AB210,39,11
8118.025 Arbor day observance. A school The principal
of a public, private,
9or tribal school may request one free tree provided from state forest nurseries by the
10department of natural resources under s. 28.06 for each 4th grade pupil in the school
11for planting in conjunction with an annual observance and celebration of arbor day.
Note: Specifies that tribal schools may request trees from the state forest nursery
for Arbor Day observance.
AB210, s. 66
12Section
66
. 118.07 (3) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,40,313
118.07
(3) The department shall make available to school districts, private
14schools,
tribal schools, and charter schools information about meningococcal disease,
15including the causes and symptoms of the disease, how it is spread, and how to obtain
16additional information about the disease and the availability, effectiveness, and
17risks of vaccinations against the disease. The department may do so by posting the
18information on its Internet site. At the beginning of the 2006-07 to 2011-12 school
19years, each school board and the governing body of each private school and each
20charter school shall provide the parents and guardians of pupils enrolled in grades
216 to 12 in the school district or school with the information. At the beginning of the
222012-13 school year and each school year thereafter, each school board and the
1governing body of each private school and each charter school shall provide the
2parents and guardians of pupils enrolled in grade 6 in the school district or school
3with the information.
Note: Requires DPI to provide information to tribal schools about meningococcal
disease. However, in contrast to requirements imposed on public, private, and charter
schools, the bill does not require that tribal schools provide the information to parents and
guardians of pupils.
AB210, s. 67
4Section
67
. 118.08 (1) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,40,105
118.08
(1) On any street or highway which borders the grounds of any public
6or, private
, or tribal school in which school is held for a term of not less than 6 months,
7the authority in charge of the maintenance of the street or highway shall erect black
8and yellow "school" warning signs. The authority may also designate school
9crossings across any street or highway, whether or not the street or highway borders
10on the grounds of a school.
Note: Requires the authority in charge of a street or highway to erect school
warning signs, including signs for tribal schools.
AB210, s. 68
11Section
68
. 118.125 (2) (n) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,41,412
118.125
(2) (n) For the purpose of providing services to a pupil before
13adjudication, a school board may disclose pupil records to a law enforcement agency,
14district attorney, city attorney, corporation counsel, agency, as defined in s. 938.78
15(1), intake worker under s. 48.067 or 938.067, court of record, municipal court,
16private school, or another school board if disclosure is pursuant to an interagency
17agreement and the person to whom the records are disclosed certifies in writing that
18the records will not be disclosed to any other person except as permitted under this
19subsection.
For the purpose of providing services to a pupil before adjudication, a
20school board may disclose pupil records to a tribal school if disclosure is pursuant to
21an agreement between the school board and the governing body of the tribal school
1and if the school board determines that enforceable protections are provided by a
2tribal school policy or tribal law that requires the tribal school official to whom the
3records are disclosed not to disclose the records to any other person except as
4permitted under this subsection.
Note: Current law provides that, for the purpose of providing services to a pupil
before adjudication, a school board may disclose pupil records to certain entities,
including a private school, if disclosure is pursuant to an interagency agreement and the
person to whom records are disclosed certifies that the records will not be disclosed to any
other person except as permitted under s. 118.125 (2), stats. This
Section permits a
school board to disclose pupil records to a tribal school under this provision if disclosure
is pursuant to an agreement between the school board and the governing body of the
tribal school and if the school board determines that enforceable protections are provided
by a tribal school policy or tribal law that requires the tribal school official to whom the
records are disclosed not to disclose the records to any other person except as permitted
under s. 118.125 (2), stats.
AB210, s. 69
5Section
69
. 118.125 (4) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,41,196
118.125
(4) Transfer of records. Within 5 working days, a school district shall
7transfer to another school
, including a private or tribal school, or school district all
8pupil records relating to a specific pupil if the transferring school district has
9received written notice from the pupil if he or she is an adult or his or her parent or
10guardian if the pupil is a minor that the pupil intends to enroll in the other school
11or school district or written notice from the other school or school district that the
12pupil has enrolled or from a court that the pupil has been placed in a juvenile
13correctional facility, as defined in s. 938.02 (10p), or a secured residential care center
14for children and youth, as defined in s. 938.02 (15g). In this subsection, "school" and
15"school district" include any juvenile correctional facility, secured residential care
16center for children and youth, adult correctional institution, mental health institute,
17or center for the developmentally disabled, that provides an educational program for
18its residents instead of or in addition to that which is provided by public
and, private
,
19and tribal schools.
Note: Clarifies that, under current law, the requirement that a school district
transfer records to a school includes a requirement that a school district transfer records
to a tribal school. This Section also adds a reference to tribal schools in referring to a
center for the developmentally disabled that provides an educational program directly or
in addition to that provided by a tribal school.
AB210, s. 70
1Section
70
. 118.127 (2) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,42,192
118.127
(2) A school district
or, private school
, or tribal school may disclose
3information from law enforcement officers' records obtained under s. 938.396 (1) (c)
43. only to persons employed by the school district who are required by the department
5under s. 115.28 (7) to hold a license, to persons employed by the private school
or
6tribal school as teachers, and to other school district
or, private school
, or tribal school 7officials who have been determined by the school board or governing body of the
8private school
or tribal school to have legitimate educational interests, including
9safety interests, in that information. In addition, if that information relates to a
10pupil of the school district
or, private school
, or tribal school, the school district
or, 11private school
, or tribal school may also disclose that information to those employees
12of the school district
or, private school
, or tribal school who have been designated by
13the school board or governing body of the private school
or tribal school to receive that
14information for the purpose of providing treatment programs for pupils enrolled in
15the school district
or, private school
, or tribal school. A school district may not use
16law enforcement officers' records obtained under s. 938.396 (1) (c) 3. as the sole basis
17for expelling or suspending a pupil or as the sole basis for taking any other
18disciplinary action, including action under the school district's athletic code, against
19a pupil.
Note: This amendment relates to the amendment to s. 938.396 (1) (c) 3., below.
If law enforcement records are disclosed to a tribal school under that provision, the
amendment to s. 118.127 (2), stats., imposes duties on the tribal school that are the same
as those duties imposed on a private school that receives such information, namely,
limiting to whom the tribal school may disclose the information. (The amendment to s.
938.396 (1) (c) 3., stats., below, specifies that the law enforcement agency policy must
specify that the law enforcement agency cannot provide information under s. 938.396 (1)
(c) 3., stats., to a tribal school unless the governing body of the tribal school agrees that
the information will be used by the tribal school in the same manner as public and private
schools as provided under s. 118.127 (2), stats.)
AB210, s. 71
1Section
71
. 118.145 (3) and (4) of the statutes are amended to read:
AB210,43,102
118.145
(3) If the superintendent of a private school
or of a tribal school files
3with the department the course of study for elementary grades prescribed by such
4school and if such course of study is substantially equivalent to the course of study
5prepared for elementary grades by the department, a certificate or diploma or other
6written evidence issued by the superintendent of the private school
or tribal school 7showing that the pupil has completed such course of study shall entitle the pupil to
8admission to a public high school. The certificate or diploma or a certified copy
9thereof or a certified copy of a list of graduates shall be filed with the school district
10clerk of the school district operating the high school.
AB210,43,16
11(4) The school board of a school district operating high school grades shall allow
12a pupil enrolled in a private school
, a pupil enrolled in a tribal school, or a pupil
13enrolled in a home-based educational program, who has met the standards for
14admission to high school under sub. (1), to take up to 2 courses during each school
15semester if the pupil resides in the school district in which the public school is located
16and if the school board determines that there is sufficient space in the classroom.
Note: Permits a tribal school to file with DPI information about the elementary
school course of study which entitles a pupil having completed that course of study to be
admitted to a public high school. Also permits a tribal school pupil who has met the
standards for admission to high school to take up to two courses each semester at a public
high school in the school district in which the pupil resides if the school board determines
that there is sufficient space in the classroom. (Under s. 121.004 (7) (e), stats., public
schools receive some equalization aid for providing this instruction; under s. 121.05 (1)
(a) 12., stats., the number of these pupils is included in the annual school district report;
and under s. 121.54 (2) (c), stats., a school district may elect, but is not required, to provide
transportation for pupils under s. 118.145 (4), stats.)
AB210, s. 72
17Section
72
. 118.15 (1) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,44,7
1118.15
(1) (a) Except as provided under pars. (b) to (d) and (g) and sub. (4),
2unless the child is excused under sub. (3) or has graduated from high school, any
3person having under control a child who is between the ages of 6 and 18 years shall
4cause the child to attend school regularly during the full period and hours, religious
5holidays excepted, that the public
or, private
, or tribal school in which the child
6should be enrolled is in session until the end of the school term, quarter or semester
7of the school year in which the child becomes 18 years of age.
Note: Current law does not clearly provide that attendance at a tribal school
satisfies the compulsory school attendance laws. This Section explicitly refers to
attendance at a tribal school.
The bill does not treat tribal schools similarly to private schools under the
compulsory school attendance laws in that private schools are required to: (1) keep
records, including: the dates school is held, the names and ages of pupils, the names and
addresses of parents of the pupils, and the dates pupils were present at school; and (2)
make that information available to the school board's school attendance officer. The bill
does not require tribal schools to do so.
AB210, s. 73
8Section
73
. 118.15 (1) (d) 4. of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,44,139
118.15
(1) (d) 4. Enrollment in any nonsectarian private school or program
, or
10tribal school, located in the school district in which the child resides, which complies
11with the requirements of
42 USC 2000d. Enrollment of a child under this subdivision
12shall be pursuant to a contractual agreement
which
under s. 121.78 (5) that provides
13for the payment of the child's tuition by the school district.
Note: Under current law, a child's parent or the child may request that the school
board provide program or curriculum modifications, including several items specified in
the statutes, including a request to attend a private school, rather than the public school.
The school board then decides the matter. This Section permits a curriculum
modification to be requested to attend a tribal school.
AB210, s. 74
14Section
74
. 118.153 (1) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,45,215
118.153
(1) (b) "Dropout" means a child who ceased to attend school, does not
16attend a public
or, private
, or tribal school, technical college
, or home-based private
1educational program on a full-time basis, has not graduated from high school
, and
2does not have an acceptable excuse under s. 118.15 (1) (b) to (d) or (3).
Note: Exempts a child who attends a tribal school from the definition of "dropout"
in the statute for children at risk of not graduating from high school programs. That
definition is used by cross-reference in several other statutes.
The bill does not amend s. 118.163, stats., relating to municipal truancy and school
dropout ordinances. However, the effect of the amendments noted above that include
tribal schools will affect s. 118.163, stats.
AB210, s. 75
3Section
75
. 118.16 (2) (e) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,45,74
118.16
(2) (e)
Shall Except as provided in par. (f), shall have access to
5information regarding the attendance of any child between the ages of 6 and 18 who
6is a resident of the school district or who claims or is claimed to be in attendance at
7a private school located in the school district.
AB210, s. 76
8Section
76
. 118.16 (2) (f) of the statutes is created to read:
AB210,45,139
118.16
(2) (f) Shall request information regarding the attendance of any child
10between the ages of 6 and 18 who is a resident of the school district and who claims
11or is claimed to be in attendance at a tribal school, or who is not a resident of the
12school district and who claims or is claimed to be in attendance at a tribal school
13located in the school district.
Note: As part of the school attendance enforcement statute, current law requires
private schools to keep a record containing certain information about pupils, including
their attendance. Current law also specifies that a school attendance officer must have
access to this information at all reasonable times. [s. 118.16 (2) (e) and (3), stats.] This
Section requires a school attendance officer to request information about the attendance
of a child between the ages of 6 and 18 who: (a) is a resident of the school district and
claims or is claimed to be attending a tribal school; or (b) is not a resident of the school
district but claims or is claimed to be attending a tribal school located in the school
district. The bill does not require the tribal school to keep or provide the information to
the school attendance officer.
AB210, s. 77
14Section
77
. 118.162 (1) (am) and (m) of the statutes are created to read:
AB210,46,215
118.162
(1) (am) A representative from each tribal school in the county,
16designated by the governing body of the tribal school that he or she represents, who
1may be a member of the tribal school governing body, school administrator, teacher,
2pupil services professional, or parent of a child enrolled in that tribal school.
AB210,46,43
(m) A parent of a pupil enrolled in a tribal school located in the county, who
4resides in the county, designated by the county board.
Note: Adds to the county committee that advises on school districts' truancy plans:
(1) a representative of each tribal school in the county; and (2) a parent of a tribal school
pupil. The latter provision is modeled after the provision for a parent of a private school
pupil being appointed to the county committee.
AB210, s. 78
5Section
78
. 118.255 (2) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,46,196
118.255
(2) (a) If a school board, cooperative educational service agency
, or
7county children with disabilities education board provides physical or mental health
8treatment services to its pupils, it may also provide such services within the private
9school
or tribal school facilities to those private school
or tribal school pupils who are
10referred to the public school board, cooperative educational service agency
, or county
11children with disabilities education board by the administrator of a private school
12or tribal school for evaluation for possible servicing. There shall be no charge for
13health treatment services provided to any pupils unless public school students or
14their parents are charged for similar services. For purposes of state aid, as it is
15provided under s. 115.88 to the public school district, for the health treatment service
16program, private school
and tribal school pupils receiving such health treatment
17services shall be counted among the pupils of the public school district receiving such
18services, although each child may receive health treatment services within the
19child's own school facilities, whether public
or, private
, or tribal.
AB210,47,520
(b) A school board, cooperative educational service agency, or county children
21with disabilities education board providing services under this section may enter
22into agreements with the administrator of a private school
or tribal school on the
23scheduling, space
, and other necessary arrangements for performance of such health
1treatment services. A school board, cooperative educational service agency
, or county
2children with disabilities education board shall not pay any private school
or tribal
3school for any services or facilities provided under this section. Control of the health
4treatment services program shall rest with the public school board, cooperative
5educational service agency
, or county children with disabilities education board.
AB210,47,96
(c) A school board, cooperative educational service agency
, or county children
7with disabilities education board may provide health treatment services only within
8private school
or tribal school facilities located within the boundaries of the school
9district, cooperative educational service agency
, or county.
Note: Permits school boards, CESAs, and county children with disabilities
education boards to provide health treatment services to tribal school pupils at tribal
schools under certain circumstances. One of the required circumstances is that the pupil
be referred by the tribal school administrator.
AB210, s. 79
10Section
79
. 118.257 (1) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,47,1411
118.257
(1) (d) "School" means a public, parochial
or, private
, or tribal school
12which provides an educational program for one or more grades between grades 1 and
1312 and which is commonly known as an elementary school, middle school, junior high
14school, senior high school
, or high school.
Note: Current law exempts from liability certain staff at a private school for
removing a pupil from school premises or from school-sponsored activities for suspicion
of certain activities relating to controlled substances. Changing this definition has the
effect of extending to certain tribal school officials the same exemption from liability
under state law. It also has the effect of adding tribal schools to the definition of school
in s. 134.66 (1) (h), stats., which cross-references this definition. This would prohibit a
retailer from placing a vending machine that dispenses cigarettes within 500 feet of a
tribal school.
Extending the immunity protections under state law to certain tribal school staff
does not affect liability under tribal law or whatever right such staff may have to raise
a defense of tribal sovereign immunity if sued.
AB210, s. 80
15Section
80
. 118.29 (2) (a) (intro.) and 3. and (b) and (3) of the statutes are
16amended to read:
AB210,48,10
1118.29
(2) (a) (intro.) Notwithstanding chs. 441, 447, 448
, and 450, a school bus
2operator validly authorized under ss. 343.12 and 343.17 (3) (c) to operate the school
3bus he or she is operating, any school employee or volunteer, county children with
4disabilities education board employee or volunteer or cooperative educational
5service agency employee or volunteer authorized in writing by the administrator of
6the school district, the board or the agency, respectively, or by a school principal,
and 7any private school employee or volunteer authorized in writing by a private school
8administrator or private school principal
, and any tribal school employee or
9volunteer authorized in writing by a tribal school administrator or tribal school
10principal:
AB210,48,1411
3.
Is Subject to sub. (4m), is immune from civil liability for his or her acts or
12omissions in administering a drug or prescription drug to a pupil under subd. 1., 2.,
132m., or 2r. unless the act or omission constitutes a high degree of negligence. This
14subdivision does not apply to health care professionals.
AB210,48,2015
(b)
Any Subject to sub. (4m), any school district administrator, county children
16with disabilities education board administrator, cooperative educational service
17agency administrator, public
or, private
, or tribal school principal
, or private
or tribal 18school administrator who authorizes an employee or volunteer to administer a drug
19or prescription drug to a pupil under par. (a) is immune from civil liability for the act
20of authorization unless it constitutes a high degree of negligence.
AB210,49,4
21(3) Emergency care; civil liability exemption. Any school bus operator validly
22authorized under ss. 343.12 and 343.17 (3) (c) to operate the school bus he or she is
23operating and any public
or, private
, or tribal school employee or volunteer, county
24children with disabilities education board employee or volunteer
, or cooperative
25educational service agency employee or volunteer, other than a health care
1professional, who in good faith renders emergency care to a pupil of a public
or, 2private
, or tribal school is immune from civil liability for his or her acts or omissions
3in rendering such emergency care. The immunity from civil liability provided under
4this subsection is in addition to and not in lieu of that provided under s. 895.48 (1).
AB210, s. 81
5Section
81
. 118.29 (4m) of the statutes is created to read:
AB210,49,96
118.29
(4m) Applicability to tribal school employees. The immunity under
7sub. (2) applies to a tribal school employee, administrator, or volunteer only if the
8governing body of the tribal school has adopted a written policy that complies with
9sub. (4).
Note: Current law, in pertinent part, permits private school employees and
volunteers to administer certain drugs to pupils under certain circumstances and
exempts them from liability under state law for doing so. Current law also requires the
governing board of a private school to adopt a written policy governing such
administration. This Section permits tribal school employees and volunteers to do so in
the same situations and extends to them the same exemptions from liability under state
law if the governing body of the tribal school has adopted a written policy that complies
with the requirements for a written policy that apply to private schools. This Section also
extends to tribal school employees and volunteers the same exemption from liability
under state law when they are rendering emergency care that applies to certain others,
including private school employees and volunteers.
Extending the immunity protections under state law to tribal school employees
and volunteers does not affect liability under tribal law or whatever right tribal school
employees and volunteers may have to raise a defense of tribal sovereign immunity if
sued.
AB210, s. 82
10Section
82
. 118.291 (1g) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,49,1111
118.291
(1g) (b) "School" includes a public
and a, private
, and tribal school.
AB210, s. 83
12Section
83
. 118.291 (2) (c) of the statutes is created to read:
AB210,49,1713
118.291
(2) (c) No tribal school or tribal school employee is civilly liable for
14injury to a pupil caused by a tribal school employee who prohibits a pupil from using
15an inhaler because of the employee's good faith belief that the requirements of sub.
16(1r) had not been satisfied or who allows a pupil to use an inhaler because of the
17employee's good faith belief that the requirements of sub. (1r) had been satisfied.
Note: Current law permits a pupil with asthma to use an inhaler at school under
circumstances when the pupil has provided the school principal with written approval of
the pupil's physician and parent. Current statutes provide immunity under state law for
school employees who permit inhaler use because of a good faith belief that these
conditions have been satisfied or who prohibit use because of a good faith belief that these
conditions have not been satisfied.
This Section extends the immunity to tribal school employees under the same
conditions. This extension of immunity protections under state law does not affect
liability under tribal law or whatever right a tribal school employee may have to raise a
defense of tribal sovereign immunity if sued.
AB210, s. 84
1Section
84
. 118.295 of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,50,8
2118.295 Suicide intervention; civil liability exemption. Any school
3board, private school,
tribal school, county children with disabilities education
4board
, or cooperative educational service agency, and any officer, employee
, or
5volunteer thereof, who in good faith attempts to prevent suicide by a pupil is immune
6from civil liability for his or her acts or omissions in respect to the suicide or
7attempted suicide. The civil liability immunity provided in this section is in addition
8to and not in lieu of that provided under s. 895.48 (1).
Note: Current law, in pertinent part, specifies that private school officers,
employees, and volunteers who in good faith attempt to prevent suicide by a pupil are
exempt under state law from civil liability for their acts or omissions. This Section
extends the same exemptions from liability under state law to tribal school officers,
employees, and volunteers.
Extending the immunity protections to tribal school officers, employees, and
volunteers does not affect liability under tribal law or whatever right tribal school
officers, employees, and volunteers may have to raise a defense of tribal sovereign
immunity if sued.
AB210, s. 85
9Section
85
. 120.18 (1) (a) 2. and (s) of the statutes are amended to read:
AB210,51,410
120.18
(1) (a) 2. Adding the number of persons under this paragraph who were
11residents of the school district and were enrolled in the school district on the 3rd
12Friday of September of the previous school year; plus the number of persons under
13this paragraph who were residents of the school district and who were enrolled in
14private schools,
tribal schools, home-based private educational programs
, or other
15school districts on the 3rd Friday of September of the previous school year; plus the
1number or an estimate of the number of those persons under this paragraph who
2were residents of the school district and not enrolled in the school district, private
3schools,
tribal schools, home-based private educational programs
, or other school
4districts on the 3rd Friday of September of the previous school year.
AB210,51,65
(s) Such other facts and statistics in relation to the
schools, public
or, private
6or tribal schools, in the school district as the department requires.
Note: In the annual school district report submitted by the school district clerk to
DPI, this Section requires inclusion of the above information about tribal schools and
tribal school pupils. (This information can be included only if the tribal school voluntarily
provides the information to the school district.)
AB210, s. 86
7Section
86
. 121.05 (1) (a) 7. of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,51,98
121.05
(1) (a) 7. Pupils enrolled in a nonsectarian private school or program
or
9tribal school under s. 118.15 (1) (d) 4.
Note: Current law requires that the pupil membership report (which is used to
calculate state aid to school districts) include pupils enrolled in a nonsectarian private
school or program if the school district is paying tuition for the pupil to attend such a
private school or program because of a curriculum modification agreed to by the school
board. This Section adds tribal schools to reflect the proposed amendment to s. 118.15
(1) (d) 4., stats., above.
AB210, s. 87
10Section
87
. 121.76 (1) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,51,1411
121.76
(1) (a) "Agency of service" means a school board, board of control of a
12cooperative educational service agency, county children with disabilities education
13board
, or governing body of a nonsectarian private school
or, university model school
,
14or tribal school, which provides services for which tuition may be charged.
Note: Current law defines "agency of service" for purposes of subch. V, ch. 121,
stats., which describes various circumstances under which a pupil may attend a school
other than a public school in the school district of residence, how tuition and aid are
calculated if the school district is paying for it, and how tuition is otherwise calculated.
The entity providing the services is the agency of service. This
Section adds tribal schools
to this definition. As a result of other provisions of this bill, a tribal school may be
providing the services due to curriculum modification or court-ordered educational
placement.
AB210, s. 88
15Section
88
. 121.76 (2) (c) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,52,4
1121.76
(2) (c) The agency of service
, other than a tribal school, shall rebate a
2proportional share of state or federal aid received for pupils for whom it received
3tuition. The rebate shall be paid to the agency or person who paid the tuition within
430 days of its receipt by the agency of service.
Note: Under current law, if an agency of service, including a private school,
receives tuition from a school district, it must rebate a proportional share of any federal
or state aid it received. Because a tribal school could assert a defense of sovereign
immunity in any lawsuit to collect a rebate, this Section does not require a tribal school
to rebate such aid. Rather, the bill provides in s. 121.78 (4) and (5), stats., below, that
federal and state aid are subtracted in determining the amount of tuition paid to a tribal
school that is providing either court-ordered educational placement under an agreement
with the school district or curriculum modification under an agreement with the school
district.
AB210, s. 89
5Section
89
. 121.78 (4) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB210,52,206
121.78
(4) Court-ordered educational services. If a pupil is receiving
7educational services as the result of a court order under s. 48.345 (12) or 938.34 (7d),
8the school board of the school district in which the pupil resided at the time of
9issuance of the court order shall pay tuition for the pupil. A school board paying
10tuition for a pupil under this subsection shall count the pupil as 1.0 pupil in
11membership for general aid under subch. II. The school board shall pay each agency
12specified under s. 48.345 (12) (a) 2. to 4. or 938.34 (7d) (a) 2. to 4., for each full-time
13equivalent pupil served by the agency, an amount equal to at least 80% of the average
14per pupil cost for the school district. No state aid may be paid to the technical college
15district for pupils attending the technical college under s. 48.345 (12) (a) 4. or 938.34
16(7d) (a) 4.
The minimum amount paid by a school board to a tribal school specified
17under s. 48.345 (12) (a) 5. or 938.34 (7d) (a) 5., for each full-time equivalent pupil
18served by the tribal school, shall be determined by multiplying the average per pupil
19cost for the school district by 0.8 and then subtracting any federal or state aid
20received by the tribal school for the pupil.
Note: Amends this provision to reflect the amendments which add s. 48.345 (12)
(a) 5., stats., above, and s. 938.34 (7d) (a) 5., stats., below, which permit a court to require
in a CHIPS, JIPS, or delinquency dispositional order an educational placement at a tribal
school that must be paid for by the school district. Under current law, a school board must
pay an agency providing such services, other than a technical college, at least 80% of the
average per pupil cost for the school district. This is the minimum amount that must be
specified in the contract between the school board and agency. The agency of service must
rebate all federal and state aid received for that pupil under s. 121.76 (2) (c), stats.
This Section specifies that if a tribal school is providing a court-ordered
educational placement for a pupil under an agreement with the school district, the
minimum amount paid by the school board to the tribal school must be determined by
multiplying the average per pupil cost of the school district times 0.80 and then
subtracting all federal and state aid received by the tribal school for that pupil.
AB210, s. 90
1Section
90
. 121.78 (5) of the statutes is created to read:
AB210,53,72
121.78
(5) Alternative programs. If a pupil is placed in an alternative program
3under s. 118.15 (1) (d) 4., the school board shall pay tuition for the pupil to the agency
4of service pursuant to a contractual agreement between the school board and the
5agency of service. If the agency of service is a tribal school, any federal or state aid
6received by the tribal school for the pupil shall be subtracted in determining the
7amount of aid to be paid.
Note: This Section provides that, if a school board approves a curriculum
modification allowing a pupil to attend a nonsectarian private school or tribal school at
school district expense and pursuant to an agreement between the school board and the
private school or tribal school, the school board pays tuition pursuant to an agreement
with the private school or tribal school. (Current law included this requirement with
respect to private schools in s. 118.15 (1) (d) 4., stats.; the bill adds tribal schools and
cross-references the requirement with respect to private schools.) This Section requires
such an agreement with a tribal school to provide for subtracting the amount of federal
and state aid received for the pupil in determining the amount of tuition paid by the school
district for the pupil to the tribal school. The bill is silent with respect to private schools
in this regard, as private schools are required to rebate any such payment under s. 121.76
(2) (c), stats.