Bill Text: FL S0996 | 2024 | Regular Session | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Education
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 3-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-03-05 - Laid on Table, refer to CS/CS/HB 1285 [S0996 Detail]
Download: Florida-2024-S0996-Introduced.html
Bill Title: Education
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 3-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-03-05 - Laid on Table, refer to CS/CS/HB 1285 [S0996 Detail]
Download: Florida-2024-S0996-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2024 SB 996 By Senator Burgess 23-01125-24 2024996__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to education; amending s. 1002.45, 3 F.S.; requiring virtual instruction program providers 4 and virtual charter schools to provide specified 5 information to school districts; providing 6 requirements for testing site locations; requiring 7 school districts to provide certain students with 8 access to the district testing facility and certain 9 information; creating s. 1003.052, F.S.; requiring the 10 Department of Education to create the Purple Star 11 School District program; providing program 12 requirements; authorizing the department to establish 13 additional criteria; authorizing the State Board of 14 Education to adopt rules; amending s. 1003.53, F.S.; 15 authorizing district school boards to assign certain 16 students to an alternative-to-expulsion program; 17 providing that student eligibility to receive certain 18 services may not be based solely on a student’s 19 disability; deleting the definition of the term 20 “second chance schools”; deleting provisions 21 authorizing a district school board to open a second 22 chance school; deleting provisions relating to second 23 chance schools; requiring that an academic 24 intervention plan be developed for students enrolled 25 in dropout prevention and academic intervention 26 programs; requiring a school principal to notify a 27 parent or guardian in a specified manner regarding a 28 student’s placement in such a program; amending s. 29 1006.38, F.S.; requiring publishers and manufacturers 30 of instructional materials to make available, 31 electronically and freely, sample copies of 32 instructional materials for a specified purpose; 33 amending s. 1008.33, F.S.; revising a timeframe for a 34 school district to provide the Department of Education 35 with a memorandum of understanding; revising 36 requirements for a district-managed turnaround plan; 37 requiring a school district to continue to operate a 38 school that closes and reopens as a charter school for 39 the following school year and to execute a charter 40 school turnaround contract with specified provisions; 41 prohibiting the school district from reducing or 42 removing resources from such school during a certain 43 timeframe; requiring a charter school operator to 44 provide enrollment preference to certain students 45 following a charter school turnaround; requiring the 46 school district to consult and negotiate with the 47 charter school every 3 years regarding the attendance 48 zone; requiring the charter school operator to serve 49 the existing grade levels served by the school; 50 prohibiting the school district from charging a rental 51 or leasing fee; prohibiting the school district from 52 withholding an administrative fee for certain 53 services; requiring the State Board of Education to 54 adopt rules relating to specified timelines; making 55 technical changes; amending s. 1012.79, F.S.; 56 authorizing the Commissioner of Education to appoint 57 and remove an executive director of the Education 58 Practices Commission; making technical changes; 59 amending ss. 1002.33, 1002.332, 1002.333, 1008.34, and 60 1011.62, F.S.; conforming cross-references; providing 61 an effective date. 62 63 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 64 65 Section 1. Paragraph (b) of subsection (5) of section 66 1002.45, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 67 1002.45 Virtual instruction programs.— 68 (5) STUDENT PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS.—Each student 69 enrolled in the school district’s virtual instruction program 70 authorized pursuant to paragraph (1)(c) must: 71 (b) Take statewide assessments pursuant to s. 1008.22 and 72 participate in the coordinated screening and progress monitoring 73 system under s. 1008.25(9). Statewide assessments and progress 74 monitoring may be administered within the school district in 75 which such student resides, or as specified in the contract in 76 accordance with s. 1008.24(3). If requested by the approved 77 virtual instruction program provider or virtual charter school, 78 the district of residence must provide the student with access 79 to the district’s testing facilities. 80 1. The virtual instruction program provider or virtual 81 charter school shall provide to the school district a list of 82 students to be tested, which includes student names, Florida 83 Education Identifiers, grade levels, assessments to be 84 administered, and contact information. 85 2. Unless an alternative testing site is mutually agreed to 86 by the virtual instruction program provider or virtual charter 87 school and the school district, or as contracted under s. 88 1008.24, all progress monitoring under s. 1008.25(9) and 89 statewide assessments must be taken at the school to which the 90 student would be assigned according to district school board 91 attendance areas. 92 3. A school district shall provide the student with access 93 to the school or district testing facilities and the date and 94 time of the administration of each statewide assessment. 95 Section 2. Section 1003.052, Florida Statutes, is created 96 to read: 97 1003.052 Purple Star School Districts.— 98 (1)(a) The Department of Education shall establish the 99 Purple Star School District program. At a minimum, the program 100 shall require a participating school district to: 101 1. Have at least 75 percent of the schools in the school 102 district designated as a Purple Star School of Distinction 103 according to s. 1003.051. 104 2. Maintain a web page on the school district’s web site 105 which includes resources for military students and their 106 families and provides a link to each Purple Star School of 107 Distinction’s military web page. 108 (b) The department may establish additional criteria to 109 identify school districts that demonstrate a commitment to or 110 provide critical coordination of services for military-connected 111 families, such as establishing a council consisting of a 112 representative from each Purple Star School of Distinction in 113 the school district and one school district-level representative 114 to ensure alignment of military student-focused policies and 115 procedures within the school district. 116 (2) The State Board of Education may adopt rules to 117 implement this section. 118 Section 3. Paragraphs (a) and (d) of subsection (1), 119 paragraph (a) of subsection (2), and subsections (3), (4), and 120 (5) of section 1003.53, Florida Statutes, are amended, and 121 paragraph (c) is added to subsection (2) of that section, to 122 read: 123 1003.53 Dropout prevention and academic intervention.— 124 (1)(a) Dropout prevention and academic intervention 125 programs may differ from traditional educational programs and 126 schools in scheduling, administrative structure, philosophy, 127 curriculum, or setting and shall employ alternative teaching 128 methodologies, curricula, learning activities, and diagnostic 129 and assessment procedures in order to meet the needs, interests, 130 abilities, and talents of eligible students. The educational 131 program shall provide curricula, character development and law 132 education, and related services that support the program goals 133 and lead to improved performance in the areas of academic 134 achievement, attendance, and discipline. Student participation 135 in such programs isshall bevoluntary. District school boards 136 may, however, assign students to a disciplinary program for 137 disruptive students or an alternative-to-expulsion program 138 pursuant to s. 1006.13. Notwithstanding any otherprovision of139 law to the contrary, anostudent may notshallbe identified as 140beingeligible to receive services funded through the dropout 141 prevention and academic intervention program based solely on the 142 student being from a single-parent family or based on a 143 disability. 144(d)1. “Second chance schools” means district school board145programs provided through cooperative agreements between the146Department of Juvenile Justice, private providers, state or147local law enforcement agencies, or other state agencies for148students who have been disruptive or violent or who have149committed serious offenses. As partnership programs, second150chance schools are eligible for waivers by the Commissioner of151Education from State Board of Education rules that prevent the152provision of appropriate educational services to violent,153severely disruptive, or delinquent students in small154nontraditional settings or in court-adjudicated settings.1552. District school boards seeking to enter into a156partnership with a private entity or public entity to operate a157second chance school for disruptive students may apply to the158Department of Education for startup grants. These grants must be159available for 1 year and must be used to offset the startup160costs for implementing such programs off public school campuses.161General operating funds must be generated through the162appropriate programs of the Florida Education Finance Program.163Grants approved under this program shall be for the full164operation of the school by a private nonprofit or for-profit165provider or the public entity. This program must operate under166rules adopted by the State Board of Education and be implemented167to the extent funded by the Legislature.1683. A student enrolled in a sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth,169or tenth grade class may be assigned to a second chance school170if the student meets the following criteria:171a. The student is a habitual truant as defined in s.1721003.01.173b. The student’s excessive absences have detrimentally174affected the student’s academic progress and the student may175have unique needs that a traditional school setting may not176meet.177c. The student’s high incidences of truancy have been178directly linked to a lack of motivation.179d. The student has been identified as at risk of dropping180out of school.1814. A student who is habitually truant may be assigned to a182second chance school only if the case staffing committee,183established pursuant to s. 984.12, determines that such184placement could be beneficial to the student and the criteria185included in subparagraph 3. are met.1865. A student may be assigned to a second chance school if187the district school board in which the student resides has a188second chance school and if the student meets one of the189following criteria:190a. The student habitually exhibits disruptive behavior in191violation of the code of student conduct adopted by the district192school board.193b. The student interferes with the student’s own learning194or the educational process of others and requires attention and195assistance beyond that which the traditional program can196provide, or, while the student is under the jurisdiction of the197school either in or out of the classroom, frequent conflicts of198a disruptive nature occur.199c. The student has committed a serious offense which200warrants suspension or expulsion from school according to the201district school board’s code of student conduct. For the202purposes of this program, “serious offense” is behavior which:203(I) Threatens the general welfare of students or others204with whom the student comes into contact;205(II) Includes violence;206(III) Includes possession of weapons or drugs; or207(IV) Is harassment or verbal abuse of school personnel or208other students.2096. Prior to assignment of students to second chance210schools, district school boards are encouraged to use211alternative programs, such as in-school suspension, which212provide instruction and counseling leading to improved student213behavior, a reduction in the incidence of truancy, and the214development of more effective interpersonal skills.2157. Students assigned to second chance schools must be216evaluated by the district school board’s child study team before217placement in a second chance school. The study team shall ensure218that students are not eligible for placement in a program for219emotionally disturbed children.2208. Students who exhibit academic and social progress and221who wish to return to a traditional school shall complete a222character development and law education program and demonstrate223preparedness to reenter the regular school setting prior to224reentering a traditional school.225 (2)(a) Each district school board may establish dropout 226 prevention and academic intervention programs at the elementary, 227 middle, junior high school, or high school level. Programs 228 designed to eliminate patterns of excessive absenteeism or 229 habitual truancy shall emphasize academic performance and may 230 provide specific instruction in the areas of career education, 231 preemployment training, and behavioral management. Such programs 232 shall utilize instructional teaching methods and student 233 services leading to improved student behavior appropriate to the 234 specific needs of the student. 235 (c) For each student enrolled in a dropout prevention and 236 academic intervention program or school, an academic 237 intervention plan must be developed to address eligibility for 238 placement in the program, individualized student goals, and 239 progress monitoring procedures. An exceptional student education 240 student’s academic intervention plan must be consistent with the 241 student’s individual education plan. 242 (3) Each district school board offeringreceiving state243funding fordropout prevention and academic intervention 244 programsthrough the General Appropriations Actshall submit 245 information through an annual report to the Department of 246 Education’s database documenting the extent to which each of the 247 district’s dropout prevention and academic intervention programs 248 has been successful in the areas of graduation rate, dropout 249 rate, attendance rate, and retention/promotion rate. The 250 department shall compile this information into an annual report 251 which shall be submitted to the presiding officers of the 252 Legislature by February 15. 253 (4) Each district school board shall establish course 254 standards, as defined by rule of the State Board of Education, 255 for dropout prevention and academic intervention programs which 256 are qualified pursuant to s. 1012.55 and procedures for ensuring 257 that teachers assigned to the programs possess the affective, 258 pedagogical, and content-related skills necessary to meet the 259 needs of these students. 260 (5) Each district school board providing a dropout 261 prevention and academic intervention program pursuant to this 262 section shall maintain for each participating student records 263 documenting the student’s eligibility, the length of 264 participation, the type of program to which the student was 265 assigned or the type of academic intervention services provided, 266 and an evaluation of the student’s academic and behavioral 267 performance while in the program. The school principal or his or 268 her designee shall, prior to placement in a dropout prevention 269 and academic intervention program or the provision of an 270 academic service, provide written notice of placementor271services by certified mail, return receipt requested,to the 272student’sparent or guardian of the student. Reasonable efforts 273 must also be made by the principal to notify the parent or 274 guardian by telephone or e-mail, or both, and these efforts must 275 be documented. The parent or guardian of the student shall sign 276 an acknowledgment of the notice of placement or service and 277 return the signed acknowledgment to the principal within 3 days 278 after receipt of the notice. The parent or guardianparentsof a 279 student assigned to such a dropout prevention and academic 280 intervention program shall be notified in writing and entitled 281 to an administrative review of any action by school personnel 282 relating to such placement pursuant to the provisions of chapter 283 120. 284 Section 4. Present subsections (3) through (16) of section 285 1006.38, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (4) 286 through (17), respectively, a new subsection (3) is added to 287 that section, and present subsections (14) and (16) of that 288 section are amended, to read: 289 1006.38 Duties, responsibilities, and requirements of 290 instructional materials publishers and manufacturers.—This 291 section applies to both the state and district approval 292 processes. Publishers and manufacturers of instructional 293 materials, or their representatives, shall: 294 (3) Make available, electronically and freely, sample 295 copies of instructional materials found on the Commissioner of 296 Education’s adopted list for each adoption cycle for online use 297 by institutions and programs that prepare candidates for teacher 298 preparation as defined in ss. 1004.04 and 1004.85 so that 299 teacher preparation candidates can practice teaching with 300 currently adopted instructional materials aligned to state 301 academic standards. 302 (15)(14)Accurately and fully disclose only the names of 303 those persons who actually authored the instructional materials. 304 In addition to the penalties provided in subsection (17)(16), 305 the commissioner may remove from the list of state-adopted 306 instructional materials those instructional materials whose 307 publisher or manufacturer misleads the purchaser by falsely 308 representing genuine authorship. 309 (17)(16)Upon the willful failure of the publisher or 310 manufacturer to comply with the requirements of this section, be 311 liable to the department in the amount of three times the total 312 sum which the publisher or manufacturer was paid in excess of 313 the price required under subsections (6)(5)and (7)(6)and in 314 the amount of three times the total value of the instructional 315 materials and services which the district school board is 316 entitled to receive free of charge under subsection (8)(7). 317 Section 5. Subsections (4) and (5) of section 1008.33, 318 Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 319 1008.33 Authority to enforce public school improvement.— 320 (4)(a) The state board shall apply intensive intervention 321 and support strategies tailored to the needs of schools earning 322 two consecutive grades of “D” or a grade of “F.” In the first 323 full school year after a school initially earns a grade of “D,” 324 the school district must immediately implement intervention and 325 support strategies prescribed in rule under paragraph (3)(c). 326 (b) For a school that initially earns a grade of “F” or a 327 second consecutive grade of “D,” the school district must either 328 continue implementing or immediately begin implementing 329 intervention and support strategies prescribed in rule under 330 paragraph (3)(c) and provide the department, by AugustSeptember331 1, with the memorandum of understanding negotiated pursuant to 332 s. 1001.42(21) and, by October 1,a district-managed turnaround 333 plan for approval by the state board. The plan must include 334 measurable academic benchmarks that put the school on a path to 335 earning and maintaining a grade of “C” or higherThe district336managed turnaround plan may include a proposal for the district337to implement an extended school day, a summer program, a338combination of an extended school day and a summer program, or339any other option authorized under paragraph (b) for state board340approval. A school district is not required to wait until a341school earns a second consecutive grade of “D” to submit a342turnaround plan for approval by the state board under this343paragraph. Upon approval by the state board, the school district 344 must implement the plan for the remainder of the school year and 345 continue the plan for 1 full school year. The state board may 346 allow a school an additional year of implementation before the 347 school must implement a turnaround option required under 348 paragraph (c)(b)if it determines that the school is likely to 349 improve to a grade of “C” or higher after the first full school 350 year of implementation. 351 (c)(b)Unless an additional year of implementation is 352 provided pursuant to paragraph (a) or paragraph (b), a school 353 that completes a plan cycle under paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) 354 and does not improve to a grade of “C” or higher must implement 355 one of the following: 356 1. Reassign students to another school and monitor the 357 progress of each reassigned student.;358 2. Close the school and reopen the school as one or more 359 charter schools, each with a governing board that has a 360 demonstrated record of effectiveness.; or361 a. The school district shall continue to operate the school 362 for the following school year and no later than October 1 363 execute a charter school turnaround contract that will allow the 364 charter school an opportunity to conduct an evaluation of the 365 educational program and personnel currently assigned to the 366 school during the year in preparation for assuming full 367 operational control of the school and facility by July 1. The 368 school district may not reduce or remove resources from the 369 school during this time. 370 b. The charter school operator shall provide enrollment 371 preference to students currently attending or who would have 372 otherwise attended or been zoned for the school. The school 373 district shall consult and negotiate with the charter school 374 every 3 years to determine whether realignment of the attendance 375 zone is appropriate to ensure that students residing closest to 376 the school are provided with an enrollment preference. 377 c. The charter school operator shall serve the existing 378 grade levels served by the school at its current enrollment or 379 higher but may, at its discretion, serve additional grade 380 levels. 381 d. The school district may not charge a rental or leasing 382 fee for the existing facility or for the property normally 383 inventoried to the school. The school and school district shall 384 agree to reasonable maintenance provisions in order to maintain 385 the facility in a manner similar to all other school facilities 386 in the district. 387 e. The school district may not withhold an administrative 388 fee for the provision of services identified in s. 389 1002.33(20)(a). 390 3. Contract with an outside entity that has a demonstrated 391 record of effectiveness to provide turnaround services 392 identified in state board rule, which may include school 393 leadership, educational modalities, teacher and leadership 394 professional development, curriculum, operation and management 395 services, school-based administrative staffing, budgeting, 396 scheduling, other educational service provider functions, or any 397 combination thereof. Selection of an outside entity may include 398 one or a combination of the following: 399 a. An external operator, which may be a district-managed 400 charter school or a high-performing charter school network in 401 which all instructional personnel are not employees of the 402 school district, but are employees of an independent governing 403 board composed of members who did not participate in the review 404 or approval of the charter. 405 b. A contractual agreement that allows for a charter school 406 network or any of its affiliated subsidiaries to provide 407 individualized consultancy services tailored to address the 408 identified needs of one or more schools under this section. 409 410 A school district and outside entity under this subparagraph 411 must enter, at minimum, a 2-year, performance-based contract. 412 The contract must include school performance and growth metrics 413 the outside entity must meet on an annual basis. The state board 414 may require the school district to modify or cancel the 415 contract. 416 (d)(c)Implementation of the turnaround option is no longer 417 required if the school improves to a grade of “C” or higher. 418 (e)(d)If a school earning two consecutive grades of “D” or 419 a grade of “F” does not improve to a grade of “C” or higher 420 after 2 school years of implementing the turnaround option 421 selected by the school district under paragraph (c)(b), the 422 school district must implement another turnaround option. 423 Implementation of the turnaround option must begin the school 424 year following the implementation period of the existing 425 turnaround option, unless the state board determines that the 426 school is likely to improve to a grade of “C” or higher if 427 additional time is provided to implement the existing turnaround 428 option. 429 (5) The state board shall adopt rules pursuant to ss. 430 120.536(1) and 120.54 to administer this section. The rules 431 shall include timelines for submission of implementation plans, 432 approval criteria for implementation plans, and timelines for 433 implementing intervention and support strategies, a standard 434 charter school turnaround contract, standard facility lease, and 435 mutual management agreement. The state board shall consult with 436 education stakeholders in developing the rules. 437 Section 6. Subsection (5), paragraph (a) of subsection (6), 438 and subsection (9) of section 1012.79, Florida Statutes, are 439 amended to read: 440 1012.79 Education Practices Commission; organization.— 441 (5) The appointment and removal ofcommission, by a vote of442three-fourths of the membership, shall employan executive 443 director, who shall be exempt from career service, is at the 444 discretion of the Commissioner of Education.The executive445director may be dismissed by a majority vote of the membership.446 (6)(a) The commission shall be assigned to the Department 447 of Education for administrative and fiscal accountability 448 purposes. The commission, in the performance of its powers and 449 duties, isshallnotbesubject to control, supervision, or 450 direction by the Department of Education. 451 (9) The commission shall make such expenditures as may be 452 necessary in exercising its authority and powers and carrying 453 out its duties and responsibilities, including expenditures for 454 personal services, legal servicesgeneral counsel or access to455counsel, and rent at the seat of government and elsewhere; for 456 books of reference, periodicals, furniture, equipment, and 457 supplies; and for printing and binding. The expenditures of the 458 commission areshall besubject to the powers and duties of the 459 Department of Financial Services as provided in s. 17.03. 460 Section 7. Paragraph (n) of subsection (9) of section 461 1002.33, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 462 1002.33 Charter schools.— 463 (9) CHARTER SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS.— 464 (n)1. The director and a representative of the governing 465 board of a charter school that has earned a grade of “D” or “F” 466 pursuant to s. 1008.34 shall appear before the sponsor to 467 present information concerning each contract component having 468 noted deficiencies. The director and a representative of the 469 governing board shall submit to the sponsor for approval a 470 school improvement plan to raise student performance. Upon 471 approval by the sponsor, the charter school shall begin 472 implementation of the school improvement plan. The department 473 shall offer technical assistance and training to the charter 474 school and its governing board and establish guidelines for 475 developing, submitting, and approving such plans. 476 2.a. If a charter school earns three consecutive grades 477 below a “C,” the charter school governing board shall choose one 478 of the following corrective actions: 479 (I) Contract for educational services to be provided 480 directly to students, instructional personnel, and school 481 administrators, as prescribed in state board rule; 482 (II) Contract with an outside entity that has a 483 demonstrated record of effectiveness to operate the school; 484 (III) Reorganize the school under a new director or 485 principal who is authorized to hire new staff; or 486 (IV) Voluntarily close the charter school. 487 b. The charter school must implement the corrective action 488 in the school year following receipt of a third consecutive 489 grade below a “C.” 490 c. The sponsor may annually waive a corrective action if it 491 determines that the charter school is likely to improve a letter 492 grade if additional time is provided to implement the 493 intervention and support strategies prescribed by the school 494 improvement plan. Notwithstanding this sub-subparagraph, a 495 charter school that earns a second consecutive grade of “F” is 496 subject to subparagraph 3. 497 d. A charter school is no longer required to implement a 498 corrective action if it improves to a “C” or higher. However, 499 the charter school must continue to implement strategies 500 identified in the school improvement plan. The sponsor must 501 annually review implementation of the school improvement plan to 502 monitor the school’s continued improvement pursuant to 503 subparagraph 4. 504 e. A charter school implementing a corrective action that 505 does not improve to a “C” or higher after 2 full school years of 506 implementing the corrective action must select a different 507 corrective action. Implementation of the new corrective action 508 must begin in the school year following the implementation 509 period of the existing corrective action, unless the sponsor 510 determines that the charter school is likely to improve to a “C” 511 or higher if additional time is provided to implement the 512 existing corrective action. Notwithstanding this sub 513 subparagraph, a charter school that earns a second consecutive 514 grade of “F” while implementing a corrective action is subject 515 to subparagraph 3. 516 3. A charter school’s charter contract is automatically 517 terminated if the school earns two consecutive grades of “F” 518 after all school grade appeals are final unless: 519 a. The charter school is established to turn around the 520 performance of a district public school pursuant to s. 521 1008.33(4)(c)2.s. 1008.33(4)(b)2.Such charter schools shall be 522 governed by s. 1008.33; 523 b. The charter school serves a student population the 524 majority of which resides in a school zone served by a district 525 public school subject to s. 1008.33(4) and the charter school 526 earns at least a grade of “D” in its third year of operation. 527 The exception provided under this sub-subparagraph does not 528 apply to a charter school in its fourth year of operation and 529 thereafter; or 530 c. The state board grants the charter school a waiver of 531 termination. The charter school must request the waiver within 532 15 days after the department’s official release of school 533 grades. The state board may waive termination if the charter 534 school demonstrates that the Learning Gains of its students on 535 statewide assessments are comparable to or better than the 536 Learning Gains of similarly situated students enrolled in nearby 537 public schools. The waiver is valid for 1 year and may only be 538 granted once. Charter schools that have been in operation for 539 more than 5 years are not eligible for a waiver under this sub 540 subparagraph. 541 542 The sponsor shall notify the charter school’s governing board, 543 the charter school principal, and the department in writing when 544 a charter contract is terminated under this subparagraph. A 545 charter terminated under this subparagraph must follow the 546 procedures for dissolution and reversion of public funds 547 pursuant to paragraphs (8)(d)-(f) and (9)(o). 548 4. The director and a representative of the governing board 549 of a graded charter school that has implemented a school 550 improvement plan under this paragraph shall appear before the 551 sponsor at least once a year to present information regarding 552 the progress of intervention and support strategies implemented 553 by the school pursuant to the school improvement plan and 554 corrective actions, if applicable. The sponsor shall communicate 555 at the meeting, and in writing to the director, the services 556 provided to the school to help the school address its 557 deficiencies. 558 5. Notwithstanding any provision of this paragraph except 559 sub-subparagraphs 3.a.-c., the sponsor may terminate the charter 560 at any time pursuant to subsection (8). 561 Section 8. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section 562 1002.332, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 563 1002.332 High-performing charter school system.— 564 (1) For purposes of this section, the term: 565 (b) “High-performing charter school system” means an entity 566 that: 567 1. Operated at least three high-performing charter schools 568 in the state during each of the previous 3 school years; 569 2. Operated a system of charter schools in which at least 570 50 percent of the charter schools were high-performing charter 571 schools pursuant to s. 1002.331 and no charter school earned a 572 school grade of “D” or “F” pursuant to s. 1008.34 in any of the 573 previous 3 school years regardless of whether the entity 574 currently operates the charter school, except that: 575 a. If the entity assumed operation of a public school 576 pursuant to s. 1008.33(4)(c)2.s. 1008.33(4)(b)2.with a school 577 grade of “F,” that school’s grade may not be considered in 578 determining high-performing charter school system status for a 579 period of 3 years. 580 b. If the entity established a new charter school that 581 served a student population the majority of which resided in a 582 school zone served by a public school that earned a grade of “F” 583 or three consecutive grades of “D” pursuant to s. 1008.34, that 584 charter school’s grade may not be considered in determining 585 high-performing charter school system status if it attained and 586 maintained a school grade that was higher than that of the 587 public school serving that school zone within 3 years after 588 establishment; and 589 3. Did not receive a financial audit that revealed one or 590 more of the financial emergency conditions set forth in s. 591 218.503(1) for any charter school assumed or established by the 592 entity in the most recent 3 fiscal years for which such audits 593 are available. 594 Section 9. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) and subsection 595 (2) of section 1002.333, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 596 1002.333 Persistently low-performing schools.— 597 (1) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term: 598 (d) “School of hope” means: 599 1. A charter school operated by a hope operator which: 600 a. Serves students from one or more persistently low 601 performing schools and students who reside in a Florida 602 Opportunity Zone; 603 b. Is located in a Florida Opportunity Zone or in the 604 attendance zone of a persistently low-performing school or 605 within a 5-mile radius of such school, whichever is greater; and 606 c. Is a Title I eligible school; or 607 2. A school operated by a hope operator pursuant to s. 608 1008.33(4)(c)3.s. 1008.33(4)(b)3.609 (2) HOPE OPERATOR.—A hope operator is a nonprofit 610 organization with tax exempt status under s. 501(c)(3) of the 611 Internal Revenue Code that operates three or more charter 612 schools that serve students in grades K-12 in Florida or other 613 states with a record of serving students from low-income 614 families and is designated by the State Board of Education as a 615 hope operator based on a determination that: 616 (a) The past performance of the hope operator meets or 617 exceeds the following criteria: 618 1. The achievement of enrolled students exceeds the 619 district and state averages of the states in which the 620 operator’s schools operate; 621 2. The average college attendance rate at all schools 622 currently operated by the operator exceeds 80 percent, if such 623 data is available; 624 3. The percentage of students eligible for a free or 625 reduced price lunch under the National School Lunch Act enrolled 626 at all schools currently operated by the operator exceeds 70 627 percent; 628 4. The operator is in good standing with the authorizer in 629 each state in which it operates; 630 5. The audited financial statements of the operator are 631 free of material misstatements and going concern issues; and 632 6. Other outcome measures as determined by the State Board 633 of Education; 634 (b) The operator was awarded a United States Department of 635 Education Charter School Program Grant for Replication and 636 Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools within the preceding 3 637 years before applying to be a hope operator; 638 (c) The operator receives funding through the National Fund 639 of the Charter School Growth Fund to accelerate the growth of 640 the nation’s best charter schools; or 641 (d) The operator is selected by a district school board in 642 accordance with s. 1008.33. 643 644 An entity that meets the requirements of paragraph (b), 645 paragraph (c), or paragraph (d) before the adoption by the state 646 board of measurable criteria pursuant to paragraph (a) shall be 647 designated as a hope operator. After the adoption of the 648 measurable criteria, an entity, including a governing board that 649 operates a school established pursuant to s. 1008.33(4)(c)3.s.6501008.33(4)(b)3., shall be designated as a hope operator if it 651 meets the criteria of paragraph (a). 652 Section 10. Paragraph (b) of subsection (7) of section 653 1008.34, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 654 1008.34 School grading system; school report cards; 655 district grade.— 656 (7) TRANSITION.—To assist in the transition to 2022-2023 657 school grades and district grades calculated based on the 658 comprehensive, end-of-year progress monitoring assessment under 659 s. 1008.25(9), the 2022-2023 school grades and district grades 660 shall serve as an informational baseline for schools and 661 districts to work toward improved performance in future years. 662 Accordingly, notwithstanding any other provision of law: 663 (b) A school may not be required to select and implement a 664 turnaround option pursuant to s. 1008.33 in the 2023-2024 school 665 year based on the school’s 2022-2023 grade. The benefits of s. 666 1008.33(4)(d)s. 1008.33(4)(c), relating to a school being 667 released from implementation of the turnaround option, and s. 668 1008.33(4)(e)s. 1008.33(4)(d), relating to a school 669 implementing strategies identified in its school improvement 670 plan, apply to a school using turnaround options pursuant to s. 671 1008.33 which improves to a grade of “C” or higher during the 672 2022-2023 school year. 673 674 This subsection is repealed July 1, 2025. 675 Section 11. Paragraph (b) of subsection (7) of section 676 1011.62, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 677 1011.62 Funds for operation of schools.—If the annual 678 allocation from the Florida Education Finance Program to each 679 district for operation of schools is not determined in the 680 annual appropriations act or the substantive bill implementing 681 the annual appropriations act, it shall be determined as 682 follows: 683 (7) EDUCATIONAL ENRICHMENT ALLOCATION.— 684 (b) For district-managed turnaround schools as identified 685 in s. 1008.33(4)(b)s. 1008.33(4)(a), schools that earn three 686 consecutive grades below a “C,” as identified in s. 687 1008.33(4)(c)3.s. 1008.33(4)(b)3., and schools that have 688 improved to a “C” and are no longer in turnaround status, as 689 identified in s. 1008.33(4)(d)s. 1008.33(4)(c), a supplemental 690 amount shall be added to their educational enrichment allocation 691 for purposes of implementing the intervention and support 692 strategies identified in the turnaround plan submitted pursuant 693 to s. 1008.33. 694 1. The supplemental amount shall be based on the unweighted 695 full-time equivalent student enrollment at the eligible schools 696 and a per full-time equivalent funding amount of $500 or as 697 provided in the General Appropriations Act. 698 2. Services funded by the allocation may include, but are 699 not limited to, tutorial and afterschool programs, student 700 counseling, nutrition education, parental counseling, and an 701 extended school day and school year. In addition, services may 702 include models that develop a culture that encourages students 703 to complete high school and to attend college or career 704 training, set high academic expectations, and inspire character 705 development. 706 3. A school district may enter into a formal agreement with 707 a nonprofit organization that has tax-exempt status under s. 708 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to implement an 709 integrated student support service model that provides students 710 and families with access to wrap-around services, including, but 711 not limited to, health services, after-school programs, drug 712 prevention programs, college and career readiness programs, and 713 food and clothing banks. 714 Section 12. This act shall take effect July 1, 2024.