1086 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 157
An Act concerning schools; relating to the compulsory attendance
age of children; amend-
ing K.S.A. 72-1111, as amended by section 121 of chapter 229 of the
1996 Session Laws
of Kansas, and K.S.A. 1995 Supp. 72-1113, as amended by section 122
of chapter 229
of the 1996 Session Laws of Kansas, and repealing the existing
sections; also repealing
K.S.A. 72-1111 and K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 72-1113.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of
Kansas:
Section 1. K.S.A. 72-1111, as amended by section 121 of chapter
229
of the 1996 Session Laws of Kansas, is hereby amended to read as
follows:
72-1111. (a) Subject to the other provisions of this section, every
parent
or person acting as parent in the state of Kansas, who has control
over or
charge of any child who has reached the age of seven years and is
under
the age of 18 years and has not attained a high school diploma
or a general
educational development (GED) credential, shall require such
child to
attend continuously each school year (1) a public school for the
duration
of the school term provided for in K.S.A. 72-1106, and
amendments
thereto, or (2) a private, denominational or parochial school
taught by a
competent instructor for a period of time which is substantially
equivalent
to the period of time public school is maintained in the school
district in
which the private, denominational or parochial school is located.
If the If the
child is 16 or 17
child is 16 or 17 years of age, the parent or person acting as
parent, by
written consent, or the court, pursuant to a court order, may allow
the
child to be exempt from the compulsory attendance requirements of
this
section. If the child is 16 or 17 years of age and is regularly
enrolled in a
program recognized by the local board of education as an approved
al-
ternative educational program, the child shall be exempt from the
com-
pulsory attendance requirements of this section.
years of age, the parent or person acting as parent, by written
consent,
Ch. 157 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1087
or the court, pursuant to a court order, may allow the child
to be exempt
from the compulsory attendance requirements of this
section.
(b) If the child is 16 or 17 years of age, the child shall be
exempt from
the compulsory attendance requirements of this section if (1) the
child is
regularly enrolled in a program recognized by the local board of
education
as an approved alternative educational program, or (2) the child
and the
parent or person acting as parent attend a final counseling session
con-
ducted by the school during which a disclaimer to encourage the
child to
remain in school or to pursue educational alternatives is presented
to and
signed by the child and the parent or person acting as parent. The
dis-
claimer shall include information regarding the academic skills
that the
child has not yet achieved, the difference in future earning power
between
a high school graduate and a high school drop out, and a listing of
edu-
cational alternatives that are available for the child.
(b) (c) Any child who is under the age
of seven years, but who is
enrolled in school, is subject to the compulsory attendance
requirements
of this section. Any such child may be withdrawn from enrollment
in
school at any time by a parent or person acting as parent of the
child and
thereupon the child shall be exempt from the compulsory
attendance
requirements of this section until the child reaches the age of
seven years
or is re-enrolled in school.
(c) (d) Any child who is determined to
be an exceptional child, except
for an exceptional child who is determined to be a gifted child,
under the
provisions of the special education for exceptional children act is
subject
to the compulsory attendance requirements of such act and is
exempt
from the compulsory attendance requirements of this
section.
(d) (e) No child attending public school
in this state shall be required
to participate in any activity which is contrary to the religious
teachings
of the child if a written statement signed by one of the parents or
a person
acting as parent of the child is filed with the proper authorities
of the
school attended requesting that the child not be required to
participate
in such activities and stating the reason for the request.
(e) (f) When a recognized church or
religious denomination that ob-
jects to a regular public high school education provides, offers
and
teaches, either individually or in cooperation with another
recognized
church or religious denomination, a regularly supervised program of
in-
struction, which is approved by the state board of education, for
children
of compulsory school attendance age who have successfully
completed
the eighth grade, participation in such a program of instruction by
any
such children whose parents or persons acting as parents are
members
of the sponsoring church or religious denomination shall be
regarded as
acceptable school attendance within the meaning of this act.
Approval of
such programs shall be granted by the state board of education,
for
two-year periods, upon application from recognized churches and
relig-
ious denominations, under the following conditions: (1) Each
participat-
1088 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 157
ing child shall be engaged, during each day on which attendance
is legally
required in the public schools in the school district in which the
child
resides, in at least five hours of learning activities appropriate
to the adult
occupation that the child is likely to assume in later
years;
(2) acceptable learning activities, for the purposes of this
subsection,
shall include parent (or person acting as parent) supervised
projects in
agriculture and homemaking, work-study programs in cooperation
with
local business and industry, and correspondence courses from
schools
accredited by the national home study council, recognized by the
United
States office of education as the competent accrediting agency for
private
home study schools;
(3) at least 15 hours per week of classroom work under the
supervi-
sion of an instructor shall be provided, at which time students
shall be
required to file written reports of the learning activities they
have pursued
since the time of the last class meeting, indicating the length of
time spent
on each one, and the instructor shall examine and evaluate such
reports,
approve plans for further learning activities, and provide
necessary as-
signments and instruction;
(4) regular attendance reports shall be filed as required by
law, and
students shall be reported as absent for each school day on which
they
have not completed the prescribed minimum of five hours of
learning
activities;
(5) the instructor shall keep complete records concerning
instruction
provided, assignments made, and work pursued by the students, and
these
records shall be filed on the first day of each month with the
state board
of education and the board of education of the school district in
which
the child resides;
(6) the instructor shall be capable of performing competently
the
functions entrusted thereto;
(7) in applying for approval under this subsection a recognized
church
or religious denomination shall certify its objection to a regular
public
high school education and shall specify, in such detail as the
state board
of education may reasonably require, the program of instruction
that it
intends to provide and no such program shall be approved unless it
fully
complies with standards therefor which shall be specified by the
state
board of education;
(8) if the sponsors of an instructional program approved under
this
subsection fail to comply at any time with the provisions of this
subsection,
the state board of education shall rescind, after a written warning
has
been served and a period of three weeks allowed for compliance,
approval
of the programs, even though the two-year approval period has
not
elapsed, and thereupon children attending such program shall be
admit-
ted to a high school of the school district.
(f) (g) As used in this section, the
terms ``parent'' and ``person acting
Ch. 157 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1089
as parent'' have the meanings respectively ascribed thereto in
K.S.A.
72-1046, and amendments thereto.
Sec. 2. K.S.A. 1995 Supp. 72-1113, as amended by section 122
of
chapter 229 of the 1996 Session Laws of Kansas, is hereby amended
to
read as follows: 72-1113. (a) Each board of education shall
designate one
or more employees who shall report to the secretary of social and
reha-
bilitation services, or a designee thereof, all cases of children
who are less
than 13 years of age and are not attending school as required by
law, and
to the appropriate county or district attorney, or a designee
thereof, all
cases of children who are 13 or more years of age but less than 18
years
of age and are not attending school as required by law. The
designation
shall be made no later than September 1 of each school year and
shall be
certified no later than 10 days thereafter by the board of
education to the
secretary of social and rehabilitation services, or the designee
thereof, to
the county or district attorney, or the designee thereof, and to
the com-
missioner of education. The commissioner of education shall compile
and
maintain a list of the designated employees of each board of
education.
(b) Whenever a child is required by law to attend school, and
the
child is not enrolled in a public or nonpublic school, the child
shall be
considered to be not attending school as required by law and a
report
thereof shall be made in accordance with the provisions of
subsection (a)
by a designated employee of the board of education of the school
district
in which the child resides. The provisions of this subsection are
subject
to the provisions of subsection (d).
(c) (1) Whenever a child is required by law to attend school and
is
enrolled in school, and the child is inexcusably absent therefrom
on either
three consecutive school days or five school days in any semester
or seven
school days in any school year, whichever of the foregoing occurs
first,
the child shall be considered to be not attending school as
required by
law. A child is inexcusably absent from school if the child is
absent there-
from all or a significant part of a school day without a valid
excuse ac-
ceptable to the school employee designated by the board of
education to
have responsibility for the school attendance of such
child.
(2) Each board of education shall adopt rules for determination
of
valid excuse for absence from school and for determination of what
shall
constitute a ``significant part of a school day'' for the purpose
of this
section.
(3) Each board of education shall designate one or more
employees,
who shall each be responsible for determining the acceptability and
va-
lidity of offered excuses for absence from school of specified
children, so
that a designee is responsible for making such determination for
each
child enrolled in school.
(4) Whenever a determination is made in accordance with the
pro-
visions of this subsection that a child is not attending school as
required
1090 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 157
by law, the designated employee who is responsible for such
determina-
tion shall make a report thereof in accordance with the provisions
of
subsection (a).
(5) The provisions of this subsection are subject to the
provisions of
subsection (d).
(d) (1) Prior to making any report under this section that a
child is
not attending school as required by law, the designated employee of
the
board of education shall serve written notice thereof, by personal
delivery
or by first class mail, upon a parent or person acting as parent of
the child.
The notice shall inform the parent or person acting as parent that
con-
tinued failure of the child to attend school without a valid excuse
will
result in a report being made to the secretary of social and
rehabilitation
services or to the county or district attorney. Upon failure, on
the school
day next succeeding personal delivery of the notice or within three
school
days after the notice was mailed, of attendance at school by the
child or
of an acceptable response, as determined by the designated
employee, to
the notice by a parent or person acting as parent of the child, the
desig-
nated employee shall make a report thereof in accordance with the
pro-
visions of subsection (a). The designated employee shall submit
with the
report a certificate verifying the manner in which notice was
provided to
the parent or person acting as parent.
(2) Whenever a law enforcement officer assumes temporary
custody
of a child who is found away from home or school without a valid
excuse
during the hours school is actually in session, and the law
enforcement
officer delivers the child to the school in which the child is
enrolled or to
a location designated by the school in which the child is enrolled
to ad-
dress truancy issues, the designated employee of the board of
education
shall serve notice thereof upon a parent or person acting as parent
of the
child. The notice may be oral or written and shall inform the
parent or
person acting as parent of the child that the child was absent from
school
without a valid excuse and was delivered to school by a law
enforcement
officer.
(e) Whenever the secretary of social and rehabilitation services
re-
ceives a report required under this section, the secretary shall
investigate
the matter. If, during the investigation, the secretary determines
that the
reported child is not attending school as required by law, the
secretary
shall institute proceedings under the code for care of children.
If, during
the investigation, the secretary determines that a criminal
prosecution
should be considered, the secretary shall make a report of the case
to the
appropriate law enforcement agency.
(f) Whenever a county or district attorney receives a report
required
under this section, the county or district attorney shall
investigate the
matter. If, during the investigation, the county or district
attorney deter-
mines that the reported child is not attending school as required
by law,
the county or district attorney shall prepare and file a petition
alleging
Ch. 157 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1091
that the child is a child in need of care. If, during the
investigation, the
county or district attorney determines that a criminal prosecution
is nec-
essary, the county or district attorney shall commence the
same.
(g) As used in this section, ``board of education'' means the
board of
education of a school district or the governing authority of a
nonpublic
school. The provisions of this act shall apply to both public and
nonpublic
schools.
Sec. 3. K.S.A. 72-1111 and K.S.A. 72-1111, as amended by
section
121 of chapter 229 of the 1996 Session Laws of Kansas, and K.S.A.
1995
Supp. 72-1113, as amended by section 122 of chapter 229 of the
1996
Session Laws of Kansas, and K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 72-1113 are hereby
re-
pealed.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and
after its
publication in the statute book.
Approved May 9, 1997.