Texas 2025 89th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1961 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/05/2025

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                    89R14958 RDR-F
 By: Bettencourt S.B. No. 1961




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the reporting of data relating to postsecondary
 education and workforce trends by the Texas Higher Education
 Coordinating Board and the Texas Workforce Commission, to
 performance tier funding under the public junior college finance
 program, and to a biennial regional labor demand assessment by the
 coordinating board.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter C, Chapter 61, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 61.09023 and 61.09096 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 61.09023.  REPORTING ON POSTSECONDARY OUTCOMES. (a)
 The board shall post on the board's Internet website the following
 de-identified data, disaggregated by institution of higher
 education and matriculating cohort:
 (1)  for students who graduate from a degree,
 certificate, or other credential program:
 (A)  the program completed;
 (B)  the employment status of graduates from each
 program, including, if known, the number of those graduates who
 enrolled in additional postsecondary education; and
 (C)  the counties of employment and residence,
 industries of employment, occupations, and wages of graduates from
 each program; and
 (2)  for students who have not graduated from a degree,
 certificate, or other credential program and are no longer enrolled
 in that program:
 (A)  the program in which the student was most
 recently enrolled;
 (B)  the number of credits remaining before the
 student would complete the program;
 (C)  the student's employment status, including,
 if known, whether the student is enrolled in another degree,
 certificate, or other credential program at an institution of
 higher education; and
 (D)  the counties and industries of employment,
 occupations, and wages of those students.
 (b)  The board shall ensure the data posted under Subsection
 (a) complies with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of
 1974 (20 U.S.C. Section 1232g).
 Sec. 61.09096.  BIENNIAL REGIONAL LABOR DEMAND ASSESSMENT.
 (a)  The board, in consultation with the Texas Workforce
 Commission, shall conduct a biennial assessment of regional labor
 demands across the state to allow institutions of higher education
 to better align educational programs with workforce needs.  In
 conducting the assessment, the board shall:
 (1)  analyze current and projected workforce needs in
 each region of the state over a 10-year period, disaggregated by
 wage, industry, occupational field, full-time and part-time
 status, county of primary employment, county of residence, and
 remote work status;
 (2)  identify for each region and county the industries
 and occupations that lead to a self-sufficient wage, as determined
 under Section 2308A.012, Government Code, based on local labor
 market conditions;
 (3)  provide a list of degrees, certificates, or other
 credentials included in the library of credentials established
 under Section 2308A.007, Government Code, that lead to jobs in the
 industries or occupations identified under Subdivision (2); and
 (4)  provide information on outcomes relating to each
 degree, certificate, or other credential listed under Subdivision
 (3), including:
 (A)  the median wage earned by students who
 graduated with the degree, certificate, or other credential in 1
 year, 5 years, and 10 years after completion of the program; and
 (B)  job placement rates in six months of
 completion of the degree, certificate, or other credential.
 (b)  To assist the board in conducting the assessment under
 this section, the board, in coordination with other state agencies,
 including the Texas Workforce Commission, the Texas Education
 Agency, and other relevant entities, shall:
 (1)  access labor market information, employment data,
 and workforce projections; and
 (2)  ensure that educational and training programs,
 credentialing pathways, and career preparation efforts are
 informed by comprehensive and accurate labor market data.
 (c)  The board shall provide the labor market information and
 workforce projections obtained from the assessment conducted under
 this section to institutions of higher education, school districts,
 and open-enrollment charter schools to support program development
 aligned with regional workforce needs.
 (d)  Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,
 the board shall report the results of the assessment conducted
 under this section to the governor, the lieutenant governor, the
 speaker of the house of representatives, and the standing
 legislative committees with primary jurisdiction over higher
 education.
 SECTION 2.  Section 130A.101(c), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  The measurable outcomes considered for purposes of
 performance tier funding are:
 (1)  the number of credentials of value awarded, as
 determined by the coordinating board under Section 130A.102 [based
 on analyses of wages and costs associated with the credential],
 including degrees, certificates, and other credentials from credit
 and non-credit programs that equip students for continued learning
 and greater earnings in the state economy, with an additional
 weight for placement of students who earn that credential in a
 high-demand occupation, as defined by coordinating board rule, or
 an appropriate proxy determined by the coordinating board based on
 available data;
 (2)  the number of students who earn at least 15
 semester credit hours or the equivalent at the junior college
 district and:
 (A)  subsequently transfer to a general academic
 teaching institution, as that term is defined by Section 61.003; or
 (B)  are enrolled in a structured co-enrollment
 program, as authorized by coordinating board rule; and
 (3)  the number of students who complete a sequence of
 at least 15 semester credit hours or the equivalent for dual credit
 or dual enrollment courses, as defined by coordinating board rule,
 that apply toward academic or workforce program requirements at the
 postsecondary level.
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter C, Chapter 130A, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 130A.102 to read as follows:
 Sec. 130A.102.  CREDENTIALS OF VALUE. (a) For purposes of
 Section 130A.101(c)(1), the coordinating board shall designate a
 postsecondary credential as a credential of value if the
 credential:
 (1)  is aligned with regional or state workforce
 demand;
 (2)  provides a positive return on investment within a
 time frame relatively proportional, as determined by the
 coordinating board, to the duration of the certificate or degree
 program at a public junior college through which a person may earn
 the credential; and
 (3)  ensures a person who graduates from a public
 junior college with the credential achieves a minimum earnings
 threshold as determined under Subsection (b).
 (b)  The coordinating board by rule shall establish a minimum
 earnings threshold for a credential of value.  In establishing the
 threshold, the coordinating board must consider:
 (1)  the time frame in which earnings from the
 credential exceed the total cost of attendance at a public junior
 college, including foregone wages; and
 (2)  whether the earnings meet or exceed the amount of
 the self-sufficient wage determined under Section 2308A.012,
 Government Code, within a time frame relatively proportional, as
 determined by the coordinating board, to the duration of the
 certificate or degree program at a public junior college through
 which a person may earn the credential.
 (c)  The coordinating board by rule may designate a
 postsecondary credential as a credential of value regardless of
 whether the credential meets the requirements under Subsection (a)
 if the coordinating board determines the designation necessary. A
 designation under this subsection expires on the second anniversary
 of the date on which the designation was made unless renewed by the
 coordinating board.  In determining whether a designation is
 necessary, the coordinating board shall consider:
 (1)  workforce demand in critical industries;
 (2)  alignment with state economic priorities;
 (3)  public service or essential workforce roles; and
 (4)  other considerations the coordinating board deems
 necessary.
 SECTION 4.  Section 204.0025, Labor Code, is amended to read
 as follows:
 Sec. 204.0025.  ADDITIONAL WORKFORCE DATA REPORTING. The
 commission shall [It is the intent of the legislature that the
 commission, subject to the availability of federal funding or other
 resources for the purpose,] work with employers to enhance the
 reporting of employment and earnings data by employers to the
 commission as part of an employer's routine wage filings under this
 subtitle or commission rule and consistent with federal law and
 regulations. The enhanced wage filings must include information
 related to wage, industry, occupational field, full-time and
 part-time status, county of primary employment, county of
 residence, remote work status, [occupation] and other important
 employment information necessary to conduct the assessment
 required under Section 61.09096, Education Code [that would improve
 the state's labor market information].
 SECTION 5.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.