and the former law is continued in effect for that
 purpose.
 ARTICLE 2. REPORTING OF MISCONDUCT AND CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT
 SECTION 2.01.  Article 42.018(a), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  This article applies only to:
 (1)  conviction or deferred adjudication community
 supervision granted on the basis of:
 (A)  an offense for which a conviction or grant of
 deferred adjudication community supervision requires the defendant
 to register as a sex offender under Chapter 62;
 (B)  an offense under Section 21.12 or 43.24,
 Penal Code;
 (C)  a felony offense under Chapter 43, Penal
 Code;
 (D)  a felony offense involving school property;
 or
 (E)  an offense under the laws of another state or
 federal law that is equivalent to an offense under Paragraph (A),
 (B), (C), or (D); or
 (2)  conviction of:
 (A)  a felony [an] offense under Title 5, Penal
 Code[, if the victim of the offense was under 18 years of age at the
 time the offense was committed]; or
 (B)  an offense under the laws of another state or
 federal law that is equivalent to an offense under Paragraph (A)
 [(3)  conviction or deferred adjudication community
 supervision granted on the basis of an offense under Section 43.24,
 Penal Code].
 SECTION 2.02.  Subtitle D, Title 2, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 22A, and a heading is added to that
 chapter to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 22A. EMPLOYEE AND SERVICE PROVIDER MISCONDUCT
 SECTION 2.03.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter A, and a heading is added to
 that subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
 SECTION 2.04.  Section 21.006(a), Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter A, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.001, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.001.  DEFINITIONS. [(a)] In this chapter
 [section]:
 (1)  "Abuse" has the meaning assigned by Section
 261.001, Family Code, and includes any sexual conduct involving [an
 educator and] a student or minor.
 (2)  "Board" means the State Board for Educator
 Certification.
 (3)  "Educational entity" means a school district,
 district of innovation, open-enrollment charter school, other
 charter entity, regional education service center, or shared
 services arrangement.
 (4)  "Other charter entity" means:
 (A)  a school district operating under a home-rule
 school district charter adopted under Subchapter B, Chapter 12;
 (B)  a campus or campus program operating under a
 charter granted under Subchapter C, Chapter 12; and
 (C)  an entity that contracts to partner with a
 school district under Section 11.174(a)(2) to operate a district
 campus under a charter granted to the entity by the district under
 Subchapter C, Chapter 12.
 (5)  "Registry" means the registry of persons who are
 not eligible to be employed by or act as a service provider for an
 educational entity maintained under Section 22A.151.
 (6)  "Service provider" means a person who provides
 services to an educational entity. The term includes:
 (A)  a contractor or subcontractor for an
 educational entity;
 (B)  a provider of tutoring services for an
 educational entity;
 (C)  an entity that has entered into a contract to
 operate a school district campus under Section 11.174;
 (D)  a staffing provider for an educational
 entity; and
 (E)  a person employed by or under the control of a
 person described by Paragraph (A), (B), (C), or (D).
 SECTION 2.05.  Subchapter A, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, is amended by adding Section 22A.002 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 22A.002.  CONFIDENTIALITY. (a) Unless disclosure is
 required by other law and except as provided by Subsection (b), a
 complaint, statement, recording, note, file, record, memorandum,
 or report that is received, obtained, or created by the board or
 agency relating to the review or investigation of an allegation of
 misconduct involving a person who is an applicant for or holder of a
 certification or permit issued by the board or for which a person is
 required to be included in the registry is confidential and not
 subject to disclosure under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 (b)  Subsection (a) does not prohibit the disclosure of
 information described by Subsection (a) for purposes of:
 (1)  a report required under Subchapter B, Chapter 21,
 Subchapter C-1, Chapter 22, or this chapter; or
 (2)  an administrative or other legal proceeding
 brought under Chapter 2001, Government Code.
 SECTION 2.06.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter B, and a heading is added to
 that subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER B. REQUIRED MISCONDUCT REPORTING
 SECTION 2.07.  Sections 21.006(b), (b-1), (b-2), (c), (c-1),
 (c-2), (d), (e), (f), (g), (g-1), (h), (i), (j), and (k), Education
 Code, are transferred to Subchapter B, Chapter 22A, Education Code,
 as added by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.051, Education
 Code, and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.051.  REQUIREMENT TO REPORT EDUCATOR MISCONDUCT TO
 BOARD. (a) [(b)] In addition to the reporting requirement under
 Section 261.101, Family Code, and except as provided by Subsection
 (f) [(c-2)], the superintendent or director of an educational
 entity [a school district, district of innovation, open-enrollment
 charter school, other charter entity, regional education service
 center, or shared services arrangement] shall notify the board
 [State Board for Educator Certification] if:
 (1)  an educator employed by or seeking employment by
 the entity [school district, district of innovation, charter
 school, other charter entity, service center, or shared services
 arrangement] has a criminal record and the entity [school district,
 district of innovation, charter school, other charter entity,
 service center, or shared services arrangement] obtained
 information about the educator's criminal record by a means other
 than the criminal history clearinghouse established under Section
 411.0845, Government Code;
 (2)  an educator's employment at the entity [school
 district, district of innovation, charter school, other charter
 entity, service center, or shared services arrangement] was
 terminated and there is evidence that the educator:
 (A)  abused or otherwise committed an unlawful act
 with a student or minor, including by engaging in conduct that
 involves physical mistreatment or constitutes a threat of violence
 to a student or minor and that is not justified under Chapter 9,
 Penal Code, regardless of whether the conduct resulted in bodily
 injury;
 (B) [(A-1)]  was involved in a romantic
 relationship with or solicited or engaged in sexual contact with a
 student or minor;
 (C)  engaged in inappropriate communications with
 a student or minor;
 (D)  failed to maintain appropriate boundaries
 with a student or minor;
 (E) [(B)]  possessed, transferred, sold, or
 distributed a controlled substance, as defined by Chapter 481,
 Health and Safety Code, or by 21 U.S.C. Section 801 et seq.;
 (F) [(C)]  illegally transferred, appropriated,
 or expended funds or other property of the entity [school district,
 district of innovation, charter school, other charter entity,
 service center, or shared services arrangement];
 (G) [(D)]  attempted by fraudulent or
 unauthorized means to obtain or alter a professional certificate or
 license for the purpose of promotion or additional compensation; or
 (H) [(E)]  committed a criminal offense or any
 part of a criminal offense on school property or at a
 school-sponsored event;
 (3)  the educator resigned and there is evidence that
 the educator engaged in misconduct described by Subdivision (2);
 (4)  the superintendent or director becomes aware of
 evidence that an educator employed by the entity engaged in
 misconduct described by Subdivision (2)(A), (B), (C), or (D); or
 (5) [(4)]  the educator engaged in conduct that
 violated the assessment instrument security procedures established
 under Section 39.0301.
 (b) [(b-1)]  A superintendent or director of an educational
 entity [a school district, district of innovation, open-enrollment
 charter school, other charter entity, regional education service
 center, or shared services arrangement] shall complete an
 investigation of an educator that involves evidence that the
 educator may have engaged in misconduct described by Subsection
 (a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) [(b)(2)(A) or (A-1)], despite the
 educator's resignation from employment before completion of the
 investigation.
 (c) [(b-2)]  The principal of a school district, district of
 innovation, open-enrollment charter school, or other charter
 entity campus must notify the superintendent or director of the
 [school] district, [district of innovation, charter] school, or
 [other charter] entity:
 (1)  except as provided by Subdivision (2), not later
 than the seventh business day after the date:
 (A) [(1)]  of an educator's termination of
 employment or resignation following an alleged incident of
 misconduct described by Subsection (a) [(b)]; or
 (B) [(2)]  the principal knew about an educator's
 criminal record under Subsection (a)(1); or
 (2)  not later than 48 hours after the principal
 becomes aware of evidence of misconduct described by Subsection
 (a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) [(b)(1)].
 (d) [(c)]  Except as provided by Subsection (f) [(c-2)], the
 superintendent or director must notify the board [State Board for
 Educator Certification] by filing a report with the board:
 (1)  except as provided by Subdivision (2), not later
 than the seventh business day after the date the superintendent or
 director:
 (A)  receives notice [a report] from a principal
 under Subsection (c) [(b-2)]; or
 (B)  knew about an educator's termination of
 employment or resignation following an alleged incident of
 misconduct described by Subsection (a) [(b)] or an educator's
 [employee's] criminal record under Subsection (a)(1); or
 (2)  not later than 48 hours after the superintendent
 or director:
 (A)  receives notice from a principal under
 Subsection (c); or
 (B)  became aware of evidence of misconduct
 described by Subsection (a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) [(b)(1)].
 (e) [(c-1)]  The report under Subsection (d) must be [(c)]:
 (1)  [must be:
 [(A)]  in writing;
 (2)  [and
 [(B)]  in a form prescribed by the board; and
 (3)  [(2)  may be] filed through the Internet portal
 developed and maintained by the agency under Section 22A.155 [State
 Board for Educator Certification under Subsection (g-1)].
 (f) [(c-2)]  A superintendent or director of an educational
 entity [a school district, district of innovation, open-enrollment
 charter school, regional education service center, or shared
 services arrangement] is not required to notify the board [State
 Board for Educator Certification] or file a report with the board
 under Subsection (a) [(b)] or (d) [(c)] if the superintendent or
 director has reasonable cause to believe the educator who is
 alleged to have engaged in the misconduct is deceased[:
 [(1)  completes an investigation into an educator's
 alleged incident of misconduct described by Subsection (b)(2)(A) or
 (A-1) before the educator's termination of employment or
 resignation; and
 [(2)  determines the educator did not engage in the
 alleged incident of misconduct described by Subsection (b)(2)(A) or
 (A-1)].
 (g) [(d)]  The superintendent or director shall notify the
 board of trustees or governing body of the educational entity
 [school district, open-enrollment charter school, other charter
 entity, regional education service center, or shared services
 arrangement] and the educator of the filing of the report required
 by Subsection (d) [(c)].
 (h) [(e)]  A superintendent, director, or principal of an
 educational entity [a school district, district of innovation,
 open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity, regional
 education service center, or shared services arrangement] who in
 good faith and while acting in an official capacity files a report
 with the board [State Board for Educator Certification] under this
 section or communicates with another superintendent, director, or
 principal concerning an educator's criminal record or alleged
 incident of misconduct is immune from civil or criminal liability
 that might otherwise be incurred or imposed.
 (i) [(f)]  The board [State Board for Educator
 Certification] shall determine whether to impose sanctions,
 including an administrative penalty under Subsection (l) [(i)],
 against a principal who fails to provide notification to a
 superintendent or director in violation of Subsection (c) [(b-2)]
 or against a superintendent or director who fails to file a report
 in violation of Subsection (d) [(c)].
 (j) [(g)]  The board [State Board for Educator
 Certification] shall propose rules as necessary to implement this
 section.
 (k)  [(g-1)  The State Board for Educator Certification
 shall develop and maintain an Internet portal through which a
 report required under Subsection (c) may be confidentially and
 securely filed.
 [(h)]  The name of a student or minor who is the victim of
 abuse or unlawful conduct by an educator must be included in a
 report filed under this section, but the name of the student or
 minor is not public information under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 (l) [(i)]  If an educator serving as a superintendent or
 director is required to file a report under Subsection (d) [(c)] and
 fails to file the report by the date required by that subsection, or
 if an educator serving as a principal is required to notify a
 superintendent or director about an educator's criminal record or
 alleged incident of misconduct under Subsection (c) [(b-2)] and
 fails to provide the notice by the date required by that subsection,
 the board [State Board for Educator Certification] may impose on
 the educator an administrative penalty of not less than $500 and not
 more than $10,000. The board [State Board for Educator
 Certification] may not renew the certification of an educator
 against whom an administrative penalty is imposed under this
 subsection until the penalty is paid.
 (m) [(j)]  A superintendent or director required to file a
 report under Subsection (d) [(c)] commits an offense if the
 superintendent or director fails to file the report by the date
 required by that subsection with intent to conceal an educator's
 criminal record or alleged incident of misconduct described by
 Subsection (a)(2)(A), (B), (E), (F), (G), or (H). A principal
 required to notify a superintendent or director about an educator's
 criminal record or alleged incident of misconduct under Subsection
 (c) [(b-2)] commits an offense if the principal fails to provide the
 notice by the date required by that subsection with intent to
 conceal an educator's criminal record or alleged incident of
 misconduct described by Subsection (a)(2)(A), (B), (E), (F), (G),
 or (H). An offense under this subsection is a state jail felony.
 (n) [(k)]  The commissioner may review the records of an
 educational entity [a school district, district of innovation,
 open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity, regional
 education service center, or shared services arrangement] to ensure
 compliance with the requirement to report misconduct under this
 section.
 SECTION 2.08.  Section 22.093, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter B, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.052, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.052  [22.093].  REQUIREMENT TO REPORT EMPLOYEE OR
 SERVICE PROVIDER MISCONDUCT TO AGENCY.  (a)  [In this section,
 "abuse" has the meaning assigned by Section 261.001, Family Code,
 and includes any sexual conduct involving a student or minor.
 [(b)]  This section applies to:
 (1)  a person who is employed by an educational entity
 [a school district, district of innovation, open-enrollment
 charter school, other charter entity, regional education service
 center, or shared services arrangement] and who does not hold a
 certification or permit issued under Subchapter B, Chapter 21; or
 (2)  a service provider for an educational entity who
 has or will have direct contact with students.
 (b) [(c)]  In addition to the reporting requirement under
 Section 261.101, Family Code, the superintendent or director of an
 educational entity [a school district, district of innovation,
 open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity, regional
 education service center, or shared services arrangement] shall
 notify the commissioner if the superintendent or director:
 (1)  becomes aware of [an employee's employment at the
 school district, district of innovation, charter school, other
 charter entity, service center, or shared services arrangement was
 terminated and there is] evidence that a person described by
 Subsection (a) engaged in misconduct described by Section
 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) [the employee:
 [(A)  abused or otherwise committed an unlawful
 act with a student or minor; or
 [(B)  was involved in a romantic relationship with
 or solicited or engaged in sexual contact with a student or minor];
 or
 (2)  obtained criminal history record information
 relating to misconduct described by Subdivision (1) for a person
 described by Subsection (a) [the employee resigned and there is
 evidence that the employee engaged in misconduct described by
 Subdivision (1)].
 (c) [(d)]  A superintendent or director of an educational
 entity [a school district, district of innovation, open-enrollment
 charter school, other charter entity, regional education service
 center, or shared services arrangement] shall complete an
 investigation of a person described by Subsection (a) [an employee]
 that involves evidence that the person [employee] may have engaged
 in misconduct described by Subsection (b)(1) [(c)(1)(A) or (B)],
 despite the person's termination of or [employee's] resignation
 from employment or cessation of services for the entity before
 completion of the investigation.
 (d) [(e)]  The principal of a school district, district of
 innovation, open-enrollment charter school, or other charter
 entity campus must notify the superintendent or director of the
 [school] district, [district of innovation, charter] school, or
 [other charter] entity not later than 48 hours [the seventh
 business day] after the principal becomes aware of evidence of
 [date of an employee's termination of employment or resignation
 following] an alleged incident of misconduct described by
 Subsection (b)(1) [(c)(1)(A) or (B)].
 (e) [(f)]  The superintendent or director of an educational
 entity must notify the commissioner by filing a report with the
 commissioner not later than 48 hours [the seventh business day]
 after the [date the] superintendent or director:
 (1)  receives notice [a report] from a principal under
 Subsection (d);
 (2)  [(e) or] knew about the [an employee's]
 termination of [employment] or resignation from employment or
 cessation of services of a person described by Subsection (a) for
 the entity following an alleged incident of misconduct described by
 Subsection (b)(1); or
 (3)  became aware of evidence of misconduct described
 by Subsection (b)(1) [(c)(1)(A) or (B)].
 (f)  The report under Subsection (e) must be:
 (1)  in writing; [and]
 (2)  in a form prescribed by the commissioner; and
 (3)  filed through the Internet portal developed and
 maintained by the agency under Section 22A.155.
 (g)  A superintendent or director of an educational entity is
 not required to notify the agency or file a report with the agency
 under Subsection (b) or (e) if the superintendent or director has
 reasonable cause to believe that the person who is alleged to have
 engaged in misconduct is deceased.
 (h)  The superintendent or director shall notify the board of
 trustees or governing body of the educational entity [school
 district, district of innovation, open-enrollment charter school,
 other charter entity, regional education service center, or shared
 services arrangement] and the person [employee] of the filing of
 the report required by Subsection (e) [(f)].
 (i) [(h)]  A superintendent or director who in good faith and
 while acting in an official capacity files a report with the
 commissioner under Subsection (e) [(f)] or a principal who in good
 faith and while acting in an official capacity notifies a
 superintendent or director under Subsection (d) [(e)] is immune
 from civil or criminal liability that might otherwise be incurred
 or imposed.
 (j) [(i)]  The commissioner shall refer an educator who
 fails to file a report in violation of Subsection (e) [(f)] to the
 State Board for Educator Certification, and the board shall
 determine whether to impose sanctions against the educator.
 (k) [(j)]  The name of a student or minor who is the victim of
 abuse or unlawful conduct by an employee must be included in a
 report filed under this section, but the name of the student or
 minor is not public information under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 (l) [(k)]  A superintendent or director required to file a
 report under Subsection (e) [(f)] commits an offense if the
 superintendent or director fails to file the report by the date
 required by that subsection with intent to conceal a person's [an
 employee's] criminal record or alleged incident of misconduct
 described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A) or (B).  A principal
 required to notify a superintendent or director about a person's
 [an employee's] alleged incident of misconduct under Subsection (d)
 [(e)] commits an offense if the principal fails to provide the
 notice by the date required by that subsection with intent to
 conceal a person's [an employee's] alleged incident of misconduct
 described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A) or (B).  An offense under
 this subsection is a state jail felony.
 (m) [(l)]  The commissioner may review the records of an
 educational entity [a school district, district of innovation,
 open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity, regional
 education service center, or shared services arrangement] to ensure
 compliance with the requirement to report misconduct under this
 section.
 (n) [(m)]  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary
 to implement this section.
 SECTION 2.09.  Section 21.0061, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter B, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.053, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.053  [21.0061].  NOTICE TO PARENT OR GUARDIAN ABOUT
 [EDUCATOR] MISCONDUCT. (a) The board of trustees or governing body
 of an educational entity [a school district, district of
 innovation, open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity,
 regional education service center, or shared services arrangement]
 shall adopt a policy under which notice is provided to the parent or
 guardian of a student with whom a person employed by or acting as a
 service provider for the entity [an educator] is alleged to have
 engaged in misconduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B),
 (C), or (D) [Section 21.006(b)(2)(A) or (A-1)] informing the parent
 or guardian:
 (1)  that the alleged misconduct occurred;
 (2)  whether the person [educator] was terminated
 following an investigation of the alleged misconduct or resigned
 before completion of the investigation; and
 (3)  whether a report was submitted to the agency or
 board [State Board for Educator Certification] concerning the
 alleged misconduct.
 (b)  The policy required by this section must require that
 information specified by Subsection (a)(1) be provided as soon as
 feasible after the educational [employing] entity becomes aware
 that alleged misconduct may have occurred.
 [(c)  In this section, "other charter entity" has the meaning
 assigned by Section 21.006.]
 SECTION 2.10.  Sections 21.007 and 21.009, Education Code,
 are transferred to Subchapter B, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, redesignated as Sections 22A.054 and 22A.055,
 Education Code, and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.054  [21.007].  NOTICE ON CERTIFICATION RECORD OF
 ALLEGED MISCONDUCT; INCLUSION IN REGISTRY. (a) [In this section,
 "board" means the State Board for Educator Certification.
 [(b)]  The board shall adopt a procedure for placing a notice
 of alleged misconduct on an educator's public certification
 records. The procedure adopted by the board must provide for
 immediate placement of a notice of alleged misconduct on an
 educator's public certification records if the alleged misconduct
 presents a risk to the health, safety, or welfare of a student or
 minor as determined by the board.
 (b) [(c)]  The board must notify:
 (1)  an educator in writing when placing a notice of an
 alleged incident of misconduct on the public certification records
 of the educator; and
 (2)  the agency for purposes of placing the educator on
 the registry in accordance with Subsection (c).
 (c)  On receiving a notification under Subsection (b), the
 agency shall immediately place the educator on the registry and
 include information indicating that the educator is under
 investigation for alleged misconduct.
 (d)  The board must provide an opportunity for an educator to
 show cause why the notice should not be placed on the educator's
 public certification records. The board shall propose rules
 establishing the length of time that a notice may remain on the
 educator's public certification records before the board must:
 (1)  initiate a proceeding to impose a sanction on the
 educator on the basis of the alleged misconduct; or
 (2)  remove the notice from the educator's public
 certification records.
 (e)  If it is determined that the educator has not engaged in
 the alleged incident of misconduct, the board shall immediately
 remove:
 (1)  the notice from the educator's public
 certification records; and
 (2)  notify the agency to remove the educator from the
 registry.
 (f)  The board shall propose rules necessary to administer
 this section.
 Sec. 22A.055  [21.009].  PRE-EMPLOYMENT OR PRE-SERVICE
 AFFIDAVIT.  (a) A person applying [An applicant] for employment
 with or who will act as a service provider for an educational entity
 [a position described by Section 21.003(a) or (b) with a school
 district, district of innovation, open-enrollment charter school,
 private school, regional education service center, or shared
 services arrangement] must submit, using a form adopted by the
 agency, consent for release of the person's employment records and
 a pre-employment or pre-service affidavit disclosing whether the
 person [applicant] has ever been:
 (1)  investigated by a law enforcement or child
 protective services agency for, or charged with, adjudicated for,
 or convicted of an offense involving, conduct described by Section
 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D);
 (2)  investigated by a licensing authority or had a
 license, certificate, or permit denied, suspended, revoked, or
 subject to another sanction in this state or another state for
 conduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D);
 (3)  included in the registry;
 (4)  employed or is currently employed by or has acted
 or is currently acting as a service provider for a public or private
 school; and
 (5)  terminated or discharged or has resigned, in lieu
 of being terminated or discharged, from a public or private school
 [having an inappropriate relationship with a minor].
 (b)  A person [An applicant] who answers affirmatively
 concerning an action listed under Subsection (a) [inappropriate
 relationship with a minor] must disclose in the affidavit all
 relevant facts known to the person pertaining to the matter
 [charge, adjudication, or conviction], including, if applicable to
 the action [for a charge], whether the allegation [charge] was
 determined to be true or false.
 (c)  A person or service provider [An applicant] is not
 precluded from being employed by or providing services to an
 educational entity based on a disclosed allegation [charge] if the
 [employing] entity determines based on the information disclosed in
 the affidavit that the allegation [charge] was false.
 (d)  A determination that an employee or person providing
 services failed to disclose information required to be disclosed by
 a person [an applicant] under this section is grounds for
 termination of employment or service.
 (e)  An educational entity shall discharge or refuse to hire
 or allow to act as a service provider for the entity a person
 against whom a determination has been made under Subsection (d).
 (f)  The board [State Board for Educator Certification] may
 revoke the certificate of an administrator if the board determines
 it is reasonable to believe that the administrator employed a
 person or accepted services from a service provider [an applicant
 for a position described by Section 21.003(a) or (b)] despite being
 aware that the person knowingly failed to disclose information
 required to be disclosed under Subsection (a) [applicant had been
 adjudicated for or convicted of having an inappropriate
 relationship with a minor].
 (g)  A person commits an offense if the person fails to
 disclose information required to be disclosed under Subsection (a).
 An offense under this subsection is a Class B misdemeanor.
 SECTION 2.11.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter C, and a heading is added to
 that subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER C. INVESTIGATION OF MISCONDUCT
 SECTION 2.12.  Section 22.094, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter C, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.101, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.101  [22.094].  NOTICE OF ALLEGED MISCONDUCT;
 INVESTIGATION; HEARING.  (a) This section applies to a [A] person
 described by Section 22A.052(a) [22.093(b) and] who is:
 (1)  the subject of a report that alleges misconduct
 described by Section 22A.051(a)(2);
 (2)  [22.093(c)(1)(A) or (B) or who is] identified as
 having engaged in [that] misconduct described by Subdivision (1)
 using the interagency reportable conduct search engine established
 under Chapter 810, Health and Safety Code; or
 (3)  the subject of a complaint alleging misconduct
 described by Subdivision (1) filed with the agency.
 (b)  A person to whom this section applies [,] is entitled to
 a hearing on the merits of the allegations of misconduct under the
 procedures provided by Chapter 2001, Government Code, to contest
 the allegation in the report, [or] search engine, or complaint.
 (c) [(b)]  On receiving a report filed under Section
 22A.052(e) or a complaint alleging misconduct described by
 Subsection (a)(1) [22.093(f)] or making an identification
 described by Subsection (a), the commissioner shall promptly send
 to the person who is the subject of the report or identification a
 notice that includes:
 (1)  a statement informing the person that the person
 must request a hearing on the merits of the allegations of
 misconduct within the period provided by Subsection (d) [(c)];
 (2)  a request that the person submit a written
 response within the period provided by Subsection (d) [(c)] to show
 cause why the commissioner should not pursue an investigation; and
 (3)  a statement informing the person that if the
 person does not timely submit a written response to show cause as
 provided by Subdivision (2), the agency shall provide information
 indicating the person is under investigation in the manner provided
 by Subsection (e) [(d)].
 (d) [(c)]  A person entitled to a hearing under Subsection
 (b) [(a)] must request a hearing and submit a written response to
 show cause not later than the 10th day after the date the person
 receives the notice from the commissioner provided under Subsection
 (c) [(b)].
 (e) [(d)]  If a person who receives notice provided under
 Subsection (c) [(b)] does not timely submit a written response to
 show cause why the commissioner should not pursue an investigation,
 the commissioner shall instruct the agency to make available
 through the Internet portal developed and maintained by the agency
 under Section 22A.155 [22.095] information indicating that the
 person is under investigation for alleged misconduct.
 (f) [(e)]  If a person entitled to a hearing under Subsection
 (b) [(a)] does not request a hearing as provided by Subsection (d)
 [(c)], the commissioner shall:
 (1)  based on the report filed under Section 22A.052(e)
 [22.093(f)], the complaint alleging misconduct, or the
 identification described by Subsection (a), make a determination
 whether the person engaged in misconduct; and
 (2)  if the commissioner determines that the person
 engaged in misconduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B),
 (C), or (D) [22.093(c)(1)(A) or (B)], instruct the agency to add the
 person's name to the registry [maintained under Section 22.092].
 (g) [(f)]  If a person entitled to a hearing under Subsection
 (b) [(a)] requests a hearing as provided by Subsection (d) [(c)] and
 the final decision in that hearing determines that the person
 engaged in misconduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B),
 (C), or (D) [22.093(c)(1)(A) or (B)], the commissioner shall
 instruct the agency to add the person's name to the registry
 [maintained under Section 22.092].
 (h) [(g)]  If a person entitled to a hearing under Subsection
 (b) [(a)] requests a hearing as provided by Subsection (d) [(c)] and
 the final decision in that hearing determines that the person did
 not engage in misconduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A),
 (B), (C), or (D) [22.093(c)(1)(A) or (B)], the commissioner shall
 instruct the agency to immediately remove from the Internet portal
 developed and maintained by the agency under Section 22A.155
 [22.095] the information indicating that the person is under
 investigation for alleged misconduct.
 (i) [(h)]  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary
 to implement this section. In adopting rules, the commissioner
 shall follow any guidelines adopted by the board regarding
 sanctions for misconduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A),
 (C), or (D).
 SECTION 2.13.  Subchapter C, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, is amended by adding Section 22A.102 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 22A.102.  PRELIMINARY DETERMINATION. To the extent
 feasible, not later than the 30th day after receipt of a report
 under Section 22A.051(d) or 22A.052(e), the board or agency, as
 applicable, shall, based on a preliminary review of the report,
 make a determination regarding whether the person who is the
 subject of the report engaged in the alleged misconduct.
 SECTION 2.14.  Section 21.062, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter C, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.103, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.103  [21.062].  ISSUANCE OF SUBPOENAS. (a) During
 an investigation by the commissioner of an educator or person who is
 employed by or providing services to an educational entity for an
 alleged incident of misconduct, the commissioner may issue a
 subpoena to compel:
 (1)  the attendance of a relevant witness; or
 (2)  the production[, for inspection or copying,] of
 relevant evidence that is located in this state.
 (a-1)  A response to a subpoena described by Subsection
 (a)(2) must be submitted through the Internet portal developed and
 maintained by the agency under Section 22A.155 unless the
 commissioner authorizes a different method of submission.
 (b)  A subpoena may be served personally, electronically, or
 by certified mail.
 (c)  If a person fails to comply with a subpoena, the
 commissioner, acting through the attorney general, may file suit to
 enforce the subpoena in a district court in this state. On finding
 that good cause exists for issuing the subpoena, the court shall
 order the person to comply with the subpoena. The court may punish
 a person who fails to obey the court order.
 (d)  All information and materials subpoenaed or compiled in
 connection with an investigation described by Subsection (a) are
 confidential and not subject to disclosure under Chapter 552,
 Government Code.
 (e)  Except as provided by a protective order, and
 notwithstanding Subsection (d), all information and materials
 subpoenaed or compiled in connection with an investigation
 described by Subsection (a) may be used in a disciplinary
 proceeding against a person [an educator] based on an alleged
 incident of misconduct.
 SECTION 2.15.  Subchapter C, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, is amended by adding Section 22A.104 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 22A.104.  RESTRICTION ON SURRENDER OF CERTIFICATE OR
 PERMIT PENDING INVESTIGATION. If a person issued a certificate or
 permit under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, attempts to surrender the
 certificate or permit while the board is investigating an
 allegation that the person engaged in misconduct described by
 Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D), the board may not
 accept the surrender unless the person agrees to be included in the
 registry.
 SECTION 2.16.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter D, and a heading is added to
 that subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER D. PERSONS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR EMPLOYMENT OR PROVISION OF
 SERVICES
 SECTION 2.17.  Section 22.092, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter D, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.151, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.151  [22.092].  REGISTRY OF PERSONS NOT ELIGIBLE
 FOR EMPLOYMENT IN OR PROVISION OF SERVICES TO EDUCATIONAL ENTITIES
 [PUBLIC SCHOOLS]. (a) The agency shall maintain and make available
 through the Internet portal developed and maintained by the agency
 under Section 22A.155 [22.095] a registry of persons who are not
 eligible to be employed by or act as a service provider for an
 educational entity [a school district, district of innovation,
 open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity, regional
 education service center, or shared services arrangement].
 (b)  An educational entity [A school district, district of
 innovation, open-enrollment charter school, other charter entity,
 regional education service center, or shared services arrangement]
 shall discharge or refuse to hire, or terminate or refuse to accept
 services from, a person listed on the registry [maintained under
 this section].
 (c)  An educational entity may not allow a person who is
 listed on the registry to:
 (1)  act as a service provider for the entity; or
 (2)  be present at an event sponsored by the entity.
 (d)  The registry [maintained under this section] must list
 the following persons as not eligible to be employed by or act as a
 service provider for an educational entity [public schools]:
 (1)  a person determined by the agency under Section
 22.0832 as a person who would not be eligible for educator
 certification under Subchapter B, Chapter 21;
 (2)  a person determined by the agency to be not
 eligible for employment based on the person's criminal history
 record information review, as provided by Section 22.0833;
 (3)  a person who is not eligible for employment based
 on criminal history record information received by the agency under
 Section 22A.201(b) [21.058(b)];
 (4)  a person whose certification or permit, or
 application for a certification or permit, issued under Subchapter
 B, Chapter 21, is denied or revoked by the board and who has not been
 issued a certificate or permit under that subchapter subsequent to
 that denial or revocation [State Board for Educator Certification
 on a finding that the person engaged in misconduct described by
 Section 21.006(b)(2)(A) or (A-1)]; [and]
 (5)  a person whose certification or permit issued
 under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, is suspended by the board for a
 reason other than under Section 21.105(c), 21.160(c), or 21.210(c)
 for the period of the suspension;
 (6)  a person who is determined by the commissioner
 under Section 22A.101 [22.094] to have engaged in misconduct
 described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D);
 (7)  a person temporarily included in the registry
 under Section 22A.152 or 22A.153 for the term of the placement;
 (8)  subject to Subsection (e), a person who is
 determined by the State Board for Educator Certification to have
 engaged in electioneering under Section 22B.003; and
 (9)  subject to Subsection (e), a person who is
 determined by the commissioner under Section 22B.005 or by another
 governmental body to have engaged in electioneering under Section
 22B.003 [22.093(c)(1)(A) or (B)].
 (e)  The agency shall remove a person included in the
 registry under Subsection (d)(8) or (9) not later than:
 (1)  the third anniversary of the date on which the
 person was included in the registry under the applicable
 subdivision if the person was the superintendent or director of an
 educational entity at the time the person was included in the
 registry; or
 (2)  the first anniversary of the date on which the
 person was included in the registry under the applicable
 subdivision if the person held a position other than a position
 described by Subdivision (1) of this subsection at the time the
 person was included in the registry.
 (f)  The registry must include information indicating
 whether a person's listing in the registry expires. A prohibition
 applicable to a person included in the registry no longer applies to
 a person whose listing in the registry has expired and, if
 applicable, whose certification or permit under Subchapter B,
 Chapter 21, has been reinstated.
 (g) [(d)]  The agency shall provide equivalent access to the
 registry [maintained under this section] to:
 (1)  private schools;
 (2)  educational entities [public schools]; [and]
 (3)  nonprofit teacher organizations approved by the
 commissioner for the purpose of participating in the tutoring
 program established under Section 33.913;
 (4)  entities that have entered into a contract to
 operate a school district campus under Section 11.174; and
 (5)  service providers for an educational entity that
 are authorized by the entity to access the registry.
 (h)  Each school year, the superintendent or director of an
 educational entity shall certify to the commissioner that the
 entity has complied with this section. If feasible, the
 commissioner by rule shall consolidate the requirement under this
 subsection with other reporting requirements applicable to the
 entity.
 (i) [(e)]  The commissioner [agency] shall adopt rules as
 necessary to implement this section.
 SECTION 2.18.  Subchapter D, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, is amended by adding Sections 22A.152, 22A.153,
 and 22A.154 to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.152.  TEMPORARY INCLUSION IN REGISTRY BASED ON
 CONTINUING AND IMMINENT THREAT TO PUBLIC WELFARE. (a) The
 commissioner shall temporarily include a person in the registry if
 the commissioner, based on evidence or information presented to the
 commissioner regarding a complaint alleging misconduct by the
 person, determines that the person's continued employment at or
 provision of services to an educational entity constitutes a
 continuing and imminent threat to the public welfare.
 (b)  A person may be temporarily included in the registry
 without notice or hearing on the complaint alleging the person's
 misconduct if:
 (1)  proceedings for a hearing before the State Office
 of Administrative Hearings are initiated simultaneously with the
 temporary inclusion; and
 (2)  a hearing is held as soon as possible under this
 chapter and Chapter 2001, Government Code.
 (c)  The State Office of Administrative Hearings shall hold a
 preliminary hearing not later than the 17th day after the date of
 the temporary inclusion to determine whether probable cause exists
 that the person's employment at or provision of services to an
 educational entity constitutes a continuing and imminent threat to
 the public welfare. The probable cause hearing shall be conducted
 as a de novo hearing.
 (d)  The State Office of Administrative Hearings shall hold a
 final hearing on the matter not later than the 61st day after the
 date of the temporary inclusion.
 (e)  The commissioner by rule shall adopt procedures for the
 temporary inclusion of a person in the registry under this section.
 Sec. 22A.153.  TEMPORARY INCLUSION IN REGISTRY FOR CERTAIN
 ARRESTS. (a) The commissioner may temporarily include a person who
 is employed by or acting as a service provider for an educational
 entity in the registry if the educator is arrested for an offense
 listed under Section 22A.201(a).
 (b)  Before temporarily including a person described by
 Subsection (a) in the registry, the commissioner must verify that
 the person arrested for an offense described by that subsection is
 the same person who is employed by or acting as a service provider
 for an educational entity.
 (c)  An inclusion in the registry under this section remains
 in effect until the final disposition of the case.
 (d)  Sections 22A.152(b), (c), and (d) apply to a temporary
 inclusion in the registry under this section.
 (e)  The commissioner shall adopt rules to implement this
 section, including rules regarding evidence that serves as proof of
 final disposition of a case.
 Sec. 22A.154.  REPORTING TO LAW ENFORCEMENT. (a) The agency
 shall refer to an appropriate local law enforcement agency any
 allegation of misconduct that results in the inclusion of a person
 in the registry that has not already been referred to a local law
 enforcement agency.
 (b)  The agency may refer any allegation of misconduct to an
 appropriate local law enforcement agency if the agency believes the
 allegation includes evidence of criminal conduct.
 (c)  The agency shall maintain a record of each allegation of
 misconduct referred to a local law enforcement agency under this
 section.
 SECTION 2.19.  Sections 22.095 and 22.096, Education Code,
 are transferred to Subchapter D, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, redesignated as Sections 22A.155 and 22A.156,
 Education Code, and amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.155  [22.095].  INTERNET PORTAL. (a) The agency
 shall develop and maintain an Internet portal through which:
 (1)  a report required under Section 22A.051(d),
 22A.052(e), or 22A.301(d) [22.093(f)] may be confidentially and
 securely filed; and
 (2)  the agency makes available:
 (A)  the registry of persons who are not eligible
 to be employed by or act as service providers for educational
 entities [in public schools] as described by Section 22A.151
 [22.092]; and
 (B)  information indicating that a person is under
 investigation for alleged misconduct in accordance with Section
 22A.101(e) [22.094(d)], provided that the agency must provide the
 information through a procedure other than the registry [described
 under Paragraph (A)].
 (b)  The Internet portal must comply with any requirements
 adopted by the board for filing reports under Sections 22A.051 and
 22A.301.
 Sec. 22A.156  [22.096].  COMPLIANCE MONITORING; AGENCY
 INVESTIGATION AND REVIEW. (a) The agency shall periodically
 [conduct site visits and] review the records of educational
 entities [school districts, districts of innovation,
 open-enrollment charter schools, other charter entities, regional
 education service centers, and shared services arrangements] to
 ensure compliance with Section 22A.151(b) [22.092(b)].
 (b)  The agency shall review the investigations conducted by
 educational entities involving allegations of misconduct described
 by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) to ensure that the
 investigations are conducted using appropriate investigative
 protocols, including when cooperating with a law enforcement agency
 or the Department of Family and Protective Services in accordance
 with the policy adopted under Section 38.004. If the agency
 determines that an educational entity failed to follow appropriate
 investigative protocols, the commissioner may authorize a special
 investigation under Section 39.003.
 (c)  The agency may directly investigate allegations of
 misconduct described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D),
 regardless of whether a report or complaint was filed with the
 agency.
 SECTION 2.20.  Section 22.085, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter D, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.157, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.157 [22.085].  EMPLOYEES AND APPLICANTS CONVICTED
 OF OR PLACED ON DEFERRED ADJUDICATION COMMUNITY SUPERVISION FOR
 CERTAIN OFFENSES. (a) An educational entity [A school district,
 open-enrollment charter school, or shared services arrangement]
 shall discharge or refuse to hire an employee or applicant for
 employment if the entity [district, school, or shared services
 arrangement] obtains information through a criminal history record
 information review that the employee or applicant has been:
 (1)  convicted of or placed on deferred adjudication
 community supervision for an offense described by Section
 22A.201(a)(1) [for which a defendant is required to register as a
 sex offender under Chapter 62, Code of Criminal Procedure]; or
 (2)  convicted of an [:
 [(A)  a felony] offense described by Section
 22A.201(a)(2) [under Title 5, Penal Code, if the victim of the
 offense was under 18 years of age at the time the offense was
 committed; or
 [(B)  an offense under the laws of another state
 or federal law that is equivalent to an offense under Subdivision
 (1) or Paragraph (A)].
 (b)  Subsection (a) does not apply if the employee or
 applicant for employment committed an offense under Title 5, Penal
 Code and:
 (1)  the date of the offense is more than 30 years
 before:
 (A)  the effective date of S.B. No. 9, Acts of the
 80th Legislature, Regular Session, 2007, in the case of a person
 employed by a school district, open-enrollment charter school, or
 shared services arrangement as of that date; or
 (B)  the date the person's employment will begin,
 in the case of a person applying for employment with a school
 district, open-enrollment charter school, or shared services
 arrangement after the effective date of S.B. No. 9, Acts of the 80th
 Legislature, Regular Session, 2007; and
 (2)  the employee or applicant for employment satisfied
 all terms of the court order entered on conviction.
 (c)  An educational entity [A school district,
 open-enrollment charter school, or shared services arrangement]
 may not allow a person who is an employee of or applicant for
 employment by a qualified school contractor or an entity that
 contracts with the entity [district, school, or shared services
 arrangement] to serve [at the district or school or] for the entity
 [shared services arrangement] if the entity [district, school, or
 shared services arrangement] obtains information described by
 Subsection (a) through a criminal history record information review
 concerning the employee or applicant. An educational entity [A
 school district, open-enrollment charter school, or shared
 services arrangement] must ensure that an entity that the
 educational entity [district, school, or shared services
 arrangement] contracts with for services has obtained all criminal
 history record information as required by Section 22.0834.
 (d)  An educational entity or [A school district,
 open-enrollment charter school,] private school[, regional
 education service center, or shared services arrangement] may
 discharge an employee if the entity [district] or school obtains
 information of the employee's conviction of a felony or of a
 misdemeanor involving moral turpitude that the employee did not
 disclose to the board [State Board for Educator Certification] or
 the entity or [district,] school[, service center, or shared
 services arrangement]. An employee discharged under this section
 is considered to have been discharged for misconduct for purposes
 of Section 207.044, Labor Code.
 (e)  The board [State Board for Educator Certification] may
 impose a sanction on an educator who does not discharge an employee
 or refuse to hire an applicant for employment if the educator knows
 or should have known, through a criminal history record information
 review, that the employee or applicant has been:
 (1)  convicted of or placed on deferred adjudication
 community supervision for an offense described by Subsection
 (a)(1); or
 (2)  convicted of an offense described by Subsection
 (a)(2).
 (f)  Each school year, the superintendent of a school
 district or chief operating officer of an open-enrollment charter
 school shall certify to the commissioner that the district or
 school has complied with this section.
 SECTION 2.21.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter E, and a heading is added to
 that subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER E. DENIAL OR REVOCATION OF EDUCATOR CERTIFICATION FOR
 MISCONDUCT
 SECTION 2.22.  Section 21.058, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter E, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.201, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.201 [21.058].  DENIAL OR REVOCATION OF CERTIFICATE
 AND TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT BASED ON CONVICTION OF OR PLACEMENT
 ON DEFERRED ADJUDICATION COMMUNITY SUPERVISION FOR CERTAIN
 OFFENSES. (a) The procedures described by this section
 [Subsections (b) and (c)] apply only to:
 (1)  conviction of or placement on deferred
 adjudication community supervision for:
 (A)  an offense for which a defendant is required
 to register as a sex offender under Chapter 62, Code of Criminal
 Procedure;
 (B)  an offense under Section 21.12 or 43.24,
 Penal Code;
 (C)  a felony offense under Chapter 43, Penal
 Code;
 (D)  a felony offense involving school property;
 or
 (E)  an offense under the laws of another state or
 federal law that is equivalent to an offense under Paragraph (A),
 (B), (C), or (D); or
 (2)  conviction of:
 (A)  a felony offense under Title 5, Penal Code[,
 if the victim of the offense was under 18 years of age at the time
 the offense was committed]; or
 (B)  an offense under the laws of another state or
 federal law that is equivalent to an offense under Paragraph (A)
 [(3)  conviction of or placement on deferred
 adjudication community supervision for an offense under Section
 43.24, Penal Code].
 (b)  Notwithstanding Section 21.041(b)(7), not later than
 the fifth day after the date the board receives notice under Article
 42.018, Code of Criminal Procedure, of the conviction or placement
 on deferred adjudication community supervision of a person who
 holds a certificate under Subchapter B, Chapter 21 [this
 subchapter], the board shall:
 (1)  revoke the certificate held by the person; and
 (2)  provide to the person, to the agency, and to any
 school district or open-enrollment charter school employing the
 person at the time of revocation written notice of:
 (A)  the revocation; and
 (B)  the basis for the revocation.
 (c)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school
 that receives notice under Subsection (b) of the revocation of a
 person's certificate issued under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, [this
 subchapter] shall:
 (1)  immediately remove the person whose certificate
 has been revoked from campus or from an administrative office, as
 applicable, to prevent the person from having any contact with a
 student; and
 (2)  for a [if the] person [is] employed under a
 probationary, continuing, or term contract under Chapter 21 [this
 chapter], with the approval of the board of trustees or governing
 body or a designee of the board or governing body:
 (A)  suspend the person without pay;
 (B)  provide the person with written notice that
 the person's contract is void as provided by Subsection (e)
 [(c-2)]; and
 (C)  terminate the employment of the person as
 soon as practicable.
 (d) [(c-1)]  If a school district or open-enrollment charter
 school becomes aware that a person employed by the district or
 school under a probationary, continuing, or term contract under
 Chapter 21 [this chapter] has been convicted of or received
 deferred adjudication for a felony offense, and the person is not
 subject to Subsection (c), the district or school may, with the
 approval of the board of trustees or governing body or a designee of
 the board of trustees or governing body:
 (1)  suspend the person without pay;
 (2)  provide the person with written notice that the
 person's contract is void as provided by Subsection (e) [(c-2)];
 and
 (3)  terminate the employment of the person as soon as
 practicable.
 (e) [(c-2)]  A person's probationary, continuing, or term
 contract under Chapter 21 is void if, with the approval of the board
 of trustees or governing body or a designee of the board or
 governing body, the school district or open-enrollment charter
 school takes action under Subsection (c)(2)(B) or (d)(2)
 [(c-1)(2)].
 (f)  The board or a school district may not issue a
 certificate or permit under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, to a person
 who has been convicted of or placed on deferred adjudication for an
 offense described by Subsection (a)(1) or who has been convicted of
 an offense described by Subsection (a)(2) [(d) A person whose
 certificate is revoked under Subsection (b) may reapply for a
 certificate in accordance with board rules].
 (g) [(e)]  Action taken by a school district or
 open-enrollment charter school under Subsection (c) or (d) [(c-1)]
 is not subject to appeal under this chapter, and the notice and
 hearing requirements of this chapter do not apply to the action.
 SECTION 2.23.  Subchapter E, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as
 added by this Act, is amended by adding Sections 22A.202 and 22A.203
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.202.  TEMPORARY SUSPENSION OF CERTIFICATION OR
 PERMIT BASED ON CONTINUING AND IMMINENT THREAT TO PUBLIC WELFARE.
 (a) The board may, by a majority vote of the board or of a
 five-person committee of board members designated by the board,
 temporarily suspend an educator's certification or permit issued
 under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, if the board, based on evidence or
 information presented to the board regarding a complaint alleging
 misconduct by the educator, determines that the educator's
 continued certification or permit issuance constitutes a
 continuing and imminent threat to the public welfare.
 (b)  Notwithstanding Chapter 551, Government Code, the board
 or a committee described by Subsection (a) may hold a meeting by
 telephone conference call if the board or committee determines that
 immediate action is required and convening the board or committee
 at one location would be inconvenient for any member of the board or
 committee.
 (c)  An educator's certification or permit may be
 temporarily suspended under this section without notice or hearing
 on the complaint alleging the educator's misconduct if:
 (1)  proceedings for a hearing before the State Office
 of Administrative Hearings are initiated simultaneously with the
 temporary suspension; and
 (2)  a hearing is held as soon as possible under this
 chapter and Chapter 2001, Government Code.
 (d)  The State Office of Administrative Hearings shall hold a
 preliminary hearing not later than the 17th day after the date of
 the temporary suspension to determine whether probable cause exists
 that the educator's certification or permit issuance constitutes a
 continuing and imminent threat to the public welfare. The probable
 cause hearing shall be conducted as a de novo hearing.
 (e)  The State Office of Administrative Hearings shall hold a
 final hearing on the matter not later than the 61st day after the
 date of the temporary suspension.
 (f)  The board shall propose rules adopting procedures for
 the temporary suspension of an educator's certification or permit
 under this section.
 Sec. 22A.203.  TEMPORARY SUSPENSION OF CERTIFICATION OR
 PERMIT FOR CERTAIN ARRESTS. (a)  The board may, by a majority vote
 of the board or of a five-person committee of board members
 designated by the board, temporarily suspend an educator's
 certification or permit issued under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, if
 the educator is arrested for an offense listed under Section
 22A.201(a).
 (b)  Before suspending an educator's certification or permit
 under Subsection (a), the board or committee, as applicable, must
 verify that the person arrested for an offense described by that
 subsection is the same person who holds a certification or permit
 issued under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, by the board.
 (c)  A suspension under this section remains in effect until
 the final disposition of the case.
 (d)  Sections 22A.202(c), (d), and (e) apply to a suspension
 under this section.
 (e)  The board shall propose rules to implement this section,
 including rules regarding evidence that serves as proof of final
 disposition of a case.
 SECTION 2.24.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter F to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER F. OTHER REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
 Sec. 22A.251.  REPORT BY AGENCY. The agency, in cooperation
 with the board, shall, on a quarterly basis, post on the agency's
 Internet website a report on employee and service provider
 misconduct reported under this chapter. The report must be
 disaggregated by type of misconduct.
 SECTION 2.25.  Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added by this
 Act, is amended by adding Subchapter G, and a heading is added to
 that subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER G. REQUIRED MISCONDUCT REPORTING: PRIVATE SCHOOLS
 SECTION 2.26.  Section 21.0062, Education Code, is
 transferred to Subchapter G, Chapter 22A, Education Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Section 22A.301, Education Code, and
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22A.301 [21.0062].  REQUIREMENT TO REPORT MISCONDUCT:
 PRIVATE SCHOOLS. (a) In this section, "private [:
 [(1)  "Abuse" has the meaning assigned by Section
 261.001, Family Code, and includes any sexual conduct involving a
 student or minor and private school educator.
 [(2)  "Private] school educator" means a person
 employed by or seeking employment in a private school for a position
 in which the person would be required to hold a certificate issued
 under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, if the person were employed by a
 school district.
 (b)  In addition to the reporting requirement under Section
 261.101, Family Code, the chief administrative officer of a private
 school shall notify the board [State Board for Educator
 Certification] if:
 (1)  a private school educator[:
 [(1)]  has a criminal record and the private school
 obtained information about the educator's criminal record; or
 (2)  the chief administrative officer becomes aware of
 evidence that a private school educator engaged in misconduct
 described by Section 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) [was
 terminated and there is evidence that the educator:
 [(A)  abused or otherwise committed an unlawful
 act with a student or minor; or
 [(B)  was involved in a romantic relationship with
 or solicited or engaged in sexual contact with a student or minor].
 (c)  If there is evidence that a private school educator may
 have engaged in misconduct described by Subsection (b) and the
 educator resigns from employment before completion of the
 investigation, the chief administrative officer of the private
 school shall submit the evidence of misconduct collected to the
 board [State Board for Educator Certification].
 (d)  The chief administrative officer of the private school
 must notify the board [State Board for Educator Certification] by
 filing a report with the board:
 (1)  not later than the seventh business day after the
 date the chief administrative officer knew that a private school
 educator[:
 [(1)]  has a criminal record under Subsection (b)(1);
 or
 (2)  not later than 48 hours after the chief
 administrative officer becomes aware of evidence of [was terminated
 following] an alleged incident of misconduct described by
 Subsection (b)(2).
 (e)  The report filed under Subsection (d) must be:
 (1)  in writing; [and]
 (2)  in a form prescribed by the board; and
 (3)  filed through the Internet portal developed and
 maintained by the agency under Section 22A.155.
 (f)  Any person who knows or has reason to believe that a
 private school educator engaged in the misconduct described by
 Subsection (b)(2) may file a report with the board [State Board for
 Educator Certification] under this section.
 (g)  A chief administrative officer of a private school or
 any other person who in good faith files a report with the board
 [State Board for Educator Certification] under this section or
 communicates with a chief administrative officer or other
 administrator of a private school concerning the criminal record of
 or an alleged incident of misconduct by a private school educator is
 immune from civil or criminal liability that might otherwise be
 incurred or imposed.
 (h)  The name of a student or minor who is the victim of abuse
 or unlawful conduct by a private school educator must be included in
 a report filed under this section, but the name of the student or
 minor is not public information under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 (i)  The board [State Board for Educator Certification]
 shall propose rules as necessary to implement this section.
 SECTION 2.27.  Section 39.003(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The commissioner may authorize special investigations
 to be conducted:
 (1)  when excessive numbers of absences of students
 eligible to be tested on state assessment instruments are
 determined;
 (2)  when excessive numbers of allowable exemptions
 from the required state assessment instruments are determined;
 (3)  in response to complaints submitted to the agency
 with respect to alleged violations of civil rights or other
 requirements imposed on the state by federal law or court order;
 (4)  in response to established compliance reviews of
 the district's financial accounting practices and state and federal
 program requirements;
 (5)  when extraordinary numbers of student placements
 in disciplinary alternative education programs, other than
 placements under Sections 37.006 and 37.007, are determined;
 (6)  in response to an allegation involving a conflict
 between members of the board of trustees or between the board and
 the district administration if it appears that the conflict
 involves a violation of a role or duty of the board members or the
 administration clearly defined by this code;
 (7)  when excessive numbers of students in special
 education programs under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, are assessed
 through assessment instruments developed or adopted under Section
 39.023(b);
 (8)  in response to an allegation regarding or an
 analysis using a statistical method result indicating a possible
 violation of an assessment instrument security procedure
 established under Section 39.0301, including for the purpose of
 investigating or auditing a school district under that section;
 (9)  when a significant pattern of decreased academic
 performance has developed as a result of the promotion in the
 preceding two school years of students who did not perform
 satisfactorily as determined by the commissioner under Section
 39.0241(a) on assessment instruments administered under Section
 39.023(a), (c), or (l);
 (10)  when excessive numbers of students eligible to
 enroll fail to complete an Algebra II course or any other advanced
 course as determined by the commissioner;
 (11)  when resource allocation practices as evaluated
 under Section 39.0821 indicate a potential for significant
 improvement in resource allocation;
 (12)  when a disproportionate number of students of a
 particular demographic group is graduating with a particular
 endorsement under Section 28.025(c-1);
 (13)  when an excessive number of students is
 graduating with a particular endorsement under Section
 28.025(c-1);
 (14)  in response to a complaint submitted to the
 agency with respect to alleged inaccurate data that is reported
 through the Public Education Information Management System (PEIMS)
 or through other reports required by state or federal law or rule or
 court order and that is used by the agency to make a determination
 relating to public school accountability, including accreditation,
 under this chapter;
 (15)  when 10 percent or more of the students
 graduating in a particular school year from a particular high
 school campus are awarded a diploma based on the determination of an
 individual graduation committee under Section 28.0258;
 (16)  when a school district for any reason fails to:
 (A)  produce, at the request of the agency,
 evidence or an investigation report relating to a person [an
 educator] who is under investigation by the State Board for
 Educator Certification or the agency; or
 (B)  timely submit a report required under Chapter
 22A regarding a person who is required to be reported to the State
 Board for Educator Certification or the agency under that chapter;
 [or]
 (17)  in response to an alleged violation of Section
 22B.003; or
 (18)  as the commissioner otherwise determines
 necessary.
 SECTION 2.28.  Section 261.001, Family Code, is amended by
 amending Subdivision (1) and adding Subdivision (3-a) to read as
 follows:
 (1)  "Abuse" includes the following acts or omissions
 by a person:
 (A)  mental or emotional injury to a child that
 results in an observable and material impairment in the child's
 growth, development, or psychological functioning;
 (B)  causing or permitting the child to be in a
 situation in which the child sustains a mental or emotional injury
 that results in an observable and material impairment in the
 child's growth, development, or psychological functioning;
 (C)  physical injury that results in substantial
 harm to the child, or the genuine threat of substantial harm from
 physical injury to the child, including an injury that is at
 variance with the history or explanation given and excluding an
 accident or reasonable discipline by a parent, guardian, or
 managing or possessory conservator that does not expose the child
 to a substantial risk of harm;
 (D)  failure to make a reasonable effort to
 prevent an action by another person that results in physical injury
 that results in substantial harm to the child;
 (E)  sexual conduct harmful to a child's mental,
 emotional, or physical welfare, including conduct that constitutes
 the offense of continuous sexual abuse of young child or disabled
 individual under Section 21.02, Penal Code, indecency with a child
 under Section 21.11, Penal Code, improper relationship between
 educator and student under Section 21.12, Penal Code, sexual
 assault under Section 22.011, Penal Code, or aggravated sexual
 assault under Section 22.021, Penal Code;
 (F)  failure to make a reasonable effort to
 prevent sexual conduct harmful to a child;
 (G)  compelling or encouraging the child to engage
 in sexual conduct as defined by Section 43.01, Penal Code,
 including compelling or encouraging the child in a manner that
 constitutes an offense of trafficking of persons under Section
 20A.02(a)(7) or (8), Penal Code, solicitation of prostitution under
 Section 43.021, Penal Code, or compelling prostitution under
 Section 43.05(a)(2), Penal Code;
 (H)  causing, permitting, encouraging, engaging
 in, or allowing the photographing, filming, or depicting of the
 child if the person knew or should have known that the resulting
 photograph, film, or depiction of the child is obscene as defined by
 Section 43.21, Penal Code, or pornographic;
 (I)  the current use by a person of a controlled
 substance as defined by Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, in a
 manner or to the extent that the use results in physical, mental, or
 emotional injury to a child;
 (J)  causing, expressly permitting, or
 encouraging a child to use a controlled substance as defined by
 Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code;
 (K)  causing, permitting, encouraging, engaging
 in, or allowing a sexual performance by a child as defined by
 Section 43.25, Penal Code;
 (L)  knowingly causing, permitting, encouraging,
 engaging in, or allowing a child to be trafficked in a manner
 punishable as an offense under Section 20A.02(a)(5), (6), (7), or
 (8), Penal Code, or the failure to make a reasonable effort to
 prevent a child from being trafficked in a manner punishable as an
 offense under any of those sections; or
 (M)  forcing or coercing a child to enter into a
 marriage.
 (3-a)  "Law enforcement agency" means:
 (A)  the Department of Public Safety;
 (B)  the police department of a municipality;
 (C)  the sheriff's office of a county; or
 (D)  a constable's office of a county.
 SECTION 2.29.  Section 261.103(a), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Subsections (b) and (c) and
 Section 261.405, a report shall be made to:
 (1)  a [any local or state] law enforcement agency;
 (2)  the department; or
 (3)  the state agency that operates, licenses,
 certifies, or registers the facility in which the alleged abuse or
 neglect occurred.
 SECTION 2.30.  Sections 261.104(b) and (d), Family Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  If the individual making a report of child abuse or
 neglect uses the toll-free telephone number the department operates
 for reporting child abuse or neglect and the individual is
 unwilling to provide the information described by Subsection
 (a)(4), the department representative receiving the report shall
 notify the individual that:
 (1)  the department is not authorized to accept an
 anonymous report of abuse or neglect;
 (2)  the individual may report the abuse or neglect by
 making a report to a [any local or state] law enforcement agency;
 and
 (3)  the identity of an individual making a report
 under this subchapter is confidential and may be disclosed only:
 (A)  as provided by Section 261.201; or
 (B)  to a law enforcement officer for the purposes
 of conducting a criminal investigation of the report.
 (d)  If a report of abuse or neglect is made orally, the
 department or [local or state] law enforcement agency receiving the
 report shall:
 (1)  notify the individual making the report that:
 (A)  the report is being recorded; and
 (B)  making a false report is a criminal offense
 under Section 261.107 punishable as a state jail felony or a third
 degree felony; and
 (2)  make an audio recording of the report.
 SECTION 2.31.  Sections 261.105(a), (b), and (d), Family
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  All reports received by a [local or state] law
 enforcement agency that allege abuse or neglect by a person
 responsible for a child's care, custody, or welfare shall be
 referred immediately to the department.
 (b)  The department shall immediately notify the appropriate
 [state or local] law enforcement agency of any report it receives,
 other than a report from a law enforcement agency, that concerns the
 suspected abuse or neglect of a child or death of a child from abuse
 or neglect.
 (d)  If the department initiates an investigation and
 determines that the abuse or neglect does not involve a person
 responsible for the child's care, custody, or welfare, the
 department shall refer the report to the appropriate [a] law
 enforcement agency for further investigation. If the department
 determines that the abuse or neglect involves an employee of a
 public or private elementary or secondary school, [and that the
 child is a student at the school,] the department shall [orally]
 notify, in writing, the superintendent of the school district, the
 director of the open-enrollment charter school, or the chief
 executive officer of the private school in which the employee is
 employed about the investigation. The written notice required by
 this subsection may be provided by e-mail to the official e-mail
 address of the appropriate official, if that e-mail address is
 publicly available.
 SECTION 2.32.  Sections 261.301(a) and (c), Family Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  With assistance from the appropriate [state or local]
 law enforcement agency as provided by this section, the department
 shall make a prompt and thorough investigation of a report of child
 abuse or neglect allegedly committed by a person responsible for a
 child's care, custody, or welfare. The investigation shall be
 conducted without regard to any pending suit affecting the
 parent-child relationship.
 (c)  The department is not required to investigate a report
 that alleges child abuse, neglect, or exploitation by a person
 other than a person responsible for a child's care, custody, or
 welfare. The appropriate [state or local] law enforcement agency
 shall investigate that report if the agency determines an
 investigation should be conducted.
 SECTION 2.33.  Section 261.304(a), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  If an individual makes an anonymous report of child
 abuse or neglect by a person responsible for a child's care,
 custody, or welfare to a [local or state] law enforcement agency and
 the agency refers the report to the department, the department
 shall conduct a preliminary investigation to determine whether
 there is any evidence to corroborate the report.
 SECTION 2.34.  Section 261.308, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (f) to read as follows:
 (f)  The department shall release information required to be
 released to the Texas Education Agency or the State Board for
 Educator Certification under Subsection (d) or (e) by submitting
 the information through the Internet portal developed and
 maintained by the agency under Section 22A.155, Education Code.
 SECTION 2.35.  Section 261.402(b), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  A state agency shall immediately notify the appropriate
 [state or local] law enforcement agency of any report the agency
 receives, other than a report from a law enforcement agency, that
 concerns the suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a child
 or the death of a child from abuse or neglect. If the state agency
 finds evidence indicating that a child may have been abused,
 neglected, or exploited, the agency shall report the evidence to
 the appropriate law enforcement agency.
 SECTION 2.36.  This article applies beginning with the
 2025-2026 school year.
 SECTION 2.37.  Sections 22A.051 and 22A.052, Education Code,
 as transferred, redesignated, and amended by this article, apply
 only to an offense committed on or after September 1, 2025. An
 offense committed before September 1, 2025, is governed by the law
 in effect on the date the offense was committed, and the former law
 is continued in effect for that purpose. For purposes of this
 section, an offense was committed before September 1, 2025, if any
 element of the offense occurred before that date.
 ARTICLE 3. CONFORMING CHANGES
 SECTION 3.01.  Section 7.028(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Section 22A.051(n) [21.006(k)],
 22A.052(m) [22.093(l)], 22A.156 [22.096], 28.006, 29.001(5),
 29.010(a), 33.006(h), 37.1083, 37.1084, 38.003, or 39.003, the
 agency may monitor compliance with requirements applicable to a
 process or program provided by a school district, campus, program,
 or school granted charters under Chapter 12, including the process
 described by Subchapter F, Chapter 11, or a program described by
 Subchapter B, C, D, E, F, H, or I, Chapter 29, or Subchapter A,
 Chapter 37, only as necessary to ensure:
 (1)  compliance with federal law and regulations;
 (2)  financial accountability, including compliance
 with grant requirements;
 (3)  data integrity for purposes of:
 (A)  the Public Education Information Management
 System (PEIMS); and
 (B)  accountability under Chapters 39 and 39A; and
 (4)  qualification for funding under Chapter 48.
 SECTION 3.02.  Section 12.0271, Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 12.0271.  FAILURE TO DISCHARGE OR REFUSE TO HIRE OR
 TERMINATE OR REFUSE SERVICES FROM CERTAIN EMPLOYEES, [OR]
 APPLICANTS, OR SERVICE PROVIDERS. A home-rule school district
 commits a material violation of the school district's charter if
 the school district fails to comply with the duty to discharge or
 refuse to hire, or terminate or refuse to accept services from,
 certain employees, [or] applicants for employment, or service
 providers under Section 22A.151 or 22A.157, as applicable [22.085
 or 22.092].
 SECTION 3.03.  Section 12.0631, Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 12.0631.  FAILURE TO DISCHARGE OR REFUSE TO HIRE OR
 TERMINATE OR REFUSE SERVICES FROM CERTAIN EMPLOYEES, [OR]
 APPLICANTS, OR SERVICE PROVIDERS. A campus or campus program
 granted a charter under this subchapter commits a material
 violation of its charter if the campus or program fails to comply
 with the duty to discharge or refuse to hire, or terminate or refuse
 to accept services from, certain employees, [or] applicants for
 employment, or service providers under Section 12.1059, 22A.151, or
 22A.157, as applicable [22.085, or 22.092].
 SECTION 3.04.  Section 12.104(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  An open-enrollment charter school is subject to:
 (1)  a provision of this title establishing a criminal
 offense;
 (2)  the provisions in Chapter 554, Government Code;
 and
 (3)  a prohibition, restriction, or requirement, as
 applicable, imposed by this title or a rule adopted under this
 title, relating to:
 (A)  the Public Education Information Management
 System (PEIMS) to the extent necessary to monitor compliance with
 this subchapter as determined by the commissioner;
 (B)  criminal history records under Subchapter C,
 Chapter 22;
 (C)  reading instruments and accelerated reading
 instruction programs under Section 28.006;
 (D)  accelerated instruction under Section
 28.0211;
 (E)  high school graduation requirements under
 Section 28.025;
 (F)  special education programs under Subchapter
 A, Chapter 29;
 (G)  bilingual education under Subchapter B,
 Chapter 29;
 (H)  prekindergarten programs under Subchapter E
 or E-1, Chapter 29, except class size limits for prekindergarten
 classes imposed under Section 25.112, which do not apply;
 (I)  extracurricular activities under Section
 33.081;
 (J)  discipline management practices or behavior
 management techniques under Section 37.0021;
 (K)  health and safety under Chapter 38;
 (L)  the provisions of Subchapter A, Chapter 39;
 (M)  public school accountability and special
 investigations under Subchapters A, B, C, D, F, G, and J, Chapter
 39, and Chapter 39A;
 (N)  the requirement under Section 22A.051 or
 22A.052 [21.006] to report [an educator's] misconduct;
 (O)  intensive programs of instruction under
 Section 28.0213;
 (P)  the right of a school employee to report a
 crime, as provided by Section 37.148;
 (Q)  bullying prevention policies and procedures
 under Section 37.0832;
 (R)  the right of a school under Section 37.0052
 to place a student who has engaged in certain bullying behavior in a
 disciplinary alternative education program or to expel the student;
 (S)  the right under Section 37.0151 to report to
 local law enforcement certain conduct constituting assault or
 harassment;
 (T)  a parent's right to information regarding the
 provision of assistance for learning difficulties to the parent's
 child as provided by Sections 26.004(b)(11) and 26.0081(c) and (d);
 (U)  establishment of residency under Section
 25.001;
 (V)  school safety requirements under Sections
 37.0814, 37.108, 37.1081, 37.1082, 37.1083, 37.1084, 37.1085,
 37.1086, 37.109, 37.113, 37.114, 37.1141, 37.115, 37.207, and
 37.2071 and Subchapter J, Chapter 37;
 (W)  the early childhood literacy and mathematics
 proficiency plans under Section 11.185;
 (X)  the college, career, and military readiness
 plans under Section 11.186; and
 (Y)  parental options to retain a student under
 Section 28.02124.
 SECTION 3.05.  Section 12.1059, Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 12.1059.  REQUIREMENTS FOR EMPLOYMENT OF CERTAIN
 EMPLOYEES. A person may not be employed by or serve as a teacher,
 librarian, educational aide, administrator, or school counselor
 for an open-enrollment charter school unless:
 (1)  the person has been approved by the agency
 following a review of the person's national criminal history record
 information as provided by Section 22.0832; and
 (2)  the school has confirmed that the person is not
 included in the registry under Section 22A.151 [22.092].
 SECTION 3.06.  Section 12.1151, Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 12.1151.  FAILURE TO DISCHARGE OR REFUSE TO HIRE OR
 TERMINATE OR REFUSE SERVICES FROM CERTAIN EMPLOYEES, [OR]
 APPLICANTS, OR SERVICE PROVIDERS. An open-enrollment charter
 school commits a material violation of the school's charter if the
 school fails to comply with the duty to discharge or refuse to hire,
 or terminate or refuse to accept services from, certain employees,
 [or] applicants for employment, or service providers under Section
 12.1059, 22A.151, or 22A.157, as applicable [22.085, or 22.092].
 SECTION 3.07.  Section 12.252(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  An adult education program operated under a charter
 granted under this subchapter is subject to:
 (1)  a provision of this title establishing a criminal
 offense; and
 (2)  a prohibition, restriction, or requirement, as
 applicable, imposed by this title or a rule adopted under this
 title, relating to:
 (A)  the Public Education Information Management
 System (PEIMS) to the extent necessary as determined by the
 commissioner to monitor compliance with this subchapter and, as
 applicable, Subchapter D;
 (B)  criminal history records under Subchapter C,
 Chapter 22;
 (C)  high school graduation requirements under
 Section 28.025, to the extent applicable to a program participant;
 (D)  special education programs under Subchapter
 A, Chapter 29;
 (E)  bilingual education under Subchapter B,
 Chapter 29;
 (F)  health and safety under Chapter 38;
 (G)  the requirement under Section 22A.051 or
 22A.052 [21.006] to report [an educator's] misconduct; and
 (H)  the right of an employee to report a crime, as
 provided by Section 37.148.
 SECTION 3.08.  Section 12A.008(b-1), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (b-1)  The commissioner may terminate a district's
 designation as a district of innovation if the district fails to
 comply with the duty to discharge or refuse to hire certain
 employees or applicants for employment under Section 12.1059,
 applicable to the district under Section 12A.004(a)(1), or Section
 22A.151 or 22A.157 [22.085 or 22.092].
 SECTION 3.09.  Section 21.054(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  Continuing education requirements for a principal must
 provide that not more than 25 percent of the training required every
 five years include instruction regarding:
 (1)  effective and efficient management, including:
 (A)  collecting and analyzing information;
 (B)  making decisions and managing time; and
 (C)  supervising student discipline and managing
 behavior;
 (2)  recognizing early warning indicators that a
 student may be at risk of dropping out of school;
 (3)  digital learning, digital teaching, and
 integrating technology into campus curriculum and instruction;
 (4)  effective implementation of a comprehensive
 school counseling program under Section 33.005;
 (5)  mental health programs addressing a mental health
 condition;
 (6)  educating diverse student populations, including:
 (A)  students who are educationally
 disadvantaged;
 (B)  emergent bilingual students; and
 (C)  students at risk of dropping out of school;
 and
 (7)  preventing, recognizing, and reporting any sexual
 conduct between an educator and student that is prohibited under
 Section 21.12, Penal Code, or for which reporting is required under
 Section 22A.051 [21.006] of this code.
 SECTION 3.10.  Section 21.0585, Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 21.0585.  NOTICE TO AGENCY REGARDING REVOCATION OF
 CERTIFICATE OR PERMIT FOR CERTAIN MISCONDUCT. The board shall
 promptly notify the agency for purposes of Section 22A.151 [22.092]
 if the board revokes a certificate or permit of a person on a
 finding that the person engaged in misconduct described by Section
 22A.051(a)(2)(A), (B), (C), or (D) [21.006(b)(2)(A) or (A-1)].
 SECTION 3.11.  Section 22.0815(a), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In this section, "other charter entity" has the meaning
 assigned by Section 22A.001 [21.006].
 SECTION 3.12.  Section 22.0825(a), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In this section, "other charter entity" has the meaning
 assigned by Section 22A.001 [21.006].
 SECTION 3.13.  Section 22.0833(g), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (g)  A school district, open-enrollment charter school, or
 shared services arrangement shall provide the agency with the name
 of a person to whom this section applies. The agency shall obtain
 all criminal history record information of the person through the
 criminal history clearinghouse as provided by Section 411.0845,
 Government Code. The agency shall examine the criminal history
 record information of the person and notify the district, school,
 or shared services arrangement if the person may not be hired or
 must be discharged as provided by Section 22A.157 [22.085].
 SECTION 3.14.  Section 22.0834(o), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (o)  A school district, charter school, regional education
 service center, commercial transportation company, education
 shared services arrangement, or qualified school contractor,
 contracting entity, or subcontracting entity may not permit an
 employee to whom Subsection (a) applies to provide services at a
 school if the employee has been convicted of a felony or misdemeanor
 offense that would prevent a person from being employed under
 Section 22A.157(a) [22.085(a)].
 SECTION 3.15.  Section 22.0836(g), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (g)  A school district, open-enrollment charter school, or
 shared services arrangement shall provide the agency with the name
 of a person to whom this section applies. The agency shall obtain
 all criminal history record information of the person through the
 criminal history clearinghouse as provided by Section 411.0845,
 Government Code. The agency shall examine the criminal history
 record information and certification records of the person and
 notify the district, school, or shared services arrangement if the
 person:
 (1)  may not be hired or must be discharged as provided
 by Section 22A.157 [22.085]; or
 (2)  may not be employed as a substitute teacher
 because the person's educator certification has been revoked or is
 suspended.
 SECTION 3.16.  Section 33.913(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  To participate in the program as a tutor, a person must:
 (1)  be an active or retired teacher;
 (2)  apply for the position in a manner specified by the
 nonprofit organization;
 (3)  designate in the application whether the person
 plans to provide tutoring:
 (A)  for compensation, on a volunteer basis, or
 both; and
 (B)  in person, online, or both; and
 (4)  not be included in the registry of persons not
 eligible for employment by a public school under Section 22A.151
 [22.092].
 SECTION 3.17.  Section 39.0302(a), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  During an agency investigation or audit of a school
 district under Section 39.0301(e) or (f), a special investigation
 under Section 39.003(a)(8) or (14), a compliance review under
 Section 22A.051(n), 22A.052(m) [21.006(k), 22.093(l)], or 22A.156
 [22.096], or an investigation by the State Board for Educator
 Certification of an educator for an alleged violation of an
 assessment instrument security procedure established under Section
 39.0301(a), the commissioner may issue a subpoena to compel the
 attendance of a relevant witness or the production, for inspection
 or copying, of relevant evidence that is located in this state.
 SECTION 3.18.  Section 810.003(a), Health and Safety Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The department, in collaboration with each
 participating state agency, shall establish an interagency
 reportable conduct search engine for persons to search information
 on reportable conduct in accordance with this chapter and rules
 adopted under this chapter maintained by:
 (1)  the Department of Family and Protective Services
 in the central registry established under Section 261.002, Family
 Code;
 (2)  the Health and Human Services Commission in the
 employee misconduct registry established under Chapter 253;
 (3)  the Texas Education Agency in the registry
 established under Section 22A.151 [22.092], Education Code; and
 (4)  the Texas Juvenile Justice Department in the
 integrated certification information system and in any informal
 list the Texas Juvenile Justice Department maintains.
 SECTION 3.19.  Section 810.004(b), Health and Safety Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (b)  In addition to the eligible individuals described by
 Subsection (a), each participating state agency shall designate
 additional users who are eligible to access the search engine and
 may require those users to determine whether an individual has
 engaged in reportable conduct. The additional designated users may
 include controlling persons, hiring managers, or administrators
 of:
 (1)  licensed or certified long-term care providers,
 including:
 (A)  home and community support services agencies
 licensed under Chapter 142;
 (B)  nursing facilities licensed under Chapter
 242;
 (C)  assisted living facilities licensed under
 Chapter 247;
 (D)  prescribed pediatric extended care centers
 licensed under Chapter 248A;
 (E)  intermediate care facilities for individuals
 with an intellectual disability licensed under Chapter 252;
 (F)  state supported living centers, as defined by
 Section 531.002; and
 (G)  day activity and health services facilities
 licensed under Chapter 103, Human Resources Code;
 (2)  providers under a Section 1915(c) waiver program,
 as defined by Section 521.0001 [531.001], Government Code;
 (3)  juvenile probation departments and registered
 juvenile justice facilities;
 (4)  independent school districts, districts of
 innovation, open-enrollment charter schools, other charter
 entities, as defined by Section 22A.001 [21.006], Education Code,
 regional education service centers, education shared services
 arrangements, or any other educational entity or provider that is
 authorized to access the registry established under Section 22A.151
 [22.092], Education Code;
 (5)  private schools that:
 (A)  offer a course of instruction for students in
 this state in one or more grades from prekindergarten through grade
 12; and
 (B)  are:
 (i)  accredited by an organization
 recognized by the Texas Education Agency or the Texas Private
 School Accreditation Commission;
 (ii)  listed in the database of the National
 Center for Education Statistics of the United States Department of
 Education; or
 (iii)  otherwise authorized by Texas
 Education Agency rule to access the search engine; and
 (6)  nonprofit teacher organizations approved by the
 commissioner of education for the purpose of participating in the
 tutoring program established under Section 33.913, Education Code.
 SECTION 3.20.  The following provisions of the Education
 Code are repealed:
 (1)  the heading to Section 21.006;
 (2)  the heading to Subchapter C-1, Chapter 22; and
 (3)  Section 22.091.
 ARTICLE 4. TRANSITION; SEVERABILITY; EFFECTIVE DATE
 SECTION 4.01.  To the extent of any conflict, this Act
 prevails over another Act of the 89th Legislature, Regular Session,
 2025, relating to nonsubstantive additions to and corrections in
 enacted codes.
 SECTION 4.02.  It is the intent of the legislature that every
 provision, section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase, or word
 in this Act, and every application of the provisions in this Act to
 each person or entity, is severable from each other. If any
 application of any provision in this Act to any person, group of
 persons, or circumstances is found by a court to be invalid for any
 reason, the remaining applications of that provision to all other
 persons and circumstances shall be severed and may not be affected.
 SECTION 4.03.  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, 2025.