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:
- Existing Board of Regents Would Be Abolished and New
Board Created. Upon publication of S.B. 345, as amended,
in the Kansas Register, the current Board of Regents and the
position of Executive Director of the Board would be abolished. There would be a wind-down period until June 30,
1999, and on July 1, 1999, the new Board of Regents
created by the bill would become operational.
- Nine-Member Board of Regents Would Be Established. S.B.
345, as amended, would create a nine-member Board of
Regents appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the
Senate. After the initial appointment that would establish
staggered terms, members would serve four-year terms, with
a two-term limit. As currently is the case, one member of the
Board of Regents would be a resident of each congressional
district and the remaining members would be appointed at
large, except that no two members could be from the same
county. No more than five members could be from the same
political party. The Governor would designate the first
chairperson of the new Board, but after that the members
would elect the chair. Members of the new Board of Regents
would be appointed on or before July 1, 1999.
- New Board Would Have Responsibilities to Govern, Supervise,
and Coordinate. There would be no change in the new
Board's authority to govern (manage and control) the Regents
institutions. Governance of the community colleges, area
vocational schools, and technical colleges would continue to
reside with local boards of trustees for the community
colleges and local school district boards, boards of trustees,
or multi-boards of control for the area vocational schools and
technical colleges. Washburn University would continue to
be governed by the Washburn University Board of Regents.
Supervision of the community colleges, area vocational
schools, and technical colleges would be transferred from the
State Board of Education to the State Board of Regents. The
responsibility to administer adult basic education and adult
supplementary education programs and to license proprietary
schools also would be transferred from the State Board of
Education to the Board of Regents. Coordination between
and among institutions and institutional sectors, including
Washburn University and the independent colleges and
universities, would be exercised by the Board of Regents.
- Duties of the Board of Regents. The Board would be charged
with the following specific duties:
- adopt and administer a comprehensive plan for coordination of higher education;
- determine institutional roles and review institutional
missions and goals;
- develop articulation procedures among and between postsecondary institutions;
- approve or disapprove for state funding purposes existing
and proposed educational programs, courses of instruction,
and program and course locations;
- review budget requests and present a unified budget for
higher education to the Governor and to the Legislature
each year;
- approve core indicators of quality performance for
postsecondary educational institutions;
- resolve conflicts among and between postsecondary
educational institutions;
- develop and implement a comprehensive plan for the
utilization of distance learning technologies;
- develop each year and recommend to the Governor and the
Legislature a policy agenda for higher education that
assesses priorities among proposals for policy change,
programmatic recommendations, and state funding requests;
- conduct continuous studies of ways to maximize the
utilization of higher education resources and of how to
improve access to postsecondary education;
- receive and consider reports, proposals, and recommendations of commissions that are advisory to the Board and
take such actions thereon as are deemed necessary and
appropriate; and
- make annual reports on its functions and duties to the
Governor and the Legislature.
- Advisory Commissions Would Be Established. The Board of
Regents would be subdivided into three advisory commissions--one for community colleges, area vocational schools,
and technical colleges; one for Regents institutions; and one
for higher education coordination. At the time the Governor
appoints each member to the Board of Regents, the Governor
would designate the advisory commission on which the
member is to serve. Each advisory commission would have
three members and each member of the Board of Regents
would serve on one of the commissions. After July 1, 2002,
only one representative of any one postsecondary educational
institution could serve on a commission. "Representative of
a postsecondary educational institution" would be defined to
mean someone who holds an associate degree, a bachelor's
degree, or a certificate of completion from a postsecondary
institution.
- Duties of the Commission for Community Colleges and
Vocational/Technical Education. The Commission for Community Colleges and Vocational/Technical Education would
have the following duties:
- propose for adoption by the State Board rules and regulations for supervision of the community colleges, technical
colleges, and area vocational schools;
- initiate plans for institutional advancement and new
educational programs and courses of instruction;
- provide for statewide planning for community colleges,
technical colleges, and area vocational schools;
- review existing and proposed educational programs,
courses of instruction, and program and course locations
and make recommendations to the State Board with
respect to the approval or disapproval of such programs,
courses, and locations;
- review requests of community colleges, technical colleges,
and area vocational schools for state funding and formulate recommendations thereon;
- identify core indicators of quality performance for community colleges, technical colleges, and area vocational
schools;
- develop an annual policy agenda for community colleges,
technical colleges, and area vocational schools;
- conduct continuous studies and make recommendations
concerning ways to best use resources available for
institutions under its jurisdiction; and
- make reports on the performance of its functions and
duties together with any proposals and recommendations
at each regular meeting of the Board of Regents.
- Duties of the Commission for Public Universities. The
Commission for Public Universities would have the following
duties:
- propose rules and regulations to the Board of Regents
concerning the operation and management of the Regents
institutions;
- initiate plans for institutional advancement and new
educational programs and courses of instruction;
- formulate budget requests for the Regents institutions;
- make recommendations to the Board with respect to the
appointment of chief executive officers of the Regents
institutions;
- review existing educational programs and courses of
instruction at the Regents institutions and make decisions
with respect to the educational and economic justification
for the programs and courses;
- develop an annual policy agenda for the Regents institutions;
- conduct continuous studies of ways to best use resources
available for Regents institutions;
- make reports on the performance of its functions and
duties together with any proposals and recommendations
at each regular meeting of the Board of Regents; and
- identify core indicators of quality performance for Regents
institutions.
- Duties of the Commission for Higher Education Coordination.
The Commission for Higher Education Coordination would
have the following duties:
- conduct continuous review and evaluation of the comprehensive plan for coordination of higher education and make
recommendations for amendment, revision, or modification
of the plan;
- review existing and proposed educational programs,
courses of instruction, and program and course locations
and make recommendations to the Board with respect to
the coordination of programs, courses, and locations;
- collect and analyze data and maintain a uniform
postsecondary education database;
- formulate recommendations for the resolution of conflicts
among and between postsecondary educational sectors
and institutions;
- compile core indicators of quality performance for all of the
postsecondary educational institutions under the Board's
jurisdiction;
- broker affiliations and mergers of postsecondary educational institutions;
- coordinate with Washburn University and the private
colleges and universities in developing a state system of
higher education;
- formulate budget requests for state student assistance
programs; and
- make reports on the performance of its functions and
duties together with any proposals and recommendations
at each regular meeting of the State Board of Regents.
- New Board Would Assume Duties of Former Board of Regents
and State Board of Education With Respect to Transferred
Institutions. Transfer language would make the newly-established Board of Regents the successor board to the
current Board and provide for the transfer of supervisory
authority for the community colleges, area vocational schools,
and technical colleges from the State Board of Education to
the State Board of Regents. These provisions address the
transfer of current employees of the Board of Regents and the
State Board of Education to the new Board of Regents if the
new Board determines that the officers and employees are
necessary to perform the new Board's powers, duties, and
functions.
- Performance Funding Would Be Implemented. Beginning in
FY 2003, the Legislature would appropriate funding to the
State Board of Regents to be allocated to postsecondary
educational institutions, including Washburn University, on
the basis of performance. The Board would make allocations
to each postsecondary institution on the basis of each
institution's attainment of success and excellence on indicators that have been selected and approved by the Board.
Each institution would be eligible to receive additional funding
of up to 2 percent of its State General Fund appropriation for
the prior year. (For area vocational schools and technical
colleges, the award would be based on total funding for the
postsecondary state aid program the prior year.)
- Community College State Aid Programs Would Be Replaced
With An Operating Grant. Beginning in FY 2001, community
college funding would be on the basis of operating grants
equal to 50 percent of the state aid per student for a full-time
equivalent (FTE) lower-division student at the regional
Regents institutions (Emporia, Fort Hays, and Pittsburg state
universities) multiplied by the higher of the community
college's FTE enrollment in the current or prior year. The
credit hour, out-district, and general state aid programs would
be eliminated. A hold-harmless provision would ensure that
no community college gets less in FY 2001 than in FY 2000.
For fiscal years 2002 through 2004, operating grants would
increase by 5 percentage points each year until the grants
equal 65 percent of the state aid per student for an FTE
lower-division student at the regional Regents institutions
multiplied by the higher of the community college's FTE
enrollment the current or prior year.
- Community College Mill Levies Would Be Reduced. Beginning in FY 2001 when the grant is implemented, community
colleges would have to use at least 80 percent of increased
state aid over the prior year to reduce their mill levies. The
remaining portion of the increase either could be used for
program enrichment or to further reduce mill levies.
- County Out-District Tuition Would Be Eliminated. Beginning
in FY 2001, county out-district tuition would be phased out
in even increments over a four-year period ending in FY 2004:
In FY 2001 the counties would pay $18 per credit hour; in FY
2002 they would pay $12; and in FY 2003 they would pay
$6. The revenue lost to community colleges from county out-district tuition would be replaced by state aid and would be
included within the operating grant for each community
college.
- Washburn University's Operating Grant Would Be Changed.
The basis for the Washburn University operating grant would
be the same as that for community colleges and would be 50
percent of the state aid per student for an FTE lower-division
student at the regional Regents institutions multiplied by the
higher of the University's enrollment in the current or prior
year. A hold-harmless provision would ensure that the
University would not get less money in FY 2001 than in FY
2000. The percentage would increase to 55 percent in FY
2002, 60 percent in FY 2003, and 65 percent in FY 2004.
Out-district tuition paid by counties other than Shawnee and
by townships in Shawnee County outside the City of Topeka
would be phased out beginning in FY 2001 and ending in FY
2004 and would be replaced by state aid as part of the
operating grant.
- Regents Faculty Salaries Would Increase. Upon the conversion of community college funding to an operating grant,
whatever the dollar amount of the percentage increase for the
community colleges (excluding state aid replacement for
county out-district tuition), the same amount of dollars would
be made available to Regents institutions for faculty salary
enhancements over and above normal operating budget
increases. This enhancement would end in FY 2004 when
the community college operating grant is fully phased in.
- Legislative Educational Planning Committee Would Monitor
Act. The implementation and operation of the Kansas Higher
Education Coordination Act would be monitored by the
Legislative Educational Planning Committee, which would
make an annual report concerning the Act to the Legislature
and to the Governor. The report could include recommendations and proposed legislation to amend the Act.
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:
- The Commission for Higher Education Coordination would be
given the duty to formulate budget requests for state student
assistance programs.
- The Senate version would cap performance funding at 2.5
percent for each institution, compared to 2.0 percent in the
House version, and would make one appropriation to the
Board of Regents for Regents institutions and Washburn
University, one for community colleges, and one for technical
colleges and area vocational schools. Under the House
Education Committee version, all performance funding would
be in a single appropriation to the Board. The Senate version
would require institutions to revise institutional improvement
plans at least every three years. Under both versions,
performance funding would begin in FY 2003.
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:
- Publication in the Kansas Register--S.B. 345, as amended,
would become effective. The existing Board of Regents
would be abolished, but would continue to function in a wind-down mode until June 30, 1999.
- July 1, 1999--The new Board of Regents would become
operational and all powers, duties, and functions exercised by
the former board would be transferred. By this date, appointments to the new board would be made and supervisory
authority for the community colleges, area vocational schools,
and technical colleges would be transferred from the State
Board of Education to the new board, as would the regulatory
authority to license proprietary schools and administrative
authority over adult basic and adult supplemental education
programs.
- July 1, 2001-Community college and Washburn University
funding would be on the basis of operating grants equal to 50
percent of the state aid per student for FTE lower-division
students at the regional Regents institutions. County out-district tuition would begin to phase out. Regents institutions
would get an enhanced amount of funding for faculty salaries
based on an increase in funding for community colleges.
Performance indicators would be established by the Board of
Regents for all postsecondary institutions under the Board for
the purpose of performance funding.
- July 1, 2002-Operating grants for community colleges and
Washburn University would increase to 55 percent. Performance funding would begin, with an appropriation made to
the Board of Regents. The Board would allocate funds to
each postsecondary institution on the basis of each institution's attainment of excellence on its indicators. Each
institution would be eligible to receive additional funding of
up to 2 percent of its State General Fund appropriation for the
prior year. (For area vocational schools and technical
colleges, the award would be based on total funding for the
postsecondary state aid program the prior year.) Regents
faculty salary enhancements would continue.
- July 1, 2003-Operating grants for community colleges and
Washburn University would increase to 60 percent. The
phase-out of county out-district tuition and Regents faculty
salary increases would continue.
- July 1, 2004-Operating grants for community colleges and
Washburn University would increase to 65 percent, completing the phase-in of the operating grant. This also would be
the last year of the phase-out of county out-district tuition
and Regents faculty salary increases under the proposed plan.
Performance grants would continue.
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