Bill Text: MI HB5360 | 2017-2018 | 99th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Education; school districts; foster youth educational rights; establish. Amends secs. 1135, 1136, 1148 & 1311 of 1976 PA 451 (MCL 380.1135 et seq.) & adds sec. 1149.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2017-12-28 - Bill Electronically Reproduced 12/13/2017 [HB5360 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2017-HB5360-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 5360
December 13, 2017, Introduced by Rep. Kosowski and referred to the Committee on Education Reform.
A bill to amend 1976 PA 451, entitled
"The revised school code,"
by amending sections 1135, 1136, 1148, and 1311 (MCL 380.1135,
380.1136, 380.1148, and 380.1311), section 1135 as added by 1987 PA
84, section 1136 as added by 2016 PA 367, section 1148 as amended
by 2009 PA 186, and section 1311 as amended by 2016 PA 364, and by
adding section 1149.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec.
1135. (1) Upon Except for
an individual enrolling a
student who is in foster care, upon enrollment of a student for the
first
time in a local school
district, public school academy, or
intermediate school district, the district shall notify in writing
the
person individual enrolling the student that within 30 days he
or
she shall provide to the local school
district, public school
academy, or intermediate school district either of the following:
(a) A certified copy of the student's birth certificate.
(b) Other reliable proof, as determined by the school
district, public school academy, or intermediate school district of
the student's identity and age, and an affidavit explaining the
inability to produce a copy of the birth certificate.
(2)
If a person Except for an
individual enrolling a student
who is in foster care, if an individual enrolling a student fails
to
comply with subsection (1), the local school district, public
school academy, or intermediate school district shall notify the
person
individual enrolling the student in writing that, unless he
or she complies within 30 days after the notification, the case
shall be referred to the local law enforcement agency for
investigation.
If the person individual enrolling the student fails
to
comply within that 30-day period, the local school district,
public school academy, or intermediate school district shall notify
the local law enforcement agency.
(3)
The local school district,
public school academy, or
intermediate school district shall immediately report to the local
law
enforcement agency any affidavit received pursuant to under
this section that appears inaccurate or suspicious in form or
content.
(4) Within 14 days after enrolling a transfer student, the
school shall request in writing directly from the student's
previous school a copy of his or her school record. Any school that
compiles records for each student in the school and that is
requested to forward a copy of a transferring student's record to
the new school shall comply within 30 days after receipt of the
request
unless the record has been tagged pursuant to under section
1134.
If a student record has been tagged pursuant to under section
1134, a copy of the student record shall not be forwarded, and the
requested school shall notify the law enforcement agency that
notified the school district, public school academy, or
intermediate
school district of the missing student pursuant
to
section
8 of Act No. 319 of the Public Acts of 1968, being section
28.258
of the Michigan Compiled Laws, under
section 8 of 1968 PA
319, MCL 28.258, of the request.
(5)
A local school district,
public school academy, or
intermediate school district shall not disclose any personally
identifiable information contained in a student record to a law
enforcement
agency, except in compliance with the family
educational
rights and privacy act, 20 U.S.C. 1232g.20 USC 1232g,
commonly referred to as the family educational rights and privacy
act.
(6) As used in this section, "foster care" means that term as
defined in section 2 of the foster care and adoption services act,
1994 PA 203, MCL 722.952.
Sec. 1136. (1) To protect pupil privacy, the superintendent of
public instruction shall ensure that the department complies with
all of the following and the state budget director shall ensure
that CEPI complies with all of the following:
(a) The department or CEPI shall not sell any information that
is part of a pupil's education records.
(b) Within 30 days after the effective date of this section,
the department and CEPI each shall post on its website a notice of
the information it collects for a pupil's education records. The
notice shall include at least an inventory of all pupil data
elements collected by the department or CEPI and a description of
each pupil data element.
(c) At least 30 days before initiating the collection of any
pupil data elements in addition to those already disclosed in the
inventory under subdivision (b), the department or CEPI shall post
on its website a notice of the additional pupil data elements it is
proposing to collect and an explanation of the reasons for the
proposal.
(d) The department or CEPI shall not disclose any information
concerning a pupil that is collected or created by the department
or CEPI except in accordance with a policy adopted and made
publicly available by the superintendent of public instruction or
state budget director, as applicable, that clearly states the
criteria for the disclosure of the information.
(e) The department or CEPI shall ensure that any contract it
has with a vendor that allows the vendor access to education
records contains express provisions requiring the vendor to protect
the privacy of education records and provides express penalties for
noncompliance.
(f) If the department or CEPI provides any personally
identifiable information concerning a pupil that is collected or
created by the department or CEPI as part of the pupil's education
records to any person other than the school district, intermediate
school district, public school academy, authorizing body,
preschool, or postsecondary institution in which the pupil is
currently or was formerly enrolled, or the pupil's parent or legal
guardian, then the department or CEPI shall, if the pupil is under
18 years of age or claimed as a dependent on a parent's or legal
guardian's federal income tax return, disclose to the pupil's
parent or legal guardian upon his or her written request all of the
following:
(i) The specific data fields that were disclosed.
(ii) The name and contact information of each person, agency,
or organization to which the information has been disclosed.
(iii) The reason for the disclosure.
(g) The department or CEPI shall disclose the information
under subdivision (f) within 30 days after receiving the written
request and without charge to the parent or legal guardian. If the
department or CEPI considers it necessary to make redacted copies
of all or part of a pupil's education records in order to protect
personally identifiable information of another pupil, the
department or CEPI shall not charge the parent or legal guardian
for the cost of making those copies.
(2) To protect pupil privacy, the board of a school district
or intermediate school district or board of directors of a public
school academy shall ensure that the school district, intermediate
school district, or public school academy complies with all of the
following, and the governing board of an authorizing body shall
ensure that the authorizing body complies with all of the
following:
(a) A school district, an intermediate school district, a
public school academy, an educational management organization, or
an authorizing body shall not sell or otherwise provide to a for-
profit business entity any personally identifiable information that
is part of a pupil's education records. This subdivision does not
apply to any of the following situations:
(i) For a pupil enrolled in a public school academy, if the
public school academy has a management agreement with an
educational management organization, the public school academy
providing the information to that educational management
organization.
(ii) Providing the information as necessary for standardized
testing that measures the pupil's academic progress and
achievement.
(iii) Providing the information as necessary to a person that
is providing educational or educational support services to the
pupil under a contract with the school district, intermediate
school district, public school academy, or educational management
organization.
(b) Upon written request by a pupil's parent or legal
guardian, a school district, an intermediate school district, a
public school academy, or an authorizing body shall disclose to the
parent or legal guardian any personally identifiable information
concerning the pupil that is collected or created by the school
district, intermediate school district, public school academy, or
authorizing body as part of the pupil's education records.
(c) Subject to the exemptions under subsection (3), if a
school district, intermediate school district, public school
academy, or authorizing body provides any information described in
subdivision (b) to any person, agency, or organization, then the
school district, intermediate school district, public school
academy, or authorizing body shall disclose to the pupil's parent
or legal guardian upon his or her written request all of the
following:
(i) The specific information that was disclosed.
(ii) The name and contact information of each person, agency,
or organization to which the information has been disclosed.
(iii) The legitimate reason that the person, agency, or
organization had in obtaining the information.
(d) A school district, an intermediate school district, a
public school academy, or an authorizing body shall disclose the
information under subdivisions (b) and (c) within 30 days after
receiving the written request and without charge to the parent or
legal guardian. If the school district, intermediate school
district, public school academy, or authorizing body considers it
necessary to make redacted copies of all or part of a pupil's
education records in order to protect personally identifiable
information of another pupil, the school district, intermediate
school district, public school academy, or authorizing body shall
not charge the parent or legal guardian for the cost of those
copies.
(3) Subsection (2)(c) does not apply to any of the following
situations:
(a) A school district, intermediate school district, public
school academy, or authorizing body providing the information to
the department or CEPI.
(b) A school district, intermediate school district, public
school academy, or authorizing body providing the information to
the pupil's parent or legal guardian.
(c) A public school academy providing the information to its
authorizing body or to an educational management organization with
which it has a management agreement.
(d) A school district or public school academy providing the
information to its intermediate school district or to another
intermediate school district providing services to the school
district or public school academy or its pupils pursuant to a
written agreement.
(e) An intermediate school district providing the information
to a school district or public school academy in which the pupil is
enrolled or to a school district or public school academy for which
the intermediate school district is providing services pursuant to
a written agreement.
(f) An authorizing body providing the information to a public
school academy in which the pupil is enrolled.
(g) Providing the information to a person, agency, or
organization with written consent from the pupil's parent or legal
guardian or, if the pupil is at least age 18, the pupil.
(h) Providing the information to a person, agency, or
organization seeking or receiving records in accordance with an
order, subpoena, or ex parte order issued by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
(i) Providing the information as necessary for standardized
testing that measures the pupil's academic progress and
achievement.
(j) A school district, intermediate school district, public
school academy, or authorizing body providing information that is
covered by the opt-out form described in subsection (6), unless the
pupil's parent or legal guardian or, if the pupil is at least age
18 or is an emancipated minor, the pupil has signed and submitted
the opt-out form under subsection (6)(d).
(k) Providing the information under subsection (8).
(4) If an educational management organization receives
information that is part of a pupil's education records from any
source as permitted under this section, the educational management
organization shall not sell or otherwise provide the information to
any other person except as provided under this section.
(5) In addition to ensuring compliance with subsection (1),
the superintendent of public instruction shall ensure that the
department, and the state budget director shall ensure that CEPI,
complies with all other applicable privacy law.
(6) For the purposes of this section, each school district,
intermediate school district, public school academy, or authorizing
body shall do all of the following:
(a) Develop a list of uses for which the school district,
intermediate school district, public school academy, or authorizing
body commonly would disclose a pupil's directory information.
(b) Develop an opt-out form that lists all of the uses or
instances under subdivision (a) and allows a parent or legal
guardian to elect not to have his or her child's directory
information disclosed for 1 or more of these uses.
(c) Present the opt-out form under subdivision (b) to each
pupil's parent or legal guardian within the first 30 days of the
school year. A school district, intermediate school district,
public school academy, or authorizing body also shall make the form
available to a parent or legal guardian at other times upon
request.
(d) If an opt-out form under subdivision (b) is signed and
submitted to the school district, intermediate school district,
public school academy, or authorizing body by a pupil's parent or
legal guardian, the school district, intermediate school district,
public school academy, or authorizing body shall not include the
pupil's directory information in any of the uses that have been
opted out of in the opt-out form.
(7) If a pupil is at least age 18 or is an emancipated minor,
the pupil may act on his or her own behalf under subsection (6).
(8) A school district, intermediate school district, or public
school academy shall provide the education records of a pupil in
foster care to the following, upon request:
(a) The pupil, if the pupil is at least 16 years of age.
(b) The pupil's foster care caseworker.
(c) The pupil's probation officer.
(9) (8)
As used in this section:
(a) "Authorizing body" means that term as defined in part 6a,
6c, or 6e or section 1311b, as applicable.
(b) "CEPI" means the center for educational performance and
information created under section 94a of the state school aid act
of 1979, MCL 388.1694a.
(c) "Directory information" means that term as defined in 34
CFR 99.3.
(d) "Education records" means that term as defined in 34 CFR
99.3.
(e) "Educational management organization" means that term as
defined in section 503c, 523c, or 553c, as applicable.
(f) "Foster care" means that term as defined in section 2 of
the foster care and adoption services act, 1994 PA 203, MCL
722.952.
(g) (f)
"Management agreement"
means that term as defined in
section 503c, 523c, or 553c, as applicable.
(h) (g)
"Personally identifiable
information" means that term
as defined in 34 CFR 99.3.
Sec. 1148. (1) Except as provided in section 1711 and
subsection
(2), subsections (2) and (3),
a child whose parents or
legal guardians are unable to provide a home for the child and who
is placed in a licensed home or in a home of relatives in the
school district for the purpose of securing a suitable home for the
child and not for an educational purpose shall be considered a
resident for education purposes of the school district where the
home in which the child is living is located. The child shall be
admitted to the school in the district.
(2) If a child who is under court jurisdiction under section
2(b) of chapter XIIA of the probate code of 1939, 1939 PA 288, MCL
712A.2, is placed in foster care, a school district shall allow the
child to enroll in and attend the appropriate grade in the school
selected by the department of health and human services or a child
placing agency without regard to whether or not the child is
residing in that school district. If the selection results in a
child transferring to another school, the child's school records
shall be transferred as provided under section 1135.
(3) If a child is in foster care, a school district shall
allow the child to enroll in and attend the appropriate grade in
the school the child attended before the child's placement in
foster care without regard to the recommendations of the department
of health and human services or a child placing agency and without
regard to whether or not the child is residing in that school
district.
(4) As used in this section:
(a) "Foster care" means that term as defined in section 2 of
the foster care and adoption services act, 1994 PA 203, MCL
722.952.
(b) "Placement" means that term as defined in section 115f of
the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.115f.
Sec. 1149. (1) If a high school pupil in foster care enrolls
in a new public school, the school district, intermediate school
district, or public school academy operating the public school
shall meet all of the following:
(a) Grant the pupil partial credit for any course in which the
pupil was previously enrolled and in which the pupil was earning a
passing grade.
(b) Enroll the pupil in classes and grade levels equivalent to
the classes and grade levels in which the pupil was previously
enrolled, as appropriate.
(c) The school district, intermediate school district, or
public school academy shall not require the pupil to retake a class
or portion of a class the pupil has already completed with a
passing grade.
(d) The school district, intermediate school district, or
public school academy shall not lower the pupil's grade if the
pupil is absent from school for a court hearing, placement change,
or court-related activity.
(2) As used in this section, "foster care" means that term as
defined in section 2 of the foster care and adoption services act,
1994 PA 203, MCL 722.952.
Sec.
1311. (1) Subject to subsection (2), subsections (2),
(12), and (13), the school board, or the school district
superintendent, a school building principal, or another school
district official if designated by the school board, may authorize
or order the suspension or expulsion from school of a pupil guilty
of gross misdemeanor or persistent disobedience if, in the judgment
of the school board or its designee, as applicable, the interest of
the school is served by the authorization or order. If there is
reasonable cause to believe that the pupil is a student with a
disability, and the school district has not evaluated the pupil in
accordance with rules of the superintendent of public instruction
to determine if the pupil is a student with a disability, the pupil
shall be evaluated immediately by the intermediate school district
of which the school district is constituent in accordance with
section 1711.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) and section 1310d, if a pupil
possesses in a weapon free school zone a weapon that constitutes a
dangerous weapon, commits arson in a school building or on school
grounds, or commits criminal sexual conduct in a school building or
on school grounds, the school board, or the designee of the school
board as described in subsection (1) on behalf of the school board,
shall expel the pupil from the school district permanently, subject
to possible reinstatement under subsection (6). However, a school
board is not required to expel a pupil for possessing a weapon if
the pupil establishes in a clear and convincing manner at least 1
of the following:
(a) The object or instrument possessed by the pupil was not
possessed by the pupil for use as a weapon, or for direct or
indirect delivery to another person for use as a weapon.
(b) The weapon was not knowingly possessed by the pupil.
(c) The pupil did not know or have reason to know that the
object or instrument possessed by the pupil constituted a dangerous
weapon.
(d) The weapon was possessed by the pupil at the suggestion,
request, or direction of, or with the express permission of, school
or police authorities.
(3) There is a rebuttable presumption that expulsion under
subsection (2) for possession of a weapon is not justified if both
of the following are met:
(a) The school board or its designee determines in writing
that at least 1 of the factors listed in subsection (2)(a) to (d)
has been established in a clear and convincing manner.
(b) The pupil has no history of suspension or expulsion.
(4)
If an individual is expelled pursuant to under subsection
(2), the expelling school district shall enter on the individual's
permanent
record that he or she has been expelled pursuant to under
subsection (2). Except if a school district operates or
participates cooperatively in an alternative education program
appropriate
for individuals expelled pursuant to under subsection
(2) and in its discretion admits the individual to that program,
and except for a strict discipline academy established under
sections
1311b to 1311m, an individual expelled pursuant to under
subsection (2) is expelled from all public schools in this state
and the officials of a school district shall not allow the
individual to enroll in the school district unless the individual
has been reinstated under subsection (6). Except as otherwise
provided by law, a program operated for individuals expelled
pursuant
to under subsection (2) shall ensure that those
individuals are physically separated at all times during the school
day from the general pupil population. If an individual expelled
from
a school district pursuant to under
subsection (2) is not
placed in an alternative education program or strict discipline
academy, the school district may provide, or may arrange for the
intermediate school district to provide, appropriate instructional
services to the individual at home. The type of services provided
shall meet the requirements of section 6(4)(u) of the state school
aid act of 1979, MCL 388.1606, and the services may be contracted
for in the same manner as services for homebound pupils under
section 109 of the state school aid act of 1979, MCL 388.1709. This
subsection does not require a school district to expend more money
for
providing services for a pupil expelled pursuant to under
subsection (2) than the amount of the foundation allowance the
school district receives for the pupil as calculated under section
20 of the state school aid act of 1979, MCL 388.1620.
(5)
If a school board expels an individual pursuant to under
subsection (2), the school board shall ensure that, within 3 days
after the expulsion, an official of the school district refers the
individual to the appropriate county department of social services
or county community mental health agency and notifies the
individual's parent or legal guardian or, if the individual is at
least age 18 or is an emancipated minor, notifies the individual of
the referral.
(6) The parent or legal guardian of an individual expelled
pursuant
to under subsection (2) or, if the individual is at least
age 18 or is an emancipated minor, the individual may petition the
expelling school board for reinstatement of the individual to
public education in the school district. If the expelling school
board denies a petition for reinstatement, the parent or legal
guardian or, if the individual is at least age 18 or is an
emancipated minor, the individual may petition another school board
for reinstatement of the individual in that other school district.
All of the following apply to reinstatement under this subsection:
(a) For an individual who was enrolled in grade 5 or below at
the time of the expulsion and who has been expelled for possessing
a firearm or threatening another person with a dangerous weapon,
the parent or legal guardian or, if the individual is at least age
18 or is an emancipated minor, the individual may initiate a
petition for reinstatement at any time after the expiration of 60
school days after the date of expulsion. For an individual who was
enrolled in grade 5 or below at the time of the expulsion and who
has
been expelled pursuant to under
subsection (2) for a reason
other than possessing a firearm or threatening another person with
a dangerous weapon, the parent or legal guardian or, if the
individual is at least age 18 or is an emancipated minor, the
individual may initiate a petition for reinstatement at any time.
For an individual who was in grade 6 or above at the time of
expulsion, the parent or legal guardian or, if the individual is at
least age 18 or is an emancipated minor, the individual may
initiate a petition for reinstatement at any time after the
expiration of 150 school days after the date of expulsion.
(b) An individual who was in grade 5 or below at the time of
the expulsion and who has been expelled for possessing a firearm or
threatening another person with a dangerous weapon shall not be
reinstated before the expiration of 90 school days after the date
of expulsion. An individual who was in grade 5 or below at the time
of
the expulsion and who has been expelled pursuant to under
subsection (2) for a reason other than possessing a firearm or
threatening another person with a dangerous weapon shall not be
reinstated before the expiration of 10 school days after the date
of the expulsion. An individual who was in grade 6 or above at the
time of the expulsion shall not be reinstated before the expiration
of 180 school days after the date of expulsion.
(c) It is the responsibility of the parent or legal guardian
or, if the individual is at least age 18 or is an emancipated
minor, of the individual to prepare and submit the petition. A
school board is not required to provide any assistance in preparing
the petition. Upon request by a parent or legal guardian or, if the
individual is at least age 18 or is an emancipated minor, by the
individual, a school board shall make available a form for a
petition.
(d) Not later than 10 school days after receiving a petition
for reinstatement under this subsection, a school board shall
appoint a committee to review the petition and any supporting
information submitted by the parent or legal guardian or, if the
individual is at least age 18 or is an emancipated minor, by the
individual. The committee shall consist of 2 school board members,
1 school administrator, 1 teacher, and 1 parent of a pupil in the
school district. During this time the superintendent of the school
district may prepare and submit for consideration by the committee
information concerning the circumstances of the expulsion and any
factors mitigating for or against reinstatement.
(e) Not later than 10 school days after all members are
appointed, the committee described in subdivision (d) shall review
the petition and any supporting information and information
provided by the school district and shall submit a recommendation
to the school board on the issue of reinstatement. The
recommendation shall be for unconditional reinstatement, for
conditional reinstatement, or against reinstatement, and shall be
accompanied by an explanation of the reasons for the recommendation
and of any recommended conditions for reinstatement. The
recommendation shall be based on consideration of all of the
following factors:
(i) The extent to which reinstatement of the individual would
create a risk of harm to pupils or school personnel.
(ii) The extent to which reinstatement of the individual would
create a risk of school district liability or individual liability
for the school board or school district personnel.
(iii) The age and maturity of the individual.
(iv) The individual's school record before the incident that
caused the expulsion.
(v) The individual's attitude concerning the incident that
caused the expulsion.
(vi) The individual's behavior since the expulsion and the
prospects for remediation of the individual.
(vii) If the petition was filed by a parent or legal guardian,
the degree of cooperation and support that has been provided by the
parent or legal guardian and that can be expected if the individual
is reinstated, including, but not limited to, receptiveness toward
possible conditions placed on the reinstatement.
(f) Not later than the next regularly scheduled board meeting
after receiving the recommendation of the committee under
subdivision (e), a school board shall make a decision to
unconditionally reinstate the individual, conditionally reinstate
the individual, or deny reinstatement of the individual. The
decision of the school board is final.
(g) A school board may require an individual and, if the
petition was filed by a parent or legal guardian, his or her parent
or legal guardian to agree in writing to specific conditions before
reinstating the individual in a conditional reinstatement. The
conditions may include, but are not limited to, agreement to a
behavior contract, which may involve the individual, parent or
legal guardian, and an outside agency; participation in or
completion of an anger management program or other appropriate
counseling; periodic progress reviews; and specified immediate
consequences for failure to abide by a condition. A parent or legal
guardian or, if the individual is at least age 18 or is an
emancipated minor, the individual may include proposed conditions
in a petition for reinstatement submitted under this subsection.
(7) A school board or school administrator that complies with
subsection (2) is not liable for damages for expelling a pupil
pursuant
to under subsection (2), and the authorizing body of a
public school academy is not liable for damages for expulsion of a
pupil
by the public school academy pursuant to under subsection
(2).
(8) The department shall develop and distribute to all school
districts a form for a petition for reinstatement to be used under
subsection (6).
(9) This section does not diminish any rights under federal
law of a pupil who has been determined to be eligible for special
education programs and services.
(10) If a pupil expelled from a public school district
pursuant
to under subsection (2) is enrolled by a public school
district sponsored alternative education program or a public school
academy during the period of expulsion, the public school academy
or alternative education program shall immediately become eligible
for the prorated share of either the public school academy or
operating school district's foundation allowance or the expelling
school district's foundation allowance, whichever is higher.
(11)
If an individual is expelled pursuant to under subsection
(2), it is the responsibility of that individual and of his or her
parent or legal guardian to locate a suitable alternative
educational program and to enroll the individual in such a program
during the expulsion. The office of safe schools in the department
shall compile information on and catalog existing alternative
education programs or schools and nonpublic schools that may be
open
to enrollment of individuals expelled pursuant to under
subsection
(2) and pursuant to under section 1311a, and shall
periodically distribute this information to school districts for
distribution to expelled individuals. A school board that
establishes an alternative education program or school described in
this subsection shall notify the office of safe schools about the
program or school and the types of pupils it serves. The office of
safe schools also shall work with and provide technical assistance
to school districts, authorizing bodies for public school
academies, and other interested parties in developing these types
of alternative education programs or schools in geographic areas
that are not being served.
(12) Except for a pupil described in subsection (2), a school
board, school district superintendent, school building principal,
or another school district official designated by a school board
shall not suspend a pupil in foster care unless all of the
following are met:
(a) The pupil is suspended for no more than 5 consecutive
school days or a total of 20 school days during a school year
unless both of the following are met:
(i) The pupil is being considered for expulsion.
(ii) The pupil's foster care caseworker and attorney, if any,
are invited to a meeting to discuss the suspension.
(b) The pupil is informed of the reasons for the suspension
and afforded an opportunity to provide his or her version of the
events leading to the suspension.
(13) Except for a pupil described in subsection (2), a school
board, school district superintendent, school building principal,
or another school district official designated by a school board
shall not expel a pupil in foster care unless all of the following
are met:
(a) The pupil's foster care caseworker and attorney, if any,
are notified of the pending expulsion.
(b) The pupil is afforded a formal hearing and an opportunity
to be represented by an attorney at the formal hearing.
(14) (12) As used in this section:
(a) "Arson" means a felony violation of chapter X of the
Michigan penal code, 1931 PA 328, MCL 750.71 to 750.79.
(b) "Criminal sexual conduct" means a violation of section
520b, 520c, 520d, 520e, or 520g of the Michigan penal code, 1931 PA
328, MCL 750.520b, 750.520c, 750.520d, 750.520e, and 750.520g.
(c) "Dangerous weapon" means that term as defined in section
1313.
(d) "Firearm" means that term as defined in section 921 of
title 18 of the United States Code, 18 USC 921.
(e) "Foster care" means that term as defined in section 2 of
the foster care and adoption services act, 1994 PA 203, MCL
722.952.
(f) (e)
"School board" means a
school board, intermediate
school board, or the board of directors of a public school academy.
(g) (f)
"School district" means a
school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy.
(h) (g)
"Weapon free school zone"
means that term as defined
in section 237a of the Michigan penal code, 1931 PA 328, MCL
750.237a.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days
after the date it is enacted into law.