Bill Text: TX SB12 | 2025-2026 | 89th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Relating to parental rights in public education and to certain public school requirements and prohibitions regarding instruction and diversity, equity, and inclusion duties and the loss of funding for public schools that fail to comply with those provisions.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2025-02-27 - Scheduled for public hearing on . . . [SB12 Detail]

Download: Texas-2025-SB12-Introduced.html
 
 
  By: Creighton S.B. No. 12
 
 
 
   
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to parental rights in public education and to certain
  public school requirements and prohibitions regarding instruction
  and diversity, equity, and inclusion duties and the loss of funding
  for public schools that fail to comply with those provisions.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Chapter 1, Education Code, is amended by adding
  Sections 1.007 and 1.009 to read as follows:
         Sec. 1.007.  COMPLIANCE WITH MANDATORY POLICY. (a) In this
  section, "public elementary or secondary school" means a school
  district and a district, campus, program, or school operating under
  a charter under Chapter 12.
         (b)  A public elementary or secondary school, the school's
  governing body, and the school's employees shall implement and
  comply with each policy the school is required to adopt under this
  code or other law.
         Sec. 1.009.  INFRINGEMENT OF PARENTAL RIGHTS PROHIBITED.
  The fundamental rights granted to parents by their Creator and
  upheld by the United States Constitution, the Texas Constitution,
  and the laws of this state, including the right to direct the moral
  and religious training of the parent's child, make decisions
  concerning the child's education, and consent to medical,
  psychiatric, and psychological treatment of the parent's child
  under Section 151.001, Family Code, may not be infringed on by any
  public elementary or secondary school or state governmental entity,
  including the state or a political subdivision of the state, unless
  the infringement is:
               (1)  necessary to further a compelling state interest,
  such as providing life-saving care to a child; and
               (2)  narrowly tailored using the least restrictive
  means to achieve that compelling state interest.
         SECTION 2.  Subchapter A, Chapter 11, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 11.005 to read as follows:
         Sec. 11.005.  PROHIBITION ON DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND
  INCLUSION DUTIES. (a) In this section, "diversity, equity, and
  inclusion duties" means:
               (1)  influencing hiring or employment practices with
  respect to race, sex, color, or ethnicity except as necessary to
  comply with state or federal antidiscrimination laws;
               (2)  promoting differential treatment of or providing
  special benefits to individuals on the basis of race, color, or
  ethnicity;
               (3)  developing or implementing policies, procedures,
  or training programs that reference race, color, ethnicity, gender
  identity, or sexual orientation except as necessary to comply with
  state or federal law;
               (4)  compelling, requiring, inducing, or soliciting
  any person to provide a diversity, equity, and inclusion statement
  or giving preferential consideration to any person based on the
  provision of a diversity, equity, and inclusion statement; and
         (b)  Except as required by state or federal law, a school
  district:
               (1)  may not assign diversity, equity, and inclusion
  duties to any person; and
               (2)  shall prohibit a district employee, contractor, or
  volunteer from engaging in diversity, equity, and inclusion duties.
         (c)  A school district shall adopt a policy and procedure for
  the appropriate discipline, including termination, of a district
  employee or contractor who engages in or assigns to another person
  diversity, equity, and inclusion duties.
         (d)  Nothing in this section may be construed to limit or
  prohibit a school district from acknowledging or teaching the
  significance of state and federal holidays or commemorative months
  and how those holidays or months fit into the themes of history and
  the stories of this state and the United States of America in
  accordance with the essential knowledge and skills adopted under
  Subchapter A, Chapter 28.
         SECTION 3.  Section 11.161, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 11.161.  FRIVOLOUS SUIT OR PROCEEDING. (a) In a civil
  suit or administrative proceeding brought under state law or rules
  [,] against an independent school district or an officer of an
  independent school district acting under color of office, the court
  or another person authorized to make decisions regarding the
  proceeding may award costs and reasonable attorney's fees if:
               (1)  the court or other authorized person finds that
  the suit or proceeding is frivolous, unreasonable, and without
  foundation; and
               (2)  the suit or proceeding is dismissed or judgment is
  for the defendant.
         (b)  This section does not apply to a civil suit or
  administrative proceeding brought under the Individuals with
  Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.). A
  civil suit or administrative proceeding described by this
  subsection is governed by the attorney's fees provisions under 20
  U.S.C. Section 1415.
         SECTION 4.  Section 12.104(b), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (b)  An open-enrollment charter school is subject to:
               (1)  a provision of this title establishing a criminal
  offense;
               (2)  the provisions in Chapter 554, Government Code;
  and
               (3)  a prohibition, restriction, or requirement, as
  applicable, imposed by this title or a rule adopted under this
  title, relating to:
                     (A)  the Public Education Information Management
  System (PEIMS) to the extent necessary to monitor compliance with
  this subchapter as determined by the commissioner;
                     (B)  criminal history records under Subchapter C,
  Chapter 22;
                     (C)  reading instruments and accelerated reading
  instruction programs under Section 28.006;
                     (D)  accelerated instruction under Section
  28.0211;
                     (E)  high school graduation requirements under
  Section 28.025;
                     (F)  special education programs under Subchapter
  A, Chapter 29;
                     (G)  bilingual education under Subchapter B,
  Chapter 29;
                     (H)  prekindergarten programs under Subchapter E
  or E-1, Chapter 29, except class size limits for prekindergarten
  classes imposed under Section 25.112, which do not apply;
                     (I)  extracurricular activities under Section
  33.081;
                     (J)  discipline management practices or behavior
  management techniques under Section 37.0021;
                     (K)  health and safety under Chapter 38;
                     (L)  the provisions of Subchapter A, Chapter 39;
                     (M)  public school accountability and special
  investigations under Subchapters A, B, C, D, F, G, and J, Chapter
  39, and Chapter 39A;
                     (N)  the requirement under Section 21.006 to
  report an educator's misconduct;
                     (O)  intensive programs of instruction under
  Section 28.0213;
                     (P)  the right of a school employee to report a
  crime, as provided by Section 37.148;
                     (Q)  bullying prevention policies and procedures
  under Section 37.0832;
                     (R)  the right of a school under Section 37.0052
  to place a student who has engaged in certain bullying behavior in a
  disciplinary alternative education program or to expel the student;
                     (S)  the right under Section 37.0151 to report to
  local law enforcement certain conduct constituting assault or
  harassment;
                     (T)  a parent's right to information regarding the
  provision of assistance for learning difficulties to the parent's
  child as provided by Sections 26.004(b)(11) and 26.0081(c) and (d);
                     (U)  establishment of residency under Section
  25.001;
                     (V)  school safety requirements under Sections
  37.0814, 37.108, 37.1081, 37.1082, 37.1083, 37.1084, 37.1085,
  37.1086, 37.109, 37.113, 37.114, 37.1141, 37.115, 37.207, and
  37.2071 and Subchapter J, Chapter 37;
                     (W)  the early childhood literacy and mathematics
  proficiency plans under Section 11.185;
                     (X)  the college, career, and military readiness
  plans under Section 11.186; [and]
                     (Y)  parental options to retain a student under
  Section 28.02124;
                     (Z)  diversity, equity, and inclusion duties
  under Section 11.005;
                     (AA)  parental access to instructional materials
  and curricula under Section 26.0061;
                     (BB)  the adoption of a parental engagement policy
  as provided by Section 26.0071; and
                     (CC)  parental rights to information regarding a
  student's mental, emotional, and physical health-related needs and
  related services offered by the school as provided by Section
  26.0083.
         SECTION 5.  Section 25.001(h), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (h)  In addition to the penalty provided by Section 37.10,
  Penal Code, a person who knowingly falsifies information on a form
  required for enrollment of a student in a school district is liable
  to the district if the student is not eligible for enrollment in the
  district but is enrolled on the basis of the false information. The
  person is liable, for the period during which the ineligible
  student is enrolled, for [the greater of:
               [(1)  the maximum tuition fee the district may charge
  under Section 25.038; or
               [(2)]  the amount the district has budgeted for each
  student as maintenance and operating expenses.
         SECTION 6.  Section 25.036, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsections (d), (e),
  (f), (g), (h), and (i) to read as follows:
         (a)  Any child, other than a high school graduate, who is
  younger than 21 years of age and eligible for enrollment on
  September 1 of any school year may apply to transfer for in-person
  instruction annually from the child's school district of residence
  to another district in this state [if both the receiving district
  and the applicant parent or guardian or person having lawful
  control of the child jointly approve and timely agree in writing to
  the transfer].
         (b)  A transfer application [agreement] under this section
  shall be filed and preserved as a receiving district record for
  audit purposes of the agency.
         (d)  A school district may deny approval of a transfer under
  this section only if:
               (1)  the district or a school in the district to which a
  student seeks to transfer is at full student capacity or has more
  requests for transfers than available positions after the district
  has filled available positions in accordance with Subsection (f)
  and has satisfied the requirement provided under Subsection (g);
               (2)  before the application deadline for the applicable
  school year, the district adopted a policy that provides for the
  exclusion of a student who has a documented history of a criminal
  offense, a juvenile court adjudication, or discipline problems
  under Subchapter A, Chapter 37, and the student meets the
  conditions for exclusion under the policy; or
               (3)  approving the transfer would supersede a
  court-ordered desegregation plan.
         (e)  For the purpose of determining whether a school in a
  school district is at full student capacity under Subsection
  (d)(1), the district may not consider equity as a factor in the
  district's decision-making process.
         (f)  A school district that has more applicants for transfer
  under this section than available positions must fill the available
  positions by lottery and must give priority to applicants in the
  following order:
               (1)  students who:
                     (A)  do not reside in the district but were
  enrolled in the district in the preceding school year; or
                     (B)  are dependents of an employee of the
  receiving district; and
               (2)  students:
                     (A)  receiving special education services under
  Subchapter A, Chapter 29;
                     (B)  who are dependents of military personnel;
                     (C)  who are dependents of law enforcement
  personnel;
                     (D)  in foster care;
                     (E)  who are the subject of court-ordered
  modification of an order establishing conservatorship or
  possession and access; or
                     (F)  who are siblings of a student who is enrolled
  in the receiving district at the time the student seeks to transfer.
         (g)  A school district may deny approval of a transfer under
  Subsection (d)(1) only if the district publishes and annually
  updates the district's full student capacity by campus.
         (h)  Except as provided by other law, a receiving school
  district may, but is not required to, provide transportation to a
  student who transfers to the receiving district under this section.
         (i)  A receiving school district may revoke, at any time
  during the school year, the approval of the student's transfer only
  if:
               (1)  the student engages in conduct:
                     (A)  for which a student is required or permitted
  to be removed from class and placed in a disciplinary alternative
  education program under Section 37.006; or
                     (B)  for which a student is required or permitted
  to be expelled from school under Section 37.007; and
               (2)  before revoking approval of the student's
  transfer, the district:
                     (A)  ensures the student is afforded appropriate
  due process and complies with any requirements of state law or
  district policy relating to the expulsion of a student to the same
  extent as if the student were being expelled under Section 37.007;
  and
                     (B)  if the student is a child with a disability
  under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C.
  Section 1400 et seq.), or the district suspects or has a reason to
  suspect that the student may be a child with a disability, complies
  with all federal and state requirements regarding revoking the
  approval of the student's transfer.
         SECTION 7.  Section 25.038, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 25.038.  TUITION FEE FOR TRANSFER STUDENTS PAID BY
  SCHOOL DISTRICT.  (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b), a
  [The] receiving school district may charge a tuition fee to another
  school district, if the receiving district has contracted with the
  other district to educate the other district's students, to the
  extent that the district's actual expenditure per student in
  average daily attendance, as determined by its board of trustees,
  exceeds the sum the district benefits from state aid sources as
  provided by Section 25.037.  However, unless a tuition fee is
  prescribed and set out in a transfer agreement before its execution
  by the parties, an increase in tuition charge may not be made for
  the year of that transfer that exceeds the tuition charge, if any,
  of the preceding school year.
         (b)  A school district may not charge a tuition fee under
  this section for a student transfer authorized under Section
  25.036.
         SECTION 8.  Section 26.001, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a), (c), (d), and (e) and adding Subsections
  (a-1) and (c-1) to read as follows:
         (a)  As provided under Section 151.001, Family Code, a parent
  has the right to direct the moral and religious training of the
  parent's child, make decisions concerning the child's education,
  and consent to medical, psychiatric, and psychological treatment of
  the child without obstruction or interference from this state, any
  political subdivision of this state, a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school, or any other governmental entity.
         (a-1)  Parents are partners with educators, administrators,
  and school district boards of trustees in their children's
  education.  Parents shall be encouraged to actively participate in
  creating and implementing educational programs for their children.
         (c)  Unless otherwise provided by law, a board of trustees,
  administrator, educator, or other person shall comply with Section
  1.009 and may not limit parental rights or withhold information
  from a parent regarding the parent's child.
         (c-1)  A school district may not be considered to have
  withheld information from a parent regarding the parent's child if
  the district's actions are in accordance with other law, including
  the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (20 U.S.C.
  Section 1232g).
         (d)  Each board of trustees shall:
               (1)  provide for procedures to consider complaints that
  a parent's right has been denied; [.]
               (2)  develop a plan for parental participation in the
  district to improve parent and teacher cooperation, including in
  the areas of homework, school attendance, and discipline;
               (3)  [(e)  Each board of trustees shall] cooperate in
  the establishment of ongoing operations of at least one
  parent-teacher organization at each school in the district to
  promote parental involvement in school activities; and
               (4)  provide to a parent of a child on the child's
  enrollment in the district for the first time and to the parent of
  each child enrolled in the district at the beginning of each school
  year information about parental rights and options, including the
  right to withhold consent for or exempt the parent's child from
  certain activities and instruction, that addresses the parent's
  rights and options concerning:
                     (A)  the child's course of study and supplemental
  services;
                     (B)  instructional materials and library
  materials;
                     (C)  health education instruction under Section
  28.004;
                     (D)  instruction regarding sexual orientation and
  gender identity under Section 28.0043;
                     (E)  school options, including virtual and remote
  schooling options;
                     (F)  immunizations under Section 38.001;
                     (G)  gifted and talented programs;
                     (H)  promotion, retention, and graduation
  policies;
                     (I)  grade, class rank, and attendance
  information;
                     (J)  state standards and requirements;
                     (K)  data collection practices;
                     (L)  health care services, including notice and
  consent under Section 26.0083(g); and
                     (M)  the local grievance procedure under Section
  26.011.
         (e)  The agency shall develop a form for use by school
  districts in providing information about parental rights and
  options under Subsection (d)(4). Each school district shall post
  the form in a prominent location on the district's Internet
  website.
         SECTION 9.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by adding
  Section 26.0025 to read as follows:
         Sec. 26.0025.  RIGHT TO SELECT EDUCATIONAL SETTING. A
  parent is entitled to choose the educational setting for the
  parent's child, including public school, private school, or home
  school.
         SECTION 10.  Section 26.004(b), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (b)  A parent is entitled to access to all written records of
  a school district concerning the parent's child, including:
               (1)  attendance records;
               (2)  test scores;
               (3)  grades;
               (4)  disciplinary records;
               (5)  counseling records;
               (6)  psychological records;
               (7)  applications for admission;
               (8)  medical records in accordance with Section
  38.0095, including health and immunization information;
               (9)  teacher and school counselor evaluations;
               (10)  reports of behavioral patterns; and
               (11)  records relating to assistance provided for
  learning difficulties, including information collected regarding
  any intervention strategies used with the child.
         SECTION 11.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Section 26.0071 to read as follows:
         Sec. 26.0071.  PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT POLICY. Each board of
  trustees of a school district shall develop a parental engagement
  policy that:
               (1)  provides for an Internet portal through which
  parents of students enrolled in the district may submit comments to
  campus or district administrators and the board;
               (2)  requires the board to prioritize public comments
  by presenting those comments at the beginning of each board
  meeting; and
               (3)  requires board meetings to be held outside of
  typical work hours.
         SECTION 12.  Section 26.008, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 26.008.  RIGHT TO FULL INFORMATION CONCERNING STUDENT.
  (a) Except as provided by Section 38.004, a [A] parent is entitled
  to:
               (1)  full information regarding the school activities
  of a parent's child; and
               (2)  notification not later than one school business
  day after the date a school district employee first suspects that a
  criminal offense has been committed against the parent's child
  [except as provided by Section 38.004].
         (b)  An attempt by any school district employee to encourage
  or coerce a child to withhold information from the child's parent is
  grounds for discipline under Section 21.104, 21.156, or 21.211, as
  applicable, or by the State Board for Educator Certification, if
  applicable.
         SECTION 13.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Section 26.0083 to read as follows:
         Sec. 26.0083.  RIGHT TO INFORMATION REGARDING MENTAL,
  EMOTIONAL, AND PHYSICAL HEALTH AND HEALTH-RELATED SERVICES. (a)
  The agency shall adopt a procedure for school districts to notify
  the parent of a student enrolled in the district regarding any
  change in services provided to or monitoring of the student related
  to the student's mental, emotional, or physical health or
  well-being.
         (b)  A procedure adopted under Subsection (a) must reinforce
  the fundamental right of a parent to make decisions regarding the
  upbringing and control of the parent's child by requiring school
  district personnel to:
               (1)  encourage a student to discuss issues relating to
  the student's well-being with the student's parent; or
               (2)  facilitate a discussion described under
  Subdivision (1).
         (c)  A school district may not adopt a procedure that:
               (1)  prohibits a district employee from notifying the
  parent of a student regarding:
                     (A)  information about the student's mental,
  emotional, or physical health or well-being; or
                     (B)  a change in services provided to or
  monitoring of the student related to the student's mental,
  emotional, or physical health or well-being;
               (2)  encourages or has the effect of encouraging a
  student to withhold from the student's parent information described
  by Subdivision (1)(A); or
               (3)  prevents a parent from accessing education or
  health records concerning the parent's child.
         (d)  Subsections (a) and (c) do not require the disclosure of
  information to a parent if a reasonably prudent person would
  believe the disclosure is likely to result in the student suffering
  abuse or neglect, as those terms are defined by Section 261.001,
  Family Code.
         (e)  A school district employee may not discourage or
  prohibit parental knowledge of or involvement in critical decisions
  affecting a student's mental, emotional, or physical health or
  well-being.
         (f)  Any student support services training developed or
  provided by a school district to district employees must comply
  with any student services guidelines, standards, and frameworks
  established by the State Board of Education and the agency.
         (g)  Before the first instructional day of each school year,
  a school district shall provide to the parent of each student
  enrolled in the district written notice of each health-related
  service offered at the district campus the student attends. The
  notice must include a statement of the parent's right to withhold
  consent for or decline a health-related service. A parent's
  consent to a health-related service does not waive a requirement of
  Subsection (a), (c), or (e).
         (h)  Before administering a student well-being questionnaire
  or health screening form to a student enrolled in prekindergarten
  through 12th grade, a school district must provide a copy of the
  questionnaire or form to the student's parent and obtain the
  parent's consent to administer the questionnaire or form.
         (i)  This section may not be construed to:
               (1)  limit or alter the requirements of Section 38.004
  of this code or Chapter 261, Family Code; or
               (2)  limit a school district employee's ability to
  inquire about a student's daily well-being without parental
  consent.
         (j)  Not later than June 30, 2026, the agency, the State
  Board of Education, and the State Board for Educator Certification,
  as appropriate, shall review and revise as necessary the following
  to ensure compliance with this section:
               (1)  school counseling frameworks and standards;
               (2)  educator practices and professional conduct
  principles; and
               (3)  any other student services personnel guidelines,
  standards, or frameworks.
         (k)  Subsection (j) and this subsection expire September 1,
  2027.
         SECTION 14.  Section 26.009, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsections (a-1), (a-2), (a-3),
  (c), and (d) to read as follows:
         (a)  An employee of a school district must obtain the written
  consent of a child's parent in the manner required by Subsection
  (a-2) before the employee may:
               (1)  conduct a psychological examination, test, or
  treatment, unless the examination, test, or treatment is required
  under Section 38.004 or state or federal law regarding requirements
  for special education; [or]
               (2)  subject to Subsection (b), make or authorize the
  making of a videotape of a child or record or authorize the
  recording of a child's voice;
               (3)  unless authorized by other law:
                     (A)  disclose a child's health or medical
  information to any person other than the child's parent; or
                     (B)  collect, use, store, or disclose to any
  person other than the child's parent a child's biometric
  identifiers; or
               (4)  subject to Subsection (a-3), provide health care
  services or medication or conduct a medical procedure.
         (a-1)  For purposes of Subsection (a), "biometric
  identifier" means a blood sample, hair sample, skin sample, DNA
  sample, body scan, retina or iris scan, fingerprint, voiceprint, or
  record of hand or face geometry.
         (a-2)  Written consent for a parent's child to participate in
  a district activity described by Subsection (a) must be signed by
  the parent and returned to the district. A child may not
  participate in the activity unless the district receives the
  parent's signed written consent to that activity.
         (a-3)  For the purpose of obtaining written consent for
  actions described by Subsection (a)(4) that are determined by a
  school district to be routine care provided by a person who is
  authorized by the district to provide physical or mental
  health-related services, the district may obtain consent at the
  beginning of the school year or at the time of the child's
  enrollment in the district. Unless otherwise provided by a child's
  parent, written consent obtained in accordance with this subsection
  is effective until the end of the school year in which the consent
  was obtained.
         (c)  Before the first instructional day of each school year,
  a school district shall provide to the parent of each student
  enrolled in the district written notice of any actions the district
  may take involving the authorized collection, use, or storage of
  information as described by Subsection (a)(3). The notice must:
               (1)  include a plain language explanation for the
  district's collection, use, or storage of the child's information
  and the district's legal authority to engage in that collection,
  use, or storage; and
               (2)  be signed by the parent and returned to the
  district.
         (d)  A school district shall take disciplinary action
  against an employee responsible for allowing a child to participate
  in an activity described by Subsection (a)(4) if the district did
  not obtain a parent's consent for the child's participation in that
  activity.
         SECTION 15.  Section 26.011, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 26.011.  LOCAL GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE [COMPLAINTS].
  (a)  The board of trustees of each school district shall adopt a
  grievance procedure under which the board shall:
               (1)  address each grievance [complaint] that the board
  receives concerning a violation of the prohibition under Section
  11.005 or of a right guaranteed by Section 1.009 or this chapter:
                     (A)  if the grievance is filed not later than six
  school weeks after the date on which the parent received notice of
  an incident giving rise to the grievance; or
                     (B)  regardless of whether the grievance was filed
  during the period prescribed by Paragraph (A) if the grievance was
  informally brought to the attention of school district personnel
  during that period;
               (2)  allow a parent at any time before a final decision
  by the board to provide additional evidence regarding the parent's
  grievance; and
               (3)  allow a parent to file more than one grievance at
  the same time.
         (b)  The board of trustees of a school district is not
  required by Subsection (a) or Section 11.1511(b)(13) to address a
  grievance [complaint] that the board receives concerning a
  student's participation in an extracurricular activity that does
  not involve a violation of a right guaranteed by this chapter. This
  subsection does not affect a claim brought by a parent under the
  Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400
  et seq.) or a successor federal statute addressing special
  education services for a child with a disability.
         (c)  The board of trustees of a school district shall ensure
  a grievance procedure adopted under Subsection (a):
               (1)  authorizes a parent to file a grievance with the
  principal of the district campus the parent's child attends or the
  person designated by the district to receive grievances for that
  campus;
               (2)  requires that a principal or the person designated
  by the district to receive grievances for a campus:
                     (A)  acknowledge receipt of a grievance under
  Subdivision (1) not later than two school business days after
  receipt of the grievance; and
                     (B)  not later than the 14th school business day
  after receipt of a grievance described by Subdivision (1), provide
  to the parent who submitted the grievance written documentation of
  the decision regarding the issue that gave rise to the grievance,
  including:
                           (i)  an explanation of the findings that
  contributed to the decision;
                           (ii)  notification regarding the parent's
  right to appeal the decision; and
                           (iii)  the timeline for appealing the
  decision;
               (3)  requires that, if a parent appeals a decision
  under Subdivision (2) not later than the 14th school business day
  after receiving notice of the decision, the superintendent or the
  superintendent's designee provide to the parent not later than the
  14th school business day after receipt of the appeal written
  documentation of the decision regarding the issue that gave rise to
  the grievance, including:
                     (A)  an explanation of the findings that
  contributed to the decision;
                     (B)  notification regarding the parent's right to
  appeal the decision; and
                     (C)  the timeline for appealing the decision;
               (4)  requires that, if a parent appeals a decision
  under Subdivision (3) not later than the 14th school business day
  after receiving notice of the decision, the board hear the
  grievance in a closed session at the board's next regular meeting
  that occurs on or after the 14th school business day after the date
  the board receives notice of the appeal; and
               (5)  requires that, not later than the 10th school
  business day after the date of a board meeting described by
  Subdivision (4), the board provide to the parent written
  documentation of the board's decision regarding the issue that gave
  rise to the grievance, including notice that the parent may appeal
  to the commissioner in writing under Section 7.057, if applicable.
         (d)  The parties may mutually agree to adjust the timeline
  for the procedure under this section.
         (e)  Notwithstanding Subsection (d), if a grievance
  submitted under this section involves an employee who is on
  documented leave that is scheduled to begin or has begun before the
  grievance is submitted, the school district may alter the timeline
  for the procedure under this section to make a reasonable
  accommodation for the employee's leave. The district must provide
  notice of the change to the parent who submitted the grievance.
         SECTION 16.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Sections 26.0111 and 26.0112 to read as follows:
         Sec. 26.0111.  GRIEVANCE HEARING BEFORE HEARING EXAMINER.
  (a)  This section applies only to a grievance regarding a violation
  of:
               (1)  Section 11.005, 28.0022, 28.004, or 28.0043 or
  Chapter 38 or the implementation of those provisions by a school
  district; or
               (2)  Chapter 551, Government Code, involving school
  district personnel.
         (b)  If a parent has exhausted the parent's options under the
  local grievance procedure established by the board of trustees of a
  school district under Section 26.011 regarding a grievance to which
  this section applies, and the grievance is not resolved to a
  parent's satisfaction, the parent may file a written request with
  the commissioner for a hearing before a hearing examiner under this
  section not later than the 30th school business day after the date
  on which the board of trustees of the district resolved the parent's
  grievance under Section 26.011. The parent must provide the
  district with a copy of the request and must provide the
  commissioner with a copy of the district's resolution of the
  grievance. The parties may agree in writing to extend by not more
  than 10 school business days the deadline for requesting a hearing.
         (c)  The commissioner shall assign a hearing examiner to
  review the grievance in the manner provided by Section 21.254. The
  hearing examiner has the powers described by Sections 21.255 and
  21.256 and shall conduct the hearing in the manner provided by those
  sections as if the parent were a teacher.
         (d)  Not later than the 60th business day after the date on
  which the commissioner receives a parent's written request for a
  hearing, the hearing examiner shall complete the hearing and make a
  written recommendation that includes proposed findings of fact and
  conclusions of law. The recommendation of the hearing examiner is
  final and may not be appealed.
         (e)  Sections 21.257(c), (d), and (e) apply to a hearing
  under this section in the same manner as a hearing conducted under
  Subchapter F, Chapter 21.
         (f)  The costs of the hearing examiner, the court reporter,
  the original hearing transcript, and any hearing room costs, if the
  hearing room is not provided by the school district, shall be paid
  by the school district if the hearing examiner finds in favor of the
  parent.
         (g)  Notwithstanding Subsection (d), if a parent fails to
  appear at a hearing under this section, the hearing examiner is not
  required to complete the hearing and may not make a recommendation
  in favor of the parent.
         Sec. 26.0112.  TESTIMONY BEFORE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION.
  If the commissioner adopts the recommendation of a hearing examiner
  finding against a school district under Section 26.0111 in at least
  five grievances to which that section applies involving the
  district during a school year, the superintendent of the school
  district must appear before the State Board of Education to testify
  regarding the hearing examiner's findings and the frequency of
  grievances against the district.
         SECTION 17.  Section 28.002, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (c-6) to read as follows:
         (c-6)  The State Board of Education may not adopt standards
  in violation of Section 28.0043.
         SECTION 18.  Section 28.0022, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (f) and adding Subsection (h) to read as
  follows:
         (f)  This section does not create a private cause of action
  against a teacher, administrator, or other employee of a school
  district or open-enrollment charter school. [A school district or
  open-enrollment charter school may take appropriate action
  involving the employment of any teacher, administrator, or other
  employee based on the individual's compliance with state and
  federal laws and district policies.]
         (h)  A school district or open-enrollment charter school
  shall adopt a policy and procedure for the appropriate discipline,
  including termination, of a district or school employee or
  contractor who engages in or assigns to another person an act
  prohibited by this section.
         SECTION 19.  Section 28.004, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (i-2) to read as follows:
         (i-2)  Before a student may be provided with human sexuality
  instruction, a school district must obtain the written consent of
  the student's parent. A request for written consent under this
  subsection:
               (1)  may not be included with any other notification or
  request for written consent provided to the parent, other than the
  notice provided under Subsection (i); and
               (2)  must be provided to the parent not later than the
  14th day before the date on which the human sexuality instruction
  begins.
         SECTION 20.  Subchapter A, Chapter 28, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 28.0043 to read as follows:
         Sec. 28.0043.  RESTRICTION ON INSTRUCTION REGARDING SEXUAL
  ORIENTATION AND GENDER IDENTITY. (a) A school district,
  open-enrollment charter school, or district or charter school
  employee may not provide or allow a third party to provide
  instruction, guidance, activities, or programming regarding sexual
  orientation or gender identity to students enrolled in
  prekindergarten through 12th grade.
         (b)  This section may not be construed to limit:
               (1)  a student's ability to engage in speech or
  expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment to the United
  States Constitution or by Section 8, Article I, Texas Constitution,
  that does not result in material disruption to school activities;
  or
               (2)  the ability of a person who is authorized by the
  district to provide physical or mental health-related services to
  provide the services to a student, subject to any required parental
  consent.
         SECTION 21.  The heading to Section 28.022, Education Code,
  is amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 28.022.  NOTICE TO PARENT OF UNSATISFACTORY
  PERFORMANCE; CONFERENCES.
         SECTION 22.  Section 28.022(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  The board of trustees of each school district shall
  adopt a policy that:
               (1)  provides for at least two opportunities for
  in-person conferences during each school year [a conference]
  between each parent of a child enrolled in the district and the
  child's [parents and] teachers;
               (2)  requires the district, at least once every 12
  weeks, to give written notice to a parent of a student's performance
  in each class or subject; and
               (3)  requires the district, at least once every three
  weeks, or during the fourth week of each nine-week grading period,
  to give written notice to a parent or legal guardian of a student's
  performance in a subject included in the foundation curriculum
  under Section 28.002(a)(1) if the student's performance in the
  subject is consistently unsatisfactory, as determined by the
  district.
         SECTION 23.  Subchapter A, Chapter 48, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 48.013 to read as follows:
         Sec. 48.013.  CERTIFICATION OF COMPLIANCE WITH CERTAIN LAWS
  REQUIRED. (a) Not later than September 30 of each year, the
  superintendent of a school district or open-enrollment charter
  school shall certify to the agency that the district or school is in
  compliance with this section and Sections 11.005 and 28.0022.
         (b)  The certification required by Subsection (a) must:
               (1)  be:
                     (A)  approved by a majority vote of the board of
  trustees of the school district or the governing body of the
  open-enrollment charter school at a public meeting that includes an
  opportunity for public testimony and for which notice was posted on
  the district's or school's Internet website at least seven days
  before the date on which the meeting is held; and
                     (B)  submitted electronically to the agency; and
               (2)  include:
                     (A)  a description of the policies and procedures
  required by Sections 11.005(c) and 28.0022(h) and the manner in
  which district or school employees and contractors were notified of
  those policies and procedures;
                     (B)  any existing policies, programs, procedures,
  or trainings that were altered to ensure compliance with this
  section or Section 11.005 or 28.0022; and
                     (C)  any cost savings resulting from actions taken
  by the school district or open-enrollment charter school to comply
  with this section.
         (c)  The agency shall post each certification received under
  Subsection (a) on the agency's Internet website.
         SECTION 24.  The following provisions are repealed:
               (1)  Section 25.0344, Education Code, as added by
  Chapter 583 (H.B. 2892), Acts of the 88th Legislature, Regular
  Session, 2023; and
               (2)  Section 25.0344, Education Code, as added by
  Chapter 322 (H.B. 1959), Acts of the 88th Legislature, Regular
  Session, 2023.
         SECTION 25.  This Act applies beginning with the 2025-2026
  school year.
         SECTION 26.  (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) of
  this section, this Act takes effect immediately if it receives a
  vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
  provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
  Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2025.
         (b)  Section 48.013, Education Code, as added by this Act,
  takes effect September 1, 2025.
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