Bill Text: TX HB462 | 2025-2026 | 89th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating to the armed security officers required to be present at public schools and the permissible uses of the school safety allotment and the creation of a mental health allotment under the Foundation School Program.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced) 2024-11-12 - Filed [HB462 Detail]
Download: Texas-2025-HB462-Introduced.html
By: Guillen | H.B. No. 462 |
|
||
|
||
relating to the armed security officers required to be present at | ||
public schools and the permissible uses of the school safety | ||
allotment and the creation of a mental health allotment under the | ||
Foundation School Program. | ||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | ||
SECTION 1. Section 37.0814(b), Education Code, is amended | ||
to read as follows: | ||
(b) A security officer described by Subsection (a) must be: | ||
(1) a school district peace officer; | ||
(2) a school resource officer; [ |
||
(3) a commissioned peace officer employed as security | ||
personnel under Section 37.081; or | ||
(4) a canine unit, as defined by Section 108.001, | ||
Business & Commerce Code. | ||
SECTION 2. Section 48.115, Education Code, is amended by | ||
amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsections (a-2) and | ||
(a-3) to read as follows: | ||
(a) Except as provided by Subsection (a-1) and subject to | ||
Subsection (a-2), a school district is entitled to an annual | ||
allotment equal to the sum of the following amounts or a greater | ||
amount provided by appropriation: | ||
(1) $100 [ |
||
attendance, plus $1 for each student in average daily attendance | ||
per every $50 by which the district's maximum basic allotment under | ||
Section 48.051 exceeds $6,160, prorated as necessary; and | ||
(2) $100,000 [ |
||
(a-2) To be eligible to receive an allotment under this | ||
section, a school district must ensure that: | ||
(1) at least one security officer described by Section | ||
37.0814(b) armed with a firearm is present at each district campus | ||
during regular school hours; and | ||
(2) at least one school marshal or security officer | ||
described by Section 37.0814(b) who has received training | ||
comparable to the training required for a school marshal under | ||
Section 1701.260(c), Occupations Code, and is armed with a firearm | ||
is appointed, assigned, or employed by the district for every 200 | ||
students enrolled at the district. | ||
(a-3) Requirements under subsection (a-2)(2) can also be | ||
met via at least one remote-human-operated aerial device described | ||
by Article 2.33(a)(1), Code of Criminal Procedure, deployed or | ||
contracted by the district at each district campus providing less | ||
lethal interdiction capability by means of air-based irritant | ||
delivery or other mechanisms for every 200 students enrolled at the | ||
district. | ||
(b) Funds allocated under this section must be used to | ||
improve school safety and security, including costs associated | ||
with: | ||
(1) securing school facilities in accordance with the | ||
requirements of Section 37.351, including: | ||
(A) improvements to school infrastructure; | ||
(B) the use or installation of perimeter security | ||
fencing conducive to a public school learning environment or | ||
physical barriers, which may not include razor wire; | ||
(C) exterior door and window safety and security | ||
upgrades, including exterior door numbering and locking systems and | ||
security film that provides resistance to a forced entry; and | ||
(D) the purchase and maintenance of: | ||
(i) security cameras and, if the district | ||
has already installed security cameras, other security equipment, | ||
including video surveillance as provided by Section 29.022; and | ||
(ii) technology, including communications | ||
systems or devices, such as silent panic alert devices, two-way | ||
radios, or wireless Internet booster equipment, that facilitates | ||
communication and information sharing between students, school | ||
personnel, and first responders in an emergency; | ||
(2) providing security for the district, including: | ||
(A) employing school district peace officers, | ||
private security officers, and school marshals; and | ||
(B) collaborating with local law enforcement | ||
agencies, such as entering into a memorandum of understanding for | ||
the assignment of school resource officers to schools in the | ||
district; | ||
(3) school safety and security measures, including: | ||
(A) active shooter and emergency response | ||
training; | ||
(B) prevention and treatment programs relating | ||
to addressing adverse childhood experiences; and | ||
(C) the prevention, identification, and | ||
management of emergencies and threats, using evidence-based, | ||
effective prevention practices and including the establishment of | ||
[ |
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[ |
||
(4) [ |
||
personnel to manage and monitor school safety initiatives and the | ||
implementation of school safety requirements for the district. | ||
SECTION 3. Subchapter C, Chapter 48, Education Code, is | ||
amended by adding Section 48.117 to read as follows: | ||
Sec. 48.117. MENTAL HEALTH ALLOTMENT. (a) A school | ||
district is entitled to an annual allotment of $100,000 or a greater | ||
amount provided by appropriation to support mental health services | ||
at the district. | ||
(b) In addition to the allotment under Subsection (a), a | ||
school district that receives an allotment under Section 48.101 or | ||
at which more than 50 percent of enrolled students are | ||
educationally disadvantaged is entitled to an allotment for each | ||
student enrolled in the district in an amount provided by | ||
appropriation. | ||
(c) Funds allocated under this section: | ||
(1) must be used to develop or enhance a comprehensive | ||
school mental health system that, through the implementation of | ||
programs, practices, and procedures in accordance with Section | ||
38.351, provides a tiered array of supports and services in the | ||
educational setting, including support provided by chaplains, that | ||
contribute to: | ||
(A) a positive school climate; | ||
(B) the development of skills related to managing | ||
emotions, establishing and maintaining positive relationships, and | ||
responsible decision-making; | ||
(C) the learning and well-being of students with | ||
or at risk of mental health or substance use conditions; | ||
(D) family and community engagement; | ||
(E) reduced exclusionary discipline practices; | ||
and | ||
(F) staff wellness; and | ||
(2) may be used to pay for costs associated with: | ||
(A) the salary of school personnel, including | ||
chaplains, responsible for planning, coordinating, delivering, or | ||
monitoring supports and services described by Subdivision (1); | ||
(B) training school personnel regarding | ||
effective practices and district and campus procedures to support | ||
student mental health; | ||
(C) a contract-based collaborative effort or | ||
partnership with one or more local community programs, agencies, or | ||
providers, including programs provided by chaplains; and | ||
(D) developing and implementing programs focused | ||
on restorative justice practices, including programs provided by | ||
chaplains. | ||
(d) Funds allocated for purposes of this section may not be | ||
used to supplant any other funds that may be provided for the same | ||
purpose. | ||
(e) Not later than June 1 of each year and in accordance with | ||
commissioner rule, each school district shall submit to the | ||
commissioner information regarding the outcomes and expenditures | ||
related to funds allocated to the district under this section. | ||
(f) Not later than September 1 of each year, the | ||
commissioner shall publish a report regarding the use of funds | ||
allocated under this section during the preceding school year, | ||
including information regarding the programs, personnel, and | ||
resources implemented, employed, or purchased by school districts | ||
using the funds and other purposes for which the funds were used. | ||
SECTION 4. This Act takes effect September 1, 2025. |