HBA-MPA H.B. 171 76(R) BILL ANALYSIS Office of House Bill AnalysisH.B. 171 By: Garcia Public Education 4/20/1999 Introduced BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Currently there is no recourse in the law if a parent feels that the parent's child is not receiving a proper education. H.B. 171 allows a parent to bring suit against a school district attended by the parent's child if the child fails to perform satisfactorily on one or more assessment instruments commonly known as the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills test. This bill provides for procedures to initiate a claim, reach administrative determination of such a claim, award damages for claims and make payments, and provide defenses that a school district may use in answering claims. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that rulemaking authority is expressly delegated to the chief administrative law judge of the State Office of the Administrative Hearings and to the comptroller of public accounts in SECTION 1 (Sections 39.205, 39.206, Education Code) of this bill. SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS SECTION 1. Amends Chapter 39, Education Code, by adding Subchapter I, as follows: SUBCHAPTER I. PRIVATE REMEDY Sec. 39.201. DEFINITIONS. Defines "parent." Sec. 39.202. CLAIM AUTHORIZED. Authorizes a parent to bring a claim against a school district if the parent's child has been enrolled in a district for three consecutive school years and during three different school years has failed to perform satisfactorily on one or more assessment instruments administered under Section 39.023 (a) or (c), and commonly known as Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) tests. Sec. 39.203. DEFENSES. Provides that it is a defense against a claim under this subchapter if the child did not receive the ordinary amount of instruction due to excessive absence or tardiness; the child or parent refused remedial actions recommended by the school district; the child has a recognized mental or physical impediment; the child was suspended, expelled or assigned to an alternative education program; the child was determined to have committed an offense involving moral turpitude; or the proximate cause of the child's failure was private and beyond the control of the school district. Sec. 39.204. INITIATION OF CLAIM; LIMITATIONS. Provides that to initiate a claim under this subsection a parent must file a notice of claim with the school district. Requires a school district that opposes a claim to submit the claim to the State Office of Administrative Hearings within 30 days after receiving notice of the claim. Requires a parent to file a claim not later than the first anniversary of the last day of the third school year in which the parent's child failed to perform satisfactorily on a specified assessment instrument. Sec. 39.205. ADMINISTRATIVE DETERMINATION OF CLAIM. Requires an administrative law judge to hear the claim as a contested case under Chapter 2001 Administrative Procedures, Government Code, and to decide the claim in accordance with this subchapter and the rules adopted by the chief administrative law judge of the State Office of Administrative Hearings. Requires the judge to order payment by the school district in accordance with this subchapter if the preponderance of the evidence indicates the claim is valid. Requires the costs of the proceeding to be paid by the parent, but that those costs are recoverable if the parent prevails in the proceeding. Sec. 39.206. AMOUNT OF AWARD; PAYMENT. Provides that a parent who prevails in a proceeding brought under this subchapter is entitled to receive the cost of the proceedings and reasonable attorney's fees, paid directly to the parents, and a voucher for three times the per student expenditure (the school district's gross budget divided by the number of students) for the year in which the third failure occurred plus interest as per Section 304.003 Judgement Interest Rate: Interest Rate Not in Contract, Financial Code, which may be used only to pay for educational services for the child at a public or private entity chosen by the child's parents. Requires the comptroller to issue the voucher to the parents on behalf of the school district. Authorizes the comptroller to adopt rules necessary to implement this subsection, including rules regarding payment of the vouchers by the school district. Sec. 39.207. JUDICIAL REVIEW. Provides that the determination of an administrative law judge under this subchapter is subject to judicial review as provided by Chapter 2001, Government Code. Sec. 39.208. WAIVER OF SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY. Waives sovereign immunity to suit to the extent that liability is created by this subchapter, but does not subject a teacher, administrator, board member, or other individual associated with a school district to personal liability. SECTION 2. Effective date: September 1, 1999. Makes application of this Act prospective. SECTION 3. Emergency clause.