SESSION OF 1999



SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON SENATE BILL NO. 345



As Amended by House Committee of the Whole





Brief(1)



S.B. 345 would create the Kansas Higher Education Coordination Act. The bill would make statutory changes to the State Board of Regents; provide for the Board's supervision of postsecondary institutions and programs currently under the State Board of Education; create a higher education coordinating role for the Board of Regents; implement performance funding for public postsecondary institutions; change the funding mechanisms for community colleges and Washburn University; and provide for Regents faculty salary increases.



Specifically, the bill would provide for the supervision by the State Board of Regents of community colleges, area vocational schools, and technical colleges. No change would be made to the Board's existing governance of the Regents institutions. The administration of adult basic education and adult supplementary education programs and the regulation of proprietary schools also would be transferred from the State Board of Education to the State Board of Regents. The bill would make the Board of Regents responsible for the coordination of postsecondary education, including Washburn University and the independent colleges and universities.



In addition, the bill would make the Board of Regents responsible for identifying core performance indicators that would serve as the basis for performance funding, which would begin July 1, 2002.



Major features of the bill are as follows:











Background



The original version of S.B. 345 made changes to the Kansas Board of Regents and affected the structure and coordination of postsecondary education. A performance funding component affecting all public postsecondary institutions was added to the bill, as passed by the Senate.



The structural changes proposed in S.B. 345, in its present form, would not require a constitutional amendment, nor would the changes affect existing authority of the Board of Regents over the institutions it governs. The Board's authority to administer state student assistance programs, which affect students at area vocational schools, community colleges, Regents institutions, and independent colleges and universities, would not be affected. Also unaffected would be the powers and duties of community college boards of trustees and local governing boards for the technical colleges and area vocational schools.



The main change made by the House Education Committee was to add a funding component to the bill which would change the way community colleges and Washburn University are funded and provide for Regents faculty salary increases. In addition to the funding component, other changes made to the Senate-passed version of the bill by the House Committee are the following:



According to the fiscal note prepared by the Division of the Budget, the immediate fiscal impact of S.B. 345 would be that all funding for the existing Board of Regents and the Board's 18.0 FTE positions would be transferred to the new Board. In addition, all funding for those institutions and programs that would be transferred from the State Board of Education to the new Board of Regents would be transferred from one board to the other, along with salaries for 11.0 FTE positions. However, it has not been calculated what the fiscal impact would be of new responsibilities given to the Board of Regents. The amount of money available for performance funding would be subject to appropriation and would not begin until FY 2003.



The amendments made by the House Committee would increase funding for the community colleges, Washburn University, and Regents institutions over a several-year period. The table below shows estimated increases over the prior year for each sector for the implementation years of the program (FY 2001 through FY 2004), excluding performance funding.





Estimated State Aid Increases
Salary
Comm. Increases
College Washburn Regents
Grant*


University*


Institutions
TOTAL
FY 2001 $ 11,854,115 $ 758,725 $ 8,414,115 $ 21,026,955
FY 2002 9,016,796 919,463 5,576,796 15,513,055
FY 2003 9,377,394 937,852 5,937,394 16,252,640
FY 2004 9,682,228
956,609
6,242,228
16,881,065
TOTAL $ 39,930,533 $ 3,572,649 $ 26,170,533 $ 69,673,715
* Assumes a 2 percent growth for inflation.
Of the funds community colleges would receive, $3,440,000 of the increase each year would be money to replace revenues they already receive from counties for out-district tuition and would not be additional revenue. Likewise, $129,252 of the state aid increase received by Washburn each year for FY 2001 through FY 2004 would be money to replace county and township out-district tuition. The table below shows estimated new revenues the institutions would receive under the plan:



Community Washburn
Colleges


University


FY 2001 $ 8,414,115 $ 629,473
FY 2002 5,576,796 790,211
FY 2003 5,937,394 808,600
FY 2004 6,242,228
827,357
TOTAL $ 26,170,533
$ 3,055,641
A timeline of significant dates in S.B. 345, as amended, is as follows:

The House Committee of the Whole amended the bill to delay implementation of the operating grant from FY 2000 to FY 2001. Another amendment would hold Cloud County Community College harmless in FY 2001 when the operating grant is scheduled to begin. (Cloud County Community College was the only community college that would have lost money in FY 2001 compared to FY 2000.)



If S.B. 345 is enacted, a trailer bill would be necessary to delete all references in the statutes to the authority of the State Board of Education over those institutions and functions that would be transferred to the Kansas Board of Regents and to make other clean-up amendments.

1. *Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/bill_search.html