Relates to charter schools; clarifies the transparency and accountability of charter schools and provides fiscal relief to the school districts where charter schools are located.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
781
2017-2018 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
January 9, 2017
___________
Introduced by M. of A. PRETLOW -- read once and referred to the Commit-
tee on Education
AN ACT to amend the education law, in relation to charter schools
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Legislative intent. New York's charter school law was
2 enacted 14 years ago in an effort to create new learning opportunities
3 for all students, to encourage different and innovative teaching methods
4 and to provide parents and students with expanded choice within the
5 public schools. Fourteen years provides the state with enough informa-
6 tion to make judgments about changes that are needed in the law to
7 ensure the public knows how their tax dollars are being spent and to
8 ensure public schools serving the majority of students have the
9 resources needed to provide a quality education to all students. This
10 legislation is intended to clarify the transparency and accountability
11 of charter schools and provide fiscal relief to the school districts
12 where charter schools are located.
13 § 2. Subdivision 1 of section 2851 of the education law, as amended by
14 chapter 101 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
15 1. An application to establish a charter school may be submitted by
16 teachers, parents, school administrators, community residents or any
17 combination thereof. Such application may be filed in conjunction with
18 a college, university, museum, educational institution, not-for-profit
19 corporation exempt from taxation under paragraph 3 of subsection (c) of
20 section 501 of the internal revenue code [or for-profit business or
21 corporate entity authorized to do business in New York state. Provided
22 however, for-profit business or corporate entities shall not be eligible
23 to submit an application to establish a charter school pursuant to
24 subdivision nine-a of section twenty-eight hundred fifty-two of this
25 article, or operate or manage a charter school for a charter issued
26 pursuant to subdivision nine-a of section twenty-eight hundred fifty-two
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD04867-01-7
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1 of this article. For charter schools established in conjunction with a
2 for-profit business or corporate entity, the charter shall specify the
3 extent of the entity's participation in the management and operation of
4 the school], and provided that under no circumstances shall an applica-
5 tion to establish a charter school or approval to operate a charter
6 school be granted to a for-profit business or corporate entity author-
7 ized to do business in this state nor in any manner whatsoever shall
8 they have an involvement in the management and operation of a charter
9 school. The application shall include the amount of any management fee
10 to be paid to any not-for-profit corporation working in conjunction with
11 the applicants. Salaries of the employees of such not-for-profit corpo-
12 ration may not exceed the salaries for comparable positions in the
13 school district of location.
14 § 3. Paragraphs (d), (h), (p) and (v) of subdivision 2 of section 2851
15 of the education law, paragraphs (d) and (h) as added by chapter 4 of
16 the laws of 1998 and paragraphs (p) and (v) as amended by chapter 101 of
17 the laws of 2010, are amended to read as follows:
18 (d) Admission policies and procedures for the school, which shall be
19 consistent with the requirements of subdivision two of section twenty-
20 eight hundred fifty-four of this article. For charter renewals, such
21 policies and procedures shall include plans for ensuring the student
22 enrollment of the charter school includes a comparable percentage of
23 students on free lunch, students with disabilities and English language
24 learners as the school district in which the charter school is located.
25 (h) The rules and procedures by which students may be disciplined,
26 including but not limited to expulsion or suspension from the school,
27 which shall be consistent with the requirements of due process and with
28 federal laws and regulations governing the placement of students with
29 disabilities. Such rules and procedures shall include the provision of
30 educational services to any student on long term suspension or expul-
31 sion.
32 (p) The term of the proposed charter, which shall not exceed five
33 years during which instruction is provided to pupils; provided however,
34 in the case of charters issued pursuant to subdivision nine-a of section
35 twenty-eight hundred fifty-two of this article the term of such proposed
36 charter shall not exceed five years in which instruction is provided to
37 pupils plus the period commencing with the effective date of the charter
38 and ending with the opening of the school for instruction.
39 (v) A code of ethics for the charter school, setting forth for the
40 guidance of its trustees, officers and employees the standards of
41 conduct expected of them including standards with respect to disclosure
42 of conflicts of interest regarding any matter brought before the board
43 of trustees. Such code of ethics shall be in compliance with section
44 eight hundred six of the general municipal law.
45 § 4. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 4 of section 2851 of the education
46 law, as added by chapter 4 of the laws of 1998, is amended to read as
47 follows:
48 (a) A report of the progress of the charter school in achieving the
49 educational objectives set forth in the charter. Such report shall
50 include disaggregated student performance data for all student
51 subgroups.
52 § 5. Paragraphs (c) and (d) of subdivision 2 of section 2852 of the
53 education law, paragraph (c) as amended and paragraph (d) as added by
54 section 2 of part D-2 of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, are amended and
55 two new paragraphs (e) and (f) are added to read as follows:
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1 (c) granting the application is likely to improve student learning and
2 achievement and materially further the purposes set out in subdivision
3 two of section twenty-eight hundred fifty of this article; [and]
4 (d) in a school district where the total enrollment of resident
5 students attending charter schools in the base year is greater than five
6 percent of the total public school enrollment of the school district in
7 the base year [(i)] granting the application would have a significant
8 educational benefit to the students expected to attend the proposed
9 charter school [or (ii) the school district in which the charter school
10 will be located consents to such application]. For purposes of this
11 paragraph, in a city having a population of one million or more, the
12 school district shall be the community school district;
13 (e) the application for the charter school is approved by the board of
14 education of the school district where the charter school is to be
15 located; and
16 (f) the charter entity shall not approve an application that would
17 have the effect of increasing the racial isolation of a school district.
18 § 6. Subdivision 5-b of section 2852 of the education law, as added by
19 chapter 4 of the laws of 1998, is amended to read as follows:
20 5-b. If the board of regents returns a proposed charter to the charter
21 entity pursuant to the provisions of subdivision five-a of this section,
22 such charter entity shall reconsider the proposed charter, taking into
23 consideration the comments and recommendation of the board of regents.
24 Thereafter, the charter entity shall resubmit the proposed charter to
25 the board of regents with modifications, provided that the applicant
26 consents in writing to such modifications, resubmit the proposed charter
27 to the board of regents without modifications with an explanation why
28 the modifications are not being made, or abandon the proposed charter.
29 The board of regents shall review each such resubmitted proposed charter
30 in accordance with the provisions of subdivision five-a of this
31 section[; provided, however, that it shall be the duty of the board of
32 regents to approve and issue a proposed charter resubmitted by the char-
33 ter entity described in paragraph (b) of subdivision three of section
34 twenty-eight hundred fifty-one of this article within thirty days of the
35 resubmission of such proposed charter or such proposed charter shall be
36 deemed approved and issued at the expiration of such period].
37 § 7. Subdivision 7 of section 2852 of the education law is amended by
38 adding a new paragraph (c) to read as follows:
39 (c) When a revision of a charter involves an increase in enrollment
40 which brings total enrollment in charter schools in the school district
41 of location above five percent the revision shall be denied unless the
42 school district of location approves the revision or the residents of
43 the school district approve the revision through a referendum of the
44 eligible voters to be held in conjunction with the annual budget vote.
45 For purposes of this paragraph in a city having a population of one
46 million or more the school district of location shall be the community
47 school district where the charter school is located.
48 § 8. Subdivision 10 of section 2852 of the education law, as added by
49 section 3 of part D-2 of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, is amended to
50 read as follows:
51 10. Except in the case of a charter school formed by a school district
52 as a charter entity pursuant to paragraph (a) of subdivision three of
53 section twenty-eight hundred fifty-one of this article, a charter school
54 formed by approval of the regents or by operation of law on or after
55 [March] January fifteenth in any school year shall not commence instruc-
56 tion until July of the second school year next following.
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1 § 9. Subdivision 2 of section 2853 of the education law, as added by
2 chapter 4 of the laws of 1998, is amended to read as follows:
3 2. The board of regents and charter entity shall oversee each school
4 approved by such entity, and may visit, examine into and inspect any
5 charter school, including the records of such school, under its over-
6 sight. Oversight by a charter entity and the board of regents shall be
7 sufficient to ensure that the charter school is in compliance with all
8 applicable laws, regulations and charter provisions. The department
9 shall include charter schools in any review or audit of state assessment
10 administration or scoring.
11 § 10. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 3 of section 2853 of the education
12 law, as amended by chapter 101 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read
13 as follows:
14 (a) A charter school may be located in part of an existing public
15 school building, in space provided on a private work site, in a public
16 building or in any other suitable location, provided, however, a charter
17 school shall not be located in any part of an existing school building
18 when such sharing would impact the public school's ability to meet the
19 class size targets established pursuant to section two hundred eleven-d
20 of this chapter. Provided, however, before a charter school may be
21 located in part of an existing public school building, the charter enti-
22 ty shall provide notice to the parents or guardians of the students then
23 enrolled in the existing school building and shall hold a public hearing
24 for purposes of discussing the location of the charter school. A charter
25 school may own, lease or rent its space.
26 § 11. Subdivision 3 of section 2853 of the education law is amended by
27 adding two new paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as follows:
28 (f) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, any capital facility, or
29 other improvements made in public school buildings or equipment with a
30 period of probable usefulness of five or more years, with public or
31 private funds, to accommodate charter schools, shall require matching or
32 comparable improvements be made for other district schools located in
33 the same building.
34 (g) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, any construction or capi-
35 tal improvement made in accordance with this article shall be made in
36 accordance with and subject to the provisions of articles eight and nine
37 of the labor law.
38 § 12. Paragraphs (c) and (e) of subdivision 1 of section 2854 of the
39 education law, paragraph (c) as amended by section 10-b of part A of
40 chapter 56 of the laws of 2014 and paragraph (e) as added by chapter 4
41 of the laws of 1998, are amended to read as follows:
42 (c) A charter school shall be subject to the financial audits, the
43 audit procedures, and the audit requirements set forth in the charter,
44 and [shall] may be subject to audits of the comptroller of the city
45 school district of the city of New York for charter schools located in
46 New York city, [and] to the audits of the comptroller of the state of
47 New York for charter schools located in the rest of the state, [at his
48 or her discretion] or the charter entity, with respect to the school's
49 financial operations. Such procedures and standards shall be consistent
50 with generally accepted accounting and audit standards. Independent
51 fiscal audits shall be required at least once annually.
52 (e) A charter school shall be subject to the provisions of articles
53 six and seven of the public officers law in the same manner as public
54 school districts.
55 § 13. Subdivision 1 of section 2854 of the education law is amended by
56 adding a new paragraph (g) to read as follows:
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1 (g) A charter school shall be subject to the provisions of section
2 eight hundred six of the general municipal law.
3 § 14. Subdivision 2 of section 2854 of the education law, as added by
4 chapter 4 of the laws of 1998, paragraph (a) as amended by chapter 101
5 of the laws of 2010, and paragraph (b) as amended by section 3 of
6 subpart A of part B of chapter 20 of the laws of 2015, is amended to
7 read as follows:
8 2. Admissions; enrollment; students. (a) A charter school shall be
9 nonsectarian in its programs, admission policies, employment practices,
10 and all other operations and shall not charge tuition or fees; provided
11 that a charter school may require the payment of fees on the same basis
12 and to the same extent as other public schools. A charter school shall
13 not discriminate against any student, employee or any other person on
14 the basis of ethnicity, national origin, gender, or disability or any
15 other ground that would be unlawful if done by a school. Admission of
16 students shall not be limited on the basis of intellectual ability,
17 measures of achievement or aptitude, athletic ability, disability, race,
18 creed, gender, national origin, religion, or ancestry; provided, howev-
19 er, that nothing in this article shall be construed to prevent the
20 establishment of a single-sex charter school or a charter school
21 designed to provide expanded learning opportunities for students at-risk
22 of academic failure or students with disabilities and English language
23 learners; and provided, further, that the charter school shall [demon-
24 strate good faith efforts to] attract and retain a comparable or greater
25 enrollment of students with disabilities, English language learners, and
26 students who are eligible applicants for the free and reduced price
27 lunch program when compared to the enrollment figures for such students
28 in the school district in which the charter school is located. If a
29 charter school is not successful in attracting a comparable or greater
30 enrollment of students with disabilities and limited English proficient
31 students as compared to the enrollment figures for such students in the
32 school district in which the charter school is located such charter
33 school shall provide the chartering entity with a plan for improving the
34 enrollment of such students in the following year. Failure to comply
35 with this requirement for two consecutive years shall be subject to
36 revocation in accordance with subdivision one of section twenty-eight
37 hundred fifty-five of this article. A charter shall not be issued to any
38 school that would be wholly or in part under the control or direction of
39 any religious denomination, or in which any denominational tenet or
40 doctrine would be taught.
41 (b) Any child who is qualified under the laws of this state for admis-
42 sion to a public school is qualified for admission to a charter school.
43 Applications for admission to a charter school shall be submitted on a
44 uniform application form created by the department and shall be made
45 available by a charter school in languages predominately spoken in the
46 community in which such charter school is located. The school shall
47 enroll each eligible student who submits a timely application by the
48 first day of April each year, unless the number of applications exceeds
49 the capacity of the grade level or building. In such cases, students
50 shall be accepted from among applicants by a random selection process,
51 provided, however, that an enrollment preference shall be provided to
52 pupils when the charter school is located within one mile of the pupils'
53 residence, pupils returning to the charter school in the second or any
54 subsequent year of operation and pupils residing in the school district
55 in which the charter school is located, and siblings of pupils already
56 enrolled in the charter school and students on free lunch, and students
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1 with disabilities, and students with limited English proficiency. Pref-
2 erence may also be provided to children of employees of the charter
3 school or charter management organization, provided that such children
4 of employees may constitute no more than fifteen percent of the charter
5 school's total enrollment. The commissioner shall establish regulations
6 to require that the random selection process conducted pursuant to this
7 paragraph be performed in a transparent and equitable manner and to
8 require that the time and place of the random selection process be
9 publicized in a manner consistent with the requirements of section one
10 hundred four of the public officers law and be open to the public. For
11 the purposes of this paragraph and paragraph (a) of this subdivision,
12 the school district in which the charter school is located shall mean,
13 for the city school district of the city of New York, the community
14 district in which the charter school is located. The charter entity is
15 responsible for ensuring the selection process is conducted in accord-
16 ance with this paragraph. If the charter entity determines the process
17 is not in compliance with this paragraph, the charter entity shall
18 conduct the process.
19 (c) A charter school shall serve one or more of the grades one through
20 twelve, and shall limit admission to pupils within the grade levels
21 served. Nothing herein shall prohibit a charter school from establishing
22 a kindergarten program.
23 (d) A student may withdraw from a charter school at any time and
24 enroll in a public school. A charter school must provide a report to the
25 chartering entity each year indicating the number of students leaving
26 the charter school, the months in which the students leave the school,
27 the reason the students leave the school and the school the student is
28 currently attending. A charter school may refuse admission to any
29 student who has been expelled or suspended from a public school until
30 the period of suspension or expulsion from the public school has
31 expired, consistent with the requirements of due process.
32 § 15. Paragraphs (b-1), (c) and (c-1) of subdivision 3 of section 2854
33 of the education law, paragraph (b-1) as amended by section 6 of part
34 D-2 of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, and paragraphs (c) and (c-1) as
35 added by chapter 4 of the laws of 1998, are amended to read as follows:
36 (b-1) The employees of a charter school [that is not a conversion from
37 an existing public school] shall [not] be deemed members of [any] the
38 existing collective bargaining unit representing employees of the school
39 district in which the charter school is located, and the charter school
40 and its employees shall [not] be subject to any existing collective
41 bargaining agreement between the school district and its employees.
42 [Provided, however, that (i) if the student enrollment of the charter
43 school on the first day on which the charter school commences student
44 instruction exceeds two hundred fifty or if the average daily student
45 enrollment of such school exceeds two hundred fifty students at any
46 point during the first two years after the charter school commences
47 student instruction, all employees of the school who are eligible for
48 representation under article fourteen of the civil service law shall be
49 deemed to be represented in a separate negotiating unit at the charter
50 school by the same employee organization, if any, that represents like
51 employees in the school district in which such charter school is
52 located; (ii) the provisions of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph may
53 be waived in up to ten charters issued on the recommendation of the
54 charter entity set forth in paragraph (b) of subdivision three of
55 section twenty-eight hundred fifty-one of this article; (iii) the
56 provisions of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph shall not be applicable
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1 to the renewal or extension of a charter; and (iv) nothing in this
2 sentence shall be construed to subject a charter school subject to the
3 provisions of this paragraph or its employees to any collective bargain-
4 ing agreement between any public school district and its employees or to
5 make the employees of such charter school part of any negotiating unit
6 at such school district. The charter school may, in its sole discretion,
7 choose whether or not to offer the terms of any existing collective
8 bargaining to school employees.] Provided, however, that a majority of
9 the members of a negotiating unit within a charter school may modify, in
10 writing, a collective bargaining agreement for the purposes of employ-
11 ment in the charter school with the approval of the board of trustees of
12 the charter school.
13 (c) The employees of the charter school [may] shall be deemed employ-
14 ees of the local school district for the purpose of providing retirement
15 benefits, including membership in the teachers' retirement system and
16 other retirement systems open to employees of public schools. The finan-
17 cial contributions for such benefits shall be the responsibility of the
18 charter school and the school's employees. The commissioner, in consul-
19 tation with the comptroller, shall develop regulations to implement the
20 provisions of this paragraph in a manner that allows charter schools to
21 provide retirement benefits to its employees in the same manner as other
22 public school employees.
23 (c-1) Reasonable access. (i) If employees of the charter school are
24 not represented, any charter school chartered pursuant to this article
25 must afford reasonable access to any employee organization during the
26 reasonable proximate period before any representation question is raised
27 in the same manner as any public employer; or
28 (ii) If the employee organization is a challenging organization,
29 reasonable access must be provided to any organization seeking to repre-
30 sent employees beginning with a date reasonably proximate to a challenge
31 period. Reasonableness is defined, at a minimum, as access equal to that
32 provided to the incumbent organization.
33 § 16. Subdivision 1 of section 2855 of the education law, as amended
34 by chapter 101 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
35 1. The charter entity, or the board of regents, [may] shall terminate
36 a charter upon any of the following grounds:
37 (a) When a charter school's outcome on student assessment measures
38 adopted by the board of regents falls below the level that would allow
39 the commissioner to revoke the registration of another public school,
40 and student achievement on such measures [has not shown improvement] has
41 not met annual yearly progress over the preceding three school years;
42 (b) Serious violations of law;
43 (c) Material and substantial violation of the charter, including
44 fiscal mismanagement and failure to meet student performance targets;
45 (d) When the public employment relations board makes a determination
46 that the charter school demonstrates a practice and pattern of egregious
47 and intentional violations of subdivision one of section two hundred
48 nine-a of the civil service law involving interference with or discrimi-
49 nation against employee rights under article fourteen of the civil
50 service law; [or]
51 (e) Repeated failure to comply with the requirement to meet or exceed
52 enrollment and retention targets of students with disabilities, English
53 language learners, and students who are eligible applicants for the free
54 and reduced price lunch program pursuant to targets established by the
55 board of regents or the board of trustees of the state university of New
56 York, as applicable. Provided, however, if no grounds for terminating a
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1 charter are established pursuant to this section other than pursuant to
2 this paragraph, and the charter school demonstrates that it has made
3 extensive efforts to recruit and retain such students, including
4 outreach to parents and families in the surrounding communities, widely
5 publicizing the lottery for such school, and efforts to academically
6 support such students in such charter school, then the charter entity or
7 board of regents may retain such charter[.]; or
8 (f) Failure to enroll a comparable percentage of students qualifying
9 for free lunch, students with disabilities and English language learners
10 for two consecutive years.
11 § 17. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the education
12 law, as amended by chapter 378 of the laws of 2007, is amended and a new
13 paragraph (a-1) is added to read as follows:
14 (a-1) For the two thousand seventeen--two thousand eighteen school
15 year and each school year thereafter the state shall reimburse school
16 districts for the local share of the charter school tuition payment of
17 any students attending a charter school in the June payment required by
18 section three thousand six hundred nine-a of this chapter. Such local
19 share shall be calculated by deducting from the charter school tuition
20 payment the per pupil foundation aid amount attributable to such pupil.
21 (b) The school district shall also pay directly to the charter school
22 any federal or state aid attributable to a student with a disability
23 attending charter school in proportion to the level of services for such
24 student with a disability that the charter school provides directly or
25 indirectly. Notwithstanding anything in this section to the contrary,
26 amounts payable pursuant to this subdivision from state or local funds
27 may be reduced pursuant to an agreement between the school and the char-
28 ter entity set forth in the charter. Payments made pursuant to this
29 subdivision shall be made by the school district in six substantially
30 equal installments each year beginning on the first business day of July
31 and every two months thereafter. Amounts payable under this subdivision
32 shall be determined by the commissioner. Amounts payable to a charter
33 school in its first year of operation shall be based on the projections
34 of initial-year enrollment set forth in the charter until actual enroll-
35 ment data is reported to the school district by the charter school. Such
36 actual enrollment shall be reported to the school district prior to each
37 payment following the initial July payment which shall be based on
38 projected enrollment. Such projections shall be reconciled with the
39 actual enrollment as actual enrollment data is so reported and at the
40 end of the school's first year of operation and each subsequent year
41 based on a final report of actual enrollment by the charter school, and
42 any necessary adjustments resulting from such final report shall be made
43 to payments during the school's following year of operation.
44 § 18. Subdivisions 2 and 3 of section 2857 of the education law,
45 subdivision 2 as amended and paragraph (a-1) of subdivision 3 as added
46 by chapter 101 of the laws of 2010 and subdivision 3 as amended by
47 section 7 of part D-2 of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, are amended to
48 read as follows:
49 2. Each charter school shall submit to the charter entity and to the
50 board of regents an annual report. Such report shall be issued no later
51 than the first day of August of each year for the preceding school year
52 and provided to the school district where the charter school is located
53 for display on the school district website, and shall be made publicly
54 available by such date and shall be posted on the charter school's
55 website. The annual report shall be in such form as shall be prescribed
56 by the commissioner and shall include at least the following components:
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1 (a) a charter school report card, which shall include measures of the
2 comparative academic and fiscal performance of the school, as prescribed
3 by the commissioner in regulations adopted for such purpose. Such meas-
4 ures shall include, but not be limited to, graduation rates, dropout
5 rates, performance of students on standardized tests disaggregated for
6 sub-groups, college entry rates, total spending per pupil and adminis-
7 trative spending per pupil. Such measures shall be presented in a
8 format that is easily comparable to similar public schools. In addition,
9 the charter school shall ensure that such information is easily accessi-
10 ble to the community including making it publicly available by transmit-
11 ting it to local newspapers of general circulation and making it avail-
12 able for distribution at board of trustee meetings.
13 (b) discussion of the progress made towards achievement of the goals
14 set forth in the charter.
15 (c) a certified financial statement setting forth, by appropriate
16 categories, the revenues from all sources and expenditures including the
17 salary of the school leader and any other salaries in excess of the
18 reporting requirements for public school districts contained in section
19 sixteen hundred eight of this title and contracts with consultants and
20 vendors for the preceding school year, including a copy of the most
21 recent independent fiscal audit of the school and any audit conducted by
22 the comptroller of the state of New York.
23 (d) efforts taken by the charter school in the existing school year,
24 and a plan for efforts to be taken in the succeeding school year, to
25 meet or exceed enrollment and retention targets set by the board of
26 regents or the board of trustees of the state university of New York, as
27 applicable, of students with disabilities, English language learners,
28 and students who are eligible applicants for the free and reduced price
29 lunch program established pursuant to paragraph (e) of subdivision four
30 of section twenty-eight hundred fifty-one of this article.
31 3. The board of regents shall report annually by December first to the
32 governor, the temporary president of the senate, and the speaker of the
33 assembly and the public the following information:
34 (a) The number, distribution, and a brief description of new charter
35 schools established during the preceding year;
36 (a-1) A list including the number of charter schools closed during the
37 preceding year, and a brief description of the reasons therefor includ-
38 ing, but not limited to, non-renewal of the charter or revocation of the
39 charter;
40 (b) The department's assessment of the current and projected program-
41 matic and fiscal impact of charter schools on the delivery of services
42 by school districts;
43 (c) The academic progress of students attending charter schools, as
44 measured against comparable public and nonpublic schools with similar
45 student population characteristics [wherever practicable];
46 (d) A list of all actions taken by a charter entity on charter appli-
47 cation and the rationale for the renewal or revocation of any charters;
48 and
49 (e) Any other information regarding charter schools that the board of
50 regents deems necessary including information on best practices of char-
51 ter schools that improve student performance.
52 The format for this annual report shall be developed in consultation
53 with representatives of school districts and charter school officials.
54 § 19. Subparagraph (v) of paragraph a of subdivision 7 of section 1608
55 of the education law, as amended by section 4 of part A of chapter 97 of
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1 the laws of 2011, is amended and a new subparagraph (vi) is added to
2 read as follows:
3 (v) the projected amount of the unappropriated unreserved fund balance
4 that will be retained if the proposed budget is adopted, the projected
5 amount of the reserved fund balance, the projected amount of the appro-
6 priated fund balance, the percentage of the proposed budget that the
7 unappropriated unreserved fund balance represents, the actual unappro-
8 priated unreserved fund balance retained in the school district budget
9 for the preceding school year, and the percentage of the school district
10 budget for the preceding school year that the actual unappropriated
11 unreserved fund balance represents[.]; and
12 (vi) the projected amount of payments to be made to charter schools in
13 the next school year.
14 § 20. Subparagraph (v) of paragraph a of subdivision 7 of section 1716
15 of the education law, as amended by section 5 of part A of chapter 97 of
16 the laws of 2011, is amended and a new subparagraph (vi) is added to
17 read as follows:
18 (v) the projected amount of the unappropriated unreserved fund balance
19 that will be retained if the proposed budget is adopted, the projected
20 amount of the reserved fund balance, the projected amount of the appro-
21 priated fund balance, the percentage of the proposed budget that the
22 unappropriated unreserved fund balance represents, the actual unappro-
23 priated unreserved fund balance retained in the school district budget
24 for the preceding school year, and the percentage of the school district
25 budget for the preceding school year that the actual unappropriated
26 unreserved fund balance represents[.]; and
27 (vi) the projected amount of payments to be made to charter schools in
28 the next school year.
29 § 21. Paragraph t of subdivision 1 of section 3602 of the education
30 law is amended by adding a new closing paragraph to read as follows:
31 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law to the contrary, in
32 computing approved operating expense pursuant to this paragraph for city
33 school districts of those cities having a population in excess of one
34 hundred twenty-five thousand but less than one million; an amount equal
35 to (i) the amount computed for the school district for the two thousand
36 six--two thousand seven school year pursuant to former subdivision thir-
37 ty-seven of this section as this section existed on June thirtieth, two
38 thousand seven, (ii) the state funds which such district received in the
39 two thousand six--two thousand seven school year for magnet school
40 grants to public schools, and (iii) the state funds which such district
41 received in the two thousand six--two thousand seven school year for
42 teacher support, shall be accounted for in the same way as state funds
43 received for such purpose in the two thousand six--two thousand seven
44 school year.
45 § 22. This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that
46 the amendments to subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the education law
47 made by section seventeen of this act shall not affect the expiration of
48 such subdivision and shall expire therewith; provided further that the
49 amendments to paragraph a of subdivision 7 of section 1608 of the educa-
50 tion law made by section nineteen of this act shall not affect the expi-
51 ration of such paragraph and shall expire therewith; and provided
52 further that the amendments to paragraph a of subdivision 7 of section
53 1716 of the education law made by section twenty of this act shall not
54 affect the expiration of such paragraph and shall expire therewith.