SESSION OF 2001


SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON SENATE
SUBSTITUTE FOR HOUSE BILL NO. 2336


As Amended by Senate Committee on
Education


Brief (1)



Senate Sub. for HB 2336 modifies the school finance formula and addresses other education policy matters. The main provisions are described below:





School Formula Changes



The amount of state special education services aid the district receives is deposited to the school district general fund and then must be transferred to the district's special education fund. This procedure is aimed at increasing the size of a school district's general fund budget for purposes of the LOB calculation.







Other Education Policy Changes/Initiatives







The evaluation must cover the costs of providing:







The State Board of Education will secure consultant services to conduct this evaluation. The consultant will report findings and recommendations to the Governor and the Legislature at the beginning of the 2002 Legislative Session.



For the purpose of this legislation, the term "suitable education" means a curricular program consisting of the subjects and courses required under KSA 72-1101, 72-1103, and 72-1117, and amendments, the courses in foreign language, fine arts, and physical education required to qualify for a state scholarship under KSA 72-6810 through 72-6816, and amendments, and the courses included in the precollege curriculum prescribed by the Board of Regents under KSA 76-717, and amendments.





The State Board will submit its report to the Governor and the Legislature at the beginning of the 2002 Session.





A school district board may adopt a disciplinary policy or school improvement plan which includes additional school time for pupils who are in need of remedial education or who are subject to disciplinary measures imposed under the district's disciplinary policy. Any school day or school hour scheduled for a pupil under such a policy may be scheduled on weekends, before or after regular school hours, and during the summer months. Inexcusable absence from school on any school day or during any school hour by a pupil for whom additional school days or school hours have been scheduled under the policy is counted as an inexcusable absence from school for the purposes of enforcing the compulsory school attendance law.





Taxes



Background



HB 2336, as introduced, proposed to increase the Local Option Budget (LOB) cap from 25.0 percent to 30.0 percent in the 2001-02 school year, to 33.0 percent in the 2002-03 school year, and to 35.0 percent in the 2003-04 school year. All LOB authority would then expire on June 30, 2004.



The House Education Committee amended the bill to do the following:









The bill was amended by the House Committee of the Whole to require, beginning July 1, 2001, that school districts collect financial data so that they are able to report income and expenditures in the following categories:







These data would be reported to the State Department of Education by September 1 of each year.



These provisions were removed by the Senate Education Committee and replaced with the school finance provisions described in the brief. The provisions described in this brief reflect the second series of recommendations of the Senate Committee on Education pertaining to HB 2336. One of the Senate Education Committee actions has been to add to this bill the contents of HB 2094, as amended by the Senate Education Committee, relating to funding of educational services at juvenile detention facilities. The estimated added cost to the state for adding the three facilities contained in that measure is shown below.



Facility
FY 2001
FY 2002
Liberty $100,000 $131,500
King's N/A 131,500
Clarence M. Kelly 70,000 175,304
As of April 18, 2001, the State Department of Education estimated the FY 2001 appropriations for this program are sufficient to cover the added costs associated with these facilities. Additional funding needed in FY 2002 is shown on the table (above).

Following is a summary of the fiscal components contained in the Senate Education Committee plan. They are the Governor's initial recommendation to the 2001 Legislature.







Senate Education Committee Plan/
Governor's Original Plan: FY 2002
(Amounts in Millions)


Policy
Proposal
BSAPP
Change $3,870
Amount $28.7
At-Risk
Change 0.09 to 0.10
Amount $4.2
Four Year Old At-Risk Pupils
Change 2,230 to 2,666
Amount $1.0
Special Education
Change current formula - but converted to a pupil weighting
Amount 85.3% excess cost $8.0
Studies
Change adequacy study

accountability study

Amount $0.45
INCREASE
SGF $41.4
Children's Initiative Fund 1.0
TOTAL $42.4
Shown below is proposed funding necessary for the local option budget (LOB). The Senate Education Committee plan produces a somewhat higher estimate of costs to the state for LOB's than the original proposal of the Governor (by $1.6 million). These amounts are shown below.



FY 2002

(Amounts in Millions)

Governor's

Initial

Proposal


Supplemental General State Aid (LOB) $12.5
KPERS-School 17.2*
TOTAL $29.7
* Estimate exceeds actual recommendation by $0.8 million.

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/fulltext.cgi