HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 4487        FILED ON: 8/4/2009

HOUSE  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  No. 4163

 

 

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

 

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In the Year Two Thousand Nine

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An Act RELATIVE TO CHARTER SCHOOLS IN UNDERPERFORMING DISTRICTS.

 

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
 

1. Chapter 71 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after section 89 the following section:-

Section 89A.  (a) Notwithstanding subsection (i) of section 89 of this chapter or any other general or special law to the contrary, the board of elementary and secondary education may authorize charter school applications in a public school district in which the total charter school tuition payment to commonwealth charter schools will, as a result of the establishment of such charter school(s), exceed 9 percent of the district’s net school spending; provided, however, that the following conditions must be met:

(i) In any fiscal year, no public school district’s total charter school tuition payment to commonwealth charter schools shall exceed 18 percent of the district’s net school spending; provided, however, the commonwealth shall incur charter school tuition payments for siblings attending commonwealth charter schools to the extent that their attendance would otherwise cause the school district’s charter school tuition payments to exceed 18 percent of the school district’s net school spending; and 

(ii) The board of elementary and secondary education may only approve an application for the establishment of a charter school under this section in instances in which the charter school’s student enrollment will be comprised of students from districts scoring in the lowest 10 percent in the state as measured by the combined Composite Performance Index scores on the English language arts and mathematics Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System exams.

No limitation under section 89 of this chapter regarding the number of charter schools allowed to operate in the commonwealth shall apply to schools that meet the foregoing conditions and that are authorized under this section.

(b)(i) In this section the term “provider” shall mean a charter management organization, educational management organization, public or private college or university, community-based organization, any other individual or entity as approved by the board and any consortia of these entities approved by the board; provided, that no for-profit business and no for-profit corporation shall be eligible to apply for a charter. 

In addition to the categories of persons and entities listed in subsection (e) of section 89 of this chapter, the board of elementary and secondary education shall accept applications from existing charter school boards of trustees.  In order to be eligible to apply to operate a charter school under this section, an applicant, or a provider with which an applicant proposes to contract, must have a record of operating at least 1 school or similar program that demonstrates academic success and organizational viability and serves student populations with similar representations, when compared to the population of students the proposed school seeks to serve, from among the following categories: low-income; special education; limited English proficient; sub-proficient, which shall mean students who have scored in the “needs improvement,” “warning” or “failing” categories on the mathematics or English language arts exams of the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System for 2 of the past 3 years or, as applicable, shall be defined by the department using a similar measurement; students who are determined to be at risk of dropping out of school based on predictors determined by the department; students who have dropped out of school; or other at-risk students, as determined by board regulations, who should be targeted in order to eliminate achievement gaps among different groups of students.

(ii) The board of elementary and secondary education may authorize a single board of trustees to manage more than 1 charter school authorized under this section.  The board of elementary and secondary education may also authorize a single board of trustees to manage a charter school or charter schools authorized under this section in addition to a charter school authorized under section 89 of this chapter.  The board of elementary and secondary education may also authorize an amendment under this section to a charter school’s charter so that the charter school may serve a greater number of students, subject to the amendment process set forth in regulations promulgated under section 89.

 (c) Each applicant shall submit an application for each charter school it proposes, except that applicants proposing to create more than 1 charter school in more than 1 geographically proximate district may submit 1 application for such schools.  The board of elementary and secondary education shall establish the information needed in an application for the approval of a charter school under this section; provided, however, that the application shall include but not be limited to the information specified in subsection (f) of section 89 of this chapter as well as a recruitment plan and a student retention plan.  The recruitment plan shall include but not be limited to a detailed description of deliberate, specific strategies the school will use to attract and enroll a student population that, when compared to students in similar grades in schools in the same area of the district in which the charter school will be located, contains a comparable or greater percentage of students from 2 or more of the following categories: low-income; special education; limited English proficient; sub-proficient, as defined in subsection (b); students who are determined to be at risk of dropping out of school based on predictors determined by the department; students who have dropped out of school and other at-risk students, as determined by board regulations, who should be targeted in order to eliminate achievement gaps among different groups of students.  The student retention plan shall include but not be limited to a detailed description of deliberate, specific strategies the school will use to: maximize the number of students who successfully complete all school requirements; prevent students from dropping out; and minimize the number of students in the categories enumerated in this section from returning to district schools.  The student retention plan may include, but shall not be limited to, the following strategies: regular communication with parents and family members addressing how to work together to help students succeed; early and frequent intervention with at-risk students; and extra tutoring.  No part of this student retention plan requirement shall be construed as requiring a school to lower its academic or behavioral standards in order to retain students.

(d) Charter schools authorized under this section shall: develop a plan for recruiting and retaining the categories of students enumerated in subsection (c); set enrollment goals; and annually submit to the board of elementary and secondary education a report detailing progress towards the enrollment goals and retention efforts.  If a charter school has not enrolled a student population matching the enrollment goals, the report must explain why this is the case.

The report shall include an accounting of how many students were designated as requiring special education services or English language services upon enrollment and how many of these students were subsequently no longer designated as such, along with a description of methods used by the school to achieve these outcomes and the rationale behind the methodologies used. 

As part of the charter school renewal process set forth under section 89 of this chapter, the board of elementary and secondary education shall consider for charter schools authorized under this section the data described in this paragraph and other information as applicable showing: (1) the extent to which the school has followed its recruitment plan by using deliberate, specific strategies towards recruiting and enrolling the categories of students enumerated in subsection (c); and (2) the extent to which the school has followed and enhanced as necessary its student retention plan, as described in subsection (c).

(e) In order to ensure that charter schools authorized under this section are able to recruit and serve the categories of students enumerated in subsection (c), the school district in which the charter school is located shall provide to a third party mail house authorized by the department the addresses for all eligible students in the district, unless a student’s parent or guardian requests that the district withhold this information.  Each charter school authorized under this section shall supply a mailing in the most prevalent language(s) of the district(s) of the students the charter school is authorized to serve, to the extent feasible, to the third party mail house and pay for it to be copied and mailed to families in targeted neighborhoods.

(f) In the case of a district approaching its net school spending cap, the board of elementary and secondary education shall give preference to applications from providers building networks of schools in more than 1 municipality.

(g) Unless otherwise stated in this section, the provisions of section 89 of this chapter shall apply to and govern charter schools authorized under this section.

(h) The board of elementary and secondary education shall promulgate regulations necessary to effectuate the purposes of this section.