Bill Text: FL S1680 | 2023 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Charter Schools
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2023-05-05 - Died in Education Pre-K -12 [S1680 Detail]
Download: Florida-2023-S1680-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2023 SB 1680 By Senator Calatayud 38-00945A-23 20231680__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to charter schools; amending s. 3 1002.33, F.S.; authorizing a charter school to assign 4 its charter to another governing board that meets 5 specified requirements; authorizing the sponsor of a 6 charter school to require the proposed governing board 7 to provide certain information and to deny a request 8 for assignment only if the proposed governing board 9 does not meet specified requirements; authorizing 10 certain unrestricted capital assets to be used for 11 other charter schools in this state, rather than in 12 the same school district; revising the circumstances 13 under which certain laws apply to a charter school 14 governing board; specifying the circumstances under 15 which the landlord of a charter school or certain 16 other individuals may serve on a charter school 17 governing board; amending s. 1002.331, F.S.; 18 conforming provisions to changes made by the act; 19 providing an effective date. 20 21 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 22 23 Section 1. Paragraph (d) of subsection (7), paragraph (b) 24 of subsection (17), and paragraph (a) of subsection (26) of 25 section 1002.33, Florida Statues, are amended, and paragraph (d) 26 is added to subsection (26) of that section, to read: 27 1002.33 Charter schools.— 28 (7) CHARTER.—The terms and conditions for the operation of 29 a charter school, including a virtual charter school, shall be 30 set forth by the sponsor and the applicant in a written 31 contractual agreement, called a charter. The sponsor and the 32 governing board of the charter school or virtual charter school 33 shall use the standard charter contract or standard virtual 34 charter contract, respectively, pursuant to subsection (21), 35 which shall incorporate the approved application and any addenda 36 approved with the application. Any term or condition of a 37 proposed charter contract or proposed virtual charter contract 38 that differs from the standard charter or virtual charter 39 contract adopted by rule of the State Board of Education shall 40 be presumed a limitation on charter school flexibility. The 41 sponsor may not impose unreasonable rules or regulations that 42 violate the intent of giving charter schools greater flexibility 43 to meet educational goals. The charter shall be signed by the 44 governing board of the charter school and the sponsor, following 45 a public hearing to ensure community input. 46 (d) A charter may be modified during its term upon the 47 recommendation of the sponsor or the charter school’s governing 48 board and the approval of both parties to the agreement. Changes 49 to curriculum which are consistent with state standards are 50shall bedeemed approved unless the sponsor and the Department 51 of Education determine in writing that the curriculum is 52 inconsistent with state standards. Modification during any term 53 may include, but is not limited to, consolidation of multiple 54 charters into a single charter if the charters are operated 55 under the same governing board, regardless of the renewal cycle. 56 A charter school may assign its charter to another governing 57 board if the proposed governing board is a nonprofit entity or 58 otherwise meets the requirements of paragraph (12)(i). A sponsor 59 may require the proposed governing board to provide information 60 required by subparagraph (6)(a)6. and may deny a request for 61 assignment only if the sponsor demonstrates by clear and 62 convincing evidence that the proposed governing board does not 63 meet the requirements of this subsection. A charter school that 64 is not subject to a school improvement plan and that closes as 65 part of a consolidation shall be reported by the sponsor as a 66 consolidation. A request for consolidation of multiple charters 67 must be approved or denied within 60 days after the submission 68 of the request. If the request is denied, the sponsor mustshall69 notify the charter school’s governing board of the denial and 70 must provide the specific reasons, in reasonable detail, for the 71 denial of the request for consolidation within 10 days. 72 (17) FUNDING.—Students enrolled in a charter school, 73 regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded as if they are in 74 a basic program or a special program, the same as students 75 enrolled in other public schools in a school district. Funding 76 for a charter lab school shall be as provided in s. 1002.32. 77 (b)1. The basis for the agreement for funding students 78 enrolled in a charter school shall be the sum of the school 79 district’s operating funds from the Florida Education Finance 80 Program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the General Appropriations 81 Act, including gross state and local funds, discretionary 82 lottery funds, and funds from the school district’s current 83 operating discretionary millage levy; divided by total funded 84 weighted full-time equivalent students in the school district; 85 and multiplied by the weighted full-time equivalent students for 86 the charter school. Charter schools whose students or programs 87 meet the eligibility criteria in law are entitled to their 88 proportionate share of categorical program funds included in the 89 total funds available in the Florida Education Finance Program 90 by the Legislature, including transportation, and the evidence 91 based reading allocation. Total funding for each charter school 92 shall be recalculated during the year to reflect the revised 93 calculations under the Florida Education Finance Program by the 94 state and the actual weighted full-time equivalent students 95 reported by the charter school during the full-time equivalent 96 student survey periods designated by the Commissioner of 97 Education. For charter schools operated by a not-for-profit or 98 municipal entity, any unrestricted current and capital assets 99 identified in the charter school’s annual financial audit may be 100 used for other charter schools operated by the not-for-profit or 101 municipal entity within this statetheschool district. 102 Unrestricted current assets mustshallbe used in accordance 103 with s. 1011.62, and any unrestricted capital assets mustshall104 be used in accordance with s. 1013.62(2). 105 2.a. Students enrolled in a charter school sponsored by a 106 state university or Florida College System institution pursuant 107 to paragraph (5)(a) shall be funded as if they are in a basic 108 program or a special program in the school district. The basis 109 for funding these students is the sum of the total operating 110 funds from the Florida Education Finance Program for the school 111 district in which the school is located as provided in s. 112 1011.62 and the General Appropriations Act, including gross 113 state and local funds, discretionary lottery funds, and funds 114 from each school district’s current operating discretionary 115 millage levy, divided by total funded weighted full-time 116 equivalent students in the district, and multiplied by the full 117 time equivalent membership of the charter school. The Department 118 of Education shall develop a tool that each state university or 119 Florida College System institution sponsoring a charter school 120 shall use for purposes of calculating the funding amount for 121 each eligible charter school student. The total amount obtained 122 from the calculation must be appropriated from state funds in 123 the General Appropriations Act to the charter school. 124 b. Capital outlay funding for a charter school sponsored by 125 a state university or Florida College System institution 126 pursuant to paragraph (5)(a) is determined pursuant to s. 127 1013.62 and the General Appropriations Act. 128 (26) STANDARDS OF CONDUCT AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE.— 129 (a) A member of a governing board of a charter school, 130 including a charter school operated by a private entity, is 131 subject to ss. 112.313(2), (3), (7), and (12) and 112.3143(3) to 132 the extent that such statutes concern employment or contractual 133 relationships with for-profit businesses or transactions between 134 the charter school and for-profit businesses. 135 (d) The landlord of a charter school, or his or her spouse, 136 or an officer, director, or employee of an entity that is a 137 landlord of a charter school, or his or her spouse, may not be a 138 member of the governing board of the charter school unless: 139 1. The charter school is established under paragraph 140 (15)(c) and the landlord is a municipal entity; or 141 2. The landlord is a not-for-profit entity and a two-thirds 142 majority vote of the charter school board, excluding the vote of 143 landlord-affiliated board members, approves the landlord 144 affiliated board member to be elected to, or to remain on, the 145 board. 146 Section 2. Subsection (2) of section 1002.331, Florida 147 Statutes, is amended to read: 148 1002.331 High-performing charter schools.— 149 (2) A high-performing charter school is authorized to: 150 (a) Increase its student enrollment once per school year to 151 more than the capacity identified in the charter, but student 152 enrollment may not exceed the capacity of the facility at the 153 time the enrollment increase will take effect. Facility capacity 154 for purposes of expansion mustshallinclude any improvements to 155 an existing facility or any new facility in which the students 156 of the high-performing charter school will enroll. 157 (b) Expand grade levels within kindergarten through grade 158 12 to add grade levels not already served if any annual 159 enrollment increase resulting from grade level expansion is 160 within the limit established in paragraph (a). 161 (c) Submit a quarterly, rather than a monthly, financial 162 statement to the sponsor pursuant to s. 1002.33(9)(g). 163 (d) Consolidate under a single charter the charters of 164 multiple high-performing charter schools operated in the same 165 school district by the charter schools’ governing board 166 regardless of the renewal cycle. 167 (e) Receive a modification of its charter to a term of 15 168 years or a 15-year charter renewal. The charter may be modified 169 or renewed for a shorter term at the option of the high 170 performing charter school. The charter must be consistent with 171 s. 1002.33(7)(a)19. and (10)(h) and (i), is subject to annual 172 review by the sponsor, and may be terminated during its term 173 pursuant to s. 1002.33(8). 174 (f) Assign its charter to another operator, provided that 175 the proposed operator meets the requirements of s. 176 1002.33(12)(i). 177 178 A high-performing charter school shall notify its sponsor in 179 writing by March 1 if it intends to increase enrollment or 180 expand grade levels the following school year. The written 181 notice mustshallspecify the amount of the enrollment increase 182 and the grade levels that will be added, as applicable. If a 183 charter school notifies the sponsor of its intent to expand, the 184 sponsor mustshallmodify the charter within 90 days to include 185 the new enrollment maximum and may not make any other changes. 186 The sponsor may deny a request to increase the enrollment of a 187 high-performing charter school if the commissioner has 188 declassified the charter school as high-performing. If a high 189 performing charter school requests to consolidate multiple 190 charters or assign an existing charter, the sponsor hasshall191have40 days after receipt of that request to provide an initial 192 draft charter to the charter school. The sponsor and charter 193 schoolshallhave 50 days thereafter to negotiate and notice the 194 charter contract for final approval by the sponsor. 195 Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2023.