Bill Text: NY S02010 | 2015-2016 | General Assembly | Introduced
Bill Title: Relates to admission requirements for graduate-level teacher education programs, institution deregistration and suspension, teacher registration and continuing teacher education requirements; relates to establishing the New York state masters-in-education teacher incentive scholarship program; relates to annual professional performance reviews for classroom teachers and building principals; relates to mayoral control of the school district in New York city; relates to school aid increase linkage.
Spectrum: Committee Bill
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2015-01-21 - REFERRED TO FINANCE [S02010 Detail]
Download: New_York-2015-S02010-Introduced.html
S T A T E O F N E W Y O R K ________________________________________________________________________ S. 2010 A. 3010 S E N A T E - A S S E M B L Y January 21, 2015 ___________ IN SENATE -- A BUDGET BILL, submitted by the Governor pursuant to arti- cle seven of the Constitution -- read twice and ordered printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Finance IN ASSEMBLY -- A BUDGET BILL, submitted by the Governor pursuant to article seven of the Constitution -- read once and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means AN ACT to amend the education law, in relation to admission requirements for graduate-level teacher education programs, institution deregistra- tion and suspension, teacher registration and continuing teacher education requirements (Subpart A); to amend the education law, in relation to establishing the New York state masters-in-education teacher incentive scholarship program (Subpart B); to amend the educa- tion law, in relation to the appointment of teachers, principals, administrators, supervisors and all other members of the teaching and supervising staff of school districts (Subpart C); to amend the educa- tion law, in relation to takeover and restructuring of failing school districts (Subpart D); to amend the education law, in relation to disciplinary procedures for ineffective teaching or performance by a building principal or teacher (Subpart E); and to amend the education law, in relation to charter schools (Subpart F) (Part A); to amend the education law, in relation to annual professional performance reviews for classroom teachers and building principals (Part B); to amend chapter 91 of the laws of 2002 amending the education law and other laws relating to the reorganization of the New York city school construction authority, board of education and community boards, in relation to the effectiveness thereof; and to amend chapter 345 of the laws of 2009 amending the education law relating to the New York city board of education, chancellor, community councils and community superintendents, in relation to the effectiveness thereof (Part C); and to amend the education law, in relation to school aid increase linkage and to amend part A of chapter 57 of the laws of 2013 relating to school district eligibility for an increase in apportionment of school aid and implementation of standards for conducting annual professional performance reviews to determine teacher and principal effectiveness, in relation to apportionment of general support for public schools (Part D) EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [ ] is old law to be omitted. LBD12575-01-5 S. 2010 2 A. 3010 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM- BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: 1 Section 1. This act enacts into law major components of legislation 2 which are necessary to implement the state fiscal plan for the 2015-2016 3 state fiscal year. Each component is wholly contained within a Part 4 identified as Parts A through D. The effective date for each particular 5 provision contained within such Part is set forth in the last section of 6 such Part. Any provision in any section contained within a Part, includ- 7 ing the effective date of the Part, which makes a reference to a section 8 "of this act", when used in connection with that particular component, 9 shall be deemed to mean and refer to the corresponding section of the 10 Part in which it is found. Section three of this act sets forth the 11 general effective date of this act. 12 PART A 13 Section 1. This act enacts into law components of legislation which 14 are necessary to implement the provisions relating to the prosecution of 15 misconduct by public officials. Each component is wholly contained with- 16 in a Subpart identified as Subparts A through F. The effective date for 17 each particular provision contained within such Subpart is set forth in 18 the last section of such Subpart. Any provision in any section contained 19 within a Subpart, including the effective date of the Subpart, which 20 makes a reference to a section "of this act", when used in connection 21 with that particular component, shall be deemed to mean and refer to the 22 corresponding section of the Subpart in which it is found. Section three 23 of this act sets forth the general effective date of this act. 24 SUBPART A 25 Section 1. The education law is amended by adding a new section 210-a 26 to read as follows: 27 S 210-A. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATE-LEVEL TEACHER EDUCATION 28 PROGRAMS. EACH INSTITUTION REGISTERED BY THE DEPARTMENT WITH GRADUATE- 29 LEVEL TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS SHALL ADOPT RIGOROUS SELECTION CRITERIA 30 GEARED TO PREDICTING A CANDIDATE'S ACADEMIC SUCCESS IN ITS PROGRAM, 31 INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, A MINIMUM SCORE ON THE GRADUATE RECORD 32 EXAMINATION AND/OR A SUBSTANTIALLY EQUIVALENT ADMISSION EXAMINATION, AS 33 DETERMINED BY THE INSTITUTION, AND ACHIEVEMENT OF A CUMULATIVE GRADE 34 POINT AVERAGE OF 3.0 OR HIGHER IN THE CANDIDATE'S UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM. 35 S 2. The education law is amended by adding a new section 210-b to 36 read as follows: 37 S 210-B. INSTITUTION DEREGISTRATION AND SUSPENSION. 1. THE DEPARTMENT 38 SHALL DE-REGISTER AND SUSPEND THE OPERATION OF AN INSTITUTION IF FOR 39 THREE CONSECUTIVE ACADEMIC YEARS, FEWER THAN FIFTY PERCENT OF ITS 40 STUDENTS PASS EACH EXAMINATION THAT THEY HAVE TAKEN THAT IS REQUIRED FOR 41 CERTIFICATION. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THE INSTITUTION MAY BE PERMITTED TO 42 CONTINUE OPERATIONS IF THE INSTITUTION MAKES A WRITTEN REQUEST TO THE 43 DEPARTMENT TO BE PERMITTED TO CONTINUE OPERATIONS AND THE COMMISSIONER 44 GRANTS SUCH A REQUEST AND IN WRITING STATES SPECIFIC REASONS FOR ALLOW- 45 ING THE INSTITUTION TO CONTINUE OPERATIONS. FOR PURPOSES OF THIS PARA- 46 GRAPH, STUDENTS WHO HAVE SATISFACTORILY COMPLETED THE INSTITUTION'S 47 PROGRAM SHALL MEAN STUDENTS WHO HAVE MET EACH EDUCATIONAL REQUIREMENT OF 48 THE PROGRAM, EXCLUDING ANY INSTITUTIONAL REQUIREMENT THAT THE STUDENT 49 PASS EACH REQUIRED NEW YORK STATE TEACHER CERTIFICATION EXAMINATION FOR S. 2010 3 A. 3010 1 A TEACHING CERTIFICATE AND/OR SCHOOL BUILDING LEADER EXAMINATION FOR A 2 SCHOOL BUILDING LEADER CERTIFICATE IN ORDER TO COMPLETE THE PROGRAM. 3 STUDENTS SATISFACTORILY MEETING EACH EDUCATIONAL REQUIREMENT MAY INCLUDE 4 STUDENTS WHO EARN A DEGREE OR STUDENTS WHO COMPLETE EACH EDUCATIONAL 5 REQUIREMENT WITHOUT EARNING A DEGREE. WHEN MAKING SUCH A DETERMINATION, 6 THE DEPARTMENT SHALL CONSIDER THE PERFORMANCE ON EACH CERTIFICATION 7 EXAMINATION OF THOSE STUDENTS COMPLETING AN EXAMINATION NOT MORE THAN 8 THREE YEARS BEFORE THE END OF THE ACADEMIC YEAR IN WHICH THE PROGRAM IS 9 COMPLETED OR NOT LATER THAN THE SEPTEMBER THIRTIETH FOLLOWING THE END OF 10 SUCH ACADEMIC YEAR, WHERE ACADEMIC YEAR IS DEFINED AS JULY FIRST THROUGH 11 JUNE THIRTIETH, AND SHALL CONSIDER ONLY THE HIGHEST SCORE OF INDIVIDUALS 12 TAKING A TEST MORE THAN ONCE. 13 2. THE INSTITUTION MAY SUBMIT AN APPEAL AS PRESCRIBED BY THE COMMIS- 14 SIONER IN REGULATIONS. A DE-REGISTERED INSTITUTION SHALL CEASE OPER- 15 ATIONS AND SHALL NOT EDUCATE ANY STUDENTS WHILE AWAITING THE COMMISSION- 16 ER'S DECISION ON THEIR APPLICATION FOR RE-REGISTRATION. 17 3. THE DEPARTMENT MAY ALSO, AS PRESCRIBED BY THE COMMISSIONER IN REGU- 18 LATIONS, CONDUCT EXPEDITED REGISTRATION REVIEWS FOR INSTITUTIONS THAT 19 HAVE DEMONSTRATED POOR PERFORMANCE ON STUDENT OUTCOMES. 20 S 3. Section 3006 of the education law is amended by adding a new 21 subdivision 3 to read as follows: 22 3. REGISTRATION. A. COMMENCING WITH THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO 23 THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, ANY HOLDER OF A TEACHING CERTIFICATE IN 24 THE CLASSROOM TEACHING SERVICE, TEACHING ASSISTANT CERTIFICATE, OR 25 EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP CERTIFICATE THAT IS VALID FOR LIFE AS PRESCRIBED 26 BY THE COMMISSIONER IN REGULATIONS SHALL BE REQUIRED TO REGISTER WITH 27 THE DEPARTMENT EVERY FIVE YEARS IN ACCORDANCE WITH REGULATIONS OF THE 28 COMMISSIONER. SUCH REGULATIONS SHALL PRESCRIBE THE DATE OR DATES BY 29 WHICH APPLICATIONS FOR INITIAL REGISTRATION MUST BE SUBMITTED AND MAY 30 PROVIDE FOR STAGGERED INITIAL REGISTRATION AND/OR ROLLING RE-REGISTRA- 31 TION SO THAT RE-REGISTRATIONS ARE DISTRIBUTED AS EQUALLY AS POSSIBLE 32 THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. 33 B. THE DEPARTMENT SHALL POST AN APPLICATION FOR REGISTRATION ON ITS 34 WEBSITE. AN APPLICATION FOR REGISTRATION AND THE REQUIRED REGISTRATION 35 FEE SHALL BE SUBMITTED TOGETHER WITH OR AS PART OF THE APPLICATION FOR A 36 REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE. A PERSON INITIALLY CERTIFIED OR RESUMING PRAC- 37 TICE AFTER A LAPSE IN REGISTRATION DURING THE LAST TWO YEARS OF A FIVE- 38 YEAR REGISTRATION PERIOD SHALL RECEIVE A PRORATED REFUND OF ONE-FIFTH OF 39 THE TOTAL REGISTRATION FEE FOR EACH FULL YEAR OF THE REGISTRATION PERIOD 40 THAT ELAPSED PRIOR TO THE DATE OF REGISTRATION. EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE 41 PROVIDED IN THIS SECTION, THE DEPARTMENT SHALL RENEW THE REGISTRATION OF 42 EACH CERTIFICATE HOLDER UPON RECEIPT OF A PROPER APPLICATION, ON A FORM 43 PRESCRIBED BY THE DEPARTMENT, AND THE REGISTRATION FEE. ANY CERTIFICATE 44 HOLDER WHO FAILS TO REGISTER BY THE BEGINNING OF THE APPROPRIATE REGIS- 45 TRATION PERIOD SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PAY AN ADDITIONAL FEE FOR THE LATE 46 FILING OF TEN DOLLARS FOR EACH MONTH THAT REGISTRATION HAS BEEN DELAYED. 47 NO LICENSEE RESUMING PRACTICE AFTER A LAPSE OF REGISTRATION SHALL BE 48 PERMITTED TO PRACTICE WITHOUT ACTUAL POSSESSION OF THE REGISTRATION 49 CERTIFICATE. 50 C. ANY CERTIFICATE HOLDER WHO IS NOT ENGAGING IN THE PRACTICE OF HIS 51 OR HER PROFESSION IN THIS STATE AND DOES NOT DESIRE TO REGISTER SHALL SO 52 ADVISE THE DEPARTMENT. SUCH CERTIFICATE HOLDER SHALL NOT BE REQUIRED TO 53 PAY AN ADDITIONAL FEE FOR FAILURE TO REGISTER AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 54 REGISTRATION PERIOD. 55 D. CERTIFICATE HOLDERS SHALL NOTIFY THE DEPARTMENT OF ANY CHANGE OF 56 NAME OR MAILING ADDRESS WITHIN THIRTY DAYS OF SUCH CHANGE. FAILURE TO S. 2010 4 A. 3010 1 REGISTER OR PROVIDE SUCH NOTICE WITHIN ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY DAYS OF SUCH 2 CHANGE SHALL CONSTITUTE GROUNDS FOR MORAL CHARACTER REVIEW UNDER SUBDI- 3 VISION SEVEN OF SECTION THREE HUNDRED FIVE OF THIS TITLE. 4 E. THE FEE FOR REPLACEMENT OF A LOST REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE OR 5 LICENSE OR FOR REGISTRATION OF AN ADDITIONAL OFFICE SHALL BE TEN 6 DOLLARS. 7 F. AN ADDITIONAL FEE OF TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS SHALL BE CHARGED FOR THE 8 REGISTRATION OF ANY APPLICANT WHOSE CHECK HAS BEEN DISHONORED, OR IN THE 9 CASE OF A CREDIT CARD PAYMENT, WHERE THE PAYMENT IS CONTESTED AND IS NOT 10 HONORED BY THE CREDIT CARD COMPANY. 11 S 4. The education law is amended by adding a new section 3006-a to 12 read as follows: 13 S 3006-A. REGISTRATION AND CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS 14 FOR HOLDERS OF PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATES IN THE CLASSROOM TEACHING 15 SERVICE, HOLDERS OF LEVEL III TEACHING ASSISTANT CERTIFICATES, HOLDERS 16 OF PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATES IN THE EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP SERVICE. 1. 17 A. EACH HOLDER OF A PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATE IN THE CLASSROOM TEACHING 18 SERVICE, HOLDER OF A LEVEL III TEACHING ASSISTANT CERTIFICATE AND HOLDER 19 OF A PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATE IN THE EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP SERVICE 20 SHALL BE REQUIRED TO REGISTER EVERY FIVE YEARS WITH THE DEPARTMENT TO 21 PRACTICE IN THE STATE AND SHALL COMPLY WITH THE PROVISIONS OF THE 22 CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS SET FORTH IN THIS SECTION. 23 B. ANY OF THE CERTIFIED INDIVIDUALS DESCRIBED IN PARAGRAPH A OF THIS 24 SECTION WHO DO NOT SATISFY THE CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS 25 SHALL NOT PRACTICE UNTIL THEY HAVE MET SUCH REQUIREMENTS, HAVE PAID ALL 26 APPLICABLE FEES, AND HAVE BEEN ISSUED A REGISTRATION OR CONDITIONAL 27 REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE. 28 C. HOLDERS OF A PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATE IN THE CLASSROOM TEACHING 29 SERVICE, HOLDERS OF A LEVEL III TEACHING ASSISTANCE CERTIFICATE AND 30 HOLDERS OF A PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATE IN THE EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP 31 SERVICE AND ANY OTHER CERTIFIED INDIVIDUAL REQUIRED BY THE COMMISSIONER 32 TO REGISTER TRIENNIALLY SHALL BE EXEMPT FROM THE CONTINUING TEACHER 33 EDUCATION REQUIREMENT FOR THE FIVE-YEAR REGISTRATION PERIOD DURING WHICH 34 THEY ARE FIRST LICENSED BY THE DEPARTMENT. IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE INTENT 35 OF THIS SECTION, ADJUSTMENTS TO THE CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION 36 REQUIREMENT MAY BE GRANTED BY THE DEPARTMENT FOR REASONS OF HEALTH 37 CERTIFIED BY A PHYSICIAN, FOR EXTENDED ACTIVE DUTY WITH ARMED FORCES OF 38 THE UNITED STATES, OR FOR OTHER GOOD CAUSE ACCEPTABLE TO THE DEPARTMENT 39 WHICH MAY PREVENT COMPLIANCE. 40 D. CERTIFICATE HOLDERS WHO ARE NOT PRACTICING AS A TEACHER, TEACHING 41 ASSISTANT OR EDUCATIONAL LEADER IN A SCHOOL DISTRICT OR BOARD OF COOPER- 42 ATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES IN THIS STATE SHALL BE EXEMPT FROM THE 43 CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIREMENT UPON THE FILING OF A WRITTEN 44 STATEMENT WITH THE DEPARTMENT DECLARING SUCH STATUS. ANY HOLDER OF A 45 PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATE IN THE CLASSROOM TEACHING SERVICE, HOLDER OF A 46 LEVEL III TEACHING ASSISTANT CERTIFICATE AND HOLDER OF A PROFESSIONAL 47 CERTIFICATE IN THE EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP SERVICE WHO RESUMES PRACTICE 48 DURING THE FIVE-YEAR REGISTRATION PERIOD SHALL NOTIFY THE DEPARTMENT 49 PRIOR TO RESUMING PRACTICE AND SHALL PAY THE CURRENT CONTINUING TEACHER 50 EDUCATION FEE AND SHALL MEET SUCH CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIRE- 51 MENTS AS PRESCRIBED IN REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER. 52 2. A. DURING EACH FIVE-YEAR REGISTRATION PERIOD BEGINNING ON OR AFTER 53 JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, AN APPLICANT FOR REGISTRATION SHALL 54 SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE A MINIMUM OF 100 HOURS OF CONTINUING TEACHER 55 EDUCATION, AS DEFINED BY THE COMMISSIONER. THE DEPARTMENT SHALL ISSUE S. 2010 5 A. 3010 1 RIGOROUS STANDARDS FOR COURSES AND PROGRAMS THAT SHALL QUALIFY AS 2 CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION. 3 B. A CERTIFIED INDIVIDUAL WHO HAS NOT SATISFIED THE CONTINUING TEACHER 4 EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS SHALL NOT BE ISSUED A FIVE-YEAR REGISTRATION 5 CERTIFICATE BY THE DEPARTMENT AND SHALL NOT PRACTICE UNLESS AND UNTIL A 6 REGISTRATION OR CONDITIONAL REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE IS ISSUED AS 7 PROVIDED IN SUBDIVISION THREE OF THIS SECTION. FOR PURPOSES OF THIS 8 SUBDIVISION, "CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS" SHALL MEAN 9 FORMAL PROGRAMS OF LEARNING WHICH CONTRIBUTE TO GROWTH IN THE PROFES- 10 SIONAL KNOWLEDGE AND PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE OF THE CERTIFICATE HOLDER 11 WHICH MEET THE STANDARDS PRESCRIBED BY REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER. 12 TO FULFILL THE CONTINUING TEACHER EDUCATION REQUIREMENT, PROGRAMS MUST 13 BE TAKEN FROM SPONSORS APPROVED BY THE DEPARTMENT, PURSUANT TO THE REGU- 14 LATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER. 15 3. THE DEPARTMENT, IN ITS DISCRETION, MAY ISSUE A CONDITIONAL REGIS- 16 TRATION TO A TEACHER, TEACHING ASSISTANT OR EDUCATIONAL LEADER IN A 17 SCHOOL DISTRICT OR BOCES IN THIS STATE WHO FAILS TO MEET THE CONTINUING 18 EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS ESTABLISHED IN SUBDIVISION TWO OF THIS SECTION 19 BUT WHO AGREES TO MAKE UP ANY DEFICIENCIES AND TAKE ANY ADDITIONAL 20 EDUCATION WHICH THE DEPARTMENT MAY REQUIRE. THE FEE FOR SUCH A CONDI- 21 TIONAL REGISTRATION SHALL BE THE SAME AS, AND IN ADDITION TO, THE FEE 22 FOR THE TRIENNIAL REGISTRATION. THE DURATION OF SUCH CONDITIONAL REGIS- 23 TRATION SHALL BE DETERMINED BY THE DEPARTMENT. ANY HOLDER OF A PROFES- 24 SIONAL CERTIFICATE IN THE CLASSROOM TEACHING SERVICE, HOLDER OF A LEVEL 25 III TEACHING ASSISTANT CERTIFICATE OR HOLDER OF A PROFESSIONAL CERTIF- 26 ICATE IN THE EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP SERVICE AND ANY OTHER CERTIFIED 27 INDIVIDUAL REQUIRED BY THE COMMISSIONER TO REGISTER TRIENNIALLY WHO IS 28 NOTIFIED OF THE DENIAL OF REGISTRATION FOR FAILURE TO SUBMIT EVIDENCE, 29 SATISFACTORY TO THE DEPARTMENT, OF REQUIRED CONTINUING EDUCATION AND WHO 30 PRACTICES WITHOUT SUCH REGISTRATION, SHALL BE SUBJECT TO MORAL CHARACTER 31 REVIEW UNDER SUBDIVISION SEVEN OF SECTION THREE HUNDRED FIVE OF THIS 32 TITLE. 33 4. THE REGISTRATION FEE SHALL BE DETERMINED BY THE REGENTS, AND SHALL 34 BE PAYABLE ON OR BEFORE THE FIRST DAY OF EACH TRIENNIAL REGISTRATION 35 PERIOD. 36 S 5. This act shall take effect July 1, 2015, provided that the 37 authority of the board of regents to adopt regulations necessary to 38 implement the provisions of this act on such effective date shall take 39 effect immediately. 40 SUBPART B 41 Section 1. The education law is amended by adding a new section 669-f 42 to read as follows: 43 S 669-F. NEW YORK STATE MASTERS-IN-EDUCATION TEACHER INCENTIVE SCHOL- 44 ARSHIP PROGRAM. 1. ELIGIBILITY. STUDENTS WHO ARE MATRICULATED IN AN 45 APPROVED MASTER'S DEGREE IN EDUCATION PROGRAM AT A NEW YORK STATE PUBLIC 46 INSTITUTION OF HIGHER EDUCATION LEADING TO A CAREER AS A TEACHER IN 47 PUBLIC ELEMENTARY OR SECONDARY EDUCATION SHALL BE ELIGIBLE FOR AN AWARD 48 UNDER THIS SECTION, PROVIDED THE APPLICANT: (A) EARNED AN UNDERGRADUATE 49 DEGREE FROM A COLLEGE LOCATED IN NEW YORK STATE; (B) WAS A NEW YORK 50 STATE RESIDENT WHILE EARNING SUCH UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE; (C) ACHIEVED 51 ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE AS AN UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT, AS DEFINED BY THE 52 CORPORATION IN REGULATION; (D) ENROLLS IN FULL-TIME STUDY IN AN APPROVED 53 MASTER'S DEGREE IN EDUCATION PROGRAM AT A NEW YORK STATE PUBLIC INSTITU- 54 TION OF HIGHER EDUCATION LEADING TO A CAREER AS A TEACHER IN PUBLIC S. 2010 6 A. 3010 1 ELEMENTARY OR SECONDARY EDUCATION; (E) SIGNS A CONTRACT WITH THE CORPO- 2 RATION AGREEING TO TEACH IN A CLASSROOM SETTING ON A FULL-TIME BASIS FOR 3 FIVE YEARS IN A SCHOOL LOCATED WITHIN NEW YORK STATE PROVIDING PUBLIC 4 ELEMENTARY OR SECONDARY EDUCATION RECOGNIZED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS OR 5 THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, INCLUDING CHARTER SCHOOLS 6 AUTHORIZED PURSUANT TO ARTICLE FIFTY-SIX OF THIS CHAPTER; AND (F) 7 COMPLIES WITH THE APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF THIS ARTICLE AND ALL REQUIRE- 8 MENTS PROMULGATED BY THE CORPORATION FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE 9 PROGRAM. 10 2. WITHIN AMOUNTS APPROPRIATED THEREFOR, AWARDS SHALL BE GRANTED TO 11 APPLICANTS THAT THE CORPORATION HAS CERTIFIED ARE ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE 12 SUCH AWARDS. UP TO FIVE HUNDRED AWARDS MAY BE GRANTED TO NEW RECIPIENTS 13 ANNUALLY. SUCH AWARDS SHALL BE GRANTED UPON SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION OF 14 EACH TERM, AS DEFINED BY THE CORPORATION. 15 3. AN AWARD SHALL ENTITLE THE RECIPIENT TO ANNUAL PAYMENTS FOR NOT 16 MORE THAN TWO ACADEMIC YEARS OF FULL-TIME GRADUATE STUDY LEADING TO 17 CERTIFICATION AS AN ELEMENTARY OR SECONDARY CLASSROOM TEACHER. 18 4. THE CORPORATION SHALL GRANT SUCH AWARDS IN AN AMOUNT EQUAL TO THE 19 ANNUAL TUITION CHARGED TO STATE RESIDENT STUDENTS ATTENDING A GRADUATE 20 PROGRAM FULL-TIME AT THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK, OR ACTUAL TUITION 21 CHARGED, WHICHEVER IS LESS; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, (I) A STUDENT WHO 22 RECEIVES EDUCATIONAL GRANTS AND/OR SCHOLARSHIPS THAT COVER THE STUDENT'S 23 FULL COST OF ATTENDANCE SHALL NOT BE ELIGIBLE FOR AN AWARD UNDER THIS 24 PROGRAM; (II) FOR A STUDENT WHO RECEIVES EDUCATIONAL GRANTS AND/OR SCHO- 25 LARSHIPS THAT COVER LESS THAN THE STUDENT'S FULL COST OF ATTENDANCE, 26 SUCH GRANTS AND/OR SCHOLARSHIPS SHALL NOT BE DEEMED DUPLICATIVE OF THIS 27 PROGRAM AND MAY BE HELD CONCURRENTLY WITH AN AWARD UNDER THIS PROGRAM, 28 PROVIDED THAT THE COMBINED BENEFITS DO NOT EXCEED THE STUDENT'S FULL 29 COST OF ATTENDANCE; AND (III) AN AWARD UNDER THIS PROGRAM SHALL BE 30 APPLIED TO TUITION AFTER THE APPLICATION OF ALL OTHER EDUCATIONAL GRANTS 31 AND SCHOLARSHIPS LIMITED TO TUITION AND SHALL BE REDUCED IN AN AMOUNT 32 EQUAL TO SUCH EDUCATIONAL GRANTS AND/OR SCHOLARSHIPS. UPON NOTIFICATION 33 OF AN AWARD UNDER THIS PROGRAM, THE INSTITUTION SHALL DEFER THE AMOUNT 34 OF TUITION EQUAL TO THE AWARD. NO AWARD SHALL BE FINAL UNTIL THE RECIPI- 35 ENT'S SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION OF A TERM HAS BEEN CERTIFIED BY THE INSTITU- 36 TION. A RECIPIENT OF AN AWARD UNDER THIS PROGRAM SHALL NOT BE ELIGIBLE 37 FOR AN AWARD UNDER THE NEW YORK STATE MATH AND SCIENCE TEACHING INCEN- 38 TIVE PROGRAM. 39 5. THE CORPORATION SHALL CONVERT TO A STUDENT LOAN THE FULL AMOUNT OF 40 THE AWARD GRANTED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION, PLUS INTEREST, ACCORDING TO 41 A SCHEDULE TO BE DETERMINED BY THE CORPORATION IF: (A) TWO YEARS AFTER 42 THE COMPLETION OF THE DEGREE PROGRAM AND RECEIPT OF INITIAL CERTIF- 43 ICATION IT IS FOUND THAT A RECIPIENT IS NOT TEACHING IN A PUBLIC SCHOOL 44 LOCATED WITHIN NEW YORK STATE PROVIDING ELEMENTARY OR SECONDARY EDUCA- 45 TION RECOGNIZED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS OR THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE 46 OF NEW YORK, INCLUDING CHARTER SCHOOLS AUTHORIZED PURSUANT TO ARTICLE 47 FIFTY-SIX OF THIS CHAPTER; (B) A RECIPIENT HAS NOT TAUGHT IN A PUBLIC 48 SCHOOL LOCATED WITHIN NEW YORK STATE PROVIDING ELEMENTARY OR SECONDARY 49 EDUCATION RECOGNIZED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS OR THE UNIVERSITY OF THE 50 STATE OF NEW YORK, INCLUDING CHARTER SCHOOLS AUTHORIZED PURSUANT TO 51 ARTICLE FIFTY-SIX OF THIS CHAPTER FOR FIVE OF THE SEVEN YEARS AFTER THE 52 COMPLETION OF THE GRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAM AND RECEIPT OF INITIAL CERTIF- 53 ICATION; (C) A RECIPIENT FAILS TO COMPLETE HIS OR HER GRADUATE DEGREE 54 PROGRAM IN EDUCATION; (D) A RECIPIENT FAILS TO RECEIVE OR MAINTAIN HIS 55 OR HER TEACHING CERTIFICATE OR LICENSE IN NEW YORK STATE; OR (E) A 56 RECIPIENT FAILS TO RESPOND TO REQUESTS BY THE CORPORATION FOR THE STATUS S. 2010 7 A. 3010 1 OF HIS OR HER ACADEMIC OR PROFESSIONAL PROGRESS. THE TERMS AND CONDI- 2 TIONS OF THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL BE DEFERRED FOR ANY INTERRUPTION IN 3 GRADUATE STUDY OR EMPLOYMENT AS ESTABLISHED BY THE RULES AND REGULATIONS 4 OF THE CORPORATION. ANY OBLIGATION TO COMPLY WITH SUCH PROVISIONS AS 5 OUTLINED IN THIS SECTION SHALL BE CANCELLED UPON THE DEATH OF THE RECIP- 6 IENT. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY PROVISIONS OF THIS SUBDIVISION TO THE CONTRA- 7 RY, THE CORPORATION IS AUTHORIZED TO PROMULGATE RULES AND REGULATIONS TO 8 PROVIDE FOR THE WAIVER OR SUSPENSION OF ANY FINANCIAL OBLIGATION WHICH 9 WOULD INVOLVE EXTREME HARDSHIP. 10 6. THE CORPORATION IS AUTHORIZED TO PROMULGATE RULES AND REGULATIONS, 11 AND MAY PROMULGATE EMERGENCY REGULATIONS, NECESSARY FOR THE IMPLEMENTA- 12 TION OF THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, 13 THE CRITERIA FOR THE PROVISION OF AWARDS ON A COMPETITIVE BASIS, AND THE 14 RATE OF INTEREST CHARGED FOR REPAYMENT OF THE STUDENT LOAN. 15 S 2. This act shall take effect immediately and shall be deemed to 16 have been in full force and effect on and after April 1, 2015. 17 SUBPART C 18 Section 1. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subdivision 1 of section 2509 of 19 the education law, paragraph (a) as amended by chapter 551 of the laws 20 of 1976, and paragraph (b) as amended by chapter 468 of the laws of 21 1975, are amended to read as follows: 22 (a) I. Teachers and all other members of the teaching staff[,] 23 APPOINTED PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN AND authorized by 24 section twenty-five hundred three of this article, shall be appointed by 25 the board of education, upon the recommendation of the superintendent of 26 schools, for a probationary period of three years, except that in the 27 case of a teacher who has rendered satisfactory service as a regular 28 substitute for a period of two years or as a seasonally licensed per 29 session teacher of swimming in day schools who has served in that capac- 30 ity for a period of two years and has been appointed to teach the same 31 subject in day schools on an annual salary, the probationary period 32 shall be limited to one year; provided, however, that in the case of a 33 teacher who has been appointed on tenure in another school district 34 within the state, the school district where currently employed, or a 35 board of cooperative educational services, and who was not dismissed 36 from such district or board as a result of charges brought pursuant to 37 subdivision one of section three thousand twenty-a of this chapter, the 38 probationary period shall not exceed two years. The service of a person 39 appointed to any of such positions may be discontinued at any time 40 during such probationary period, on the recommendation of the super- 41 intendent of schools, by a majority vote of the board of education. Each 42 person who is not to be recommended for appointment on tenure shall be 43 so notified by the superintendent of schools in writing not later than 44 sixty days immediately preceding the expiration of his probationary 45 period. 46 II. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW OR REGULATION TO THE 47 CONTRARY, TEACHERS AND ALL OTHER MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING STAFF APPOINTED 48 ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN AND AUTHORIZED BY SECTION 49 TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED THREE OF THIS ARTICLE, SHALL BE APPOINTED BY THE 50 BOARD OF EDUCATION, UPON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF 51 SCHOOLS, FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF FIVE YEARS, EXCEPT THAT IN THE 52 CASE OF A TEACHER WHO HAS RENDERED SATISFACTORY SERVICE AS A REGULAR 53 SUBSTITUTE FOR A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS OR AS A SEASONALLY LICENSED PER 54 SESSION TEACHER OF SWIMMING IN DAY SCHOOLS WHO HAS SERVED IN THAT CAPAC- S. 2010 8 A. 3010 1 ITY FOR A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS AND HAS BEEN APPOINTED TO TEACH THE SAME 2 SUBJECT IN DAY SCHOOLS ON AN ANNUAL SALARY, THE TEACHER SHALL BE 3 APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF THREE YEARS; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, 4 THAT IN THE CASE OF A TEACHER WHO HAS BEEN APPOINTED ON TENURE IN ANOTH- 5 ER SCHOOL DISTRICT WITHIN THE STATE, THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WHERE CURRENTLY 6 EMPLOYED, OR A BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES, AND WHO WAS 7 NOT DISMISSED FROM SUCH DISTRICT OR BOARD AS A RESULT OF CHARGES BROUGHT 8 PURSUANT TO SUBDIVISION ONE OF SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS 9 CHAPTER, THE TEACHER SHALL BE APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF 10 FOUR YEARS. THE SERVICE OF A PERSON APPOINTED TO ANY OF SUCH POSITIONS 11 MAY BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME DURING SUCH PROBATIONARY PERIOD, ON THE 12 RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF 13 THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. EACH PERSON WHO IS NOT TO BE RECOMMENDED FOR 14 APPOINTMENT ON TENURE SHALL BE SO NOTIFIED BY THE SUPERINTENDENT OF 15 SCHOOLS IN WRITING NOT LATER THAN SIXTY DAYS IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE 16 EXPIRATION OF HIS/HER PROBATIONARY PERIOD. 17 (b) I. Administrators, directors, supervisors, principals and all 18 other members of the supervising staff, except associate, assistant and 19 other superintendents[,] APPOINTED PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND 20 FIFTEEN AND authorized by section twenty-five hundred three of this 21 article, shall be appointed by the board of education, upon the recom- 22 mendation of the superintendent of schools for a probationary period of 23 three years. The service of a person appointed to any of such positions 24 may be discontinued at any time during the probationary period on the 25 recommendation of the superintendent of schools, by a majority vote of 26 the board of education. 27 II. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW OR REGULATION TO THE 28 CONTRARY, ADMINISTRATORS, DIRECTORS, SUPERVISORS, PRINCIPALS AND ALL 29 OTHER MEMBERS OF THE SUPERVISING STAFF, EXCEPT ASSOCIATE, ASSISTANT AND 30 OTHER SUPERINTENDENTS, APPOINTED ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND 31 FIFTEEN AND AUTHORIZED BY SECTION TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED THREE OF THIS 32 ARTICLE, SHALL BE APPOINTED BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, UPON THE RECOM- 33 MENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF 34 FIVE YEARS. THE SERVICE OF A PERSON APPOINTED TO ANY OF SUCH POSITIONS 35 MAY BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME DURING THE PROBATIONARY PERIOD ON THE 36 RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF 37 THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. 38 S 2. Subdivision 2 of section 2509 of the education law, as amended by 39 section 6 of part A of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, is amended to 40 read as follows: 41 2. A. At the expiration of the probationary term of any persons 42 appointed for such term PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, or 43 within six months prior thereto, the superintendent of schools shall 44 make a written report to the board of education recommending for 45 appointment on tenure those persons who have been found competent, effi- 46 cient and satisfactory[, consistent with any applicable rules of the 47 board of regents adopted pursuant to section three thousand twelve-b of 48 this chapter]. By a majority vote the board of education may then 49 appoint on tenure any or all of the persons recommended by the super- 50 intendent of schools. Such persons and all others employed in the teach- 51 ing service of the schools of such school district who have served the 52 full probationary period shall hold their respective positions during 53 good behavior and efficient and competent service, and shall not be 54 removable except for cause after a hearing as provided by section three 55 thousand twenty-a of [such law] THIS CHAPTER. Failure to maintain S. 2010 9 A. 3010 1 certification as required by this chapter and the regulations of the 2 commissioner of education shall constitute cause for removal. 3 B. FOR PERSONS APPOINTED ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, 4 AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY TERM OF ANY PERSONS APPOINTED FOR 5 SUCH TERM, OR WITHIN SIX MONTHS PRIOR THERETO, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF 6 SCHOOLS SHALL MAKE A WRITTEN REPORT TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION RECOMMEND- 7 ING FOR APPOINTMENT ON TENURE THOSE PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPE- 8 TENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFACTORY AND IN THE CASE OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER 9 OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, WHO HAVE RECEIVED COMPOSITE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL 10 PERFORMANCE REVIEW RATINGS PURSUANT TO THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS 11 CHAPTER, OF EITHER EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE IN EACH OF THE FIVE 12 PRECEDING YEARS. BY A MAJORITY VOTE, THE BOARD OF EDUCATION MAY THEN 13 APPOINT ON TENURE ANY OR ALL OF THE PERSONS RECOMMENDED BY THE SUPER- 14 INTENDENT OF SCHOOLS. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW, RULE 15 OR REGULATION TO THE CONTRARY, IF NO AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IS TAKEN BY THE 16 BOARD OF EDUCATION TO TERMINATE A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCI- 17 PAL, OR TO APPROVE OR DENY TENURE TO A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING 18 PRINCIPAL AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY PERIOD, THE CLASSROOM 19 TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL SHALL REMAIN IN PROBATIONARY STATUS UNTIL 20 THE END OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH SUCH TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL HAS 21 RECEIVED SUCH RATINGS OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE FOR THE FIVE 22 PRECEDING SCHOOL YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME A BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL 23 EITHER DISCONTINUE THE SERVICES OF SUCH PERSON, DENY TENURE OR APPROVE 24 TENURE FOR THOSE CLASSROOM TEACHERS OR BUILDING PRINCIPALS WHO OTHERWISE 25 HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFACTORY. PROVIDED, HOWEV- 26 ER, THAT THE BOARD OF EDUCATION MAY GRANT TENURE CONTINGENT UPON A 27 CLASSROOM TEACHER'S OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL'S RECEIPT OF SUCH A RATING OF 28 EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE IN THE FIFTH YEAR, AND IF SUCH CONTINGENCY 29 IS NOT MET, THE GRANT OF TENURE SHALL BE VOID AND UNENFORCEABLE AND THE 30 TEACHER'S OR PRINCIPAL'S PROBATIONARY PERIOD SHALL BE EXTENDED IN 31 ACCORDANCE WITH THIS SUBDIVISION. SUCH PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN RECOMMENDED 32 FOR TENURE AND ALL OTHERS EMPLOYED IN THE TEACHING SERVICE OF THE 33 SCHOOLS OF SUCH SCHOOL DISTRICT WHO HAVE SERVED THE FULL PROBATIONARY 34 PERIOD AS EXTENDED PURSUANT TO THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL HOLD THEIR RESPEC- 35 TIVE POSITIONS DURING GOOD BEHAVIOR AND EFFICIENT AND COMPETENT SERVICE, 36 AND SHALL NOT BE REMOVABLE EXCEPT FOR CAUSE AFTER A HEARING AS PROVIDED 37 BY SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS CHAPTER. FAILURE TO MAINTAIN 38 CERTIFICATION AS REQUIRED BY THIS CHAPTER AND THE REGULATIONS OF THE 39 COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION SHALL CONSTITUTE CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. 40 S 3. Subdivisions 1, 5 and 6 of section 2573 of the education law, 41 subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 732 of the laws of 1971, paragraph 42 (a) of subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 640 of the laws of 1983, 43 paragraph (b) of subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 468 of the laws of 44 1975, subdivision 5 and 6 as amended by section 7 of part A of chapter 45 57 of the laws of 2007, are amended to read as follows: 46 1. (a) I. Teachers and all other members of the teaching staff, 47 APPOINTED PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN AND authorized by 48 section twenty-five hundred fifty-four of this article, shall be 49 appointed by the board of education, upon the recommendation of the 50 superintendent of schools, for a probationary period of three years, 51 except that in the case of a teacher who has rendered satisfactory 52 service as a regular substitute for a period of two years or as a 53 seasonally licensed per session teacher of swimming in day schools who 54 has served in that capacity for a period of two years and has been 55 appointed to teach the same subject in day schools on an annual salary, 56 the probationary period shall be limited to one year; provided, however, S. 2010 10 A. 3010 1 that in the case of a teacher who has been appointed on tenure in anoth- 2 er school district within the state, the school district where currently 3 employed, or a board of cooperative educational services, and who was 4 not dismissed from such district or board as a result of charges brought 5 pursuant to subdivision one of section three thousand twenty-a of this 6 chapter, the probationary period shall not exceed two years; provided, 7 however, that in cities with a population of one million or more, a 8 teacher appointed under a newly created license, for teachers of reading 9 and of the emotionally handicapped, to a position which the teacher has 10 held for at least two years prior to such appointment while serving on 11 tenure in another license area who was not dismissed as a result of 12 charges brought pursuant to subdivision one of section three thousand 13 twenty-a of this chapter, the probationary period shall be one year. The 14 service of a person appointed to any of such positions may be discontin- 15 ued at any time during such probationary period, on the recommendation 16 of the superintendent of schools, by a majority vote of the board of 17 education. Each person who is not to be recommended for appointment on 18 tenure shall be so notified by the superintendent of schools in writing 19 not later than sixty days immediately preceding the expiration of his 20 probationary period. In city school districts having a population of 21 four hundred thousand or more, persons with licenses obtained as a 22 result of examinations announced subsequent to the twenty-second day of 23 May, nineteen hundred sixty-nine appointed upon conditions that all 24 announced requirements for the position be fulfilled within a specified 25 period of time, shall not acquire tenure unless and until such require- 26 ments have been completed within the time specified for the fulfillment 27 of such requirements, notwithstanding the expiration of any probationary 28 period. In all other city school districts subject to the provisions of 29 this article, failure to maintain certification as required by this 30 article and by the regulations of the commissioner of education shall be 31 cause for removal within the meaning of subdivision five of this 32 section. 33 II. TEACHERS AND ALL OTHER MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING STAFF APPOINTED ON 34 OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN AND AUTHORIZED BY SECTION 35 TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED FIFTY-FOUR OF THIS ARTICLE, SHALL BE APPOINTED BY 36 THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, UPON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF 37 SCHOOLS, FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF FIVE YEARS, EXCEPT THAT IN THE 38 CASE OF A TEACHER WHO HAS RENDERED SATISFACTORY SERVICE AS A REGULAR 39 SUBSTITUTE FOR A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS OR AS A SEASONALLY LICENSED PER 40 SESSION TEACHER OF SWIMMING IN DAY SCHOOLS WHO HAS SERVED IN THAT CAPAC- 41 ITY FOR A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS AND HAS BEEN APPOINTED TO TEACH THE SAME 42 SUBJECT IN DAY SCHOOLS ON AN ANNUAL SALARY, THE TEACHER SHALL BE 43 APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF THREE YEARS; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, 44 THAT IN THE CASE OF A TEACHER WHO HAS BEEN APPOINTED ON TENURE IN ANOTH- 45 ER SCHOOL DISTRICT WITHIN THE STATE, THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WHERE CURRENTLY 46 EMPLOYED, OR A BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES, AND WHO WAS 47 NOT DISMISSED FROM SUCH DISTRICT OR BOARD AS A RESULT OF CHARGES BROUGHT 48 PURSUANT TO SUBDIVISION ONE OF SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS 49 CHAPTER, THE TEACHER SHALL BE APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF 50 FOUR YEARS; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT IN CITIES WITH A POPULATION OF ONE 51 MILLION OR MORE, A TEACHER APPOINTED UNDER A NEWLY CREATED LICENSE, FOR 52 TEACHERS OF READING AND OF THE EMOTIONALLY HANDICAPPED, TO A POSITION 53 WHICH THE TEACHER HAS HELD FOR AT LEAST TWO YEARS PRIOR TO SUCH APPOINT- 54 MENT WHILE SERVING ON TENURE IN ANOTHER LICENSE AREA WHO WAS NOT 55 DISMISSED AS A RESULT OF CHARGES BROUGHT PURSUANT TO SUBDIVISION ONE OF 56 SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS CHAPTER, THE TEACHER SHALL BE S. 2010 11 A. 3010 1 APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF THREE YEARS. THE SERVICE OF A 2 PERSON APPOINTED TO ANY OF SUCH POSITIONS MAY BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY 3 TIME DURING SUCH PROBATIONARY PERIOD, ON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE 4 SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. 5 EACH PERSON WHO IS NOT TO BE RECOMMENDED FOR APPOINTMENT ON TENURE SHALL 6 BE SO NOTIFIED BY THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS IN WRITING NOT LATER 7 THAN SIXTY DAYS IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE EXPIRATION OF HIS PROBATIONARY 8 PERIOD. IN ALL CITY SCHOOL DISTRICTS SUBJECT TO THE PROVISIONS OF THIS 9 ARTICLE, FAILURE TO MAINTAIN CERTIFICATION AS REQUIRED BY THIS ARTICLE 10 AND BY THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION SHALL BE CAUSE 11 FOR REMOVAL WITHIN THE MEANING OF SUBDIVISION FIVE OF THIS SECTION. 12 (b) I. Administrators, directors, supervisors, principals and all 13 other members of the supervising staff, except executive directors, 14 associate, assistant, district and community superintendents and examin- 15 ers, APPOINTED PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN AND authorized 16 by section twenty-five hundred fifty-four of this article, shall be 17 appointed by the board of education, upon the recommendation of the 18 superintendent or chancellor of schools, for a probationary period of 19 three years. The service of a person appointed to any of such positions 20 may be discontinued at any time during the probationary period on the 21 recommendation of the superintendent of schools, by a majority vote of 22 the board of education. 23 II. ADMINISTRATORS, DIRECTORS, SUPERVISORS, PRINCIPALS AND ALL OTHER 24 MEMBERS OF THE SUPERVISING STAFF, EXCEPT EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS, ASSOCIATE, 25 ASSISTANT, DISTRICT AND COMMUNITY SUPERINTENDENTS AND EXAMINERS, 26 APPOINTED ON OR AFTER JULY 1, 2015 AND AUTHORIZED BY SECTION TWENTY-FIVE 27 HUNDRED FIFTY-FOUR OF THIS ARTICLE, SHALL BE APPOINTED BY THE BOARD OF 28 EDUCATION, UPON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OR CHANCELLOR 29 OF SCHOOLS, FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF FIVE YEARS PROVIDED THAT SUCH 30 PROBATIONARY PERIOD MAY BE EXTENDED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PARAGRAPH (B) OF 31 SUBDIVISION FIVE OF THIS SECTION. THE SERVICE OF A PERSON APPOINTED TO 32 ANY OF SUCH POSITIONS MAY BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME DURING THE PROBA- 33 TIONARY PERIOD ON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, 34 BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. 35 5. (A) At the expiration of the probationary term of any persons 36 appointed for such term PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, the 37 superintendent of schools shall make a written report to the board of 38 education recommending for permanent appointment those persons who have 39 been found competent, efficient and satisfactory[, consistent with any 40 applicable rules of the board of regents adopted pursuant to section 41 three thousand twelve-b of this chapter]. Such persons and all others 42 employed in the teaching, service of the schools of a city, who have 43 served the full probationary period, shall hold their respective posi- 44 tions during good behavior and efficient and competent service, and 45 shall not be removable except for cause after a hearing as provided by 46 section three thousand twenty-a of this chapter. 47 (B) AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY TERM OF ANY PERSONS 48 APPOINTED FOR SUCH TERM ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, 49 THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS SHALL MAKE A WRITTEN REPORT TO THE BOARD 50 OF EDUCATION RECOMMENDING FOR PERMANENT APPOINTMENT THOSE PERSONS WHO 51 HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFACTORY AND, IN THE CASE 52 OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, WHO HAVE RECEIVED COMPOS- 53 ITE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW RATINGS PURSUANT TO SECTION 54 THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS CHAPTER, OF EITHER EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY 55 EFFECTIVE IN EACH OF THE FIVE PRECEDING YEARS. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER 56 PROVISION OF LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO THE CONTRARY, IF NO AFFIRMATIVE S. 2010 12 A. 3010 1 ACTION IS TAKEN BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION TO TERMINATE A CLASSROOM 2 TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, OR TO APPROVE OR DENY TENURE TO A CLASS- 3 ROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY 4 PERIOD, THE CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL SHALL REMAIN IN 5 PROBATIONARY STATUS UNTIL THE END OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH SUCH 6 TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL HAS RECEIVED SUCH RATINGS OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY 7 EFFECTIVE FOR THE FIVE PRECEDING SCHOOL YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME A BOARD 8 OF EDUCATION SHALL EITHER DISCONTINUE THE SERVICES OF SUCH PERSON, DENY 9 TENURE OR APPROVE TENURE FOR THOSE CLASSROOM TEACHERS OR BUILDING PRIN- 10 CIPALS WHO OTHERWISE HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFAC- 11 TORY. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE BOARD OF EDUCATION MAY GRANT TENURE 12 CONTINGENT UPON A CLASSROOM TEACHER'S OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL'S RECEIPT OF 13 SUCH A RATING OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE IN THE FIFTH YEAR, AND IF 14 SUCH CONTINGENCY IS NOT MET, THE GRANT OF TENURE SHALL BE VOID AND UNEN- 15 FORCEABLE AND THE TEACHER'S OR PRINCIPAL'S PROBATIONARY PERIOD SHALL BE 16 EXTENDED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THIS SUBDIVISION. SUCH PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN 17 RECOMMENDED FOR TENURE AND ALL OTHERS EMPLOYED IN THE TEACHING SERVICE 18 OF THE SCHOOLS OF SUCH SCHOOL DISTRICT WHO HAVE SERVED THE FULL PROBA- 19 TIONARY PERIOD AS EXTENDED PURSUANT TO THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL HOLD THEIR 20 RESPECTIVE POSITIONS DURING GOOD BEHAVIOR AND EFFICIENT AND COMPETENT 21 SERVICE, AND SHALL NOT BE REMOVABLE EXCEPT FOR CAUSE AFTER A HEARING AS 22 PROVIDED BY SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS CHAPTER. FAILURE TO 23 MAINTAIN CERTIFICATION AS REQUIRED BY THIS CHAPTER AND THE REGULATIONS 24 OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION SHALL CONSTITUTE CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. 25 6. (A) In a city having a population of four hundred thousand or more, 26 at the expiration of the probationary term of any persons appointed for 27 such term PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, the superintendent 28 of schools shall make a written report to the board of education recom- 29 mending for permanent appointment those persons who have been found 30 satisfactory[, consistent with any applicable rules of the board of 31 regents adopted pursuant to section three thousand twelve-b of this 32 chapter], and such board of education shall immediately thereafter issue 33 to such persons permanent certificates of appointment. Such persons and 34 all others employed in the teaching service of the schools of such city, 35 who have served the full probationary period shall receive permanent 36 certificates to teach issued to them by the certificating authority, 37 except as otherwise provided in subdivision ten-a of this section, and 38 shall hold their respective positions during good behavior and satisfac- 39 tory teaching service, and shall not be removable except for cause after 40 a hearing as provided by section three thousand twenty-a of this chap- 41 ter. 42 (B) AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY TERM OF ANY PERSONS 43 APPOINTED FOR SUCH TERM ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, 44 THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS SHALL MAKE A WRITTEN REPORT TO THE BOARD 45 OF EDUCATION RECOMMENDING FOR PERMANENT APPOINTMENT THOSE PERSONS WHO 46 HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFACTORY AND, IN THE CASE 47 OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, WHO HAVE RECEIVED COMPOS- 48 ITE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW RATINGS PURSUANT TO SECTION 49 THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS CHAPTER, OF EITHER EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY 50 EFFECTIVE IN EACH OF THE FIVE PRECEDING YEARS. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER 51 PROVISION OF LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO THE CONTRARY, IF NO AFFIRMATIVE 52 ACTION IS TAKEN BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION TO TERMINATE A CLASSROOM 53 TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, OR TO APPROVE OR DENY TENURE TO A CLASS- 54 ROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY 55 PERIOD, THE CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL SHALL REMAIN IN 56 PROBATIONARY STATUS UNTIL THE END OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH SUCH S. 2010 13 A. 3010 1 TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL HAS RECEIVED SUCH RATINGS OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY 2 EFFECTIVE FOR THE FIVE PRECEDING SCHOOL YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME A BOARD 3 OF EDUCATION SHALL EITHER DISCONTINUE THE SERVICES OF SUCH PERSON, DENY 4 TENURE OR APPROVE TENURE FOR THOSE CLASSROOM TEACHERS OR BUILDING PRIN- 5 CIPALS WHO OTHERWISE HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFAC- 6 TORY. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE BOARD OF EDUCATION MAY GRANT TENURE 7 CONTINGENT UPON A CLASSROOM TEACHER'S OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL'S RECEIPT OF 8 SUCH A RATING OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE IN THE FIFTH YEAR, AND IF 9 SUCH CONTINGENCY IS NOT MET, THE GRANT OF TENURE SHALL BE VOID AND UNEN- 10 FORCEABLE AND THE TEACHER'S OR PRINCIPAL'S PROBATIONARY PERIOD SHALL BE 11 EXTENDED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THIS SUBDIVISION. SUCH PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN 12 RECOMMENDED FOR TENURE AND ALL OTHERS EMPLOYED IN THE TEACHING SERVICE 13 OF THE SCHOOLS OF SUCH SCHOOL DISTRICT WHO HAVE SERVED THE FULL PROBA- 14 TIONARY PERIOD AS EXTENDED PURSUANT TO THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL HOLD THEIR 15 RESPECTIVE POSITIONS DURING GOOD BEHAVIOR AND EFFICIENT AND COMPETENT 16 SERVICE, AND SHALL NOT BE REMOVABLE EXCEPT FOR CAUSE AFTER A HEARING AS 17 PROVIDED BY SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS CHAPTER. FAILURE TO 18 MAINTAIN CERTIFICATION AS REQUIRED BY THIS CHAPTER AND THE REGULATIONS 19 OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION SHALL CONSTITUTE CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. 20 S 4. Section 3012 of the education law, the section heading as amended 21 by chapter 358 of the laws of 1978, subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 22 442 of the laws of 1980, paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 as amended by 23 chapter 737 of the laws of 1992, subdivision 2 as amended by section 8 24 of part A of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, subdivision 3 as added by 25 chapter 859 of the laws of 1955 and as renumbered by chapter 717 of the 26 laws of 1970, is amended to read as follows: 27 S 3012. Tenure: certain school districts. 1. (a) I. Teachers and all 28 other members of the teaching staff of school districts, including 29 common school districts and/or school districts employing fewer than 30 eight teachers, other than city school districts, WHO ARE APPOINTED 31 PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, shall be appointed by the 32 board of education, or the trustees of common school districts, upon the 33 recommendation of the superintendent of schools, for a probationary 34 period of three years, except that in the case of a teacher who has 35 rendered satisfactory service as a regular substitute for a period of 36 two years or as a seasonally licensed per session teacher of swimming in 37 day schools who has served in that capacity for a period of two years 38 and has been appointed to teach the same subject in day schools, on an 39 annual salary, the probationary period shall be limited to one year; 40 provided, however, that in the case of a teacher who has been appointed 41 on tenure in another school district within the state, the school 42 district where currently employed, or a board of cooperative educational 43 services, and who was not dismissed from such district or board as a 44 result of charges brought pursuant to subdivision one of section three 45 thousand twenty-a of this [chapter] ARTICLE, the probationary period 46 shall not exceed two years. The service of a person appointed to any of 47 such positions may be discontinued at any time during such probationary 48 period, on the recommendation of the superintendent of schools, by a 49 majority vote of the board of education or the trustees of a common 50 school district. 51 II. TEACHERS AND ALL OTHER MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING STAFF OF SCHOOL 52 DISTRICTS, INCLUDING COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICTS AND/OR SCHOOL DISTRICTS 53 EMPLOYING FEWER THAN EIGHT TEACHERS, OTHER THAN CITY SCHOOL DISTRICTS, 54 WHO ARE APPOINTED ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, SHALL BE 55 APPOINTED BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, OR THE TRUSTEES OF COMMON SCHOOL 56 DISTRICTS, UPON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, FOR S. 2010 14 A. 3010 1 A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF FIVE YEARS, EXCEPT THAT IN THE CASE OF A TEACH- 2 ER WHO HAS RENDERED SATISFACTORY SERVICE AS A REGULAR SUBSTITUTE FOR A 3 PERIOD OF TWO YEARS OR AS A SEASONALLY LICENSED PER SESSION TEACHER OF 4 SWIMMING IN DAY SCHOOLS WHO HAS SERVED IN THAT CAPACITY FOR A PERIOD OF 5 TWO YEARS AND HAS BEEN APPOINTED TO TEACH THE SAME SUBJECT IN DAY 6 SCHOOLS, ON AN ANNUAL SALARY, THE TEACHER SHALL BE APPOINTED FOR A 7 PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF THREE YEARS; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT IN THE CASE 8 OF A TEACHER WHO HAS BEEN APPOINTED ON TENURE IN ANOTHER SCHOOL DISTRICT 9 WITHIN THE STATE, THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WHERE CURRENTLY EMPLOYED, OR A 10 BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES, AND WHO WAS NOT DISMISSED 11 FROM SUCH DISTRICT OR BOARD AS A RESULT OF CHARGES BROUGHT PURSUANT TO 12 SUBDIVISION ONE OF SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS ARTICLE, THE 13 TEACHER SHALL BE APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF FOUR YEARS. THE 14 SERVICE OF A PERSON APPOINTED TO ANY OF SUCH POSITIONS MAY BE DISCONTIN- 15 UED AT ANY TIME DURING SUCH PROBATIONARY PERIOD, ON THE RECOMMENDATION 16 OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE BOARD OF 17 EDUCATION OR THE TRUSTEES OF A COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT. 18 (b) I. Principals, administrators, supervisors and all other members 19 of the supervising staff of school districts, including common school 20 districts and/or school districts employing fewer than eight teachers, 21 other than city school districts, WHO ARE APPOINTED PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, 22 TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, shall be appointed by the board of education, or 23 the trustees of a common school district, upon the recommendation of the 24 superintendent of schools for a probationary period of three years. The 25 service of a person appointed to any of such positions may be discontin- 26 ued at any time during the probationary period on the recommendation of 27 the superintendent of schools, by a majority vote of the board of educa- 28 tion or the trustees of a common school district. 29 II. PRINCIPALS, ADMINISTRATORS, SUPERVISORS AND ALL OTHER MEMBERS OF 30 THE SUPERVISING STAFF OF SCHOOL DISTRICTS, INCLUDING COMMON SCHOOL 31 DISTRICTS AND/OR SCHOOL DISTRICTS EMPLOYING FEWER THAN EIGHT TEACHERS, 32 OTHER THAN CITY SCHOOL DISTRICTS, WHO ARE APPOINTED ON OR AFTER JULY 33 FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, SHALL BE APPOINTED BY THE BOARD OF EDUCA- 34 TION, OR THE TRUSTEES OF A COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT, UPON THE RECOMMENDA- 35 TION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF FIVE 36 YEARS. THE SERVICE OF A PERSON APPOINTED TO ANY OF SUCH POSITIONS MAY BE 37 DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME DURING THE PROBATIONARY PERIOD ON THE RECOMMEN- 38 DATION OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE BOARD 39 OF EDUCATION OR THE TRUSTEES OF A COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT. 40 (c) Any person previously appointed to tenure or a probationary period 41 pursuant to the provisions of former section three thousand thirteen of 42 this [chapter] ARTICLE shall continue to hold such position and be 43 governed by the provisions of this section notwithstanding any contrary 44 provision of law. 45 2. (A) At the expiration of the probationary term of a person 46 appointed for such term PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, 47 subject to the conditions of this section, the superintendent of schools 48 shall make a written report to the board of education or the trustees of 49 a common school district recommending for appointment on tenure those 50 persons who have been found competent, efficient and satisfactory[, 51 consistent with any applicable rules of the board of regents adopted 52 pursuant to section three thousand twelve-b of this article]. Such 53 persons, and all others employed in the teaching service of the schools 54 of such union free school district, common school district and/or school 55 district employing fewer than eight teachers, who have served the proba- 56 tionary period as provided in this section, shall hold their respective S. 2010 15 A. 3010 1 positions during good behavior and efficient and competent service, and 2 shall not be removed except for any of the following causes, after a 3 hearing, as provided by section three thousand twenty-a of [such law] 4 THIS ARTICLE: (a) insubordination, immoral character or conduct unbe- 5 coming a teacher; (b) inefficiency, incompetency, physical or mental 6 disability, or neglect of duty; (c) failure to maintain certification as 7 required by this chapter and by the regulations of the commissioner. 8 Each person who is not to be recommended for appointment on tenure, 9 shall be so notified by the superintendent of schools in writing not 10 later than sixty days immediately preceding the expiration of his proba- 11 tionary period. 12 (B) AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY TERM OF A PERSON APPOINTED 13 FOR SUCH TERM ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, SUBJECT TO 14 THE CONDITIONS OF THIS SECTION, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS SHALL MAKE 15 A WRITTEN REPORT TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OR THE TRUSTEES OF A COMMON 16 SCHOOL DISTRICT RECOMMENDING FOR APPOINTMENT ON TENURE THOSE PERSONS WHO 17 HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATISFACTORY AND, IN THE CASE 18 OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, WHO HAVE RECEIVED COMPOS- 19 ITE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW RATINGS PURSUANT TO SECTION 20 THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS ARTICLE, OF EITHER EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY 21 EFFECTIVE IN EACH OF THE FIVE PRECEDING YEARS. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER 22 PROVISION OF LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO THE CONTRARY, IF NO AFFIRMATIVE 23 ACTION IS TAKEN BY THE TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF EDUCATION TO TERMINATE A 24 CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL, OR TO APPROVE OR DENY TENURE TO 25 A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE 26 PROBATIONARY PERIOD, THE CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL SHALL 27 REMAIN IN PROBATIONARY STATUS UNTIL THE END OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH 28 SUCH TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL HAS RECEIVED SUCH RATINGS OF EFFECTIVE OR 29 HIGHLY EFFECTIVE FOR THE FIVE PRECEDING SCHOOL YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME 30 THE TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL EITHER DISCONTINUE THE SERVICES 31 OF SUCH PERSON, DENY TENURE OR APPROVE TENURE FOR THOSE CLASSROOM TEACH- 32 ERS OR BUILDING PRINCIPALS WHO OTHERWISE HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, 33 EFFICIENT AND SATISFACTORY. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE TRUSTEES OR 34 BOARD OF EDUCATION MAY GRANT TENURE CONTINGENT UPON A CLASSROOM TEACH- 35 ER'S OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL'S RECEIPT OF SUCH A RATING OF EFFECTIVE OR 36 HIGHLY EFFECTIVE IN THE FIFTH YEAR, AND IF SUCH CONTINGENCY IS NOT MET, 37 THE GRANT OF TENURE SHALL BE VOID AND UNENFORCEABLE AND THE TEACHER'S OR 38 PRINCIPAL'S PROBATIONARY PERIOD SHALL BE EXTENDED IN ACCORDANCE WITH 39 THIS SUBDIVISION. SUCH PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN RECOMMENDED FOR TENURE AND 40 ALL OTHERS EMPLOYED IN THE TEACHING SERVICE OF THE SCHOOLS OF SUCH 41 SCHOOL DISTRICT WHO HAVE SERVED THE FULL PROBATIONARY PERIOD AS EXTENDED 42 PURSUANT TO THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL HOLD THEIR RESPECTIVE POSITIONS 43 DURING GOOD BEHAVIOR AND EFFICIENT AND COMPETENT SERVICE, AND SHALL NOT 44 BE REMOVABLE EXCEPT FOR CAUSE AFTER A HEARING AS PROVIDED BY SECTION 45 THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS ARTICLE. FAILURE TO MAINTAIN CERTIF- 46 ICATION AS REQUIRED BY THIS CHAPTER AND THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMIS- 47 SIONER OF EDUCATION SHALL CONSTITUTE CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. 48 3. Notwithstanding any other provision of this section no period in 49 any school year for which there is no required service and/or for which 50 no compensation is provided shall in any event constitute a break or 51 suspension of probationary period or continuity of tenure rights of any 52 of the persons hereinabove described. 53 S 5. Section 3014 of the education law, as added by chapter 583 of the 54 laws of 1955, subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 551 of the laws of 55 1976, subdivision 2 as amended by section 10 of part A of chapter 57 of 56 the laws of 2007, is amended to read as follows: S. 2010 16 A. 3010 1 S 3014. Tenure: boards of cooperative educational services. 1. (A) 2 Administrative assistants, supervisors, teachers and all other members 3 of the teaching and supervising staff of the board of cooperative educa- 4 tional services APPOINTED PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, 5 shall be appointed by a majority vote of the board of cooperative educa- 6 tional services upon the recommendation of the district superintendent 7 of schools for a probationary period of not to exceed three years; 8 provided, however, that in the case of a teacher who has been appointed 9 on tenure in a school district within the state, the board of cooper- 10 ative educational services where currently employed, or another board of 11 cooperative educational services, and who was not dismissed from such 12 district or board as a result of charges brought pursuant to subdivision 13 one of section three thousand twenty-a of this [chapter] ARTICLE, the 14 probationary period shall not exceed two years. Services of a person so 15 appointed to any such positions may be discontinued at any time during 16 such probationary period, upon the recommendation of the district super- 17 intendent, by a majority vote of the board of cooperative educational 18 services. 19 (B) ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS, SUPERVISORS, TEACHERS AND ALL OTHER 20 MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING AND SUPERVISING STAFF OF THE BOARD OF COOPER- 21 ATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES APPOINTED ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOU- 22 SAND FIFTEEN, SHALL BE APPOINTED BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE BOARD OF 23 COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES UPON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE DISTRICT 24 SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF NOT TO EXCEED 25 FIVE YEARS; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT IN THE CASE OF A TEACHER WHO HAS 26 BEEN APPOINTED ON TENURE IN A SCHOOL DISTRICT WITHIN THE STATE, THE 27 BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES WHERE CURRENTLY EMPLOYED, OR 28 ANOTHER BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES, AND WHO WAS NOT 29 DISMISSED FROM SUCH DISTRICT OR BOARD AS A RESULT OF CHARGES BROUGHT 30 PURSUANT TO SUBDIVISION ONE OF SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS 31 ARTICLE, THE TEACHER SHALL BE APPOINTED FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD OF 32 FOUR YEARS. SERVICES OF A PERSON SO APPOINTED TO ANY SUCH POSITIONS MAY 33 BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME DURING SUCH PROBATIONARY PERIOD, UPON THE 34 RECOMMENDATION OF THE DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT, BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE 35 BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES. 36 2. (A) On or before the expiration of the probationary term of a 37 person appointed for such term PRIOR TO JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND 38 FIFTEEN, the district superintendent of schools shall make a written 39 report to the board of cooperative educational services recommending for 40 appointment on tenure persons who have been found competent, efficient 41 and satisfactory[, consistent with any applicable rules of the board of 42 regents adopted pursuant to section three thousand twelve-b of this 43 article]. Such persons shall hold their respective positions during good 44 behavior and competent and efficient service and shall not be removed 45 except for any of the following causes, after a hearing, as provided by 46 section three thousand twenty-a of [such law] THIS ARTICLE: [(a)] (I) 47 Insubordination, immoral character or conduct unbecoming a teacher; 48 [(b)] (II) Inefficiency, incompetency, physical or mental disability or 49 neglect of duty; [(c)] (III) Failure to maintain certification as 50 required by this chapter and by the regulations of the commissioner. 51 Each person who is not to be so recommended for appointment on tenure 52 shall be so notified in writing by the district superintendent not later 53 than sixty days immediately preceding the expiration of his probationary 54 period. 55 (B) ON OR BEFORE THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY TERM OF A PERSON 56 APPOINTED FOR SUCH TERM ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, S. 2010 17 A. 3010 1 THE DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS SHALL MAKE A WRITTEN REPORT TO 2 THE BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES RECOMMENDING FOR APPOINT- 3 MENT ON TENURE PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND 4 SATISFACTORY AND, IN THE CASE OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCI- 5 PAL, WHO HAVE RECEIVED COMPOSITE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW 6 RATINGS PURSUANT TO THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS ARTICLE, OF EITHER 7 EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE IN EACH OF THE FIVE PRECEDING YEARS. 8 NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO THE 9 CONTRARY, IF NO AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IS TAKEN BY THE BOARD OF COOPERATIVE 10 EDUCATIONAL SERVICES TO TERMINATE A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRIN- 11 CIPAL, OR TO APPROVE OR DENY TENURE TO A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING 12 PRINCIPAL AT THE EXPIRATION OF THE PROBATIONARY PERIOD, THE CLASSROOM 13 TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL SHALL REMAIN IN PROBATIONARY STATUS UNTIL 14 THE END OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH SUCH TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL HAS 15 RECEIVED SUCH RATINGS OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE FOR THE FIVE 16 PRECEDING SCHOOL YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME A BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCA- 17 TIONAL SERVICES SHALL EITHER DISCONTINUE THE SERVICES OF SUCH PERSON, 18 DENY TENURE OR APPROVE TENURE FOR THOSE CLASSROOM TEACHERS OR BUILDING 19 PRINCIPALS WHO OTHERWISE HAVE BEEN FOUND COMPETENT, EFFICIENT AND SATIS- 20 FACTORY. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE BOARD OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL 21 SERVICES MAY GRANT TENURE CONTINGENT UPON A CLASSROOM TEACHER'S OR 22 BUILDING PRINCIPAL'S RECEIPT OF SUCH A RATING OF EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY 23 EFFECTIVE IN THE FIFTH YEAR, AND IF SUCH CONTINGENCY IS NOT MET, THE 24 GRANT OF TENURE SHALL BE VOID AND UNENFORCEABLE AND THE TEACHER'S OR 25 PRINCIPAL'S PROBATIONARY PERIOD SHALL BE EXTENDED IN ACCORDANCE WITH 26 THIS SUBDIVISION. SUCH PERSONS SHALL HOLD THEIR RESPECTIVE POSITIONS 27 DURING GOOD BEHAVIOR AND COMPETENT AND EFFICIENT SERVICE AND SHALL NOT 28 BE REMOVED EXCEPT FOR ANY OF THE FOLLOWING CAUSES, AFTER A HEARING, AS 29 PROVIDED BY SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWENTY-A OF THIS ARTICLE: (I) INSUB- 30 ORDINATION, IMMORAL CHARACTER OR CONDUCT UNBECOMING A TEACHER; (II) 31 INEFFICIENCY, INCOMPETENCY, PHYSICAL OR MENTAL DISABILITY OR NEGLECT OF 32 DUTY; (III) FAILURE TO MAINTAIN CERTIFICATION AS REQUIRED BY THIS CHAP- 33 TER AND BY THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER. EACH PERSON WHO IS NOT 34 TO BE SO RECOMMENDED FOR APPOINTMENT ON TENURE SHALL BE SO NOTIFIED IN 35 WRITING BY THE DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT NOT LATER THAN SIXTY DAYS IMME- 36 DIATELY PRECEDING THE EXPIRATION OF HIS PROBATIONARY PERIOD. 37 S 6. Subdivision 1 of section 3012-c of the education law, as amended 38 by chapter 21 of the laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows: 39 1. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, rule or regulation to 40 the contrary, the annual professional performance reviews of all class- 41 room teachers and building principals employed by school districts or 42 boards of cooperative educational services shall be conducted in accord- 43 ance with the provisions of this section. Such performance reviews which 44 are conducted on or after July first, two thousand eleven, or on or 45 after the date specified in paragraph c of subdivision two of this 46 section where applicable, shall include measures of student achievement 47 and be conducted in accordance with this section. Such annual profes- 48 sional performance reviews shall be a significant factor for employment 49 decisions including but not limited to, promotion, retention, tenure 50 determination, termination, and supplemental compensation, which deci- 51 sions are to be made in accordance with locally developed procedures 52 negotiated pursuant to the requirements of article fourteen of the civil 53 service law where applicable. Provided, however, that nothing in this 54 section shall be construed to affect the UNFETTERED statutory right of a 55 school district or board of cooperative educational services to termi- 56 nate a probationary teacher or principal for ANY statutorily and consti- S. 2010 18 A. 3010 1 tutionally permissible reasons [other than the performance of the teach- 2 er or principal in the classroom or school], including but not limited 3 to misconduct AND UNTIL A TENURE DECISION IS MADE AT THE 4 END/EXPIRATION/CONCLUSION OF THE PROBATIONARY PERIOD, THE PERFORMANCE OF 5 THE TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL IN THE CLASSROOM. Such performance reviews 6 shall also be a significant factor in teacher and principal development, 7 including but not limited to, coaching, induction support and differen- 8 tiated professional development, which are to be locally established in 9 accordance with procedures negotiated pursuant to the requirements of 10 article fourteen of the civil service law. 11 S 7. Paragraph b of subdivision 5 of section 3012-c of the education 12 law, as added by chapter 21 of the laws of 2012, is amended to read as 13 follows: 14 b. Nothing in this section shall be construed to alter or diminish the 15 authority of the governing body of a school district or board of cooper- 16 ative educational services to grant or deny tenure to or terminate 17 probationary teachers or probationary building principals during the 18 pendency of an appeal pursuant to this section for statutorily and 19 constitutionally permissible reasons [other than] INCLUDING the teach- 20 er's or principal's performance that is the subject of the appeal. 21 S 8. This act shall take effect immediately. 22 SUBPART D 23 Section 1. The education law is amended by adding a new section 211-g 24 to read as follows: 25 S 211-G. TAKEOVER AND RESTRUCTURING FAILING SCHOOL DISTRICTS. 1. (A) A 26 SCHOOL DISTRICT, OTHER THAN A SPECIAL ACT SCHOOL DISTRICT AS DEFINED IN 27 SUBDIVISION EIGHT OF SECTION FOUR THOUSAND ONE OF THIS CHAPTER, SHALL BE 28 DEEMED ELIGIBLE FOR DESIGNATION AS FAILING UPON A DETERMINATION BY THE 29 COMMISSIONER, PURSUANT TO REGULATIONS ADOPTED BY SUCH COMMISSIONER, THAT 30 THE SCHOOL DISTRICT HAS SCORED IN THE LOWEST TWO AND ONE-HALF PERCENT OF 31 SCHOOL DISTRICTS STATEWIDE WHEN COMPARED TO OTHER DISTRICTS BASED ON 32 METRICS OF STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT AND OUTCOMES PRESCRIBED IN SUCH REGU- 33 LATIONS WHICH MAY INCLUDE BUT SHALL NOT BE LIMITED TO PERFORMANCE ON 34 STATE ASSESSMENTS, GRADUATION RATES AND DROP-OUT RATES AND/OR PERFORM- 35 ANCE OF THE DISTRICT OVER TIME IN SUCH MEASURES OF STUDENT ACADEMIC 36 ACHIEVEMENT AND OUTCOMES. IN MAKING SUCH DETERMINATION THE COMMISSIONER 37 SHALL CONSIDER THE SEVERITY AND DURATION OF THE DEFICIENCIES IN STUDENT 38 ACHIEVEMENT AND OUTCOMES OF THE DISTRICT. 39 (B) FOR ANY SCHOOL DISTRICT DEEMED ELIGIBLE FOR A DESIGNATION AS FAIL- 40 ING, THE COMMISSIONER SHALL APPOINT A DISTRICT REVIEW TEAM TO ASSESS AND 41 REPORT ON THE REASONS FOR THE CHRONIC UNDERPERFORMANCE AND THE PROSPECTS 42 FOR IMPROVEMENT, UNLESS SUCH AN ASSESSMENT, WHICH IS DEEMED ADEQUATE BY 43 THE COMMISSIONER, HAS BEEN PREVIOUSLY COMPLETED BY A DISTRICT REVIEW 44 TEAM, INTEGRATED INTERVENTION TEAM OR DISTINGUISHED EDUCATOR WITHIN THE 45 PREVIOUS YEAR. 46 (I) THE DISTRICT REVIEW TEAM SHALL HAVE THE MEMBERSHIP PRESCRIBED BY 47 THE COMMISSIONER, PROVIDED THAT IT SHALL INCLUDE AT LEAST ONE PERSON 48 WITH EXPERTISE IN THE EDUCATION OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS AND AT 49 LEAST ONE PERSON WITH EXPERTISE IN THE EDUCATION OF STUDENTS WITH DISA- 50 BILITIES. 51 (II) PURSUANT TO REGULATIONS ADOPTED BY THE COMMISSIONER, THE DISTRICT 52 REVIEW TEAM SHALL EVALUATE THE PERFORMANCE OF THE DISTRICT BASED ON 53 MULTIPLE INDICATORS OF DISTRICT QUALITY INCLUDING STUDENT ATTENDANCE, 54 SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM SUSPENSION RATES, STUDENT PROMOTION AND GRADU- S. 2010 19 A. 3010 1 ATION RATES IN THE DISTRICT, OR THE LACK OF DEMONSTRATED SIGNIFICANT 2 IMPROVEMENT FOR TWO OR MORE CONSECUTIVE YEARS IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS 3 AND MATHEMATICS, EITHER IN THE AGGREGATE OR AMONG ALL THE STUDENT 4 SUBGROUPS USED IN THE STATE'S ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEM. THE DISTRICT REVIEW 5 TEAM SHALL ALSO CONSIDER DISTRICT LEADERSHIP AND CAPACITY, SCHOOL LEADER 6 PRACTICES AND DECISIONS, CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT, TEACHER 7 PRACTICES AND DECISIONS, STUDENT SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENTAL 8 HEALTH AND FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT. 9 (C) UPON REVIEW OF THE FINDINGS OF THE DISTRICT REVIEW TEAM, THE 10 COMMISSIONER MAY DECLARE A DISTRICT AS FAILING. NOT MORE THAN TWO AND 11 ONE-HALF PERCENT OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF SCHOOL DISTRICTS WITHIN THE 12 STATE MAY BE DESIGNATED AS FAILING AT ANY GIVEN TIME. 13 2. (A) UPON DESIGNATION AS A FAILING SCHOOL DISTRICT, THE COMMISSIONER 14 SHALL APPOINT A RECEIVER FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WHO SHALL POSSESS AND 15 MAINTAIN ALL OF THE POWERS VESTED IN THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, OR 16 OTHER CHIEF SCHOOL OFFICER OF THE DISTRICT, AND THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, 17 AND SHALL HAVE THE POWER TO SUPERSEDE ANY DECISION OF SUCH SUPERINTEN- 18 DENT OR CHIEF SCHOOL OFFICER, OR OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. THE RECEIVER 19 SHALL HAVE AUTHORITY TO REVIEW PROPOSED SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGETS PRIOR TO 20 PRESENTATION TO THE DISTRICT VOTERS, OR IN THE CASE OF A CITY SCHOOL 21 DISTRICT IN A CITY HAVING A POPULATION OF ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE THOU- 22 SAND OR MORE OR THE ADOPTION OF A CONTINGENCY BUDGET, PRIOR TO APPROVAL 23 BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, AND TO MODIFY THE PROPOSED BUDGET TO CONFORM 24 TO THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN. 25 (B) THE COMMISSIONER SHALL CONTRACT WITH THE RECEIVER, AND THE COMPEN- 26 SATION AND OTHER COSTS OF THE RECEIVER APPOINTED BY THE COMMISSIONER 27 SHALL BE PAID FROM A STATE APPROPRIATION FOR SUCH PURPOSE, OR BY THE 28 SCHOOL DISTRICT, AS DETERMINED BY THE COMMISSIONER. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY 29 OTHER PROVISION OF LAW TO THE CONTRARY, THE RECEIVER AND ANY OF ITS 30 EMPLOYEES PROVIDING SERVICES IN THE RECEIVERSHIP SHALL BE ENTITLED TO 31 DEFENSE AND INDEMNIFICATION BY THE SCHOOL DISTRICT TO THE SAME EXTENT AS 32 A SCHOOL DISTRICT EMPLOYEE. 33 (C) THE RECEIVER SHALL BE A NON-PROFIT ENTITY, ANOTHER SCHOOL 34 DISTRICT, OR AN INDIVIDUAL, WHO SHALL OPERATE INDEPENDENTLY, BUT WHOSE 35 CONTRACT MAY BE TERMINATED BY THE COMMISSIONER FOR A VIOLATION OF LAW OR 36 THE COMMISSIONER'S REGULATIONS OR FOR NEGLECT OF DUTY. AN EXTERNAL 37 RECEIVER APPOINTED BY THE COMMISSIONER TO OPERATE A DISTRICT UNDER THIS 38 SECTION SHALL HAVE FULL MANAGERIAL AND OPERATIONAL CONTROL OVER SUCH 39 DISTRICT; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL REMAIN 40 THE EMPLOYER OF RECORD, AND PROVIDED FURTHER THAT ANY EMPLOYMENT DECI- 41 SIONS OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION MAY BE SUPERSEDED BY THE RECEIVER. IT 42 SHALL BE THE DUTY OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION AND THE SUPERINTENDENT OF 43 SCHOOLS TO FULLY COOPERATE WITH THE RECEIVER AND WILLFUL FAILURE TO 44 COOPERATE OR INTERFERENCE WITH THE FUNCTIONS OF THE RECEIVER SHALL 45 CONSTITUTE WILLFUL NEGLECT OF DUTY FOR PURPOSES OF SECTION THREE HUNDRED 46 SIX OF THIS TITLE. THE RECEIVER OR THE RECEIVER'S DESIGNEE SHALL BE AN 47 EX OFFICIO NON-VOTING MEMBER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION ENTITLED TO 48 ATTEND ALL MEETINGS OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. 49 3. THE RECEIVER SHALL CREATE A DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN TO PROMOTE THE 50 RAPID IMPROVEMENT OF THE FAILING DISTRICT AND SUBMIT IT TO THE COMMIS- 51 SIONER FOR APPROVAL. THE PLAN SHALL SPECIFICALLY FOCUS ON THE SCHOOL OR 52 SCHOOLS IN THE DISTRICT THAT HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED AS BEING IN ACCOUNT- 53 ABILITY STATUS UNDER THE STATE'S ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEM AND THE DISTRICT 54 POLICIES OR PRACTICES THAT HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO CHRONIC UNDERPERFORMANCE. 55 4. BEFORE CREATING THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN REQUIRED BY THIS 56 SUBDIVISION, THE RECEIVER SHALL CONSULT WITH LOCAL STAKEHOLDERS, SUCH S. 2010 20 A. 3010 1 AS: (A) THE BOARD OF EDUCATION; (B) THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS; (C) 2 BUILDING PRINCIPALS AND OTHER SCHOOL LEADERS; (D) TEACHERS AND THEIR 3 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVES; (E) SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS AND 4 THEIR COLLECTIVE BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVES; (F) PARENTS OF STUDENTS 5 ATTENDING THE SCHOOL OR THEIR REPRESENTATIVES; (G) REPRESENTATIVES OF 6 APPLICABLE STATE AND LOCAL SOCIAL SERVICES, HEALTH, AND/OR MENTAL HEALTH 7 AGENCIES; (H) AS APPROPRIATE, REPRESENTATIVES OF LOCAL PROVIDERS OF 8 CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION SERVICES, STATE OR LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVEL- 9 OPMENT AGENCIES AND THE LOCAL BUSINESS COMMUNITY; (I) REPRESENTATIVES OF 10 LOCAL PREKINDERGARTEN PROGRAMS; AND (J) REPRESENTATIVES FROM LOCAL 11 INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION. 12 5. (A) IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN FOR A FAIL- 13 ING SCHOOL DISTRICT, THE RECEIVER SHALL INCLUDE MEASURES INTENDED TO 14 MAXIMIZE THE RAPID IMPROVEMENT OF THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF STUDENTS 15 IN THE DISTRICT AND SHALL ENSURE THAT THE PLAN ADDRESSES DISTRICT LEAD- 16 ERSHIP AND CAPACITY, SCHOOL LEADER PRACTICES AND DECISIONS, CURRICULUM 17 DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT, TEACHER PRACTICES AND DECISIONS, STUDENT SOCIAL 18 AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENTAL WELL-BEING, HEALTH AND FAMILY AND COMMUNITY 19 ENGAGEMENT. TO THE EXTENT PRACTICABLE, THE RECEIVER SHALL BASE THE PLAN 20 ON STUDENT OUTCOME DATA, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO: (I) STUDENT 21 ACHIEVEMENT GROWTH DATA BASED ON STATE ASSESSMENTS; (II) OTHER MEASURES 22 OF STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT; (III) STUDENT PROMOTION AND GRADUATION RATES; 23 (IV) ACHIEVEMENT AND GROWTH DATA FOR THE SUBGROUPS OF STUDENTS USED IN 24 THE STATE'S ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEM; (V) STUDENT ATTENDANCE; AND (VI) 25 LONG-TERM AND SHORT-TERM SUSPENSION RATES. 26 (B) THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN SHALL, AFTER CONSIDERATION OF THE 27 RECOMMENDATIONS MADE BY THE LOCAL STAKEHOLDER GROUP, INCLUDE THE FOLLOW- 28 ING: (I) STEPS TO ADDRESS SOCIAL SERVICE, HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS 29 OF STUDENTS IN THE DISTRICT AND THEIR FAMILIES IN ORDER TO HELP STUDENTS 30 ARRIVE AND REMAIN AT SCHOOL READY TO LEARN; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THIS 31 MAY INCLUDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SCREENING; (II) STEPS TO 32 IMPROVE OR EXPAND ACCESS TO CHILD WELFARE SERVICES AND, AS APPROPRIATE, 33 SERVICES IN THE SCHOOL DISTRICT COMMUNITY TO PROMOTE A SAFE AND SECURE 34 LEARNING ENVIRONMENT; (III) AS APPLICABLE, STEPS TO PROVIDE GREATER 35 ACCESS TO CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT 36 SERVICES PROVIDED TO STUDENTS IN THE DISTRICT AND THEIR FAMILIES IN 37 ORDER TO PROVIDE STUDENTS AND FAMILIES WITH MEANINGFUL EMPLOYMENT SKILLS 38 AND OPPORTUNITIES; (IV) STEPS TO ADDRESS ACHIEVEMENT GAPS FOR ENGLISH 39 LANGUAGE LEARNERS, STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES AND ECONOMICALLY DISADVAN- 40 TAGED STUDENTS, AS APPLICABLE; (V) STEPS TO ADDRESS SCHOOL CLIMATE AND 41 POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT; AND (VI) A BUDGET FOR THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND 42 PLAN. 43 (C) AS NECESSARY, THE COMMISSIONERS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, THE 44 OFFICE OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND 45 OTHER APPLICABLE STATE AND LOCAL SOCIAL SERVICE, HEALTH, MENTAL HEALTH 46 AND CHILD WELFARE OFFICIALS SHALL COORDINATE WITH THE COMMISSIONER 47 REGARDING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE STRATEGIES DESCRIBED IN SUBPARA- 48 GRAPHS (I) THROUGH (III) OF PARAGRAPH (B) OF THIS SUBDIVISION THAT ARE 49 INCLUDED IN THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN AND SHALL, SUBJECT TO APPROPRI- 50 ATION, REASONABLY SUPPORT THE IMPLEMENTATION CONSISTENT WITH THE 51 REQUIREMENTS OF STATE AND FEDERAL LAW APPLICABLE TO THE RELEVANT 52 PROGRAMS THAT EACH SUCH OFFICIAL IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ADMINISTERING AND 53 GRANT FAILING SCHOOLS PRIORITY ACCESS TO COMPETITIVE GRANTS TO THE 54 EXTENT ALLOWABLE. 55 (D) IN ORDER TO ASSESS THE SCHOOL DISTRICT ACROSS MULTIPLE INDICATORS 56 OF DISTRICT PERFORMANCE AND STUDENT SUCCESS, THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND S. 2010 21 A. 3010 1 PLAN SHALL INCLUDE, MEASURABLE ANNUAL GOALS INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED 2 TO, THE FOLLOWING: (I) STUDENT ATTENDANCE; (II) SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM 3 SUSPENSION RATES; (III) STUDENT SAFETY AND DISCIPLINE; (IV) STUDENT 4 PROMOTION AND GRADUATION AND DROP-OUT RATES; (V) STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT AND 5 GROWTH ON STATE ASSESSMENTS; (VI) PROGRESS IN AREAS OF ACADEMIC UNDER- 6 PERFORMANCE; (VII) PROGRESS AMONG THE SUBGROUPS OF STUDENTS USED IN THE 7 STATE'S ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEM; (VIII) REDUCTION OF ACHIEVEMENT GAPS 8 AMONG DIFFERENT GROUPS OF STUDENTS; (IX) DEVELOPMENT OF COLLEGE AND 9 CAREER READINESS, INCLUDING AT THE ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL LEVELS; 10 (X) PARENT AND FAMILY ENGAGEMENT; (XI) BUILDING A CULTURE OF ACADEMIC 11 SUCCESS AMONG STUDENTS; (XII) BUILDING A CULTURE OF STUDENT SUPPORT AND 12 SUCCESS AMONG FACULTY AND STAFF; AND (XIII) USING DEVELOPMENTALLY APPRO- 13 PRIATE CHILD ASSESSMENTS FROM PRE-KINDERGARTEN THROUGH THIRD GRADE, IF 14 APPLICABLE. 15 (E) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER APPLICABLE LAW TO THE CONTRARY, IN 16 CREATING THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN, THE RECEIVER SHALL: (I) ESTABLISH 17 COMMUNITY SCHOOLS AT SCHOOLS IN THE DISTRICT TO PROVIDE EXPANDED HEALTH, 18 MENTAL HEALTH AND OTHER SERVICES TO THE COMMUNITY; (II) EXPAND, ALTER OR 19 REPLACE THE CURRICULUM AND PROGRAM OFFERINGS OF THE DISTRICT OR OF A 20 SCHOOL IN THE DISTRICT, INCLUDING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF RESEARCH-BASED 21 EARLY LITERACY PROGRAMS, EARLY INTERVENTIONS FOR STRUGGLING READERS AND 22 THE TEACHING OF ADVANCED PLACEMENT COURSES OR OTHER RIGOROUS NATIONALLY 23 OR INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNIZED COURSES, IF THE DISTRICT OR SCHOOLS IN THE 24 DISTRICT DO NOT ALREADY HAVE SUCH PROGRAMS OR COURSES; (III) REPLACE 25 UNQUALIFIED TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS, INCLUDING SCHOOL LEADERSHIP; 26 (IV) PROVIDE FUNDS, SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION TO INCREASE SALARIES OF 27 CURRENT OR PROSPECTIVE TEACHERS OR ADMINISTRATORS IN THE DISTRICT WORK- 28 ING IN A SCHOOL IN ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS; AND (V) ESTABLISH STEPS TO 29 IMPROVE HIRING, INDUCTION, TEACHER EVALUATION, PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT, 30 TEACHER ADVANCEMENT, SCHOOL CULTURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE. 31 IN ADDITION TO THESE INTERVENTIONS, THE RECEIVER MAY TAKE OTHER 32 ACTIONS TO SUPPORT THE TURNAROUND PLAN INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO: (I) 33 REALLOCATE THE USES OF THE EXISTING BUDGET OF THE DISTRICT; (II) EXPAND 34 THE SCHOOL DAY OR SCHOOL YEAR OR BOTH OF SCHOOLS IN THE DISTRICT; (III) 35 LIMIT, SUSPEND OR CHANGE ONE OR MORE PROVISIONS OF ANY CONTRACT OR 36 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT IN THE DISTRICT; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT 37 THE RECEIVER SHALL NOT REDUCE THE COMPENSATION OF AN ADMINISTRATOR, 38 TEACHER OR STAFF MEMBER UNLESS THE HOURS OF THE PERSON ARE PROPORTION- 39 ATELY REDUCED; (IV) ADD FULL-DAY PRE-KINDERGARTEN AND FULL-DAY KINDER- 40 GARTEN PROGRAMS, IF THE DISTRICT DOES NOT ALREADY HAVE SUCH PROGRAMS; 41 (V) DIRECT THE RECEIVER, IN ACCORDANCE WITH PARAGRAPHS (F) AND (G) OF 42 THIS SUBDIVISION, TO ABOLISH THE POSITIONS OF ALL MEMBERS OF THE TEACH- 43 ING AND ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPERVISORY STAFF ASSIGNED TO A SCHOOL DESIG- 44 NATED AS A FAILING SCHOOL PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-F OF 45 THIS PART, AND TERMINATE THE EMPLOYMENT OF ANY BUILDING PRINCIPAL 46 ASSIGNED TO SUCH A SCHOOL AND REQUIRE THEM TO REAPPLY FOR THEIR POSI- 47 TIONS IN THE DISTRICT, WITH FULL DISCRETION VESTED IN THE RECEIVER 48 REGARDING ANY SUCH REAPPLICATIONS; (VI) INCLUDE A PROVISION OF JOB-EM- 49 BEDDED PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TEACHERS IN THE DISTRICT, WITH AN 50 EMPHASIS ON STRATEGIES THAT INVOLVE TEACHER INPUT AND FEEDBACK; (VII) 51 ESTABLISH A PLAN FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR ADMINISTRATORS IN THE 52 DISTRICT, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON STRATEGIES THAT DEVELOP LEADERSHIP SKILLS 53 AND USE THE PRINCIPLES OF DISTRIBUTIVE LEADERSHIP; AND/OR (VIII) ORDER 54 THE CONVERSION OF A DISTRICT SCHOOL THAT HAS BEEN DESIGNATED AS FAILING 55 PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-F OF THIS PART WITHOUT A VOTE OF 56 THE PARENTS OF THE SCHOOL, PROVIDED THAT NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER S. 2010 22 A. 3010 1 PROVISION OF THE LAW TO THE CONTRARY, THE BOARD OF REGENTS SHALL BE THE 2 CHARTER ENTITY FOR SUCH CHARTER SCHOOL AND THE PROVISIONS OF PARAGRAPH 3 (B) AND SUBPARAGRAPH (I) OF PARAGRAPH (B-1) OF SUBDIVISION THREE OF 4 SECTION TWENTY-EIGHT HUNDRED FIFTY-FOUR OF THIS CHAPTER SHALL NOT APPLY 5 TO SUCH A CONVERSION CHARTER SCHOOL. 6 (F) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO 7 THE CONTRARY, UPON DESIGNATION OF A SCHOOL DISTRICT AS A FAILING SCHOOL 8 DISTRICT PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART, THE 9 ABOLITION OF POSITIONS OF MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING AND ADMINISTRATIVE AND 10 SUPERVISORY STAFF OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL THEREAFTER BE GOVERNED BY 11 THE APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED TEN, 12 TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-FIVE, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-EIGHT OR 13 THREE THOUSAND THIRTEEN OF THIS CHAPTER. A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING 14 PRINCIPAL WHO HAS RECEIVED TWO OR MORE COMPOSITE RATINGS OF INEFFECTIVE 15 ON AN ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW OR WHO HAS NEVER RECEIVED 16 AN EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE RATING ON SUCH A REVIEW SHALL BE DEEMED 17 NOT TO HAVE RENDERED FAITHFUL AND COMPETENT SERVICE WITHIN THE MEANING 18 OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED TEN, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-FIVE, 19 TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-EIGHT OR THREE THOUSAND THIRTEEN OF THIS 20 CHAPTER. WHEN A POSITION OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR BUILDING PRINCIPAL IS 21 ABOLISHED, THE SERVICES OF THE TEACHER OR ADMINISTRATOR OR SUPERVISOR 22 WITHIN THE TENURE AREA OF THE POSITION WITH THE LOWEST SCORE ON THE 23 STATE GROWTH AND OTHER COMPARABLE MEASURES SUBCOMPONENT OF THE MOST 24 RECENT ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW SHALL BE DISCONTINUED, 25 PROVIDED THAT SENIORITY WITHIN THE TENURE OF THE POSITION SHALL BE USED 26 SOLELY TO DETERMINE WHICH POSITION SHOULD BE DISCONTINUED IN THE EVENT 27 OF A TIE. 28 (G) THE RECEIVER MAY ABOLISH THE POSITIONS OF ALL MEMBERS OF THE 29 TEACHING AND SUPERVISORY STAFF ASSIGNED TO A SCHOOL DESIGNATED AS FAIL- 30 ING PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-F OF THIS PART, AND TERMINATE 31 ANY BUILDING PRINCIPAL ASSIGNED TO SUCH SCHOOL WHO IS NOT IN A TENURED 32 POSITION, AND REQUIRE THEM TO REAPPLY FOR PROBATIONARY APPOINTMENT. THE 33 RECEIVER SHALL HAVE THE SAME DISCRETION UPON SUCH REAPPLICATION AS THE 34 BOARD OF EDUCATION HAS WITH ANY CANDIDATE FOR A PROBATIONARY APPOINT- 35 MENT. A DETERMINATION OF THE RECEIVER NOT TO REHIRE A TEACHER, ADMINIS- 36 TRATOR OR SUPERVISOR MAY BE APPEALED TO THE COMMISSIONER PURSUANT TO 37 SECTION THREE HUNDRED TEN OF THIS TITLE, PROVIDED THAT SUCH DETERMI- 38 NATION MAY ONLY BE SET ASIDE UPON A FINDING THAT THE RECEIVER'S DETERMI- 39 NATION WAS MADE IN BAD FAITH OR FOR CONSTITUTIONAL OR STATUTORY REASONS. 40 NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW TO THE CONTRARY, A MEMBER OF 41 THE TEACHING OR ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF WHO IS NOT REHIRED PURSUANT TO THIS 42 PARAGRAPH SHALL NOT HAVE ANY RIGHT TO BUMP OR DISPLACE ANY OTHER PERSON 43 EMPLOYED BY THE DISTRICT, BUT SHALL BE PLACED ON A PREFERRED ELIGIBILITY 44 LIST IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE 45 HUNDRED TEN, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-FIVE, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHT- 46 Y-EIGHT OR THREE THOUSAND THIRTEEN OF THIS CHAPTER. 47 (H) FOR A DISTRICT WITH ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS, THE PROFESSIONAL 48 DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING TIME FOR TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS IDENTIFIED 49 IN SUBPARAGRAPHS (IX) THROUGH (XI), INCLUSIVE, OF PARAGRAPH (D) OF THIS 50 SUBDIVISION SHALL INCLUDE SPECIFIC STRATEGIES AND CONTENT DESIGNED TO 51 MAXIMIZE THE RAPID ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS IN 52 THE DISTRICT. 53 6. A FINAL DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN SHALL BE ISSUED BY THE RECEIVER 54 WITHIN SIX MONTHS OF DESIGNATION OF THE DISTRICT AS A FAILING SCHOOL 55 DISTRICT. A COPY OF SUCH PLAN SHALL BE PROVIDED TO THE BOARD OF EDUCA- 56 TION, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS AND THE COLLECTIVE BARGAINING REPRE- S. 2010 23 A. 3010 1 SENTATIVES OF TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT. THE 2 PLAN SHALL BE PUBLICLY AVAILABLE AND SHALL BE POSTED ON THE DEPARTMENT'S 3 WEBSITE AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT'S WEBSITE, AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL 4 PROVIDE NOTICE TO PARENTS OF SUCH DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN AND ITS 5 AVAILABILITY. 6 7. THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN SHALL BE AUTHORIZED FOR A PERIOD OF 7 NOT MORE THAN THREE YEARS. THE RECEIVER MAY DEVELOP ADDITIONAL COMPO- 8 NENTS OF THE PLAN AND SHALL DEVELOP ANNUAL GOALS FOR EACH COMPONENT OF 9 THE PLAN IN A MANNER CONSISTENT WITH THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION. THE 10 RECEIVER SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR MEETING THE GOALS OF THE DISTRICT 11 TURNAROUND PLAN. 12 8. THE RECEIVER SHALL PROVIDE A WRITTEN REPORT TO THE BOARD OF EDUCA- 13 TION ON A QUARTERLY BASIS TO PROVIDE SPECIFIC INFORMATION ABOUT THE 14 PROGRESS BEING MADE ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DISTRICT'S DISTRICT 15 TURNAROUND PLAN. ONE OF THE QUARTERLY REPORTS SHALL BE THE ANNUAL EVALU- 16 ATION REQUIRED IN SUBDIVISION NINE OF THIS SECTION. 17 9. THE COMMISSIONER SHALL EVALUATE THE PERFORMANCE OF THE RECEIVER ON 18 NOT LESS THAN AN ANNUAL BASIS. THE PURPOSE OF SUCH EVALUATION SHALL BE 19 TO ASSESS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN AND DETER- 20 MINE WHETHER THE DISTRICT HAS MET THE ANNUAL GOALS CONTAINED IN THE 21 DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN. THE EVALUATION SHALL BE IN WRITING AND SUBMIT- 22 TED TO THE COMMISSIONER AND THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE SCHOOL 23 DISTRICT NO LATER THAN JULY FIRST FOR THE PRECEDING SCHOOL YEAR. IF THE 24 COMMISSIONER DETERMINES THAT THE DISTRICT HAS MET THE ANNUAL PERFORMANCE 25 GOALS STATED IN THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN, THE EVALUATION SHALL BE 26 CONSIDERED SUFFICIENT AND THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND 27 PLAN SHALL CONTINUE. IF THE COMMISSIONER DETERMINES THAT THE RECEIVER 28 HAS NOT MET ONE OR MORE GOALS IN THE PLAN AND THE FAILURE TO MEET THE 29 GOALS MAY BE CORRECTED THROUGH REASONABLE MODIFICATION OF THE PLAN, THE 30 COMMISSIONER MAY REQUIRE THE RECEIVER TO AMEND THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND 31 PLAN, AS NECESSARY. IF THE COMMISSIONER DETERMINES THAT THE RECEIVER HAS 32 SUBSTANTIALLY FAILED TO MEET MULTIPLE GOALS IN THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND 33 PLAN, THE COMMISSIONER MAY TERMINATE THE CONTRACT OF SUCH RECEIVER; 34 PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE TERMINATION SHALL NOT OCCUR BEFORE THE 35 COMPLETION OF THE FIRST FULL SCHOOL YEAR OF THE RECEIVERSHIP OF THE 36 DISTRICT. 37 10. AFTER THE PERIOD OF RECEIVERSHIP, THE COMMISSIONER SHALL CONDUCT A 38 REEVALUATION OF A DISTRICT'S STATUS AS FAILING PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION. 39 THE COMMISSIONER SHALL ADOPT REGULATIONS PROVIDING FOR: THE REMOVAL OF 40 A DESIGNATION OF A DISTRICT AS CHRONICALLY UNDERPERFORMING; AND THE 41 TRANSFER OF THE OPERATION OF A CHRONICALLY UNDERPERFORMING DISTRICT FROM 42 AN EXTERNAL RECEIVER BACK TO THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS AND THE BOARD 43 OF EDUCATION OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT, BASED ON THE MEASURABLE IMPROVEMENT 44 OF THE DISTRICT. 45 (A) THE REGULATIONS SHALL INCLUDE PROVISIONS TO ALLOW A DISTRICT TO 46 RETAIN MEASURES ADOPTED IN A DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN FOR A TRANSITIONAL 47 PERIOD IF, IN THE JUDGMENT OF THE COMMISSIONER, THE MEASURES WOULD 48 CONTRIBUTE TO THE CONTINUED IMPROVEMENT OF THE DISTRICT. SUCH REGU- 49 LATIONS SHALL ALSO INCLUDE PROVISIONS THAT CLEARLY IDENTIFY THE CONDI- 50 TIONS UNDER WHICH SUCH A TRANSITIONAL PERIOD SHALL END AND THE POWERS 51 GRANTED TO THE COMMISSIONER UNDER THIS SECTION SHALL CEASE TO APPLY TO A 52 DISTRICT PREVIOUSLY DESIGNATED AS A FAILING SCHOOL DISTRICT. 53 (B) PURSUANT TO THE REGULATIONS PROMULGATED BY THE COMMISSIONER, AT 54 ANY TIME AFTER A FAILING DISTRICT HAS BEEN PLACED IN RECEIVERSHIP, THE 55 BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT MAY PETITION THE COMMISSIONER 56 FOR A DETERMINATION AS TO WHETHER THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN SHOULD BE S. 2010 24 A. 3010 1 MODIFIED OR ELIMINATED AND WHETHER THE SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL NO LONGER 2 BE DESIGNATED AS FAILING. THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF A FAILING SCHOOL 3 DISTRICT MAY SEEK REVIEW BY COMMISSIONER FOLLOWING AN ADVERSE DETERMI- 4 NATION. 5 (C) IF, PURSUANT TO THE REGULATIONS ADOPTED BY THE COMMISSIONER, A 6 DISTRICT HAS NOT IMPROVED SUFFICIENTLY TO REMOVE THE DESIGNATION OF THE 7 DISTRICT AS FAILING, THE COMMISSIONER MAY: (I) JOINTLY DETERMINE SUBSE- 8 QUENT ANNUAL GOALS FOR EACH COMPONENT OF THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN 9 WITH THE RECEIVER AND RENEW THE DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN FOR AN ADDI- 10 TIONAL PERIOD OF NOT MORE THAN THREE YEARS; OR (II) TERMINATE THE 11 CONTRACT OF THE RECEIVER, APPOINT A NEW RECEIVER AND CREATE A NEW OR 12 MODIFIED DISTRICT TURNAROUND PLAN, CONSISTENT WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF 13 THIS SECTION. 14 S 2. The education law is amended by adding a new section 211-f to 15 read as follows: 16 S 211-F. TAKE OVER AND RESTRUCTURING FAILING SCHOOLS. 1. (A) THE 17 COMMISSIONER SHALL DESIGNATE AS FAILING EACH OF THE SCHOOLS THAT HAVE 18 BEEN IDENTIFIED UNDER THE STATE'S ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEM TO BE AMONG THE 19 LOWEST ACHIEVING FIVE PERCENT OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN THE STATE (PRIORITY 20 SCHOOLS) FOR AT LEAST THREE YEARS BASED UPON MEASURES OF STUDENT 21 ACHIEVEMENT AND OUTCOMES AND A METHODOLOGY PRESCRIBED IN THE REGULATIONS 22 OF THE COMMISSIONER, PROVIDED THAT THIS LIST SHALL NOT INCLUDE SCHOOLS 23 WITHIN A SPECIAL ACT SCHOOL DISTRICT AS DEFINED IN SUBDIVISION EIGHT OF 24 SECTION FOUR THOUSAND ONE OF THIS CHAPTER OR SCHOOLS CHARTERED PURSUANT 25 TO ARTICLE FIFTY-SIX OF THIS CHAPTER. 26 (B) A FAILING SCHOOL SHALL OPERATE IN ACCORDANCE WITH LAWS REGULATING 27 OTHER PUBLIC SCHOOLS, EXCEPT AS SUCH PROVISIONS MAY CONFLICT WITH THIS 28 SECTION OR ANY SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLANS CREATED THEREUNDER. 29 (C) UPON THE DESIGNATION OF A SCHOOL AS A FAILING SCHOOL IN ACCORDANCE 30 WITH REGULATIONS DEVELOPED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION, THE COMMISSIONER 31 SHALL APPOINT AN EXTERNAL RECEIVER TO MANAGE AND OPERATE THE SCHOOL AND 32 TO DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT A SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN FOR THE SCHOOL. THE 33 COMMISSIONER SHALL MAKE SUCH APPOINTMENTS AS EXPEDITIOUSLY AS POSSIBLE, 34 AND IN PRIORITIZING SCHOOLS FOR APPOINTMENTS THE COMMISSIONER SHALL GIVE 35 PRIORITY BASED ON THE SEVERITY AND DURATION OF THE SCHOOL'S DEFICIENCIES 36 IN STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT AND OUTCOMES. 37 2. (A) THE RECEIVER SHALL BE AUTHORIZED TO MANAGE AND OPERATE THE 38 FAILING SCHOOL AND SHALL HAVE THE POWER TO SUPERSEDE ANY DECISION OF THE 39 SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS OR CHIEF SCHOOL OFFICER, OR OF THE BOARD OF 40 EDUCATION OR OF THE BUILDING PRINCIPAL THAT IN THE JUDGMENT OF THE 41 RECEIVER CONFLICTS WITH THE SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN. THE RECEIVER SHALL 42 HAVE AUTHORITY TO REVIEW PROPOSED SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGETS PRIOR TO PRES- 43 ENTATION TO THE DISTRICT VOTERS, OR IN THE CASE OF A CITY SCHOOL 44 DISTRICT IN A CITY HAVING A POPULATION OF ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE THOU- 45 SAND OR MORE OR THE ADOPTION OF A CONTINGENCY BUDGET, PRIOR TO APPROVAL 46 BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, AND TO MODIFY THE PROPOSED BUDGET TO CONFORM 47 TO THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN. 48 (B) THE PROVISIONS OF PARAGRAPHS (B) AND (C) OF SUBDIVISION TWO OF 49 SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART SHALL APPLY TO RECEIVERS 50 APPOINTED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION. 51 3. BEFORE DEVELOPING THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN, THE RECEIVER SHALL 52 CONSULT WITH LOCAL STAKEHOLDERS SUCH AS: (A) THE BOARD OF EDUCATION; (B) 53 THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS; (C) THE BUILDING PRINCIPAL; (D) TEACHERS 54 ASSIGNED TO THE SCHOOL AND THEIR COLLECTIVE BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVE; 55 (E) SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS ASSIGNED TO THE SCHOOL AND THEIR COLLECTIVE 56 BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVE; (F) PARENTS OF STUDENTS ATTENDING THE SCHOOL S. 2010 25 A. 3010 1 OR THEIR REPRESENTATIVES; (G) REPRESENTATIVES OF APPLICABLE STATE AND 2 LOCAL SOCIAL SERVICE, HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES; (H) AS APPRO- 3 PRIATE, REPRESENTATIVES OF LOCAL CAREER EDUCATION PROVIDERS, STATE AND 4 LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES AND THE LOCAL BUSINESS COMMUNITY; 5 (I) FOR ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, REPRESENTATIVES OF LOCAL PREKINDERGARTEN 6 PROGRAMS AND, (J) AS NEEDED FOR MIDDLE SCHOOLS OR HIGH SCHOOLS, REPRE- 7 SENTATIVES OF LOCAL HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS. 8 4. IN CREATING THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN, THE RECEIVER SHALL 9 INCLUDE PROVISIONS INTENDED TO MAXIMIZE THE RAPID ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT 10 OF STUDENTS AT THE SCHOOL AND SHALL ENSURE THAT THE PLAN ADDRESSES 11 DISTRICT LEADERSHIP AND CAPACITY, SCHOOL LEADER PRACTICES AND DECISIONS, 12 CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT, TEACHER PRACTICES AND DECISIONS, 13 STUDENT SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENTAL HEALTH AND FAMILY AND COMMU- 14 NITY ENGAGEMENT. THE RECEIVER SHALL, TO THE EXTENT PRACTICABLE, BASE THE 15 PLAN ON THE FINDINGS OF ANY RECENT DIAGNOSTIC REVIEW OR ASSESSMENT OF 16 THE SCHOOL THAT HAS BEEN CONDUCTED AND, AS APPLIED TO THE SCHOOL, 17 STUDENT OUTCOME DATA AS SPECIFIED IN PARAGRAPH (A) OF SUBDIVISION FIVE 18 OF SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART. 19 5. (A) THE RECEIVER SHALL ADDRESS IN THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN THE 20 STRATEGIES SET FORTH IN PARAGRAPH (B) OF SUBDIVISION FIVE OF SECTION TWO 21 HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART, AS APPLIED TO THE SCHOOL, EXCEPT THAT 22 INSTEAD OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGET, THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN 23 SHALL INCLUDE A FINANCIAL PLAN. 24 (B) AS NECESSARY, THE COMMISSIONERS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, THE 25 OFFICE OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND 26 OTHER APPLICABLE STATE AND LOCAL SOCIAL SERVICE, HEALTH, MENTAL HEALTH 27 AND CHILD WELFARE OFFICIALS SHALL COORDINATE WITH THE RECEIVER REGARDING 28 THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE STRATEGIES DESCRIBED IN SUBPARAGRAPHS (I) 29 THROUGH (III) OF PARAGRAPH (B) OF SUBDIVISION FIVE OF SECTION TWO 30 HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART THAT ARE INCLUDED IN THE SCHOOL INTER- 31 VENTION PLAN AND SHALL, SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION, REASONABLY SUPPORT THE 32 IMPLEMENTATION CONSISTENT WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF STATE AND FEDERAL LAW 33 APPLICABLE TO THE RELEVANT PROGRAMS THAT EACH SUCH OFFICIAL IS RESPONSI- 34 BLE FOR ADMINISTERING, AND GRANT COMMUNITY SCHOOLS ACCESS TO COMPETITIVE 35 GRANTS, AS ALLOWABLE. 36 6. IN ORDER TO ASSESS THE SCHOOL ACROSS MULTIPLE MEASURES OF SCHOOL 37 PERFORMANCE AND STUDENT SUCCESS, THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN SHALL 38 INCLUDE MEASURABLE ANNUAL GOALS, AS SET FORTH IN PARAGRAPH (D) OF SUBDI- 39 VISION FIVE OF SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART, THAT ARE 40 TAILORED TO THE NEEDS OF THE SCHOOL. 41 7. (A) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY GENERAL OR SPECIAL LAW TO THE CONTRARY, IN 42 CREATING AND IMPLEMENTING THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN, THE RECEIVER 43 SHALL, AFTER CONSULTING WITH STAKEHOLDERS: (I) CONVERT SCHOOLS TO COMMU- 44 NITY SCHOOLS TO PROVIDE EXPANDED HEALTH, MENTAL HEALTH AND OTHER 45 SERVICES TO THE COMMUNITY; (II) EXPAND, ALTER OR REPLACE THE CURRICULUM 46 AND PROGRAM OFFERINGS OF THE SCHOOL, INCLUDING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF 47 RESEARCH-BASED EARLY LITERACY PROGRAMS, EARLY INTERVENTIONS FOR STRUGGL- 48 ING READERS AND THE TEACHING OF ADVANCED PLACEMENT COURSES OR OTHER 49 RIGOROUS NATIONALLY OR INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNIZED COURSES, IF THE SCHOOL 50 DOES NOT ALREADY HAVE SUCH PROGRAMS OR COURSES; (III) REPLACE UNQUALI- 51 FIED TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS, INCLUDING SCHOOL LEADERSHIP; (IV) 52 INCREASE SALARIES OF CURRENT OR PROSPECTIVE TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS; 53 AND (V) IMPROVED HIRING, INDUCTION, TEACHER EVALUATION, PROFESSIONAL 54 DEVELOPMENT, TEACHER ADVANCEMENT, SCHOOL CULTURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL 55 STRUCTURE. S. 2010 26 A. 3010 1 IN ADDITION TO THE ABOVE INTERVENTIONS, THE RECEIVER MAY ALSO: (I) 2 REALLOCATE THE USES OF THE EXISTING BUDGET OF THE SCHOOL; (II) EXPAND 3 THE SCHOOL DAY OR SCHOOL YEAR OR BOTH OF THE SCHOOL; (III) FOR A SCHOOL 4 THAT OFFERS THE FIRST GRADE, ADD PRE-KINDERGARTEN AND FULL-DAY KINDER- 5 GARTEN CLASSES, IF THE SCHOOL DOES NOT ALREADY HAVE SUCH CLASSES; (IV) 6 LIMIT, SUSPEND, OR CHANGE ONE OR MORE PROVISIONS OF ANY CONTRACT OR 7 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT, AS THE CONTRACT OR AGREEMENT APPLIES TO 8 THE SCHOOL; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE RECEIVER SHALL NOT REDUCE THE 9 COMPENSATION OF AN ADMINISTRATOR, TEACHER OR STAFF MEMBER UNLESS THE 10 HOURS OF THE PERSON ARE PROPORTIONATELY REDUCED; AND PROVIDED FURTHER, 11 THAT UPON REQUEST OF THE RECEIVER THE PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BOARD 12 SHALL REQUIRE THE BOARD OF EDUCATION AND ANY APPLICABLE COLLECTIVE 13 BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVES TO BARGAIN IN GOOD FAITH FOR AT LEAST THIRTY 14 DAYS BEFORE EXERCISING AUTHORITY PURSUANT TO THIS CLAUSE; (V) IN ACCORD- 15 ANCE WITH PARAGRAPHS (B) AND (C) OF THIS SUBDIVISION, TO ABOLISH THE 16 POSITIONS OF ALL MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING AND ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPERVI- 17 SORY STAFF ASSIGNED TO THE FAILING SCHOOL AND TERMINATE THE EMPLOYMENT 18 OF ANY BUILDING PRINCIPAL ASSIGNED TO SUCH A SCHOOL, AND REQUIRE THEM TO 19 REAPPLY FOR THEIR POSITIONS IN THE DISTRICT; (VI) INCLUDE A PROVISION OF 20 JOB-EMBEDDED PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TEACHERS AT THE SCHOOL, WITH 21 AN EMPHASIS ON STRATEGIES THAT INVOLVE TEACHER INPUT AND FEEDBACK; (VII) 22 ESTABLISH A PLAN FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR ADMINISTRATORS AT THE 23 SCHOOL, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON STRATEGIES THAT DEVELOP LEADERSHIP SKILLS 24 AND USE THE PRINCIPLES OF DISTRIBUTIVE LEADERSHIP; AND/OR (VIII) ORDER 25 THE CONVERSION OF A DISTRICT SCHOOL THAT HAS BEEN DESIGNATED AS FAILING 26 PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION WITHOUT A VOTE OF THE PARENTS OF THE SCHOOL, 27 PROVIDED THAT NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW TO THE CONTRA- 28 RY, THE BOARD OF REGENTS SHALL BE THE CHARTER ENTITY FOR SUCH CHARTER 29 SCHOOL AND THE PROVISIONS OF PARAGRAPH (B) AND SUBPARAGRAPH (I) OF PARA- 30 GRAPH (B-1) OF SUBDIVISION THREE OF SECTION TWENTY-EIGHT HUNDRED FIFTY- 31 FOUR OF THIS CHAPTER SHALL NOT APPLY TO SUCH A CONVERSION CHARTER 32 SCHOOL. 33 (B) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO 34 THE CONTRARY, UPON DESIGNATION OF ANY SCHOOL OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT AS A 35 FAILING SCHOOL PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION, THE ABOLITION OF POSITIONS OF 36 MEMBERS OF THE TEACHING AND ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPERVISORY STAFF OF THE 37 SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL THEREAFTER BE GOVERNED BY THE APPLICABLE 38 PROVISIONS OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED TEN, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED 39 EIGHTY-FIVE, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-EIGHT OR THREE THOUSAND THIRTEEN 40 OF THIS CHAPTER AS MODIFIED BY THIS PARAGRAPH. A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR 41 BUILDING PRINCIPAL WHO HAS RECEIVED TWO OR MORE COMPOSITE RATINGS OF 42 INEFFECTIVE ON AN ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW OR WHO HAS 43 NEVER RECEIVED AN EFFECTIVE OR HIGHLY EFFECTIVE RATING ON SUCH A REVIEW 44 SHALL BE DEEMED NOT TO HAVE RENDERED FAITHFUL AND COMPETENT SERVICE 45 WITHIN THE MEANING OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED TEN, TWENTY-FIVE 46 HUNDRED EIGHTY-FIVE, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-EIGHT OR THREE THOUSAND 47 THIRTEEN OF THIS CHAPTER. WHEN A POSITION OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR 48 BUILDING PRINCIPAL IS ABOLISHED, THE SERVICES OF THE TEACHER OR ADMINIS- 49 TRATOR OR SUPERVISOR WITHIN THE TENURE AREA OF THE POSITION WITH THE 50 LOWEST SCORE ON THE STATE GROWTH AND OTHER COMPARABLE MEASURES SUBCOMPO- 51 NENT OF THE MOST RECENT ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW SHALL BE 52 DISCONTINUED, PROVIDED THAT SENIORITY WITHIN THE TENURE OF THE POSITION 53 SHALL BE USED SOLELY TO DETERMINE WHICH POSITION SHOULD BE DISCONTINUED 54 IN THE EVENT OF A TIE. 55 (C) THE RECEIVER MAY ABOLISH THE POSITIONS OF ALL MEMBERS OF THE 56 TEACHING AND SUPERVISORY STAFF ASSIGNED TO A SCHOOL DESIGNATED AS FAIL- S. 2010 27 A. 3010 1 ING PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION, AND TERMINATE ANY BUILDING PRINCIPAL 2 ASSIGNED TO SUCH SCHOOL WHO IS NOT IN A TENURED POSITION, AND REQUIRE 3 THEM TO REAPPLY FOR A PROBATIONARY APPOINTMENT. THE BOARD SHALL HAVE 4 THE SAME DISCRETION UPON SUCH REAPPLICATION AS IT HAS WITH ANY CANDIDATE 5 FOR A PROBATIONARY APPOINTMENT. A DETERMINATION OF THE BOARD NOT TO 6 REHIRE A TEACHER, ADMINISTRATOR OR SUPERVISOR MAY BE APPEALED TO THE 7 COMMISSIONER PURSUANT TO SECTION THREE HUNDRED TEN OF THIS TITLE, 8 PROVIDED THAT SUCH DETERMINATION MAY ONLY BE SET ASIDE UPON A FINDING 9 THAT THE BOARD'S DETERMINATION WAS MADE IN BAD FAITH OR FOR CONSTITU- 10 TIONALLY OR STATUTORILY IMPERMISSIBLE REASONS. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER 11 PROVISION OF LAW TO THE CONTRARY, A MEMBER OF THE TEACHING OR ADMINIS- 12 TRATIVE STAFF WHO IS NOT REHIRED PURSUANT TO THIS PARAGRAPH SHALL NOT 13 HAVE ANY RIGHT TO BUMP OR DISPLACE ANY OTHER PERSON EMPLOYED BY THE 14 DISTRICT, BUT SHALL BE PLACED ON A PREFERRED ELIGIBILITY LIST IN ACCORD- 15 ANCE WITH THE APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED TEN, 16 TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-FIVE, TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY-EIGHT OR 17 THREE THOUSAND THIRTEEN OF THIS CHAPTER. 18 (D) FOR A SCHOOL WITH ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS, THE PROFESSIONAL 19 DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING TIME FOR TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS IDENTIFIED 20 IN CLAUSES (VI) THROUGH (VIII) OF THE CLOSING PARAGRAPH OF PARAGRAPH (A) 21 OF THIS SUBDIVISION, SHALL INCLUDE SPECIFIC STRATEGIES AND CONTENT 22 DESIGNED TO MAXIMIZE THE RAPID ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF THE ENGLISH 23 LANGUAGE LEARNERS. 24 (E) IF THE RECEIVER PROPOSES TO REALLOCATE FUNDS TO THE SCHOOL FROM 25 THE BUDGET OF THE DISTRICT UNDER CLAUSE (I) OF THE CLOSING PARAGRAPH OF 26 PARAGRAPH (A) OF THIS SUBDIVISION, THE RECEIVER SHALL NOTIFY THE BOARD 27 OF EDUCATION, IN WRITING, OF THE AMOUNT OF AND RATIONALE FOR THE REALLO- 28 CATION. 29 8. A FINAL SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN SHALL BE ISSUED BY THE RECEIVER 30 WITHIN SIX MONTHS OF DESIGNATION OF THE SCHOOL AS A FAILING SCHOOL. A 31 COPY OF SUCH PLAN SHALL BE PROVIDED TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, THE 32 SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS AND THE COLLECTIVE BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVES 33 OF TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT. THE PLAN SHALL BE 34 PUBLICLY AVAILABLE AND SHALL BE POSTED ON THE DEPARTMENT'S WEBSITE AND 35 THE SCHOOL DISTRICT'S WEBSITE, AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL PROVIDE 36 NOTICE TO PARENTS OF SUCH SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN AND ITS AVAILABILITY. 37 9. EACH SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN SHALL BE AUTHORIZED FOR A PERIOD OF 38 NOT MORE THAN THREE YEARS. THE EXTERNAL RECEIVER, AS APPLICABLE, MAY 39 DEVELOP ADDITIONAL COMPONENTS OF THE PLAN AND SHALL DEVELOP ANNUAL GOALS 40 FOR EACH COMPONENT OF THE PLAN IN A MANNER CONSISTENT WITH THIS SECTION, 41 ALL OF WHICH MUST BE APPROVED BY THE COMMISSIONER. THE EXTERNAL RECEIV- 42 ER, AS APPLICABLE, SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR MEETING THE GOALS OF THE 43 SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN. 44 10. THE EXTERNAL RECEIVER SHALL PROVIDE A WRITTEN REPORT TO THE BOARD 45 OF EDUCATION ON A QUARTERLY BASIS TO PROVIDE SPECIFIC INFORMATION ABOUT 46 THE PROGRESS BEING MADE ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SCHOOL'S SCHOOL 47 INTERVENTION PLAN. ONE OF THE QUARTERLY REPORTS SHALL BE THE ANNUAL 48 EVALUATION UNDER SUBDIVISION ELEVEN OF THIS SECTION. 49 11. (A) THE COMMISSIONER SHALL EVALUATE EACH FAILING SCHOOL AT LEAST 50 ANNUALLY. THE PURPOSE OF THE EVALUATION SHALL BE TO DETERMINE WHETHER 51 THE SCHOOL HAS MET THE ANNUAL GOALS IN ITS SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN AND 52 ASSESS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PLAN AT THE SCHOOL. THE REVIEW SHALL BE 53 IN WRITING AND SHALL BE SUBMITTED TO THE SUPERINTENDENT AND THE BOARD OF 54 EDUCATION NOT LATER THAN JULY FIRST FOR THE PRECEDING SCHOOL YEAR. THE 55 REVIEW SHALL BE SUBMITTED IN A FORMAT DETERMINED BY THE COMMISSIONER. S. 2010 28 A. 3010 1 (B) IF THE COMMISSIONER DETERMINES THAT THE SCHOOL HAS MET THE ANNUAL 2 PERFORMANCE GOALS STATED IN THE SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN, THE REVIEW 3 SHALL BE CONSIDERED SUFFICIENT AND THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SCHOOL 4 INTERVENTION PLAN SHALL CONTINUE. IF THE COMMISSIONER DETERMINES THAT 5 THE SCHOOL HAS NOT MET ONE OR MORE GOALS IN THE PLAN, THE COMMISSIONER 6 MAY MODIFY THE PLAN. 7 12. UPON THE EXPIRATION OF A SCHOOL INTERVENTION PLAN FOR A FAILING 8 SCHOOL, THE COMMISSIONER SHALL CONDUCT A REVIEW OF THE SCHOOL TO DETER- 9 MINE WHETHER THE SCHOOL HAS IMPROVED SUFFICIENTLY, REQUIRES FURTHER 10 IMPROVEMENT OR HAS FAILED TO IMPROVE. ON THE BASIS OF SUCH REVIEW, THE 11 COMMISSIONER MAY: (A) ON THE BASIS OF THE EXTERNAL RECEIVER'S PROGRESS 12 IN SUCCESSFULLY MEETING THE TERMS OF THE PLAN, RENEW THE PLAN WITH THE 13 EXTERNAL RECEIVER FOR AN ADDITIONAL PERIOD OF NOT MORE THAN THREE YEARS; 14 (B) IF THE FAILING SCHOOL REMAINS FAILING AND THE TERMS OF THE PLAN HAVE 15 NOT BEEN SUBSTANTIALLY MET, TERMINATE THE CONTRACT WITH THE RECEIVER AND 16 APPOINT A NEW EXTERNAL RECEIVER; OR (C) DETERMINE THAT THE SCHOOL HAS 17 IMPROVED SUFFICIENTLY FOR THE DESIGNATION OF FAILING TO BE REMOVED. 18 13. THE COMMISSIONER SHALL BE AUTHORIZED TO ADOPT REGULATIONS TO CARRY 19 OUT THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION. 20 14. THE COMMISSIONER SHALL REPORT ANNUALLY TO THE GOVERNOR AND THE 21 LEGISLATURE ON THE IMPLEMENTATION AND FISCAL IMPACT OF THIS SECTION AND 22 SECTION TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-G OF THIS PART. THE REPORT SHALL INCLUDE, BUT 23 NOT BE LIMITED TO, A LIST OF ALL SCHOOLS CURRENTLY DESIGNATED AS FAIL- 24 ING, A LIST OF ALL DISTRICTS CURRENTLY DESIGNATED AS FAILING, AND THE 25 STRATEGIES USED IN EACH OF THE SCHOOLS AND DISTRICTS TO MAXIMIZE THE 26 RAPID ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF STUDENTS. 27 S 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2015; provided, however, that 28 effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any rule 29 or regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its effec- 30 tive date is authorized and directed to be made and completed on or 31 before such date. 32 SUBPART E 33 Section 1. Subdivision 7-a of section 305 of the education law, as 34 added by chapter 296 of the laws of 2008, is amended to read as follows: 35 7-a. a. In addition to the authority to revoke and annul a certificate 36 of qualification of a teacher in a proceeding brought pursuant to subdi- 37 vision seven of this section, the commissioner shall be authorized, and 38 it shall be his or her duty, to revoke and annul in accordance with this 39 subdivision the teaching certificate of a teacher convicted of a sex 40 offense for which registration as a sex offender is required pursuant to 41 article six-C of the correction law OR OF ANY OTHER VIOLENT FELONY 42 OFFENSE IN WHICH A CHILD WAS A VICTIM. 43 b. As used in this subdivision, the following terms shall have the 44 following meanings: 45 (1) "conviction" means any conviction whether by plea of guilty or 46 nolo contendere or from a verdict after trial or otherwise; 47 (2) "sex offense" means an offense set forth in subdivision two or 48 three of section one hundred sixty-eight-a of the correction law, 49 including an offense committed in any jurisdiction for which the offen- 50 der is required to register as a sex offender in New York; 51 (3) "teacher" means any professional educator holding a teaching 52 certificate as defined in subparagraph four of this paragraph, including 53 but not limited to a classroom teacher, teaching assistant, pupil S. 2010 29 A. 3010 1 personnel services professional, school administrator or supervisor or 2 superintendent of schools; [and] 3 (4) "teaching certificate" means the certificate or license or other 4 certificate of qualification granted to a teacher by any authority what- 5 soever; AND 6 (5) "VIOLENT FELONY OFFENSE" MEANS ANY OFFENSE AS DEFINED IN SUBDIVI- 7 SION ONE OF SECTION 70.02 OF THE PENAL LAW. 8 c. Upon receipt of a certified copy of a criminal history record show- 9 ing that a teacher has been convicted of a sex offense or sex offenses 10 OR A VIOLENT FELONY OFFENSE IN WHICH A CHILD WAS A VICTIM or upon 11 receipt of notice of such a conviction as provided in paragraph d of 12 this subdivision, the commissioner shall automatically revoke and annul 13 the teaching certificate of such teacher without the right to a hearing. 14 The commissioner shall mail notice of the revocation and annulment 15 pursuant to this subdivision by certified mail, return receipt 16 requested, and by first-class mail directed to the teacher at such 17 teacher's last known address and, if different, the last address filed 18 by the certificate holder with the commissioner and to the teacher's 19 counsel of record in the criminal proceeding as reported in the notice 20 pursuant to paragraph d of this subdivision. Such notice shall inform 21 the teacher that his or her certificate has been revoked and annulled, 22 identify the sex offense or sex offenses OR VIOLENT FELONY OFFENSE OR 23 OFFENSES IN WHICH A CHILD WAS A VICTIM of which the teacher has been 24 convicted and shall set forth the procedure to follow if the teacher 25 denies he or she is the person who has been so convicted. If such teach- 26 er notifies the commissioner in writing within twenty-five days after 27 the date of receipt of the notice that he or she is not the same person 28 as the convicted offender identified in the criminal record or identi- 29 fied pursuant to paragraph d of this subdivision, provides proof to 30 reasonably support such claim and the commissioner is satisfied the 31 proof establishes such claim, the commissioner shall, within five busi- 32 ness days of the receipt of such proof, restore such teacher's teaching 33 certificate retroactive to the date of revocation and annulment. 34 d. Upon conviction of a teacher of a sex offense defined in this 35 subdivision, the district attorney or other prosecuting authority who 36 obtained such conviction shall provide notice of such conviction to the 37 commissioner identifying the sex offense or sex offenses OR VIOLENT 38 FELONY OFFENSE OR OFFENSES IN WHICH A CHILD WAS A VICTIM of which the 39 teacher has been convicted, the name and address of such offender and 40 other identifying information prescribed by the commissioner, including 41 the offender's date of birth and social security number, to the extent 42 consistent with federal and state laws governing personal privacy and 43 confidentiality of information. Such notice shall also include the name 44 and business address of the offender's counsel of record in the criminal 45 proceeding. 46 e. Upon receipt of proof that the conviction or convictions that 47 formed the basis for revocation and annulment of the teacher's teaching 48 certificate pursuant to this subdivision have been set aside upon appeal 49 or otherwise reversed, vacated or annulled, the commissioner shall be 50 required to conduct a due process hearing pursuant to subdivision seven 51 of this section and part eighty-three of title eight of the New York 52 codes, rules and regulations prior to making a determination as to 53 whether to reinstate the teacher's original teaching certificate. Such 54 determination shall be made within ninety days after such proof has been 55 received. S. 2010 30 A. 3010 1 f. Except as provided in paragraph g of this subdivision, and notwith- 2 standing any other provision of law to the contrary, a teacher shall be 3 reinstated to his or her position of employment in a public school, with 4 full back pay and benefits from the date his or her certificate was 5 revoked or annulled to the date of such reinstatement, under the follow- 6 ing circumstances: 7 (i) The termination of employment was based solely on the conviction 8 of a sex offense, OR CONVICTION OF A VIOLENT FELONY OFFENSE OR OFFENSES 9 IN WHICH A CHILD WAS A VICTIM, or the revocation or annulment of a 10 certificate based on such conviction, and such conviction has been set 11 aside on appeal or otherwise reversed, vacated or annulled and the 12 commissioner has reinstated the teacher's certification pursuant to 13 paragraph e of this subdivision; or 14 (ii) The termination of employment was based solely on the conviction 15 of a sex offense OR VIOLENT FELONY OFFENSE OR OFFENSES IN WHICH A CHILD 16 WAS A VICTIM and it has been determined that the teacher is not the same 17 person as the convicted offender. 18 g. If a teacher's employment was terminated as a result of a discipli- 19 nary proceeding conducted pursuant to section three thousand twenty-a of 20 this chapter or other disciplinary hearing conducted pursuant to any 21 collective bargaining or contractual agreement on one or more grounds 22 other than conviction of a sex offense, or the revocation or annulment 23 of a certificate based on such conviction, then nothing in paragraph f 24 of this subdivision shall require a school district to reinstate employ- 25 ment of such teacher or be liable for back pay or benefits. 26 h. No provision of this article shall be deemed to preclude the 27 following: (i) the commissioner from conducting a due process hearing 28 pursuant to subdivision seven of this section and part eighty-three of 29 title eight of the New York codes, rules and regulations; or (ii) a 30 school district or employing board from bringing a disciplinary proceed- 31 ing pursuant to section three thousand twenty-a of this chapter; or 32 (iii) a school district or employing board from bringing an alternative 33 disciplinary proceeding conducted pursuant to a collective bargaining or 34 contractual agreement. 35 i. The commissioner shall be authorized to promulgate any regulations 36 necessary to implement the provisions of this subdivision. 37 S 2. Subdivision 3 and paragraph a of subdivision 4 of section 3020 of 38 the education law, as amended by chapter 103 of the laws of 2010, are 39 amended to read as follows: 40 3. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the procedures 41 set forth in section three thousand twenty-a of this article and subdi- 42 vision seven of section twenty-five hundred ninety-j of this chapter may 43 be modified or replaced by agreements negotiated between the city school 44 district of the city of New York and any employee organization repres- 45 enting employees or titles that are or were covered by any memorandum of 46 agreement executed by such city school district and the council of 47 supervisors and administrators of the city of New York on or after 48 December first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine. Where such procedures are 49 so modified or replaced: (i) compliance with such modification or 50 replacement procedures shall satisfy any provision in this chapter that 51 requires compliance with section three thousand twenty-a, (ii) any 52 employee against whom charges have been preferred prior to the effective 53 date of such modification or replacement shall continue to be subject to 54 the provisions of such section as in effect on the date such charges 55 were preferred, (iii) the provisions of subdivisions one and two of this 56 section shall not apply to agreements negotiated pursuant to this subdi- S. 2010 31 A. 3010 1 vision, and (iv) in accordance with paragraph (e) of subdivision one of 2 section two hundred nine-a of the civil service law, such modification 3 or replacement procedures contained in an agreement negotiated pursuant 4 to this subdivision shall continue as terms of such agreement after its 5 expiration until a new agreement is negotiated; provided that any alter- 6 nate disciplinary procedures contained in a collective bargaining agree- 7 ment that becomes effective on or after July first, two thousand ten 8 shall provide for an expedited hearing process before a single hearing 9 officer in accordance with subparagraph (i-a) of paragraph c of subdivi- 10 sion three of section three thousand twenty-a of this article in cases 11 in which charges of incompetence are brought against a building princi- 12 pal based solely upon an allegation of a pattern of ineffective teaching 13 or performance as defined in section three thousand twelve-c of this 14 article and shall provide that such a pattern of ineffective teaching or 15 performance shall constitute very significant evidence of incompetence 16 which may form the basis for just cause removal of the building princi- 17 pal AND PROVIDED FURTHER THAT ANY ALTERNATE DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES 18 CONTAINED IN A COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT THAT BECOMES EFFECTIVE ON 19 OR AFTER APRIL FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN SHALL PROVIDE THAT ALL HEAR- 20 INGS SHALL BE CONDUCTED BEFORE A SINGLE HEARING OFFICER AND THAT SUCH A 21 PATTERN OF INEFFECTIVE TEACHING OR PERFORMANCE BY A BUILDING PRINCIPAL 22 SHALL CONSTITUTE PRIMA FACIE EVIDENCE OF INCOMPETENCE THAT CAN ONLY BE 23 REBUTTED BY CLEAR AND CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT THE CALCULATION OF ONE OR 24 MORE OF THE TEACHER'S OR PRINCIPAL'S UNDERLYING COMPOSITE RATINGS ON THE 25 ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEWS PURSUANT TO SECTION THREE THOU- 26 SAND TWELVE-C OF THIS ARTICLE WAS FRAUDULENT, AND IF NOT SUCCESSFULLY 27 REBUTTED, THE FINDING, ABSENT EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES, SHALL BE JUST 28 CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, 29 the commissioner shall review any appeals authorized by such modifica- 30 tion or replacement procedures within fifteen days from receipt by such 31 commissioner of the record of prior proceedings in the matter subject to 32 appeal. Such review shall have preference over all other appeals or 33 proceedings pending before such commissioner. 34 a. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the procedures 35 set forth in section three thousand twenty-a of this article and subdi- 36 vision seven of section twenty-five hundred ninety-j of this chapter may 37 be modified by agreements negotiated between the city school district of 38 the city of New York and any employee organization representing employ- 39 ees or titles that are or were covered by any memorandum of agreement 40 executed by such city school district and the united federation of 41 teachers on or after June tenth, two thousand two. Where such proce- 42 dures are so modified: (i) compliance with such modified procedures 43 shall satisfy any provision of this chapter that requires compliance 44 with section three thousand twenty-a of this article; (ii) any employee 45 against whom charges have been preferred prior to the effective date of 46 such modification shall continue to be subject to the provisions of such 47 section as in effect on the date such charges were preferred; (iii) the 48 provisions of subdivisions one and two of this section shall not apply 49 to agreements negotiated pursuant to this subdivision, except that no 50 person enjoying the benefits of tenure shall be disciplined or removed 51 during a term of employment except for just cause; and (iv) in accord- 52 ance with paragraph (e) of subdivision one of section two hundred nine-a 53 of the civil service law, such modified procedures contained in an 54 agreement negotiated pursuant to this subdivision shall continue as 55 terms of such agreement after its expiration until a new agreement is 56 negotiated; and provided further that any alternate disciplinary proce- S. 2010 32 A. 3010 1 dures contained in a collective bargaining agreement that becomes effec- 2 tive on or after July first, two thousand ten shall provide for an expe- 3 dited hearing process before a single hearing officer in accordance with 4 subparagraph (i-a) of paragraph c of subdivision three of section three 5 thousand twenty-a of this article in cases in which charges of incompe- 6 tence are brought based solely upon an allegation of a pattern of inef- 7 fective teaching or performance as defined in section three thousand 8 twelve-c of this article and shall provide that such a pattern of inef- 9 fective teaching or performance shall constitute very significant 10 evidence of incompetence which may form the basis for just cause 11 removal, AND PROVIDED FURTHER THAT ANY ALTERNATE DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES 12 CONTAINED IN A COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT THAT BECOMES EFFECTIVE ON 13 OR AFTER APRIL FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN SHALL PROVIDE THAT ALL HEAR- 14 INGS SHALL BE CONDUCTED BEFORE A SINGLE HEARING OFFICER AND THAT SUCH A 15 PATTERN OF INEFFECTIVE TEACHING OR PERFORMANCE SHALL CONSTITUTE PRIMA 16 FACIE EVIDENCE OF INCOMPETENCE THAT CAN ONLY BE REBUTTED BY CLEAR AND 17 CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT THE CALCULATION OF ONE OR MORE OF THE TEACHER'S 18 OR PRINCIPAL'S UNDERLYING COMPOSITE RATINGS ON THE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL 19 PERFORMANCE REVIEWS PURSUANT TO SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS 20 ARTICLE WAS FRAUDULENT, AND IF NOT SUCCESSFULLY REBUTTED, THE FINDING, 21 ABSENT EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES, SHALL BE JUST CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. 22 S 3. Section 3020-a of the education law, as amended by section 1 of 23 part B of chapter 57 of the laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows: 24 S 3020-a. Disciplinary procedures and penalties. 1. Filing of charges. 25 All charges against a person enjoying the benefits of tenure as provided 26 in subdivision three of section eleven hundred two, and sections twen- 27 ty-five hundred nine, twenty-five hundred seventy-three, twenty-five 28 hundred ninety-j, three thousand twelve and three thousand fourteen of 29 this chapter shall be in writing and filed with the clerk or secretary 30 of the school district or employing board during the period between the 31 actual opening and closing of the school year for which the employed is 32 normally required to serve. Except as provided in subdivision eight of 33 section twenty-five hundred seventy-three and subdivision seven of 34 section twenty-five hundred ninety-j of this chapter, no charges under 35 this section shall be brought more than three years after the occurrence 36 of the alleged incompetency or misconduct, except when the charge is of 37 misconduct constituting a crime when committed. 38 2. Disposition of charges. a. Upon receipt of the charges, the clerk 39 or secretary of the school district or employing board shall immediately 40 notify said board thereof. Within five days after receipt of charges, 41 the employing board, in executive session, shall determine, by a vote of 42 a majority of all the members of such board, whether probable cause 43 exists to bring a disciplinary proceeding against an employee pursuant 44 to this section. If such determination is affirmative, a written state- 45 ment specifying (i) the charges in detail, (ii) the maximum penalty 46 which will be imposed by the board if the employee does not request a 47 hearing or that will be sought by the board if the employee is found 48 guilty of the charges after a hearing and (iii) the employee's rights 49 under this section, shall be immediately forwarded to the accused 50 employee by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested or by 51 personal delivery to the employee. 52 b. The employee may be suspended pending a hearing on the charges and 53 the final determination thereof. The suspension shall be with pay, 54 except the employee may be suspended without pay if the employee has 55 entered a guilty plea to or has been convicted of a felony crime 56 concerning the criminal sale or possession of a controlled substance, a S. 2010 33 A. 3010 1 precursor of a controlled substance, or drug paraphernalia as defined in 2 article two hundred twenty or two hundred twenty-one of the penal law; 3 or a felony crime involving the physical abuse of a minor or student. 4 THE SUSPENSION SHALL ALSO BE WITHOUT PAY IF THE EMPLOYEE IS CHARGED WITH 5 MISCONDUCT CONSTITUTING PHYSICAL OR SEXUAL ABUSE OF A STUDENT AND IS 6 SUSPENDED PENDING AN EXPEDITED HEARING PURSUANT TO SUBPARAGRAPH (I-B) OF 7 PARAGRAPH C OF SUBDIVISION THREE OF THIS SECTION, PROVIDED THAT SUCH AN 8 EMPLOYEE SHALL BE ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE REIMBURSEMENT FOR WITHHELD PAY IF 9 THE HEARING OFFICER FINDS IN HIS FAVOR. The employee shall be terminated 10 without a hearing, as provided for in this section, upon conviction of a 11 sex offense, as defined in subparagraph two of paragraph b of subdivi- 12 sion seven-a of section three hundred five of this chapter. To the 13 extent this section applies to an employee acting as a school adminis- 14 trator or supervisor, as defined in subparagraph three of paragraph b of 15 subdivision seven-b of section three hundred five of this chapter, such 16 employee shall be terminated without a hearing, as provided for in this 17 section, upon conviction of a felony offense defined in subparagraph two 18 of paragraph b of subdivision seven-b of section three hundred five of 19 this chapter. 20 c. [Within] (I) FOR HEARINGS COMMENCED BY THE FILING OF CHARGES PRIOR 21 TO APRIL FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN, WITHIN ten days of receipt of the 22 statement of charges, the employee shall notify the clerk or secretary 23 of the employing board in writing whether he or she desires a hearing on 24 the charges and when the charges concern pedagogical incompetence or 25 issues involving pedagogical judgment, his or her choice of either a 26 single hearing officer or a three member panel, provided that a three 27 member panel shall not be available where the charges concern pedagog- 28 ical incompetence based solely upon a teacher's or principal's pattern 29 of ineffective teaching or performance as defined in section three thou- 30 sand twelve-c of this article. All other charges shall be heard by a 31 single hearing officer. 32 (II) ALL HEARINGS COMMENCED BY THE FILING OF CHARGES ON OR AFTER APRIL 33 FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN SHALL BE HEARD BY A SINGLE HEARING OFFICER. 34 d. The unexcused failure of the employee to notify the clerk or secre- 35 tary of his or her desire for a hearing within ten days of the receipt 36 of charges shall be deemed a waiver of the right to a hearing. Where an 37 employee requests a hearing in the manner provided for by this section, 38 the clerk or secretary of the board shall, within three working days of 39 receipt of the employee's notice or request for a hearing, notify the 40 commissioner of the need for a hearing. If the employee waives his or 41 her right to a hearing the employing board shall proceed, within fifteen 42 days, by a vote of a majority of all members of such board, to determine 43 the case and fix the penalty, if any, to be imposed in accordance with 44 subdivision four of this section. 45 3. Hearings. a. Notice of hearing. Upon receipt of a request for a 46 hearing in accordance with subdivision two of this section, the commis- 47 sioner shall forthwith notify the American Arbitration Association 48 (hereinafter "association") of the need for a hearing and shall request 49 the association to provide to the commissioner forthwith a list of names 50 of persons chosen by the association from the association's panel of 51 labor arbitrators to potentially serve as hearing officers together with 52 relevant biographical information on each arbitrator. Upon receipt of 53 said list and biographical information, the commissioner shall forthwith 54 send a copy of both simultaneously to the employing board and the 55 employee. The commissioner shall also simultaneously notify both the 56 employing board and the employee of each potential hearing officer's S. 2010 34 A. 3010 1 record in the last five cases of commencing and completing hearings 2 within the time periods prescribed in this section. 3 b. (i) Hearing officers. All hearings pursuant to this section shall 4 be conducted before and by a single hearing officer selected as provided 5 for in this section. A hearing officer shall not be eligible to serve in 6 such position if he or she is a resident of the school district, other 7 than the city of New York, under the jurisdiction of the employing 8 board, an employee, agent or representative of the employing board or of 9 any labor organization representing employees of such employing board, 10 has served as such agent or representative within two years of the date 11 of the scheduled hearing, or if he or she is then serving as a mediator 12 or fact finder in the same school district. 13 (A) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for hearings commenced 14 by the filing of charges prior to April first, two thousand twelve, the 15 hearing officer shall be compensated by the department with the custom- 16 ary fee paid for service as an arbitrator under the auspices of the 17 association for each day of actual service plus necessary travel and 18 other reasonable expenses incurred in the performance of his or her 19 duties. All other expenses of the disciplinary proceedings commenced by 20 the filing of charges prior to April first, two thousand twelve shall be 21 paid in accordance with rules promulgated by the commissioner. Claims 22 for such compensation for days of actual service and reimbursement for 23 necessary travel and other expenses for hearings commenced by the filing 24 of charges prior to April first, two thousand twelve shall be paid from 25 an appropriation for such purpose in the order in which they have been 26 approved by the commissioner for payment, provided payment shall first 27 be made for any other hearing costs payable by the commissioner, includ- 28 ing the costs of transcribing the record, and provided further that no 29 such claim shall be set aside for insufficiency of funds to make a 30 complete payment, but shall be eligible for a partial payment in one 31 year and shall retain its priority date status for appropriations desig- 32 nated for such purpose in future years. 33 (B) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, rule or regulation to 34 the contrary, for hearings commenced by the filing of charges on or 35 after April first, two thousand twelve, the hearing officer shall be 36 compensated by the department for each day of actual service plus neces- 37 sary travel and other reasonable expenses incurred in the performance of 38 his or her duties, provided that the commissioner shall establish a 39 schedule for maximum rates of compensation of hearing officers based on 40 customary and reasonable fees for service as an arbitrator and provide 41 for limitations on the number of study hours that may be claimed. 42 (ii) The commissioner shall mail to the employing board and the 43 employee the list of potential hearing officers and biographies provided 44 to the commissioner by the association, the employing board and the 45 employee, individually or through their agents or representatives, shall 46 by mutual agreement select a hearing officer from said list to conduct 47 the hearing and shall notify the commissioner of their selection. 48 (iii) Within fifteen days after receiving the list of potential hear- 49 ing officers as described in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, the 50 employing board and the employee shall each notify the commissioner of 51 their agreed upon hearing officer selection. If the employing board and 52 the employee fail to agree on an arbitrator to serve as a hearing offi- 53 cer from the list of potential hearing officers, or fail to notify the 54 commissioner of a selection within such fifteen day time period, the 55 commissioner shall appoint a hearing officer from the list. The 56 provisions of this subparagraph shall not apply in cities with a popu- S. 2010 35 A. 3010 1 lation of one million or more with alternative procedures specified in 2 section three thousand twenty of this article. 3 (iv) In those cases COMMENCED BY THE FILING OF CHARGES PRIOR TO APRIL 4 FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN in which the employee elects to have the 5 charges heard by a hearing panel, the hearing panel shall consist of the 6 hearing officer, selected in accordance with this subdivision, and two 7 additional persons, one selected by the employee and one selected by the 8 employing board, from a list maintained for such purpose by the commis- 9 sioner. The list shall be composed of professional personnel with admin- 10 istrative or supervisory responsibility, professional personnel without 11 administrative or supervisory responsibility, chief school administra- 12 tors, members of employing boards and others selected from lists of 13 nominees submitted to the commissioner by statewide organizations 14 representing teachers, school administrators and supervisors and the 15 employing boards. Hearing panel members other than the hearing officer 16 shall be compensated by the department at the rate of one hundred 17 dollars for each day of actual service plus necessary travel and subsis- 18 tence expenses. The hearing officer shall be compensated as set forth in 19 this subdivision. The hearing officer shall be the chairperson of the 20 hearing panel. 21 c. Hearing procedures. (i) (A) The commissioner shall have the power 22 to establish necessary rules and procedures for the conduct of hearings 23 under this section. 24 (B) The department shall be authorized to monitor and investigate a 25 hearing officer's compliance with statutory timelines pursuant to this 26 section. The commissioner shall annually inform all hearing officers who 27 have heard cases pursuant to this section during the preceding year that 28 the time periods prescribed in this section for conducting such hearings 29 are to be strictly followed. A record of continued failure to commence 30 and complete hearings within the time periods prescribed in this section 31 shall be considered grounds for the commissioner to exclude such indi- 32 vidual from the list of potential hearing officers sent to the employing 33 board and the employee for such hearings. 34 (C) Such rules shall not require compliance with technical rules of 35 evidence. Hearings shall be conducted by the hearing officer selected 36 pursuant to paragraph b of this subdivision [with full and fair disclo- 37 sure of the nature of the case and evidence against the employee by the 38 employing board] and shall be public or private at the discretion of the 39 employee. FULL AND FAIR DISCLOSURE OF THE WITNESSES AND EVIDENCE SHALL 40 BE MADE BY BOTH PARTIES IN THE MANNER PRESCRIBED IN ARTICLES THREE AND 41 FOUR OF THE STATE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT. The employee shall have 42 a reasonable opportunity to defend himself or herself and an opportunity 43 to testify in his or her own behalf. The employee shall not be required 44 to testify. Each party shall have the right to be represented by coun- 45 sel, to subpoena witnesses, and to cross-examine witnesses. All testimo- 46 ny taken shall be under oath which the hearing officer is hereby author- 47 ized to administer. CHILDREN SHALL BE PERMITTED TO TESTIFY THROUGH SWORN 48 WRITTEN OR VIDEO STATEMENTS. 49 (D) An accurate record of the proceedings shall be kept at the expense 50 of the department at each such hearing in accordance with the regu- 51 lations of the commissioner. A copy of the record of the hearings shall, 52 upon request, be furnished without charge to the employee and the board 53 of education involved. The department shall be authorized to utilize any 54 new technology or such other appropriate means to transcribe or record 55 such hearings in an accurate, reliable, efficient and cost-effective S. 2010 36 A. 3010 1 manner without any charge to the employee or board of education 2 involved. 3 (i-a)(A) Where charges of incompetence are brought based solely upon a 4 pattern of ineffective teaching or performance of a classroom teacher or 5 principal, as defined in section three thousand twelve-c of this arti- 6 cle, the hearing shall be conducted before and by a single hearing offi- 7 cer in an expedited hearing, which shall commence within seven days 8 after the pre-hearing conference and shall be completed within sixty 9 days after the pre-hearing conference. The hearing officer shall estab- 10 lish a hearing schedule at the pre-hearing conference to ensure that the 11 expedited hearing is completed within the required timeframes and to 12 ensure an equitable distribution of days between the employing board and 13 the charged employee. Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regulation 14 to the contrary, no adjournments may be granted that would extend the 15 hearing beyond such sixty days, except as authorized in this subpara- 16 graph. A hearing officer, upon request, may grant a limited and time 17 specific adjournment that would extend the hearing beyond such sixty 18 days if the hearing officer determines that the delay is attributable to 19 a circumstance or occurrence substantially beyond the control of the 20 requesting party and an injustice would result if the adjournment were 21 not granted. 22 (B) Such charges shall allege that the employing board has developed 23 and substantially implemented a teacher or principal improvement plan in 24 accordance with subdivision four of section three thousand twelve-c of 25 this article for the employee following the first evaluation in which 26 the employee was rated ineffective, and the immediately preceding evalu- 27 ation if the employee was rated developing. Notwithstanding any other 28 provision of law to the contrary, a pattern of ineffective teaching or 29 performance as defined in section three thousand twelve-c of this arti- 30 cle shall [constitute very significant evidence of incompetence for 31 purposes of this section] CONSTITUTE PRIMA FACIE EVIDENCE OF INCOMPE- 32 TENCE THAT CAN ONLY BE REBUTTED BY CLEAR AND CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT 33 THE CALCULATION OF ONE OR MORE OF THE TEACHER'S OR PRINCIPAL'S UNDERLY- 34 ING COMPOSITE RATINGS ON THE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEWS 35 PURSUANT TO SECTION THREE THOUSAND TWELVE-C OF THIS ARTICLE WAS FRAUDU- 36 LENT, AND IF NOT SUCCESSFULLY REBUTTED, THE FINDING, ABSENT EXTRAOR- 37 DINARY CIRCUMSTANCES, SHALL BE JUST CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. Nothing in this 38 subparagraph shall be construed to OTHERWISE limit the defenses which 39 the employee may place before the hearing officer in challenging the 40 allegation of a pattern of ineffective teaching or performance, EXCEPT 41 THAT FAILURE OF THE EMPLOYING BOARD TO REHABILITATE THE TEACHER OR PRIN- 42 CIPAL AND CORRECT HIS OR HER DEFICIENCIES SHALL NOT BE A DEFENSE. 43 (C) The commissioner shall annually inform all hearing officers who 44 have heard cases pursuant to this section during the preceding year that 45 the time periods prescribed in this subparagraph for conducting expe- 46 dited hearings are to be strictly followed. A record of continued fail- 47 ure to commence and complete expedited hearings within the time periods 48 prescribed in this subparagraph shall be considered grounds for the 49 commissioner to exclude such individual from the list of potential hear- 50 ing officers sent to the employing board and the employee for such expe- 51 dited hearings. 52 (I-B)(A) WHERE CHARGES OF MISCONDUCT CONSTITUTING PHYSICAL OR SEXUAL 53 ABUSE OF A STUDENT ARE BROUGHT, THE HEARING SHALL BE CONDUCTED BEFORE 54 AND BY A SINGLE HEARING OFFICER IN AN EXPEDITED HEARING, WHICH SHALL 55 COMMENCE WITHIN SEVEN DAYS AFTER THE PRE-HEARING CONFERENCE AND SHALL BE 56 COMPLETED WITHIN SIXTY DAYS AFTER THE PRE-HEARING CONFERENCE. THE HEAR- S. 2010 37 A. 3010 1 ING OFFICER SHALL ESTABLISH A HEARING SCHEDULE AT THE PRE-HEARING 2 CONFERENCE TO ENSURE THAT THE EXPEDITED HEARING IS COMPLETED WITHIN THE 3 REQUIRED TIMEFRAMES AND TO ENSURE AN EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF DAYS 4 BETWEEN THE EMPLOYING BOARD AND THE CHARGED EMPLOYEE. NOTWITHSTANDING 5 ANY OTHER LAW, RULE OR REGULATION TO THE CONTRARY, NO ADJOURNMENTS MAY 6 BE GRANTED THAT WOULD EXTEND THE HEARING BEYOND SUCH SIXTY DAYS, EXCEPT 7 AS AUTHORIZED IN THIS SUBPARAGRAPH. A HEARING OFFICER, UPON REQUEST, MAY 8 GRANT A LIMITED AND TIME SPECIFIC ADJOURNMENT THAT WOULD EXTEND THE 9 HEARING BEYOND SUCH SIXTY DAYS IF THE HEARING OFFICER DETERMINES THAT 10 THE DELAY IS ATTRIBUTABLE TO A CIRCUMSTANCE OR OCCURRENCE SUBSTANTIALLY 11 BEYOND THE CONTROL OF THE REQUESTING PARTY AND AN INJUSTICE WOULD RESULT 12 IF THE ADJOURNMENT WERE NOT GRANTED. 13 (B) THE COMMISSIONER SHALL ANNUALLY INFORM ALL HEARING OFFICERS WHO 14 HAVE HEARD CASES PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION DURING THE PRECEDING YEAR THAT 15 THE TIME PERIODS PRESCRIBED IN THIS SUBPARAGRAPH FOR CONDUCTING EXPE- 16 DITED HEARINGS ARE TO BE STRICTLY FOLLOWED AND FAILURE TO DO SO SHALL BE 17 CONSIDERED GROUNDS FOR THE COMMISSIONER TO EXCLUDE SUCH INDIVIDUAL FROM 18 THE LIST OF POTENTIAL HEARING OFFICERS SENT TO THE EMPLOYING BOARD AND 19 THE EMPLOYEE FOR SUCH EXPEDITED HEARINGS. 20 (ii) The hearing officer selected to conduct a hearing under this 21 section shall, within ten to fifteen days of agreeing to serve in such 22 position, hold a pre-hearing conference which shall be held in the 23 school district or county seat of the county, or any county, wherein the 24 employing school board is located. The pre-hearing conference shall be 25 limited in length to one day except that the hearing officer, in his or 26 her discretion, may allow one additional day for good cause shown. 27 (iii) At the pre-hearing conference the hearing officer shall have the 28 power to: 29 (A) issue subpoenas; 30 (B) hear and decide all motions, including but not limited to motions 31 to dismiss the charges; 32 (C) hear and decide all applications for bills of particular or 33 requests for production of materials or information, including, but not 34 limited to, any witness statement (or statements), investigatory state- 35 ment (or statements) or note (notes), exculpatory evidence or any other 36 evidence, including district or student records, relevant and material 37 to the employee's defense. 38 (iv) Any pre-hearing motion or application relative to the sufficiency 39 of the charges, application or amendment thereof, or any preliminary 40 matters shall be made upon written notice to the hearing officer and the 41 adverse party no less than five days prior to the date of the pre-hear- 42 ing conference. Any pre-hearing motions or applications not made as 43 provided for herein shall be deemed waived except for good cause as 44 determined by the hearing officer. 45 (v) In the event that at the pre-hearing conference the employing 46 board presents evidence that the professional license of the employee 47 has been revoked and all judicial and administrative remedies have been 48 exhausted or foreclosed, the hearing officer shall schedule the date, 49 time and place for an expedited hearing, which hearing shall commence 50 not more than seven days after the pre-hearing conference and which 51 shall be limited to one day. The expedited hearing shall be held in the 52 local school district or county seat of the county or any county, where- 53 in the said employing board is located. The expedited hearing shall not 54 be postponed except upon the request of a party and then only for good 55 cause as determined by the hearing officer. At such hearing, each party 56 shall have equal time in which to present its case. S. 2010 38 A. 3010 1 (vi) During the pre-hearing conference, the hearing officer shall 2 determine the reasonable amount of time necessary for a final hearing on 3 the charge or charges and shall schedule the location, time(s) and 4 date(s) for the final hearing. The final hearing shall be held in the 5 local school district or county seat of the county, or any county, wher- 6 ein the said employing school board is located. In the event that the 7 hearing officer determines that the nature of the case requires the 8 final hearing to last more than one day, the days that are scheduled for 9 the final hearing shall be consecutive. The day or days scheduled for 10 the final hearing shall not be postponed except upon the request of a 11 party and then only for good cause shown as determined by the hearing 12 officer. In all cases, the final hearing shall be completed no later 13 than sixty days after the pre-hearing conference unless the hearing 14 officer determines that extraordinary circumstances warrant a limited 15 extension. 16 (vii) All evidence shall be submitted by all parties within one 17 hundred twenty-five days of the filing of charges and no additional 18 evidence shall be accepted after such time, absent extraordinary circum- 19 stances beyond the control of the parties. 20 d. Limitation on claims. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 21 rule or regulation to the contrary, no payments shall be made by the 22 department pursuant to this subdivision on or after April first, two 23 thousand twelve for: (i) compensation of a hearing officer or hearing 24 panel member, (ii) reimbursement of such hearing officers or panel 25 members for necessary travel or other expenses incurred by them, or 26 (iii) for other hearing expenses on a claim submitted later than one 27 year after the final disposition of the hearing by any means, including 28 settlement, or within ninety days after the effective date of this para- 29 graph, whichever is later; provided that no payment shall be barred or 30 reduced where such payment is required as a result of a court order or 31 judgment or a final audit. 32 4. Post hearing procedures. a. The hearing officer shall render a 33 written decision within thirty days of the last day of the final hear- 34 ing, or in the case of an expedited hearing within ten days of such 35 expedited hearing, and shall forward a copy thereof to the commissioner 36 who shall immediately forward copies of the decision to the employee and 37 to the clerk or secretary of the employing board. The written decision 38 shall include the hearing officer's findings of fact on each charge, his 39 or her conclusions with regard to each charge based on said findings and 40 shall state what penalty or other action, if any, shall be taken by the 41 employing board. [At the request of the employee, in determining what, 42 if any, penalty or other action shall be imposed, the hearing officer 43 shall consider the extent to which the employing board made efforts 44 towards correcting the behavior of the employee which resulted in charg- 45 es being brought under this section through means including but not 46 limited to: remediation, peer intervention or an employee assistance 47 plan.] FAILURE OF THE EMPLOYING BOARD TO REMEDIATE OR CORRECT THE BEHAV- 48 IOR OF THE EMPLOYEE SHALL NOT BE A DEFENSE TO ANY CHARGES AND SHALL NOT 49 BE CONSIDERED BY THE HEARING OFFICER IN DETERMINING THE PENALTY OR OTHER 50 ACTION TO BE IMPOSED. In those cases where a penalty is imposed, such 51 penalty may be a written reprimand, a fine, suspension for a fixed time 52 without pay, or dismissal. In addition to or in lieu of the aforemen- 53 tioned penalties, the hearing officer[, where he or she deems appropri- 54 ate,] may impose upon the employee remedial action including but not 55 limited to leaves of absence with or without pay, continuing education 56 and/or study, a requirement that the employee seek counseling or medical S. 2010 39 A. 3010 1 treatment or that the employee engage in any other remedial or combina- 2 tion of remedial actions. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE HEARING OFFICER 3 SHALL ADOPT THE PENALTY RECOMMENDED BY THE EMPLOYING BOARD EXCEPT WHERE 4 THE HEARING OFFICER CONCLUDES THAT THE BOARD ACTED IN BAD FAITH OR THERE 5 ARE EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH THE RECOMMENDED PENALTY WOULD 6 BE SO DISPROPORTIONATE TO THE OFFENSES PROVEN AS TO BE SHOCKING TO THE 7 CONSCIENCE OF THE HEARING OFFICER. 8 b. Within fifteen days of receipt of the hearing officer's decision 9 the employing board shall implement the decision. If the employee is 10 acquitted he or she shall be restored to his or her position with full 11 pay for any period of suspension without pay and the charges expunged 12 from the employment record. If an employee who was convicted of a felony 13 crime specified in paragraph b of subdivision two of this section, has 14 said conviction reversed, the employee, upon application, shall be enti- 15 tled to have his or her pay and other emoluments restored, for the peri- 16 od from the date of his or her suspension to the date of the decision. 17 c. The hearing officer shall indicate in the decision whether any of 18 the charges brought by the employing board were frivolous as defined in 19 section eighty-three hundred three-a of the civil practice law and 20 rules. If the hearing officer finds that all of the charges brought 21 against the employee were frivolous, the hearing officer shall order the 22 employing board to reimburse the department the reasonable costs said 23 department incurred as a result of the proceeding and to reimburse the 24 employee the reasonable costs, including but not limited to reasonable 25 attorneys' fees, the employee incurred in defending the charges. If the 26 hearing officer finds that some but not all of the charges brought 27 against the employee were frivolous, the hearing officer shall order the 28 employing board to reimburse the department a portion, in the discretion 29 of the hearing officer, of the reasonable costs said department incurred 30 as a result of the proceeding and to reimburse the employee a portion, 31 in the discretion of the hearing officer, of the reasonable costs, 32 including but not limited to reasonable attorneys' fees, the employee 33 incurred in defending the charges. 34 5. Appeal. a. Not later than ten days after receipt of the hearing 35 officer's decision, the employee or the employing board may make an 36 application to the New York state supreme court to vacate or modify the 37 decision of the hearing officer pursuant to section seventy-five hundred 38 eleven of the civil practice law and rules. The court's review shall be 39 limited to the grounds set forth in such section. The hearing panel's 40 determination shall be deemed to be final for the purpose of such 41 proceeding. 42 b. In no case shall the filing or the pendency of an appeal delay the 43 implementation of the decision of the hearing officer. 44 S 4. Paragraph j of subdivision 5-a of section 3012-c of the education 45 law, as added by chapter 21 of the laws of 2012, is amended to read as 46 follows: 47 j. If a teacher receives an ineffective rating for a school year in 48 which the teacher is in year two status and the independent validator 49 agrees, the district may bring a proceeding pursuant to sections three 50 thousand twenty and three thousand twenty-a of this article based on a 51 pattern of ineffective teaching or performance. In such proceeding, the 52 charges shall allege that the employing board has developed and substan- 53 tially implemented a teacher improvement plan in accordance with subdi- 54 vision four of this section for the employee following the evaluation 55 made for the year in which the employee was in year one status and was 56 rated ineffective. The pattern of ineffective teaching or performance S. 2010 40 A. 3010 1 shall [give rise to a rebuttable presumption of incompetence and if the 2 presumption is not successfully rebutted, the finding, absent extraor- 3 dinary circumstances, shall be just cause for removal] CONSTITUTE PRIMA 4 FACIE EVIDENCE OF INCOMPETENCE THAT CAN ONLY BE REBUTTED BY CLEAR AND 5 CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT THE CALCULATION OF ONE OR MORE OF THE TEACHER'S 6 OR PRINCIPAL'S UNDERLYING COMPOSITE RATINGS ON THE ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL 7 PERFORMANCE REVIEWS PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION WAS FRAUDULENT, AND IF NOT 8 SUCCESSFULLY REBUTTED, THE FINDING, ABSENT EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES, 9 SHALL BE JUST CAUSE FOR REMOVAL. In these hearings, the teacher shall 10 have up to three days to present his or her case for every one day used 11 by the district to present its case. The hearing officer shall render a 12 written decision within ten days of the last day of the hearing. 13 S 5. This act shall take effect April 1, 2015 and shall apply to hear- 14 ings commenced by the filing or service of charges on or after April 1, 15 2015, provided that effective immediately, the commissioner of education 16 shall be authorized to promulgate any regulations needed to implement 17 the provisions of this act on such effective date. 18 SUBPART F 19 Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the 20 education law, as amended by section 3 of part BB of chapter 56 of the 21 laws of 2014, is amended to read as follows: 22 (a) The enrollment of students attending charter schools shall be 23 included in the enrollment, attendance, membership and, if applicable, 24 count of students with disabilities of the school district in which the 25 pupil resides. The charter school shall report all such data to the 26 school districts of residence in a timely manner. Each school district 27 shall report such enrollment, attendance and count of students with 28 disabilities to the department. The school district of residence shall 29 pay directly to the charter school for each student enrolled in the 30 charter school who resides in the school district the charter school 31 basic tuition, which shall be: 32 (i) for school years prior to the two thousand nine--two thousand ten 33 school year and for school years following the two thousand sixteen--two 34 thousand seventeen school year, an amount equal to one hundred percent 35 of the amount calculated pursuant to paragraph f of subdivision one of 36 section thirty-six hundred two of this chapter for the school district 37 for the year prior to the base year increased by the percentage change 38 in the state total approved operating expense calculated pursuant to 39 paragraph t of subdivision one of section thirty-six hundred two of this 40 chapter from two years prior to the base year to the base year; 41 (ii) for the two thousand nine--two thousand ten school year, the 42 charter school basic tuition shall be the amount payable by such 43 district as charter school basic tuition for the two thousand eight--two 44 thousand nine school year; 45 (iii) for the two thousand ten--two thousand eleven through two thou- 46 sand thirteen--two thousand fourteen school years, the charter school 47 basic tuition shall be the basic tuition computed for the two thousand 48 ten--two thousand eleven school year pursuant to the provisions of 49 subparagraph (i) of this paragraph; 50 (iv) for the two thousand fourteen--two thousand fifteen, two thousand 51 fifteen--two thousand sixteen and two thousand sixteen--two thousand 52 seventeen school years, the charter school basic tuition shall be the 53 sum of the lesser of the charter school basic tuition computed for the 54 two thousand ten--two thousand eleven school year pursuant to the S. 2010 41 A. 3010 1 provisions of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph or the charter school 2 basic tuition computed for the current year pursuant to the provisions 3 of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph plus the supplemental basic 4 tuition. 5 For the purposes of this subdivision, the "supplemental basic tuition" 6 shall be (A) for a school district for which the charter school basic 7 tuition computed for the current year is greater than or equal to the 8 charter school basic tuition for the two thousand ten--two thousand 9 eleven school year pursuant to the provisions of subparagraph (i) of 10 this paragraph, (1) for the two thousand fourteen--two thousand fifteen 11 school year two hundred and fifty dollars, and (2) for the two thousand 12 fifteen--two thousand sixteen school year [three hundred and fifty] FOUR 13 HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE dollars, and (3) for the two thousand sixteen--two 14 thousand seventeen school year five hundred SEVENTY-FIVE dollars, and 15 (B) for a school district for which the charter school basic tuition for 16 the two thousand ten--two thousand eleven school year is greater than 17 the charter school basic tuition for the current year pursuant to the 18 provisions of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, the positive differ- 19 ence of the charter school basic tuition for the two thousand ten--two 20 thousand eleven school year minus the charter school basic tuition for 21 the current year pursuant to the provisions of subparagraph (i) of this 22 paragraph. 23 S 2. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the education 24 law, as amended by section 4 of part BB of chapter 56 of the laws of 25 2014, is amended to read as follows: 26 (a) The enrollment of students attending charter schools shall be 27 included in the enrollment, attendance, MEMBERSHIP and, if applicable, 28 count of students with disabilities of the school district in which the 29 pupil resides. The charter school shall report all such data to the 30 school districts of residence in a timely manner. Each school district 31 shall report such enrollment, attendance and count of students with 32 disabilities to the department. The school district of residence shall 33 pay directly to the charter school for each student enrolled in the 34 charter school who resides in the school district the charter school 35 basic tuition which shall be: 36 (i) for school years prior to the two thousand nine--two thousand ten 37 school year and for school years following the two thousand sixteen--two 38 thousand seventeen school year, an amount equal to one hundred percent 39 of the amount calculated pursuant to paragraph f of subdivision one of 40 section thirty-six hundred two of this chapter for the school district 41 for the year prior to the base year increased by the percentage change 42 in the state total approved operating expense calculated pursuant to 43 paragraph t of subdivision one of section thirty-six hundred two of this 44 chapter from two years prior to the base year to the base year; 45 (ii) for the two thousand nine--two thousand ten school year, the 46 charter school basic tuition shall be the amount payable by such 47 district as charter school basic tuition for the two thousand eight--two 48 thousand nine school year; 49 (iii) for the two thousand ten--two thousand eleven through two thou- 50 sand thirteen--two thousand fourteen school years, the charter school 51 basic tuition shall be the basic tuition computed for the two thousand 52 ten--two thousand eleven school year pursuant to the provisions of 53 subparagraph (i) of this paragraph; 54 (iv) for the two thousand fourteen--two thousand fifteen, two thousand 55 fifteen--two thousand sixteen and two thousand sixteen--two thousand 56 seventeen school years, the charter school basic tuition shall be the S. 2010 42 A. 3010 1 sum of the lesser of the charter school basic tuition computed for the 2 two thousand ten--two thousand eleven school year pursuant to the 3 provisions of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph or the charter school 4 basic tuition computed for the current year pursuant to the provisions 5 of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph plus the supplemental basic 6 tuition. 7 For the purposes of this subdivision, the "supplemental basic tuition" 8 shall be (A) for a school district for which the charter school basic 9 tuition computed for the current year is greater than or equal to the 10 charter school basic tuition for the two thousand ten--two thousand 11 eleven school year pursuant to the provisions of subparagraph (i) of 12 this paragraph, (1) for the two thousand fourteen--two thousand fifteen 13 school year two hundred and fifty dollars, and (2) for the two thousand 14 fifteen--two thousand sixteen school year [three hundred and fifty] FOUR 15 HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE dollars, and (3) for the two thousand sixteen--two 16 thousand seventeen school year five hundred SEVENTY-FIVE dollars, and 17 (B) for a school district for which the charter school basic tuition for 18 the two thousand ten--two thousand eleven school year is greater than 19 the charter school basic tuition for the current year pursuant to the 20 provisions of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, the positive differ- 21 ence of the charter school basic tuition for the two thousand ten--two 22 thousand eleven school year minus the charter school basic tuition for 23 the current year pursuant to the provisions of subparagraph (i) of this 24 paragraph. 25 S 3. Subdivisions 9 and 9-a of section 2852 of the education law, 26 subdivision 9 as amended and subdivision 9-a as added by chapter 101 of 27 the laws of 2010, paragraph (a) of subdivision 9-a as amended by chapter 28 221 of the laws of 2010, paragraph (f) of subdivision 9-a as amended by 29 chapter 102 of the laws of 2010, are amended to read as follows: 30 9. The total number of charters issued pursuant to this article STATE- 31 WIDE shall not exceed [four] FIVE hundred sixty. (a) [One hundred of 32 such charters shall be issued on the recommendation of the charter enti- 33 ty described in paragraph (b) of subdivision three of section twenty- 34 eight hundred fifty-one of this article; (b) one hundred of such char- 35 ters shall be issued on the recommendation of the other charter entities 36 set forth in subdivision three of section twenty-eight hundred fifty-one 37 of this article; (c) up to fifty of the additional charters authorized 38 to be issued by the chapter of the laws of two thousand seven which 39 amended this subdivision effective July first, two thousand seven shall 40 be reserved for a city school district of a city having a population of 41 one million or more; (d) one hundred thirty charters shall be issued by 42 the board of regents pursuant to a competitive process in accordance 43 with subdivision nine-a of this section, provided that no more than 44 fifty-seven of such charters shall be granted to a charter for a school 45 to be located in a city having a population of one million or more; (e) 46 one hundred thirty charters shall be issued by the board of regents on 47 the recommendation of the board of trustees of the state university of 48 New York pursuant to a competitive process in accordance with subdivi- 49 sion nine-a of this section, provided that no more than fifty-seven of 50 such charters shall be granted to a charter for a school to be located 51 in a city having a population of one million or more] ALL CHARTERS 52 ISSUED ON OR AFTER FEBRUARY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN AND COUNTED 53 TOWARD THE NUMERICAL LIMITS ESTABLISHED BY THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL BE 54 ISSUED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS UPON APPLICATION DIRECTLY TO THE BOARD OF 55 REGENTS OR ON THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE STATE 56 UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PURSUANT TO A COMPETITIVE PROCESS IN ACCORDANCE S. 2010 43 A. 3010 1 WITH SUBDIVISION NINE-A OF THIS SECTION. The failure of any body to 2 issue the regulations authorized pursuant to this article shall not 3 affect the authority of a charter entity to propose a charter to the 4 board of regents or the board of regents' authority to grant such char- 5 ter. A conversion of an existing public school to a charter school or 6 the renewal or extension of a charter APPROVED BY ANY CHARTER ENTITY 7 shall not be counted toward the numerical limits established by this 8 subdivision. 9 (B) A CHARTER SCHOOL WHOSE CHARTER HAS BEEN SURRENDERED, REVOKED OR 10 TERMINATED, INCLUDING A CHARTER THAT HAS NOT BEEN RENEWED BY ACTION OF 11 ITS CHARTER ENTITY, SHALL NOT BE COUNTED TOWARD THE NUMERICAL LIMITS 12 ESTABLISHED BY THIS SUBDIVISION AND INSTEAD SHALL BE RETURNED TO THE 13 STATEWIDE POOL AND MAY BE REISSUED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS EITHER UPON 14 APPLICATION DIRECTLY TO THE BOARD OF REGENTS OR ON THE RECOMMENDATION OF 15 THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PURSUANT TO A 16 COMPETITIVE PROCESS IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION NINE-A OF THIS 17 SECTION. 18 (C) FOR PURPOSES OF DETERMINING THE TOTAL NUMBER OF CHARTERS ISSUED 19 WITHIN THE NUMERICAL LIMITS ESTABLISHED BY THIS SUBDIVISION, THE 20 APPROVAL DATE OF THE CHARTERING ENTITY SHALL BE THE DETERMINING FACTOR. 21 9-a. (a) The board of regents is hereby authorized and directed to 22 issue [two] UP TO FIVE hundred sixty charters UPON EITHER APPLICATIONS 23 SUBMITTED DIRECTLY TO THE BOARD OF REGENTS OR APPLICATIONS RECOMMENDED 24 BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK pursuant to 25 a competitive request for proposals process. 26 [(i) Commencing on August first, two thousand ten through September 27 first, two thousand thirteen, the board of regents and the board of 28 trustees of the state university of New York shall each issue a request 29 for proposals in accordance with this subdivision and this subparagraph: 30 (1) Each request for proposals to be issued by the board of regents 31 and the board of trustees of the state university of New York on August 32 first, two thousand ten shall be for a maximum of thirty-two charters to 33 be issued for charter schools which would commence instructional opera- 34 tion by the September of the next calendar year. 35 (2) Each request for proposals to be issued by the board of regents 36 and the board of trustees of the state university of New York on January 37 first, two thousand eleven shall be for a maximum of thirty-three char- 38 ters to be issued for charter schools which would commence instructional 39 operation by the September of the next calendar year. 40 (3) Each request for proposals to be issued by the board of regents 41 and the board of trustees of the state university of New York on January 42 first, two thousand twelve shall be for a maximum of thirty-two charters 43 to be issued for charter schools which would commence instructional 44 operation by the September of the next calendar year. 45 (4) Each request for proposals to be issued by the board of regents 46 and the board of trustees of the state university of New York on Septem- 47 ber first, two thousand thirteen shall be for a maximum of thirty-three 48 charters to be issued for charter schools which would commence instruc- 49 tional operation by the September of the next calendar year. 50 (ii) If after September first, two thousand thirteen, either the board 51 of regents or the board of trustees of the state university of New York 52 have any charters which have not yet been issued, they may be issued 53 pursuant to requests for proposals issued in each succeeding year, with- 54 out limitation as to when such requests for proposals may be issued, or 55 a limitation on the number of charters which may be issued. S. 2010 44 A. 3010 1 (iii) Notwithstanding the provisions of clauses one, two, three and 2 four of subparagraph (i) of this paragraph and subparagraph (ii) of this 3 paragraph, if fewer charters are issued than were requested in such 4 request for proposals, the difference may be added to the number of 5 charters requested in the request for proposals issued in each succeed- 6 ing year. 7 (iv)] The board of regents shall make a determination to issue a char- 8 ter pursuant to a request for proposals no later than December thirty- 9 first of each year. 10 (b) The board of regents and the board of trustees of the state 11 university of New York shall each develop such request for proposals in 12 a manner that facilitates a thoughtful review of charter school applica- 13 tions, considers the demand for charter schools by the community, and 14 seeks to locate charter schools in a region or regions where there may 15 be a lack of alternatives and access to charter schools would provide 16 new alternatives within the local public education system that would 17 offer the greatest educational benefit to students. Applications shall 18 be evaluated in accordance with the criteria and objectives contained 19 within a request for proposals. The board of regents and the board of 20 trustees of the state university of New York shall not consider any 21 applications which do not rigorously demonstrate that they have met the 22 following criteria: 23 (i) that the proposed charter school would meet or exceed enrollment 24 and retention targets, as prescribed by the board of regents or the 25 board of trustees of the state university of New York, as applicable, of 26 students with disabilities, English language learners, and students who 27 are eligible applicants for the free and reduced price lunch program. 28 When developing such targets, the board of regents and the board of 29 trustees of the state university of New York, shall ensure (1) that such 30 enrollment targets are comparable to the enrollment figures of such 31 categories of students attending the public schools within the school 32 district, or in a city school district in a city having a population of 33 one million or more inhabitants, the community school district, in which 34 the proposed charter school would be located; and (2) that such 35 retention targets are comparable to the rate of retention of such cate- 36 gories of students attending the public schools within the school 37 district, or in a city school district in a city having a population of 38 one million or more inhabitants, the community school district, in which 39 the proposed charter school would be located; and 40 (ii) that the applicant has conducted public outreach, in conformity 41 with a thorough and meaningful public review process prescribed by the 42 board of regents and the board of trustees of the state university of 43 New York, to solicit community input regarding the proposed charter 44 school and to address comments received from the impacted community 45 concerning the educational and programmatic needs of students. 46 (c) The board of regents and the board of trustees of the state 47 university of New York shall grant priority based on a scoring rubric to 48 those applications that best demonstrate how they will achieve the 49 following objectives, and any additional objectives the board of regents 50 and the board of trustees of the state university of New York, may 51 prescribe: 52 (i) increasing student achievement and decreasing student achievement 53 gaps in reading/language arts and mathematics; 54 (ii) increasing high school graduation rates and focusing on serving 55 specific high school student populations including, but not limited to, 56 students at risk of not obtaining a high school diploma, re-enrolled S. 2010 45 A. 3010 1 high school drop-outs, and students with academic skills below grade 2 level; 3 (iii) focusing on the academic achievement of middle school students 4 and preparing them for a successful transition to high school; 5 (iv) utilizing high-quality assessments designed to measure a 6 student's knowledge, understanding of, and ability to apply, critical 7 concepts through the use of a variety of item types and formats; 8 (v) increasing the acquisition, adoption, and use of local instruc- 9 tional improvement systems that provide teachers, principals, and admin- 10 istrators with the information and resources they need to inform and 11 improve their instructional practices, decision-making, and overall 12 effectiveness; 13 (vi) partnering with low performing public schools in the area to 14 share best educational practices and innovations; 15 (vii) demonstrating the management and leadership techniques necessary 16 to overcome initial start-up problems to establish a thriving, finan- 17 cially viable charter school; 18 (viii) demonstrating the support of the school district in which the 19 proposed charter school will be located and the intent to establish an 20 ongoing relationship with such school district. 21 (d) No later than November first, two thousand ten, and of each 22 succeeding year, after a thorough review of applications received, the 23 board of trustees of the state university of New York shall recommend 24 for approval to the board of regents the qualified applications that it 25 has determined rigorously demonstrate the criteria and best satisfy the 26 objectives contained within a request for proposals, along with support- 27 ing documentation outlining such determination. 28 (e) Upon receipt of a proposed charter to be issued pursuant to this 29 subdivision submitted by a charter entity, the board of regents or the 30 board of trustees of the state university of New York, shall review, 31 recommend and issue, as applicable, such charters in accordance with the 32 standards established in this subdivision. 33 (f) The board of regents shall be the only entity authorized to issue 34 a charter pursuant to this article. The board of regents shall consider 35 applications submitted directly to the board of regents and applications 36 recommended by the board of trustees of the state university of New 37 York. Provided, however, that all such recommended applications shall be 38 deemed approved and issued pursuant to the provisions of subdivisions 39 five, five-a and five-b of this section. 40 (g) Each application submitted in response to a request for proposals 41 pursuant to this subdivision shall also meet the application require- 42 ments set out in this article and any other applicable laws, rules and 43 regulations. 44 (h) During the development of a request for proposals pursuant to this 45 subdivision the board of regents and the board of trustees of the state 46 university of New York shall each afford the public an opportunity to 47 submit comments and shall review and consider the comments raised by all 48 interested parties. 49 S 4. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 2 of section 2854 of the education 50 law, as amended by chapter 101 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read 51 as follows: 52 (b) Any child who is qualified under the laws of this state for admis- 53 sion to a public school is qualified for admission to a charter school. 54 Applications for admission to a charter school shall be submitted on a 55 uniform application form created by the department and shall be made 56 available by a charter school in languages predominately spoken in the S. 2010 46 A. 3010 1 community in which such charter school is located. The school shall 2 enroll each eligible student who submits a timely application by the 3 first day of April each year, unless the number of applications exceeds 4 the capacity of the grade level or building. In such cases, students 5 shall be accepted from among applicants by a random selection process, 6 provided, however, that an enrollment preference shall be provided to 7 pupils returning to the charter school in the second or any subsequent 8 year of operation and pupils residing in the school district in which 9 the charter school is located, and siblings of pupils already enrolled 10 in the charter school. PREFERENCE SHALL ALSO BE PROVIDED TO (I) STUDENTS 11 WHO ARE ELIGIBLE APPLICANTS FOR THE FREE AND REDUCED PRICE LUNCH 12 PROGRAM, (II) STUDENTS WHO ARE CURRENTLY ATTENDING OR WOULD OTHERWISE 13 ATTEND A SCHOOL DISTRICT OR SCHOOL DESIGNATED AS CHRONICALLY UNDERPER- 14 FORMING PURSUANT TO SECTIONS TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN-F AND TWO HUNDRED 15 ELEVEN-G OF THIS CHAPTER, AND (III) CHILDREN OF EMPLOYEES OF THE CHARTER 16 SCHOOL, PROVIDED THAT SUCH CHILDREN OF EMPLOYEES MAY ONLY CONSTITUTE A 17 SMALL PERCENTAGE OF THE CHARTER SCHOOL'S TOTAL ENROLLMENT. The commis- 18 sioner shall establish regulations to require that the random selection 19 process conducted pursuant to this paragraph be performed in a transpar- 20 ent and equitable manner and to require that the time and place of the 21 random selection process be publicized in a manner consistent with the 22 requirements of section one hundred four of the public officers law and 23 be open to the public. For the purposes of this paragraph and paragraph 24 (a) of this subdivision, the school district in which the charter school 25 is located shall mean, for the city school district of the city of New 26 York, the community district in which the charter school is located. 27 S 5. Paragraphs (d) and (e) of subdivision 1 of section 2855 of the 28 education law, paragraph (d) as amended and paragraph (e) as added by 29 chapter 101 of the laws of 2010, are amended, and a new paragraph (f) is 30 added to read as follows: 31 (d) When the public employment relations board makes a determination 32 that the charter school demonstrates a practice and pattern of egregious 33 and intentional violations of subdivision one of section two hundred 34 nine-a of the civil service law involving interference with or discrimi- 35 nation against employee rights under article fourteen of the civil 36 service law; [or] 37 (e) Repeated failure to comply with the requirement to meet or exceed 38 enrollment and retention targets of students with disabilities, English 39 language learners, and students who are eligible applicants for the free 40 and reduced price lunch program pursuant to targets established by the 41 board of regents or the board of trustees of the state university of New 42 York, as applicable. Provided, however, if no grounds for terminating a 43 charter are established pursuant to this section other than pursuant to 44 this paragraph, and the charter school demonstrates that it has made 45 extensive efforts to recruit and retain such students, including 46 outreach to parents and families in the surrounding communities, widely 47 publicizing the lottery for such school, and efforts to academically 48 support such students in such charter school, then the charter entity or 49 board of regents may retain such charter[.]; OR 50 (F) REPEATED FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH THE DATA REPORTING REQUIREMENTS 51 PRESCRIBED IN SUBDIVISIONS TWO AND TWO-A OF SECTION TWENTY-EIGHT HUNDRED 52 FIFTY-SEVEN OF THIS ARTICLE, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE END OF THE 53 YEAR REPORTING REQUIREMENTS ON THE ENROLLMENT AND RETENTION OF STUDENTS 54 WITH LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENCY; THE NUMBER OF STUDENTS WITH DISABILI- 55 TIES AND THE NUMBER OF STUDENTS IDENTIFIED AS ELIGIBLE FOR FREE AND 56 REDUCED PRICE LUNCHES. S. 2010 47 A. 3010 1 S 6. Section 2857 of the education law is amended by adding a new 2 subdivision 2-a to read as follows: 3 2-A. NO LATER THAN THE FIRST DAY OF AUGUST OF EACH SCHOOL YEAR, (FOR 4 DATA FOR THE PRECEDING SCHOOL YEAR) AND BI-MONTHLY THEREAFTER FOR THE 5 CURRENT SCHOOL YEAR DATA, EACH CHARTER SCHOOL SHALL SUBMIT TO THE BOARD 6 OF REGENTS DATA ON ENROLLMENT RATES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE 7 NUMBER OF STUDENTS WITH LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENCY; THE NUMBER OF 8 STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES AND THE NUMBER OF STUDENTS IDENTIFIED AS 9 ELIGIBLE FOR FREE AND REDUCED PRICE LUNCHES AND ANY OTHER ADDITIONAL 10 REQUIREMENTS PRESCRIBED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS IN THE RULES OF THE 11 BOARD OF REGENTS. 12 S 7. This act shall take effect immediately; provided that the amend- 13 ments to subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the education law made by 14 section one of this act shall be subject to the expiration and reversion 15 of such subdivision pursuant to subdivision d of section 27 of chapter 16 378 of the laws of 2007, as amended, when upon such date the provisions 17 of section two of this act shall take effect. 18 S 2. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi- 19 sion, section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of 20 competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, 21 impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in 22 its operation to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section 23 or part thereof directly involved in the controversy in which such judg- 24 ment shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of 25 the legislature that this act would have been enacted even if such 26 invalid provisions had not been included herein. 27 S 3. This act shall take effect immediately provided, however, that 28 the applicable effective date of Subparts A through F of this act shall 29 be as specifically set forth in the last section of such Subparts. 30 PART B 31 Section 1. Subparagraph 1 of paragraph a of subdivision 2 of section 32 3012-c of the education law, as amended by chapter 21 of the laws of 33 2012, is amended to read as follows: 34 (1) [The] (I) FOR SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO 35 THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, annual professional performance reviews 36 conducted pursuant to this section for classroom teachers and building 37 principals shall differentiate teacher and principal effectiveness using 38 the following quality rating categories: highly effective, effective, 39 developing and ineffective, with explicit minimum and maximum scoring 40 ranges for each category, for the state assessments and other comparable 41 measures subcomponent of the evaluation and for the locally selected 42 measures of student achievement subcomponent of the evaluation, as 43 prescribed in the regulations of the commissioner. There shall be: 44 [(i)] (A) a state assessments and other comparable measures subcomponent 45 which shall comprise twenty or twenty-five percent of the evaluation; 46 [(ii)] (B) a locally selected measures of student achievement subcompo- 47 nent which shall comprise twenty or fifteen percent of the evaluation; 48 and [(iii)] (C) an other measures of teacher or principal effectiveness 49 subcomponent which shall comprise the remaining sixty percent of the 50 evaluation, which in sum shall constitute the composite teacher or prin- 51 cipal effectiveness score. Such annual professional performance reviews 52 shall result in a single composite teacher or principal effectiveness 53 score, which incorporates multiple measures of effectiveness related to 54 the criteria included in the regulations of the commissioner. S. 2010 48 A. 3010 1 (II) FOR THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR 2 AND THEREAFTER, ANNUAL PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEWS CONDUCTED PURSU- 3 ANT TO THIS SECTION FOR CLASSROOM TEACHERS AND BUILDING PRINCIPALS SHALL 4 DIFFERENTIATE TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL EFFECTIVENESS USING THE FOLLOWING 5 QUALITY RATING CATEGORIES: HIGHLY EFFECTIVE, EFFECTIVE, DEVELOPING AND 6 INEFFECTIVE, WITH EXPLICIT MINIMUM AND MAXIMUM SCORING RANGES FOR EACH 7 CATEGORY, FOR THE STATE ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER COMPARABLE MEASURES 8 SUBCOMPONENT AND THE OTHER MEASURES OF TEACHER AND LEADER EFFECTIVENESS 9 SUBCOMPONENT, AS PRESCRIBED IN THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER. 10 THERE SHALL BE: (A) A STATE ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER COMPARABLE MEASURES 11 SUBCOMPONENT WHICH SHALL COMPRISE FIFTY PERCENT OF THE EVALUATION; AND 12 (B) AN OTHER MEASURES OF TEACHER OR PRINCIPAL EFFECTIVENESS SUBCOMPONENT 13 WHICH SHALL COMPRISE THE REMAINING FIFTY PERCENT OF THE EVALUATION, 14 PURSUANT TO CRITERIA INCLUDED IN THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER. 15 S 2. Subparagraphs 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 of paragraph a of subdivision 2 16 of section 3012-c of the education law, as amended by chapter 21 of the 17 laws of 2012, are amended to read as follows: 18 (3) For annual professional performance reviews conducted in accord- 19 ance with paragraph b of this subdivision for the two thousand eleven-- 20 two thousand twelve school year and for annual professional performance 21 reviews conducted in accordance with paragraph f of this subdivision for 22 the two thousand twelve--two thousand thirteen [school year], TWO THOU- 23 SAND THIRTEEN--TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO 24 THOUSAND FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS for classroom teachers in subjects and 25 grades for which the board of regents has not approved a value-added 26 model and for building principals employed in schools or programs for 27 which there is no approved principal value-added model, the scoring 28 ranges for the student growth on state assessments or other comparable 29 measures subcomponent shall be in accordance with this subparagraph. A 30 classroom teacher and building principal shall receive: 31 (A) a highly effective rating in this subcomponent if the teacher's or 32 principal's results are well-above the state average for similar 33 students and they achieve a subcomponent score of 18-20; 34 (B) an effective rating in this subcomponent if the teacher's or prin- 35 cipal's results meet the state average for similar students and they 36 achieve a subcomponent score of 9-17; or 37 (C) a developing rating in this subcomponent if the teacher's or prin- 38 cipal's results are below the state average for similar students and 39 they achieve a subcomponent score of 3-8; or 40 (D) an ineffective rating in this subcomponent, if the teacher's or 41 principal's results are well-below the state average for similar 42 students and they achieve a subcomponent score of 0-2. 43 (4) For annual professional performance reviews conducted in accord- 44 ance with paragraph g of this subdivision for the two thousand twelve-- 45 two thousand thirteen [school year], TWO THOUSAND THIRTEEN--TWO THOUSAND 46 FOURTEEN AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS 47 for classroom teachers in subjects and grades for which the board of 48 regents has approved a value-added model and for building principals 49 employed in schools or programs for which there is an approved principal 50 value-added model, the scoring ranges for the student growth on state 51 assessments or other comparable measures subcomponent shall be in 52 accordance with this subparagraph. A classroom teacher and building 53 principal shall receive: 54 (A) a highly effective rating in this subcomponent if the teacher's or 55 principal's results are well-above the state average for similar 56 students and they achieve a subcomponent score of 22-25; S. 2010 49 A. 3010 1 (B) an effective rating in this subcomponent if the teacher's or prin- 2 cipal's results meet the state average for similar students and they 3 achieve a subcomponent score of 10-21; or 4 (C) a developing rating in this subcomponent if the teacher's or prin- 5 cipal's results are below the state average for similar students and 6 they achieve a subcomponent score of 3-9; or 7 (D) an ineffective rating in this subcomponent, if the teacher's or 8 principal's results are well-below the state average for similar 9 students and they achieve a subcomponent score of 0-2. 10 (5) For annual professional performance reviews conducted in accord- 11 ance with paragraph b of this subdivision for the two thousand eleven-- 12 two thousand twelve school year and for annual professional performance 13 reviews conducted in accordance with paragraph f of this subdivision for 14 the two thousand twelve--two thousand thirteen [school year], TWO THOU- 15 SAND THIRTEEN--TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO 16 THOUSAND FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS for classroom teachers in subjects and 17 grades for which the board of regents has not approved a value-added 18 model and for building principals employed in schools or programs for 19 which there is no approved principal value-added model, the scoring 20 ranges for the locally selected measures of student achievement subcom- 21 ponent shall be in accordance with this subparagraph. A classroom teach- 22 er and building principal shall receive: 23 (A) a highly effective rating in this subcomponent if the results are 24 well-above district-adopted expectations for student growth or achieve- 25 ment and they achieve a subcomponent score of 18-20; or 26 (B) an effective rating in this subcomponent if the results meet 27 district-adopted expectations for growth or achievement and they achieve 28 a subcomponent score of 9-17; or 29 (C) a developing rating in this subcomponent if the results are below 30 district-adopted expectations for growth or achievement and they achieve 31 a subcomponent score of 3-8; or 32 (D) an ineffective rating in this subcomponent if the results are 33 well-below district-adopted expectations for growth or achievement and 34 they achieve a subcomponent score of 0-2. 35 (6) For annual professional performance reviews conducted in accord- 36 ance with paragraph b of this subdivision for the two thousand eleven-- 37 two thousand twelve school year and for annual professional performance 38 reviews conducted in accordance with paragraph g of this subdivision for 39 the two thousand twelve--two thousand thirteen [school year], TWO THOU- 40 SAND THIRTEEN--TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO 41 THOUSAND FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS for classroom teachers in subjects and 42 grades for which the board of regents has approved a value-added model 43 and for building principals employed in schools or programs for which 44 there is an approved principal value-added model, the scoring ranges for 45 the locally selected measures of student achievement subcomponent shall 46 be in accordance with this subparagraph. A classroom teacher and build- 47 ing principal shall receive: 48 (A) a highly effective rating in this subcomponent if the results are 49 well-above district-adopted expectations for student growth or achieve- 50 ment and they achieve a subcomponent score of 14-15; or 51 (B) an effective rating in this subcomponent if the results meet 52 district-adopted expectations for growth or achievement and they achieve 53 a subcomponent score of 8-13; or 54 (C) a developing rating in this subcomponent if the results are below 55 district-adopted expectations for growth or achievement and they achieve 56 a subcomponent score of 3-7; or S. 2010 50 A. 3010 1 (D) an ineffective rating in this subcomponent if the results are 2 well-below district-adopted expectations for growth or achievement and 3 they achieve a subcomponent score of 0-2. 4 (7) (A) For the two thousand thirteen--two thousand fourteen [school 5 year] AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS and 6 thereafter, the commissioner shall review the specific scoring ranges 7 for each of the rating categories annually before the start of each 8 school year and shall recommend any changes to the board of regents for 9 consideration. 10 (B) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF LAW TO THE CONTRARY, FOR 11 THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFT- 12 ER, A CLASSROOM TEACHER AND BUILDING PRINCIPAL SHALL RECEIVE RATINGS ON 13 THE STATE GROWTH OR OTHER COMPARABLE MEASURES SUBCOMPONENT AND THE OTHER 14 MEASURES OF TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL EFFECTIVENESS SUBCOMPONENT PURSUANT TO 15 SCORING RANGES PRESCRIBED BY THE COMMISSIONER IN REGULATIONS. THE 16 COMMISSIONER SHALL REVIEW THE OVERALL COMPOSITE SCORING RANGES ANNUALLY 17 BEFORE THE START OF EACH SCHOOL YEAR AND MAY ISSUE NEW REGULATIONS AS HE 18 OR SHE DEEMS WARRANTED. PROVIDED; HOWEVER, IF A CLASSROOM TEACHER OR 19 BUILDING PRINCIPAL RECEIVES AN INEFFECTIVE RATING ON ANY ONE OF THESE 20 SUBCOMPONENTS, THE HIGHEST OVERALL COMPOSITE RATING HE OR SHE MAY 21 RECEIVE IS DEVELOPING. 22 (8) Except for the student growth measures on the state assessments or 23 other comparable measures of student growth prescribed in paragraphs e, 24 f and g of this subdivision, the [elements comprising the composite 25 effectiveness score and the] process by which points are assigned to 26 subcomponents shall be locally developed, consistent with the standards 27 prescribed in the regulations of the commissioner and the requirements 28 of this section, through negotiations conducted, pursuant to the 29 requirements of article fourteen of the civil service law. 30 S 3. Subparagraphs 2 and 3 of paragraph c of subdivision 2 of section 31 3012-c of the education law, as amended by chapter 21 of the laws of 32 2012, are amended to read as follows: 33 (2) Subject to paragraph k of this subdivision, FOR THE TWO THOUSAND 34 TWELVE--TWO THOUSAND THIRTEEN AND THE TWO THOUSAND THIRTEEN--TWO THOU- 35 SAND FOURTEEN SCHOOL YEARS, the entire annual professional performance 36 review shall be completed and provided to the teacher or principal as 37 soon as practicable but in no case later than September first of the 38 school year next following the school year for which the classroom 39 teacher or building principal's performance is being measured. The 40 teacher's and principal's score and rating on the locally selected meas- 41 ures subcomponent, if available, and on the other measures of teacher 42 and principal effectiveness subcomponent for a teacher's or principal's 43 annual professional performance review shall be computed and provided to 44 the teacher or principal, in writing, by no later than the last day of 45 the school year for which the teacher or principal is being measured. 46 Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to authorize a teacher or 47 principal to trigger the appeal process prior to receipt of his or her 48 composite effectiveness score and rating. 49 (3) Each such annual professional performance review shall be based on 50 the state assessments or other comparable measures subcomponent, the 51 locally selected measures of student achievement subcomponent IN SCHOOL 52 YEARS WHERE APPLICABLE, and the other measures of teacher and principal 53 effectiveness subcomponent, determined in accordance with the applicable 54 provisions of this section and the regulations of the commissioner, for 55 the school year for which the teacher's or principal's performance is 56 measured. S. 2010 51 A. 3010 1 S 4. Subparagraph 1 of paragraph f of subdivision 2 of section 3012-c 2 of the education law, as amended by chapter 21 of the laws of 2012, is 3 amended to read as follows: 4 (1) For annual professional performance reviews conducted in accord- 5 ance with paragraph c of this subdivision for the two thousand twelve-- 6 two thousand thirteen [school year and thereafter], TWO THOUSAND THIR- 7 TEEN--TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO THOUSAND 8 FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS for classroom teachers in subjects and grades for 9 which the board of regents has not approved a value-added model and for 10 building principals employed in schools or programs for which there is 11 no approved principal value-added model, forty percent of the composite 12 score of effectiveness shall be based on student achievement measures as 13 follows: (i) twenty percent of the evaluation shall be based upon 14 student growth data on state assessments as prescribed by the commis- 15 sioner or a comparable measure of student growth if such growth data is 16 not available; and (ii) twenty percent shall be based on other locally 17 selected measures of student achievement that are determined to be 18 rigorous and comparable across classrooms in accordance with the regu- 19 lations of the commissioner and as are developed locally in a manner 20 consistent with procedures negotiated pursuant to the requirements of 21 article fourteen of the civil service law. 22 S 5. Paragraph f of subdivision 2 of section 3012-c of the education 23 law is amended by adding a new subparagraph 5 to read as follows: 24 (5) FOR THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND 25 THEREAFTER, FIFTY PERCENT OF A CLASSROOM TEACHER'S OR BUILDING PRINCI- 26 PAL'S COMPOSITE EFFECTIVENESS SCORE SHALL BE BASED ON STUDENT GROWTH ON 27 STATE ASSESSMENTS, WHERE APPLICABLE, OR OTHER COMPARABLE MEASURES OF 28 STUDENT GROWTH, AS PRESCRIBED BY THE COMMISSIONER IN REGULATIONS; 29 PROVIDED THAT SUCH REGULATIONS SHALL REQUIRE THAT ANY COMPARABLE MEAS- 30 URES OF STUDENT GROWTH BE MEASURED ON AN ANNUAL BASIS. FOR THE TWO THOU- 31 SAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFTER, THERE 32 SHALL BE NO LOCALLY SELECTED MEASURES OF STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT SUBCOMPO- 33 NENT. 34 S 6. Paragraphs h, i and j of subdivision 2 of section 3012-c of the 35 education law, paragraph h as amended and paragraph j as added by chap- 36 ter 21 of the laws of 2012 and paragraph i as added by chapter 103 of 37 the laws of 2010, are amended to read as follows: 38 h. [The] FOR SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOU- 39 SAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, THE remaining sixty percent of the evalu- 40 ations, ratings and effectiveness scores shall be locally developed, AND 41 FOR THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THER- 42 EAFTER, THE REMAINING FIFTY PERCENT OF THE EVALUATIONS, RATINGS AND 43 EFFECTIVENESS SCORES SHALL BE LOCALLY DEVELOPED, consistent with the 44 standards prescribed in the regulations of the commissioner, through 45 negotiations conducted pursuant to article fourteen of the civil service 46 law, EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS SECTION. 47 (1) [A] (I) FOR SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO 48 THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, A majority of the sixty points for class- 49 room teachers shall be based on multiple classroom observations 50 conducted by a principal or other trained administrator, which may be 51 performed in-person or by video. For evaluations for the two thousand 52 twelve--two thousand thirteen school year and thereafter, at least one 53 such observation shall be an unannounced visit. 54 (II) FOR THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR 55 AND THEREAFTER, A MINIMUM OF THIRTY-FIVE OF THE FIFTY POINTS MUST BE 56 BASED ON ONE OR MORE CLASSROOM OBSERVATIONS CONDUCTED BY AN INDEPENDENT S. 2010 52 A. 3010 1 EVALUATOR, AT LEAST ONE OF WHICH MUST BE UNANNOUNCED. AN INDEPENDENT 2 EVALUATOR SHALL BE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING: 3 (A) A BUILDING PRINCIPAL OR OTHER TRAINED ADMINISTRATOR WITHIN OR 4 OUTSIDE THE SCHOOL DISTRICT, WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECORD OF EFFECTIVENESS 5 AS DETERMINED BY THE COMMISSIONER, AND WHO IS NOT CURRENTLY ASSIGNED AS 6 A PRINCIPAL OR ADMINISTRATOR IN THE SCHOOL IN WHICH HE OR SHE IS 7 CONDUCTING THE EVALUATION; OR 8 (B) A TRAINED INDEPENDENT EVALUATOR FROM A LIST OF ENTITIES AND/OR 9 EVALUATORS WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECORD OF EFFECTIVENESS AND EXPERTISE IN 10 TEACHER TRAINING, OBSERVATION, OR EFFECTIVENESS, AS DETERMINED BY THE 11 COMMISSIONER INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO RETIRED TEACHERS AND ADMINIS- 12 TRATORS; OR 13 (C) APPOINTED FACULTY AT A STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK OR A CITY 14 UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF EDUCATION. PROVIDED HOWEVER THAT, THE 15 DEPARTMENT SHALL PROVIDE TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE FOR SCHOOL DISTRICTS AND 16 BOARDS OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO: 17 (A) FACILITATING PARTNERSHIPS FOR SCHOOL DISTRICTS TO IMPLEMENT SHARED 18 SERVICE AGREEMENTS IN ORDER TO ACCESS NEIGHBORING PRINCIPALS OR TRAINED 19 ADMINISTRATORS; 20 (B) DEVELOPING AND MAINTAINING A LIST OF ENTITIES AND/OR EVALUATORS 21 WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECORD OF EFFECTIVENESS AND EXPERTISE IN TEACHER 22 TRAINING, OBSERVATION, OR EFFECTIVENESS; OR 23 (C) ASSISTING SCHOOL DISTRICTS IN DEVELOPING SCHEDULES FOR SHARING 24 ADMINISTRATORS WITHIN A SCHOOL DISTRICT; OR 25 (D) COORDINATING WITH BOARDS OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES TO 26 PROVIDE ADDITIONAL TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE. 27 (2) For the remaining portion of these sixty points for evaluations 28 for the two thousand eleven--two thousand twelve school year, the 29 commissioner's regulation shall prescribe the other forms of evidence of 30 teacher and principal effectiveness that may be used. 31 (3) For evaluations of classroom teachers for the two thousand twelve- 32 -two thousand thirteen [school year and thereafter] TWO THOUSAND THIR- 33 TEEN--TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN AND TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO THOUSAND 34 FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS, the remaining portion of these sixty points shall 35 be based on one or more of the following: 36 (i) one or more classroom observations by independent trained evalu- 37 ators selected by the school district or board of cooperative educa- 38 tional services who are teachers or former teachers with a demonstrated 39 record of effectiveness and have no prior affiliation with the school in 40 which they are conducting the evaluation and no other relationship with 41 the teachers being evaluated that would affect their impartiality; 42 (ii) classroom observations by trained in-school peer teachers; and/or 43 (iii) use of a state-approved instrument for parent or student feed- 44 back; and/or 45 (iv) evidence of student development and performance through lesson 46 plans, student portfolios and other artifacts of teacher practices 47 through a structured review process. 48 (4) [A] FOR EVALUATIONS OF CLASSROOM TEACHERS FOR THE TWO THOUSAND 49 FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFTER, THE REMAINING 50 PORTION OF THE FIFTY POINTS SHALL BE BASED ON ONE OR MORE CLASSROOM 51 OBSERVATIONS CONDUCTED BY A PRINCIPAL OR OTHER TRAINED ADMINISTRATOR, 52 WHICH MAY BE PERFORMED IN-PERSON OR BY VIDEO AND AT LEAST ONE SUCH 53 OBSERVATION SHALL BE AN UNANNOUNCED VISIT. 54 (5) (I) FOR SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOU- 55 SAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, A majority of these sixty points for building 56 principals shall be based on a broad assessment of the principal's lead- S. 2010 53 A. 3010 1 ership and management actions based on the principal practice rubric by 2 the building principal's supervisor, a trained administrator or a 3 trained independent evaluator, with one or more visits conducted by the 4 supervisor, and, for evaluations for the two thousand twelve--two thou- 5 sand thirteen school year and thereafter, that such assessment must 6 incorporate multiple school visits by a supervisor, a trained adminis- 7 trator or other trained evaluator, with at least one visit conducted by 8 the supervisor and at least one unannounced visit. For the remaining 9 portion of these sixty points for evaluations for the two thousand 10 eleven--two thousand twelve school year, such regulations shall also 11 prescribe the other forms of evidence of principal effectiveness that 12 may be used consistent with the standards prescribed by the commission- 13 er. 14 [(5)] (6) FOR EVALUATIONS OF BUILDING PRINCIPALS FOR THE TWO THOUSAND 15 FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFTER, A MINIMUM OF 16 THIRTY-FIVE OF THE FIFTY POINTS SHALL BE BASED ON A BROAD ASSESSMENT OF 17 THE PRINCIPAL'S LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT ACTIONS BASED ON THE PRINCIPAL 18 PRACTICE RUBRIC AS DETERMINED BY AN INDEPENDENT OBSERVER FOLLOWING ONE 19 OR MORE SCHOOL VISITS, AT LEAST ONE OF WHICH MUST BE UNANNOUNCED. AN 20 INDEPENDENT OBSERVER SHALL BE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING: 21 (I) A SUPERINTENDENT OR OTHER TRAINED ADMINISTRATOR THAT SUPERVISES 22 PRINCIPALS FROM OUTSIDE THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OR BOARD OF COOPERATIVE 23 EDUCATIONAL SERVICES WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECORD OF EFFECTIVENESS, OR 24 (II) A TRAINED INDEPENDENT EVALUATOR FROM A LIST OF ENTITIES AND/OR 25 EVALUATORS WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECORD OF EFFECTIVENESS AND EXPERTISE IN 26 SCHOOL BUILDING LEADER TRAINING, OBSERVATION, OR EFFECTIVENESS, AS 27 DETERMINED BY THE COMMISSIONER, OR 28 (III) APPOINTED FACULTY AT A STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK OR A CITY 29 UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF EDUCATION. 30 PROVIDED THAT, THE DEPARTMENT SHALL PROVIDE TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE FOR 31 SCHOOL DISTRICTS INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO: 32 (A) FACILITATING PARTNERSHIPS FOR SCHOOL DISTRICTS TO IMPLEMENT SHARED 33 SERVICE AGREEMENTS IN ORDER TO ACCESS NEIGHBORING SUPERINTENDENTS OR 34 OTHER TRAINED ADMINISTRATORS THAT SUPERVISE PRINCIPALS; OR 35 (B) DEVELOPING AND MAINTAINING A LIST OF ENTITIES AND/OR EVALUATORS 36 WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECORD OF EFFECTIVENESS AND EXPERTISE IN SCHOOL 37 BUILDING LEADER TRAINING, OBSERVATION, OR EFFECTIVENESS, AS DETERMINED 38 BY THE COMMISSIONER, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO RETIRED ADMINISTRA- 39 TORS; OR 40 (C) ASSISTING SCHOOL DISTRICTS IN DEVELOPING SCHEDULES FOR SHARING 41 NON-SUPERVISING ADMINISTRATORS WITHIN A SCHOOL DISTRICT, IF APPLICABLE; 42 OR 43 (D) COORDINATING WITH BOARDS OF COOPERATIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES TO 44 PROVIDE ADDITIONAL TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE. 45 (7) For evaluations of building principals for the two thousand 46 twelve--two thousand thirteen [school year and thereafter], TWO THOUSAND 47 THIRTEEN--TWO FOURTEEN AND THE TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN--TWO THOUSAND 48 FIFTEEN SCHOOL YEARS, the remaining portion of these sixty points shall 49 include, in addition to the requirements of subparagraph three of this 50 paragraph, at least two other sources of evidence from the following 51 options: feedback from teachers, students, and/or families using state- 52 approved instruments; school visits by other trained evaluators; and/or 53 review of school documents, records, and/or state accountability proc- 54 esses. Any such remaining points shall be assigned based on the results 55 of one or more ambitious and measurable goals set collaboratively with S. 2010 54 A. 3010 1 principals and their superintendents or district superintendents as 2 follows: 3 (i) at least one goal must address the principal's contribution to 4 improving teacher effectiveness, which shall include one or more of the 5 following: improved retention of high performing teachers, the corre- 6 lation between student growth scores of teachers granted tenure as 7 opposed to those denied tenure; or improvements in the proficiency 8 rating of the principal on specific teacher effectiveness standards in 9 the principal practice rubric. 10 (ii) any other goals shall address quantifiable and verifiable 11 improvements in academic results or the school's learning environmental 12 such as student or teacher attendance. 13 [(6) The] (8) FOR EVALUATIONS OF BUILDING PRINCIPALS FOR THE TWO THOU- 14 SAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFTER, THE 15 REMAINING PORTION OF THE FIFTY POINTS SHALL BE BASED ON A BROAD ASSESS- 16 MENT OF THE PRINCIPAL'S LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT ACTIONS BASED ON THE 17 PRINCIPAL PRACTICE RUBRIC BY THE BUILDING PRINCIPAL'S SUPERVISOR, WITH 18 AT LEAST ONE UNANNOUNCED VISIT. 19 (9) FOR SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND 20 SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, THE district or board of cooperative educational 21 services shall establish specific minimum and maximum scoring ranges for 22 each performance level within this subcomponent before the start of each 23 school year and shall assign points to a teacher or principal for this 24 subcomponent based on the standards prescribed in the regulations of the 25 commissioner, all in accordance with, and subject to, the requirements 26 of paragraph j of this subdivision. FOR THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--SIX- 27 TEEN SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFTER, THE COMMISSIONER SHALL ESTABLISH IN 28 REGULATIONS THE MINIMUM AND MAXIMUM SCORING RANGES FOR EACH PERFORMANCE 29 LEVEL WITHIN THIS SUBCOMPONENT. 30 i. For purposes of this section, student growth means the change in 31 student achievement for an individual student between two or more points 32 in time. 33 j. (1) The process by which points are assigned in subcomponents and 34 the scoring ranges for the subcomponents must be transparent and avail- 35 able to those being rated before the beginning of each school year. The 36 process by which points are assigned in the respective subcomponents are 37 to be determined as follows: 38 (i) For the state assessment or other comparable measures subcompo- 39 nent, that process shall be formulated by the commissioner with the 40 approval of the board of regents. 41 (ii) For SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND 42 SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, FOR the locally selected measures of the student 43 achievement subcomponent, that process shall be established locally 44 through negotiations conducted under article fourteen of the civil 45 service law. 46 (iii) For the other measures of teacher and principal effectiveness 47 subcomponent, that process shall be established locally through negoti- 48 ations conducted under article fourteen of the civil services law. 49 (2) Such process must ensure that it is possible for a teacher or 50 principal to obtain each point in the applicable scoring ranges, includ- 51 ing zero, for the state assessment or other comparable measures subcom- 52 ponent, the locally selected measures of student achievement subcompo- 53 nent IN SCHOOL YEARS WHERE APPLICABLE, and the overall rating 54 categories. The process must also ensure that it is possible for a 55 teacher or principal to obtain each point in the scoring ranges 56 prescribed by the district or board of cooperative educational services S. 2010 55 A. 3010 1 for the other measures of teacher and principal effectiveness subcompo- 2 nent. 3 (3) The superintendent, district superintendent or chancellor and the 4 president of the collective bargaining representative (where one exists) 5 shall certify in its plan that the process will use the narrative 6 descriptions of the standards for the scoring ranges provided in the 7 regulations of the commissioner to effectively differentiate a teacher 8 or principal's performance in each of the subcomponents and in their 9 overall ratings to improve student learning and instruction. 10 (4) [The] FOR SCHOOL YEARS PRIOR TO THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO 11 THOUSAND SIXTEEN SCHOOL YEAR, scoring ranges for the other measures of 12 teacher and principal effectiveness subcomponent shall be established 13 locally through negotiations conducted under article fourteen of the 14 civil service law. FOR THE TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN--TWO THOUSAND SIXTEEN 15 SCHOOL YEAR AND THEREAFTER, THE SCORING RANGES FOR THE OTHER MEASURES OF 16 TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL EFFECTIVENESS SUBCOMPONENT SHALL BE ESTABLISHED BY 17 THE COMMISSIONER IN REGULATIONS. 18 S 7. Section 3012-c of the education law is amended by adding a new 19 subdivision 11 to read as follows: 20 11. A. A STUDENT MAY NOT BE INSTRUCTED FOR TWO CONSECUTIVE SCHOOL 21 YEARS BY TWO CONSECUTIVE CLASSROOM TEACHERS IN THE SAME DISTRICT, EACH 22 OF WHOM RECEIVED A FINAL QUALITY RATING OF INEFFECTIVE UNDER AN ANNUAL 23 PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW CONDUCTED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION IN 24 THE SCHOOL YEAR IMMEDIATELY BEFORE THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH THE STUDENT 25 IS PLACED IN THE RESPECTIVE CLASSROOM TEACHER'S CLASS. 26 B. IF A CLASSROOM TEACHER DID NOT INSTRUCT STUDENTS IN THE SCHOOL YEAR 27 IMMEDIATELY BEFORE THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH THE STUDENTS ARE PLACED IN 28 THE TEACHER'S CLASS, THE TEACHER'S RATING IN THE MOST RECENT YEAR IN 29 WHICH THE TEACHER INSTRUCTED STUDENTS, INSTEAD OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IMME- 30 DIATELY BEFORE THE SCHOOL YEAR IN WHICH STUDENTS ARE PLACED IN THE 31 CLASSROOM TEACHER'S CLASS, SHALL BE USED IN DETERMINING THE RATINGS FOR 32 PURPOSES OF THIS SUBDIVISION. 33 S 8. This act shall take effect immediately. 34 PART C 35 Section 1. Section 34 of chapter 91 of the laws of 2002 amending the 36 education law and other laws relating to the reorganization of the New 37 York city school construction authority, board of education and communi- 38 ty boards, as amended by chapter 345 of the laws of 2009, is amended to 39 read as follows: 40 S 34. This act shall take effect July 1, 2002; provided, that sections 41 one through twenty, twenty-four, and twenty-six through thirty of this 42 act shall expire and be deemed repealed June 30, [2015] 2018; provided, 43 further, that notwithstanding any provision of article 5 of the general 44 construction law, on June 30, [2015] 2018 the provisions of subdivisions 45 3, 5, and 8, paragraph b of subdivision 13, subdivision 14, paragraphs 46 b, d, and e of subdivision 15, and subdivisions 17 and 21 of section 47 2554 of the education law as repealed by section three of this act, 48 subdivision 1 of section 2590-b of the education law as repealed by 49 section six of this act, paragraph (a) of subdivision 2 of section 50 2590-b of the education law as repealed by section seven of this act, 51 section 2590-c of the education law as repealed by section eight of this 52 act, paragraph c of subdivision 2 of section 2590-d of the education law 53 as repealed by section twenty-six of this act, subdivision 1 of section 54 2590-e of the education law as repealed by section twenty-seven of this S. 2010 56 A. 3010 1 act, subdivision 28 of section 2590-h of the education law as repealed 2 by section twenty-eight of this act, subdivision 30 of section 2590-h of 3 the education law as repealed by section twenty-nine of this act, subdi- 4 vision 30-a of section 2590-h of the education law as repealed by 5 section thirty of this act shall be revived and be read as such 6 provisions existed in law on the date immediately preceding the effec- 7 tive date of this act; provided, however, that sections seven and eight 8 of this act shall take effect on November 30, 2003; provided further 9 that the amendments to subdivision 25 of section 2554 of the education 10 law made by section two of this act shall be subject to the expiration 11 and reversion of such subdivision pursuant to section 12 of chapter 147 12 of the laws of 2001, as amended, when upon such date the provisions of 13 section four of this act shall take effect. 14 S 2. Subdivision 12 of section 17 of chapter 345 of the laws of 2009 15 amending the education law relating to the New York city board of educa- 16 tion, chancellor, community councils, and community superintendents, is 17 amended to read as follows: 18 12. any provision in sections one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, 19 eight, nine, ten and eleven of this act not otherwise set to expire 20 pursuant to section 34 of chapter 91 of the laws of 2002, as amended, or 21 section 17 of chapter 123 of the laws of 2003, as amended, shall expire 22 and be deemed repealed June 30, [2015] 2018. 23 S 3. This act shall take effect immediately. 24 PART D 25 Section 1. As used in this section, "current year" and "base year" 26 shall have the same meanings as defined in paragraphs a and b, respec- 27 tively, of subdivision 1 of section 3602 of the education law. 28 1. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, a school 29 district shall not be eligible for an apportionment of general support 30 for public schools for the 2015-16 school year or any school year there- 31 after in excess of the amount apportioned to such school district in the 32 base year, unless the following eligibility criteria and conditions have 33 been met: 34 (a) For all school districts, the director of the budget has notified 35 the commissioner of education in writing that by March 31, 2015 the 36 legislature has enacted a chapter or chapters of law identical to part A 37 and part B of this act as proposed in legislative bill numbers S.2010 38 and A.3010 and submitted in support of the executive budget for the 39 2015-16 state fiscal year; and 40 (b) For all school districts, the school district has submitted 41 documentation that has been approved by the commissioner of education, 42 by September 1 of the current year, demonstrating that it has fully 43 implemented the standards and procedures for conducting annual profes- 44 sional performance reviews of classroom teachers and building principals 45 in accordance with the requirements of section 3012-c of the education 46 law, as amended by part B of this act as proposed in legislative bill 47 numbers S.2010 and A.3010 and submitted in support of the executive 48 budget for the 2015-16 state fiscal year, and the commissioner of 49 education's regulations; and 50 (c) For a school district in a city with a population of one million 51 or more, the director of the budget has notified the commissioner of 52 education in writing that by March 31, 2015 the legislature has enacted 53 a chapter or chapters of law identical to part C of this act as proposed 54 in legislative bill numbers S.2010 and A.3010 and submitted in support 55 of the executive budget for the 2015-16 state fiscal year. S. 2010 57 A. 3010 1 2. If any payments of ineligible amounts pursuant to subdivision one 2 of this section were made, the total amount of such payments shall be 3 deducted from future payments to the school district; provided that, if 4 the amount of the deduction is greater than the sum of the amounts 5 available for such deductions in the applicable school year, the remain- 6 der of the deduction shall be withheld from payments scheduled to be 7 made to the school district pursuant to section 3609-a of the education 8 law for the subsequent school year. 9 3. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, any appor- 10 tionment withheld pursuant to this section shall not have any effect on 11 the base year calculation for use in the subsequent school year. 12 S 2. Subdivision 2 of section 1 of part A of chapter 57 of the laws of 13 2013 relating to school district eligibility for an increase in appor- 14 tionment of school aid and implementation of standards for conducting 15 annual professional performance reviews to determine teacher and princi- 16 pal effectiveness is amended to read as follows: 17 2. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, no school 18 district shall be eligible for an apportionment of general support for 19 public schools from the funds appropriated for the 2013-14 school year 20 [and thereafter] OR THE 2014-15 SCHOOL YEAR in excess of the amount 21 apportioned to such school district in the base year unless such school 22 district has submitted documentation that has been approved by the 23 commissioner of education by September 1 of the current year, demon- 24 strating that it has fully implemented the standards and procedures for 25 conducting annual professional performance reviews of classroom teachers 26 and building principals in accordance with the requirements of section 27 3012-c of the education law and the commissioner of education's regu- 28 lations. Any apportionment withheld pursuant to this section shall not 29 occur prior to April 1 of the current year and shall not have any effect 30 on the base year calculation for use in the subsequent school year. 31 S 3. This act shall take effect immediately. 32 S 2. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi- 33 sion, section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of 34 competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, 35 impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in 36 its operation to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section 37 or part thereof directly involved in the controversy in which such judg- 38 ment shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of 39 the legislature that this act would have been enacted even if such 40 invalid provisions had not been included herein. 41 S 3. This act shall take effect immediately provided, however, that 42 the applicable effective date of Parts A through D of this act shall be 43 as specifically set forth in the last section of such Parts.