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(124th General Assembly)
(Substitute House Bill Number 364)
AN ACT
To amend sections 2901.01, 2925.01, 3301.0714,
3302.03, 3309.51, 3313.375,
3314.011,
3314.013,
3314.02,
3314.03, 3314.05,
3314.06,
3314.07,
3314.072,
3314.08,
3314.09,
3314.091,
3314.11,
3314.13,
3317.029, 3317.03,
3318.50, 3327.01,
3327.02, 3331.01, 3365.08, and
4117.101;
to
enact
sections
3313.648, 3314.015,
3314.022,
3314.023,
3314.024,
3314.031,
3314.032,
3314.041,
3314.073,
3314.074,
3314.081,
3314.082, 3314.111,
3314.17,
3314.30, and 3314.31; to
repeal
section
3314.021
of
the
Revised
Code; and to amend Sections
44.05 and
189 of
Am.
Sub. H.B.
94 of the 124th
General
Assembly
to
expand
the
sponsorship of
community
schools, to add "academic watch" school
districts
to those districts in which start-up
community
schools may be
established, to make
changes in the
oversight and
management of
community schools,
to
establish the
Community
School Revolving Loan Fund
and the
Community School
Security Fund, and to
make
other
changes in the
community
school law; to
clarify that certain crimes carry enhanced
penalties when committed on community school
property or at community school activities; to
prohibit
school districts and community schools
from
offering certain monetary incentives for
students
to enroll in their schools; to require the
Legislative Office of Education Oversight to study
the cost of E-schools; to permit a
local
school
district superintendent to designate
the
superintendent of the educational service
center to
which the district belongs as the
authority to
issue age and schooling certificates to
students
residing in the district; to require that
Disadvantaged Pupil Impact Aid payments be
calculated using single-year district and statewide
totals of the number of students living in families
with incomes not exceeding federal poverty
guidelines and receiving family assistance rather
than the five-year average of such district and
statewide totals; to change the deadline for the
correction of reporting errors to the Education
Management Information System; to add a
representative
from
the Auditor of
State's Office
to the
Alternative
Education
Advisory Council; and
to amend the
version of section 2925.01 of the
Revised Code that
is scheduled to take effect
January 1, 2004, to
continue the provisions of this
act on and after
that effective date.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio:
SECTION 1. That sections 2901.01, 2925.01, 3301.0714,
3302.03, 3309.51, 3313.375,
3314.011,
3314.013, 3314.02,
3314.03, 3314.05, 3314.06, 3314.07,
3314.072,
3314.08,
3314.09,
3314.091, 3314.11,
3314.13, 3317.029,
3317.03,
3318.50,
3327.01,
3327.02, 3331.01,
3365.08, and 4117.101
be
amended and
sections
3313.648, 3314.015,
3314.022, 3314.023,
3314.024,
3314.031,
3314.032,
3314.041, 3314.073,
3314.074,
3314.081,
3314.082,
3314.111,
3314.17, 3314.30, and 3314.31 of
the
Revised
Code be
enacted to
read as
follows:
Sec. 2901.01. (A) As used in the Revised Code: (1) "Force" means any violence, compulsion, or constraint
physically exerted by any means upon or against a person or
thing. (2) "Deadly force" means any force that carries a
substantial risk that it will proximately result in the death of
any person. (3) "Physical harm to persons" means any injury, illness,
or
other physiological impairment, regardless of its gravity or
duration. (4) "Physical harm to property" means any tangible or
intangible damage to property that, in any degree, results in
loss
to its value or interferes with its use or enjoyment.
"Physical
harm to property" does not include wear and tear
occasioned by
normal use. (5) "Serious physical harm to persons" means any of the
following: (a) Any mental illness or condition of such gravity as
would
normally require hospitalization or prolonged psychiatric
treatment; (b) Any physical harm that carries a substantial risk of
death; (c) Any physical harm that involves some permanent
incapacity, whether partial or total, or that involves some
temporary, substantial incapacity; (d) Any physical harm that involves some permanent
disfigurement or that involves some temporary, serious
disfigurement; (e) Any physical harm that involves acute pain of such
duration as to result in substantial suffering or that involves
any degree of prolonged or intractable pain. (6) "Serious physical harm to property" means any physical
harm to property that does either of the following: (a) Results in substantial loss to the value of the
property
or requires a substantial amount of time, effort, or
money to
repair or replace; (b) Temporarily prevents the use or enjoyment of the
property or substantially interferes with its use or enjoyment
for
an extended period of time. (7) "Risk" means a significant possibility, as contrasted
with a remote possibility, that a certain result may occur or
that
certain circumstances may exist. (8) "Substantial risk" means a strong possibility, as
contrasted with a remote or significant possibility, that a
certain result may occur or that certain circumstances may exist. (9) "Offense of violence" means any of the following: (a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03,
2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.15, 2903.21, 2903.211,
2903.22,
2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.11, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.05,
2909.02, 2909.03,
2909.24,
2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2917.01,
2917.02, 2917.03, 2917.31,
2919.25, 2921.03, 2921.04, 2921.34, or
2923.161, of division (A)(1), (2), or
(3) of section 2911.12, or
of division (B)(1), (2), (3), or (4) of section
2919.22 of the
Revised Code or felonious sexual penetration in violation of
former section 2907.12 of the Revised Code; (b) A violation of an existing or former municipal
ordinance
or law of this or any other state or the United States,
substantially equivalent to any section, division, or
offense
listed in division (A)(9)(a) of this section; (c) An offense, other than a traffic offense, under an
existing or former municipal ordinance or law of this or any
other
state or the United States, committed purposely or
knowingly, and
involving physical harm to persons or a risk of
serious physical
harm to persons; (d) A conspiracy or attempt to commit, or complicity in
committing, any offense under division (A)(9)(a),
(b), or (c) of
this section. (10)(a) "Property" means any property, real or
personal,
tangible or intangible, and any interest or license in
that
property. "Property" includes, but is not limited to, cable
television service, other telecommunications service,
telecommunications devices, information service, computers, data,
computer software, financial
instruments associated with
computers, other documents
associated with computers, or copies of
the documents, whether in
machine or human readable form, trade
secrets, trademarks,
copyrights, patents, and property protected
by a trademark, copyright, or
patent. "Financial instruments
associated with computers" include, but are not limited to,
checks, drafts, warrants, money orders, notes of indebtedness,
certificates of deposit, letters of credit, bills of credit or
debit cards, financial transaction authorization mechanisms,
marketable securities, or any computer system representations of
any of them. (b) As used in division (A)(10)
of this section, "trade
secret" has the same meaning as in section 1333.61
of the Revised
Code, and "telecommunications service" and
"information
service"
have the same
meanings as in section 2913.01 of the Revised Code. (c) As used in divisions (A)(10) and (13) of
this section,
"cable television service," "computer," "computer
software,"
"computer system," "computer network," "data,"
and
"telecommunications device" have the same
meanings as in section
2913.01 of the Revised Code. (11) "Law enforcement officer" means any of the following: (a) A sheriff, deputy sheriff, constable, police officer
of
a township or joint township police district, marshal, deputy
marshal, municipal police officer, member of a police force
employed by a metropolitan housing authority under division (D)
of
section 3735.31 of the Revised Code, or state highway patrol
trooper; (b) An officer, agent, or employee of the state or any of
its agencies, instrumentalities, or political subdivisions, upon
whom, by statute, a duty to conserve the peace or to enforce all
or certain laws is imposed and the authority to arrest violators
is conferred, within the limits of that statutory duty and
authority; (c) A mayor, in the mayor's capacity as chief conservator of
the
peace within the mayor's municipal corporation; (d) A member of an auxiliary police force organized by
county, township, or municipal law enforcement authorities,
within
the scope of the member's appointment or commission; (e) A person lawfully called pursuant to section 311.07 of
the Revised Code to aid a sheriff in keeping the peace, for the
purposes and during the time when the person is called; (f) A person appointed by a mayor pursuant to section
737.01
of the Revised Code as a special patrolling
officer during riot or
emergency, for the purposes and during the time when
the person is
appointed; (g) A member of the organized militia of this state or the
armed forces of the United States, lawfully called to duty to aid
civil authorities in keeping the peace or protect against
domestic
violence; (h) A prosecuting attorney, assistant prosecuting
attorney,
secret service officer, or municipal prosecutor; (i) An Ohio veterans' home police officer appointed under
section 5907.02 of the Revised Code; (j) A member of a police force employed by a regional
transit authority under division (Y) of section 306.35 of the
Revised Code; (k) A special police officer employed by a port authority
under
section 4582.04 or 4582.28 of the Revised Code; (l) The house sergeant at arms if the house sergeant at arms
has
arrest authority pursuant to division (E)(1) of section
101.311 of the Revised Code
and an assistant house sergeant at
arms. (12) "Privilege" means an immunity, license, or right
conferred by law, bestowed by express or implied grant,
arising
out of status, position, office, or relationship, or
growing out
of necessity. (13) "Contraband" means any property described in the
following categories: (a) Property that in and of itself is unlawful for a
person
to acquire or possess; (b) Property that is not in and of itself unlawful for a
person to acquire or possess, but that has been determined by a
court of this state, in accordance with law, to be contraband
because of its use in an unlawful activity or manner, of its
nature, or of the circumstances of the person who acquires or
possesses it, including, but not limited to, goods and personal
property described in division (D) of section 2913.34 of the
Revised Code; (c) Property that is specifically stated to be contraband
by
a section of the Revised Code or by an ordinance, regulation,
or
resolution; (d) Property that is forfeitable pursuant to a section of
the Revised Code, or an ordinance, regulation, or resolution,
including, but not limited to, forfeitable firearms, dangerous
ordnance, obscene materials, and goods and personal
property
described in division (D) of section 2913.34 of the Revised Code; (e) Any controlled substance, as defined in section
3719.01
of the Revised Code, or any device, paraphernalia, money
as
defined in section 1301.01 of the Revised Code, or other means
of
exchange that has been, is being, or is intended to be used in
an
attempt or conspiracy to violate, or in a violation of,
Chapter
2925. or 3719. of the Revised Code; (f) Any gambling device, paraphernalia, money as defined
in
section 1301.01 of the Revised Code, or other means of
exchange
that has been, is being, or is intended to be used in an
attempt
or conspiracy to violate, or in the violation of, Chapter
2915. of
the Revised Code; (g) Any equipment, machine, device, apparatus, vehicle,
vessel, container, liquid, or substance that has been, is being,
or is intended to be used in an attempt or conspiracy to violate,
or in the violation of, any law of this state relating to alcohol
or tobacco; (h) Any personal property that has been, is being, or is
intended to be used in an attempt or conspiracy to commit, or in
the commission of, any offense or in the transportation of the
fruits of any offense; (i) Any property that is acquired through the sale or
other
transfer of contraband or through the proceeds of
contraband,
other than by a court or a law enforcement agency
acting within
the scope of its duties; (j) Any computer, computer system, computer network,
computer software, or other telecommunications device that is
used
in a conspiracy to commit, an
attempt to commit, or the commission
of any offense, if the
owner of the computer, computer system,
computer network, computer
software, or other telecommunications
device is convicted of or
pleads guilty to the offense in which it
is used; (k) Any property that is material support or resources and
that has been, is being, or is intended to be used in an attempt
or conspiracy to violate, or in the violation of, section 2909.22,
2909.23, or 2909.24 of the Revised Code or of section 2921.32 of
the Revised Code when the offense or act committed by the person
aided or to be aided as described in that section is an act of
terrorism. As used in division (A)(13)(k) of this section,
"material support or
resources" and "act of terrorism" have the
same meanings as in
section 2909.21 of the Revised Code. (14) A person is "not guilty by reason of insanity"
relative
to a charge of an offense only if the person proves, in the
manner
specified in section 2901.05 of the Revised Code, that at
the time
of the commission of the offense, the person did not know, as a
result of a severe mental disease or defect, the wrongfulness of
the person's acts. (B)(1)(a) Subject to division (B)(2) of this section,
as
used in any section contained in Title XXIX
of the Revised Code
that sets forth a criminal offense,
"person" includes all of the
following: (i) An individual, corporation, business trust, estate,
trust,
partnership, and association; (ii) An unborn human who is viable. (b) As used in any section contained in Title
XXIX of the
Revised Code that does not set forth a
criminal offense, "person"
includes an individual, corporation, business
trust, estate,
trust, partnership, and association. (c) As used in division (B)(1)(a) of this section: (i) "Unborn human" means an individual organism of the
species
Homo sapiens from fertilization until live birth. (ii) "Viable" means the stage of development of
a human
fetus at which there is a realistic possibility of maintaining and
nourishing of a life outside the womb with or without temporary
artificial
life-sustaining support. (2) Notwithstanding division (B)(1)(a) of this section, in
no case
shall the portion of the definition of the term "person"
that is set forth in
division (B)(1)(a)(ii) of this section be
applied or construed in any section contained in Title XXIX of the
Revised
Code that sets forth a criminal offense in any of the
following manners: (a) Except as otherwise provided in division (B)(2)(a) of
this section, in a
manner so that the offense prohibits or is
construed as
prohibiting any pregnant woman or her physician from
performing an abortion
with the consent of the pregnant woman,
with the consent of the pregnant
woman implied by law in a medical
emergency, or with the approval of one
otherwise authorized by law
to consent to medical treatment on behalf of the
pregnant woman.
An abortion that violates the conditions described in the
immediately preceding sentence may be punished as a violation of
section
2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.05, 2903.06,
2903.08,
2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.14, 2903.21, or 2903.22
of the Revised Code,
as applicable. An abortion that does not
violate the conditions
described in the second immediately
preceding sentence, but that does violate
section 2919.12,
division (B) of section 2919.13, or section 2919.151,
2919.17, or
2919.18 of the Revised Code, may be punished as a violation of
section 2919.12, division (B) of section 2919.13, or
section
2919.151, 2919.17, or 2919.18 of the Revised Code, as
applicable.
Consent is sufficient under this division if it is of the type
otherwise adequate to permit medical treatment to the pregnant
woman, even if
it does not comply with section 2919.12 of the
Revised Code. (b) In a manner so that the offense is applied or
is
construed as applying to a woman based on an act or omission of
the woman
that occurs while she is or was pregnant and that
results in any of the
following: (i) Her delivery of a stillborn baby; (ii) Her causing, in any other manner, the death in
utero of
a viable, unborn human that she is carrying; (iii) Her causing the death of her child who is born
alive
but who dies from one or more injuries that are sustained while
the
child is a viable, unborn human; (iv) Her causing her child who is born alive to
sustain one
or more injuries while the child is a viable, unborn human; (v) Her causing, threatening to cause, or attempting
to
cause, in any other manner, an injury, illness, or other
physiological
impairment, regardless of its duration or gravity,
or a mental illness or
condition, regardless of its duration or
gravity, to a viable, unborn human
that she is carrying. (C) As used in Title XXIX of the Revised Code: (1) "School safety zone"
consists of a school, school
building, school premises, school
activity, and school bus. (2) "School," "school building," and "school premises" have
the same
meanings as in section 2925.01 of the Revised Code. (3) "School activity" means any activity held under the
auspices of a board of education of a city, local,
exempted
village, joint vocational, or cooperative education
school
district,; a governing authority of a community school established
under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code; a governing board of an
educational service center,;
or
the governing body of a
nonpublic
school for which the
state board of
education prescribes minimum
standards under
section 3301.07 of
the Revised
Code. (4) "School bus" has the same meaning as in section
4511.01
of the Revised
Code.
Sec. 2925.01. As used in this chapter: (A)
"Administer,"
"controlled substance,"
"dispense,"
"distribute,"
"hypodermic,"
"manufacturer,"
"official written
order,"
"person,"
"pharmacist,"
"pharmacy,"
"sale,"
"schedule I,"
"schedule II,"
"schedule III,"
"schedule IV,"
"schedule V," and
"wholesaler" have the same meanings as in
section 3719.01 of the
Revised Code. (B)
"Drug dependent person" and
"drug of abuse" have the
same
meanings as in section 3719.011 of the Revised Code. (C)
"Drug,"
"dangerous drug,"
"licensed health professional
authorized to
prescribe
drugs," and
"prescription" have the same
meanings as in section
4729.01 of the Revised Code. (D)
"Bulk amount" of a controlled substance means any of
the
following: (1) For any compound, mixture, preparation, or substance
included in schedule I, schedule II, or schedule III,
with the
exception of marihuana, cocaine, L.S.D., heroin, and hashish and
except as provided in division (D)(2) or (5) of this
section,
whichever of the following is applicable: (a) An amount equal to or exceeding ten grams or
twenty-five
unit doses of a compound, mixture, preparation, or
substance that
is or contains any amount of a schedule I opiate
or opium
derivative; (b) An amount equal to or exceeding ten grams
of a
compound,
mixture, preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount
of raw or gum opium; (c) An amount equal to or exceeding thirty
grams or ten
unit
doses of a compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that
is or
contains any amount of a schedule I hallucinogen other than
tetrahydrocannabinol or
lysergic acid
amide, or a schedule I
stimulant or
depressant; (d) An amount equal to or exceeding twenty
grams or five
times the maximum daily dose in the usual dose range specified in
a standard pharmaceutical reference manual of a compound,
mixture,
preparation, or substance that is or contains any amount
of a
schedule II opiate or opium derivative; (e) An amount equal to or exceeding five grams or ten unit
doses of a compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that is
or
contains any amount of phencyclidine; (f) An amount equal to or exceeding one hundred twenty
grams
or thirty times the maximum daily dose in the usual dose
range
specified in a standard pharmaceutical reference manual of
a
compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that is or
contains
any amount of a schedule II stimulant that is in a final
dosage
form manufactured by a person authorized by the
"Federal
Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act," 52 Stat. 1040 (1938), 21
U.S.C.A. 301, as
amended, and the federal drug abuse control
laws, as defined in
section 3719.01 of the Revised Code, that is or contains
any
amount of a schedule II depressant
substance or a schedule II
hallucinogenic substance; (g) An amount equal to or exceeding three
grams of a
compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount of a schedule II stimulant, or any of its salts or
isomers, that is not in a final dosage form manufactured by a
person authorized by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and
the federal drug abuse control laws. (2) An amount equal to or exceeding one
hundred twenty
grams
or thirty times the maximum daily dose in the usual dose
range
specified
in a standard pharmaceutical reference manual of a
compound,
mixture,
preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount of a
schedule
III or IV substance other than an
anabolic
steroid or a schedule III opiate or opium derivative; (3) An amount equal to or exceeding twenty grams or five
times the maximum
daily dose in the usual dose range specified in
a standard pharmaceutical
reference manual of a compound, mixture,
preparation, or substance that is
or contains any amount of a
schedule III opiate or opium derivative; (4) An amount equal to or exceeding two hundred fifty
milliliters or two hundred fifty grams of a compound, mixture,
preparation, or substance that is or contains any amount of a
schedule V substance; (5) An amount equal to or exceeding two
hundred solid
dosage
units, sixteen grams, or sixteen milliliters of a
compound,
mixture, preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount
of a schedule III anabolic steroid. (E)
"Unit dose" means an amount or unit of a compound,
mixture, or preparation containing a controlled substance that is
separately identifiable and in a form that
indicates that it is
the amount or unit by which
the controlled substance is separately
administered to or taken by an
individual. (F)
"Cultivate" includes planting, watering, fertilizing,
or
tilling. (G)
"Drug abuse offense" means any of the following: (1) A violation of division (A) of section 2913.02 that
constitutes theft of drugs, or a violation of section 2925.02,
2925.03, 2925.04,
2925.041, 2925.05, 2925.06, 2925.11, 2925.12,
2925.13,
2925.22, 2925.23, 2925.24, 2925.31,
2925.32, 2925.36, or
2925.37 of the Revised Code; (2) A violation of an existing or former law of this or
any
other state or of the United States that is substantially
equivalent to any section listed in division (G)(1) of this
section; (3) An offense under an existing or former law of this or
any other state, or of the United States, of which planting,
cultivating, harvesting, processing, making, manufacturing,
producing, shipping, transporting, delivering, acquiring,
possessing, storing, distributing, dispensing, selling, inducing
another to use, administering to another, using, or otherwise
dealing with a controlled substance is an element; (4) A conspiracy to commit, attempt to commit, or complicity
in
committing or attempting to commit any offense under division
(G)(1), (2), or (3) of this section. (H)
"Felony drug abuse offense" means any drug abuse
offense
that would constitute a felony under the laws of this
state, any
other state, or the United States. (I)
"Harmful intoxicant" does not include beer or
intoxicating liquor but means any
of the following: (1) Any compound, mixture,
preparation,
or substance the gas,
fumes, or vapor of which when
inhaled can
induce intoxication,
excitement, giddiness,
irrational behavior,
depression,
stupefaction, paralysis,
unconsciousness,
asphyxiation, or other
harmful physiological
effects, and
includes, but is not limited
to, any of the
following: (a) Any volatile organic solvent, plastic cement, model
cement, fingernail polish remover, lacquer thinner, cleaning
fluid, gasoline, or other preparation containing a volatile
organic solvent; (b) Any aerosol propellant; (c) Any fluorocarbon refrigerant; (d) Any anesthetic gas.
(2) Gamma Butyrolactone; (3) 1,4 Butanediol. (J)
"Manufacture" means to plant, cultivate, harvest,
process, make, prepare, or otherwise engage in any part of the
production of a drug, by propagation, extraction, chemical
synthesis, or compounding, or any combination of the same, and
includes packaging, repackaging, labeling, and other activities
incident to production. (K)
"Possess" or
"possession" means having control over a
thing or substance, but may not be inferred solely from mere
access to the thing or substance through ownership or occupation
of the premises upon which the thing or substance is found. (L)
"Sample drug" means a drug or pharmaceutical
preparation
that would be hazardous to health or safety if used
without the
supervision of a licensed health
professional authorized to
prescribe drugs, or a drug of abuse,
and that, at one time, had
been placed in a container plainly
marked as a sample by a
manufacturer. (M)
"Standard pharmaceutical reference manual" means the
current edition, with cumulative changes if any, of any of the
following reference works: (1)
"The National Formulary"; (2)
"The United States Pharmacopeia," prepared by
authority
of the United States Pharmacopeial Convention, Inc.; (3) Other standard references that are approved by the
state
board of pharmacy. (N)
"Juvenile" means a person under eighteen years of age. (O)
"Counterfeit controlled substance" means any of the
following: (1) Any drug that bears, or whose container or label
bears,
a trademark, trade name, or other identifying mark used
without
authorization of the owner of rights to that trademark,
trade
name, or identifying mark; (2) Any unmarked or unlabeled substance that is
represented
to be a controlled substance manufactured, processed,
packed, or
distributed by a person other than the person that
manufactured,
processed, packed, or distributed it; (3) Any substance that is represented to be a controlled
substance but is not a controlled substance or is a different
controlled substance; (4) Any substance other than a controlled substance that a
reasonable person would believe to be a controlled substance
because of its similarity in shape, size, and color, or its
markings, labeling, packaging, distribution, or the price for
which it is sold or offered for sale. (P) An offense is
"committed in the vicinity of a school" if
the
offender commits the offense on school premises, in a school
building, or
within one thousand feet of the boundaries of any
school premises. (Q)
"School" means any school operated by a board of
education, any community school established under Chapter 3314.
of the Revised Code, or any
nonpublic school for which the state
board of education
prescribes minimum standards under section
3301.07 of the Revised
Code, whether or not any instruction,
extracurricular activities,
or training provided by the school is
being conducted at the time
a criminal offense is committed. (R)
"School premises" means either of the following: (1) The parcel of real property on which any school is
situated, whether or not any instruction, extracurricular
activities, or training provided by the school is being conducted
on the premises at the time a criminal offense is committed; (2) Any other parcel of real property that is owned or
leased by a board of education of a school, the governing
authority of a community school established under Chapter 3314. of
the Revised Code, or the governing body
of a
nonpublic school for
which the
state board of education prescribes
minimum standards
under
section 3301.07 of the Revised Code and
on
which some of the
instruction, extracurricular activities, or
training of the school
is conducted, whether or not any
instruction, extracurricular
activities, or training provided by
the school is being conducted
on the parcel of real property at
the time a criminal offense is
committed. (S)
"School building" means any building in which any of
the
instruction, extracurricular activities, or training provided
by a
school is conducted, whether or not any instruction,
extracurricular activities, or training provided by the school is
being conducted in the school building at the time a criminal
offense is committed. (T)
"Disciplinary counsel" means the disciplinary counsel
appointed by the board of commissioners on grievances and
discipline of the supreme court under the Rules for the
Government
of the Bar of Ohio. (U)
"Certified grievance committee" means a duly
constituted
and organized committee of the Ohio state bar
association or of
one or more local bar associations of the state
of Ohio that
complies with the criteria set forth in Rule V,
section 6 of the
Rules for the Government of the Bar of Ohio. (V)
"Professional license" means any license, permit,
certificate, registration, qualification, admission, temporary
license, temporary permit, temporary certificate, or temporary
registration that is described in divisions (W)(1) to (35) of
this
section and that qualifies a person as a professionally
licensed
person. (W)
"Professionally licensed person" means any of the
following: (1) A person who has obtained a license as a manufacturer
of
controlled substances or a wholesaler of controlled substances
under Chapter 3719. of the Revised Code; (2) A person who has received a certificate or temporary
certificate as a certified public accountant or who has
registered
as a public accountant under Chapter 4701. of the
Revised Code and
who holds an Ohio permit issued under that
chapter; (3) A person who holds a certificate of qualification to
practice architecture issued or renewed and registered under
Chapter 4703. of the Revised Code; (4) A person who is registered as a landscape architect
under Chapter 4703. of the Revised Code or who holds a permit as
a
landscape architect issued under that chapter; (5) A person licensed as an auctioneer or apprentice
auctioneer or licensed to operate an auction company under
Chapter
4707. of the Revised Code; (6) A person who has been issued a certificate of
registration as a registered barber under Chapter 4709. of the
Revised Code; (7) A person licensed and regulated to engage in the
business of a debt pooling company by a legislative authority,
under authority of Chapter 4710. of the Revised Code; (8) A person who has been issued a cosmetologist's
license,
manicurist's license, esthetician's license, managing
cosmetologist's license, managing manicurist's license, managing
esthetician's license, cosmetology instructor's license,
manicurist instructor's license, esthetician instructor's
license,
or tanning facility permit under Chapter 4713. of the
Revised
Code; (9) A person who has been issued a license to practice
dentistry, a general anesthesia permit, a conscious intravenous
sedation permit, a limited resident's license, a limited teaching
license, a dental hygienist's license, or a dental hygienist's
teacher's certificate under Chapter 4715. of the Revised Code; (10) A person who has been issued an embalmer's license, a
funeral director's license, a funeral home license, or a crematory
license, or
who has been registered for an embalmer's or funeral
director's apprenticeship
under Chapter 4717. of the Revised Code; (11) A person who has been licensed as a registered nurse
or
practical nurse, or who has been issued a certificate for the
practice of nurse-midwifery under Chapter 4723. of the Revised
Code; (12) A person who has been licensed to practice optometry
or
to engage in optical dispensing under Chapter 4725. of the
Revised
Code; (13) A person licensed to act as a pawnbroker under
Chapter
4727. of the Revised Code; (14) A person licensed to act as a precious metals dealer
under Chapter 4728. of the Revised Code; (15) A person licensed as a pharmacist, a pharmacy
intern, a
wholesale distributor of dangerous drugs, or a terminal
distributor of dangerous drugs under Chapter 4729. of the Revised
Code; (16) A person who is authorized to practice as a physician
assistant under
Chapter 4730. of the Revised Code; (17) A person who has been issued a certificate to
practice
medicine and surgery, osteopathic medicine and surgery,
a limited
branch of medicine, or podiatry under
Chapter 4731. of the Revised
Code; (18) A person licensed as a psychologist or school
psychologist under Chapter 4732. of the Revised Code; (19) A person registered to practice the profession of
engineering or surveying under Chapter 4733. of the Revised Code; (20) A person who has been issued a license to
practice
chiropractic under Chapter 4734. of the Revised Code; (21) A person licensed to act as a real estate broker or
real estate salesperson under Chapter 4735. of the Revised Code; (22) A person registered as a registered sanitarian under
Chapter 4736. of the Revised Code; (23) A person licensed to operate or maintain a junkyard
under Chapter 4737. of the Revised Code; (24) A person who has been issued a motor vehicle salvage
dealer's license under Chapter 4738. of the Revised Code; (25) A person who has been licensed to act as a steam
engineer under Chapter 4739. of the Revised Code; (26) A person who has been issued a license or temporary
permit to practice veterinary medicine or any of its branches, or
who is registered as a graduate animal technician under Chapter
4741. of the Revised Code; (27) A person who has been issued a hearing aid dealer's
or
fitter's license or trainee permit under Chapter 4747. of the
Revised Code; (28) A person who has been issued a class A, class B, or
class C license or who has been registered as an investigator or
security guard employee under Chapter 4749. of the Revised Code; (29) A person licensed and registered to practice as a
nursing home administrator under Chapter 4751. of the Revised
Code; (30) A person licensed to practice as a speech-language
pathologist
or audiologist under Chapter 4753. of the Revised
Code; (31) A person issued a license as an occupational
therapist
or physical therapist under Chapter 4755. of the
Revised Code; (32) A person who is licensed as a professional clinical
counselor or
professional counselor, licensed as a social worker
or independent social
worker, or registered as a social work
assistant under Chapter 4757. of the Revised Code; (33) A person issued a license to practice dietetics under
Chapter 4759. of the Revised Code; (34) A person who has been issued a license or
limited
permit to practice respiratory therapy under Chapter 4761. of
the
Revised Code; (35) A person who has been issued a real estate appraiser
certificate under Chapter 4763. of the Revised Code. (X)
"Cocaine" means any of the following: (1) A cocaine salt, isomer, or derivative, a salt of a
cocaine isomer or derivative, or the base form of cocaine; (2) Coca leaves or a salt, compound, derivative, or
preparation of coca leaves, including ecgonine, a salt, isomer,
or
derivative of ecgonine, or a salt of an isomer or derivative
of
ecgonine; (3) A salt, compound, derivative, or preparation of a
substance identified in division
(X)(1) or (2) of this section
that is chemically equivalent to or identical with any of those
substances, except that the substances shall not include
decocainized coca leaves or extraction of coca leaves if the
extractions do not contain cocaine or ecgonine. (Y)
"L.S.D." means
lysergic acid diethylamide. (Z)
"Hashish" means the resin or a preparation of the resin
contained in marihuana, whether in solid form or in a liquid
concentrate,
liquid extract, or liquid distillate form. (AA)
"Marihuana" has the same meaning as in section
3719.01
of the Revised Code,
except that it does not include hashish. (BB) An offense is
"committed in the vicinity of a
juvenile"
if
the offender commits the offense within one hundred feet of a
juvenile or
within the view of a juvenile, regardless of whether
the
offender knows the age of the juvenile, whether the offender
knows the offense
is being committed within one hundred feet of or
within view of the juvenile,
or whether the juvenile actually
views the commission of the offense. (CC)
"Presumption for a prison term" or
"presumption that a
prison term shall be imposed" means a presumption, as described in
division
(D) of section 2929.13 of the Revised Code, that a prison
term is a necessary
sanction for a felony in order to comply with
the purposes and principles of
sentencing under section 2929.11 of
the Revised Code. (DD)
"Major drug offender" has the same meaning as in
section
2929.01 of the Revised Code. (EE)
"Minor drug possession offense" means either of the
following: (1) A violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code as
it
existed prior to July 1, 1996; (2) A violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code as it
exists on and
after July 1, 1996, that is a misdemeanor or a
felony of the fifth
degree. (FF)
"Mandatory prison term" has the same meaning as
in
section 2929.01 of the Revised Code. (GG)
"Crack cocaine" means a compound, mixture, preparation,
or
substance that is or contains any amount of cocaine that is
analytically
identified as the base form of cocaine or that is in
a form that resembles
rocks or pebbles generally intended for
individual use. (HH)
"Adulterate" means to cause a drug to be adulterated as
described in section 3715.63 of the Revised Code.
(II)
"Public premises" means any hotel, restaurant, tavern,
store, arena, hall, or other place of public accommodation,
business, amusement, or resort.
Sec. 3301.0714. (A) The state board of education shall
adopt rules for a statewide education management information
system. The rules shall require the state board to
establish
guidelines for the establishment and maintenance of the system in
accordance with this section and the rules adopted under this
section. The guidelines shall include: (1) Standards identifying and defining the types of data
in
the system in accordance with divisions (B) and (C) of this
section; (2) Procedures for annually collecting and reporting the
data to the state board in accordance with division
(D) of this
section; (3) Procedures for annually compiling the data in
accordance
with division (G) of this section; (4) Procedures for annually reporting the data to the
public
in accordance with division (H) of this section. (B) The guidelines adopted under this section shall
require
the data maintained in the education management
information system
to include at least the following: (1) Student participation and performance data, for each
grade in each school district as a whole and for each grade in
each school building in each school district, that
includes: (a) The numbers of students receiving each category of
instructional service offered by the school district, such as
regular education instruction, vocational education instruction,
specialized instruction programs or enrichment instruction that
is
part of the educational curriculum, instruction for gifted
students, instruction for handicapped students, and remedial
instruction. The guidelines shall require instructional services
under this division to be divided into discrete categories if an
instructional service is limited to a specific subject, a
specific
type of student, or both, such as regular instructional
services
in mathematics, remedial reading instructional services,
instructional services specifically for students gifted in
mathematics or some other subject area, or instructional services
for students with a specific type of handicap. The categories of
instructional services required by the guidelines under this
division shall be the same as the categories of instructional
services used in determining cost units pursuant to division
(C)(3) of this section. (b) The numbers of students receiving support or
extracurricular services for each of the support services or
extracurricular programs offered by the school district, such as
counseling services, health services, and extracurricular sports
and fine arts programs. The categories of services required by
the guidelines under this division shall be the same as the
categories of services used in determining cost units pursuant to
division (C)(4)(a) of this section. (c) Average student grades in each subject in grades nine
through twelve; (d) Academic achievement levels as assessed by the testing
of student
achievement under sections 3301.0710 and
3301.0711 of
the Revised Code; (e) The number of students designated as having a
handicapping condition pursuant to division (C)(1) of section
3301.0711 of the Revised Code; (f) The numbers of students reported to the state board
pursuant to division (C)(2) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised
Code; (g) Attendance rates and the average daily attendance for
the year. For purposes of this division, a student shall be
counted as present for any field trip that is approved by the
school administration. (h) Expulsion rates; (i) Suspension rates; (j) The percentage of students receiving corporal
punishment; (k) Dropout rates; (l) Rates of retention in grade; (m) For pupils in grades nine through twelve, the average
number of carnegie units, as calculated in accordance with state
board of education rules; (n) Graduation rates, to be calculated in a manner
specified
by the department of education that reflects the rate
at
which
students who were in the ninth grade three years prior
to
the
current year complete school and that is consistent with
nationally accepted reporting requirements; (o) Results of diagnostic assessments administered to
kindergarten students as required under section 3301.0715 of the
Revised Code to permit a comparison of the academic readiness of
kindergarten students. However, no district shall be required to
report to the department the results of any diagnostic assessment
administered to a kindergarten student if the parent of that
student requests the district not to report those results. (2) Personnel and classroom enrollment data for each
school
district, including: (a) The total numbers of licensed employees and
nonlicensed
employees and the numbers of full-time
equivalent licensed
employees and nonlicensed employees providing
each category of
instructional service, instructional support
service, and
administrative support service used pursuant to
division (C)(3) of
this section. The guidelines adopted under
this section shall
require these categories of data to be
maintained for the school
district as a whole and, wherever
applicable, for each grade in
the school district as a whole, for
each school building as a
whole, and for each grade in each
school building. (b) The total number of employees and the number of
full-time equivalent employees providing each category of service
used pursuant to divisions (C)(4)(a) and (b) of this section, and
the total numbers of licensed employees and nonlicensed
employees
and the numbers of full-time equivalent licensed
employees and
nonlicensed employees providing each category
used pursuant to
division (C)(4)(c) of this section. The
guidelines adopted under
this section shall require these
categories of data to be
maintained for the school district as a
whole and, wherever
applicable, for each grade in the school
district as a whole, for
each school building as a whole, and for
each grade in each school
building. (c) The total number of regular classroom teachers
teaching
classes of regular education and the average number of
pupils
enrolled in each such class, in each of grades
kindergarten
through five in the district as a whole and in each
school
building in the school district. (3)(a) Student demographic data for each school district,
including information regarding the gender ratio of the school
district's pupils, the racial make-up of the school district's
pupils, and an appropriate measure of the number of the school
district's pupils who reside in economically disadvantaged
households. The demographic data shall be collected in a manner
to allow correlation with data collected under division (B)(1) of
this section. Categories for data collected pursuant to division
(B)(3) of this section shall conform, where appropriate, to
standard practices of agencies of the federal government. (b) With respect to each student entering kindergarten,
whether
the student previously participated in a public preschool
program, a private
preschool program, or a head start program, and
the number of years the
student participated in each of these
programs. (C) The education management information system shall
include cost accounting data for each district as a whole and for
each school building in each school district. The guidelines
adopted under this section shall require the cost data for each
school district to be maintained in a system of mutually
exclusive
cost units and shall require all of the costs of each
school
district to be divided among the cost units. The
guidelines shall
require the system of mutually exclusive cost
units to include at
least the following: (1) Administrative costs for the school district as a
whole.
The guidelines shall require the cost units under this
division
(C)(1) to be designed so that each of them may be
compiled and
reported in terms of average expenditure per pupil
in formula ADM
in the school
district, as determined pursuant to section 3317.03
of the Revised Code. (2) Administrative costs for each school building in the
school district. The guidelines shall require the cost units
under this division (C)(2) to be designed so that each of them
may
be compiled and reported in terms of average expenditure per
full-time equivalent pupil receiving instructional or support
services in each building. (3) Instructional services costs for each category of
instructional service provided directly to students and required
by guidelines adopted pursuant to division (B)(1)(a) of this
section. The guidelines shall require the cost units under
division (C)(3) of this section to be designed so that each of
them may be compiled and reported in terms of average expenditure
per pupil receiving the service in the school district as a whole
and average expenditure per pupil receiving the service in each
building in the school district and in terms of a total cost for
each category of service and, as a breakdown of the total cost, a
cost for each of the following components: (a) The cost of each instructional services category
required by guidelines adopted under division (B)(1)(a) of this
section that is provided directly to students by a classroom
teacher; (b) The cost of the instructional support services, such
as
services provided by a speech-language pathologist, classroom
aide, multimedia aide, or librarian, provided directly to
students
in conjunction with each instructional services
category; (c) The cost of the administrative support services
related
to each instructional services category, such as the cost
of
personnel that develop the curriculum for the instructional
services category and the cost of personnel supervising or
coordinating the delivery of the instructional services category. (4) Support or extracurricular services costs for each
category of service directly provided to students and required by
guidelines adopted pursuant to division (B)(1)(b) of this
section.
The guidelines shall require the cost units under
division (C)(4)
of this section to be designed so that each of
them may be
compiled and reported in terms of average expenditure
per pupil
receiving the service in the school district as a whole
and
average expenditure per pupil receiving the service in each
building in the school district and in terms of a total cost for
each category of service and, as a breakdown of the total cost, a
cost for each of the following components: (a) The cost of each support or extracurricular services
category required by guidelines adopted under division (B)(1)(b)
of this section that is provided directly to students by a
licensed employee, such as services provided by a guidance
counselor or any services provided by a licensed employee
under a
supplemental contract; (b) The cost of each such services category provided
directly to students by a nonlicensed employee, such as
janitorial
services, cafeteria services, or services of a sports
trainer; (c) The cost of the administrative services related to
each
services category in division (C)(4)(a) or (b) of this
section,
such as the cost of any licensed or nonlicensed
employees that
develop, supervise, coordinate, or otherwise are
involved in
administering or aiding the delivery of each services
category. (D)(1) The guidelines adopted under this section
shall
require
school districts to collect information about individual
students, staff members, or both in connection with any data
required by division (B) or (C) of this section or other
reporting
requirements established in the Revised Code. The
guidelines may
also require school districts to report
information about
individual staff members in connection with any
data required by
division (B) or (C) of this section or other
reporting
requirements established in the Revised Code. The
guidelines
shall not
authorize school districts to request social
security
numbers of
individual students.
The guidelines shall prohibit
the
reporting
under this
section of
a student's
name,
address,
and
social security number to the state board of
education or the
department of
education. The guidelines shall
also prohibit the
reporting
under
this section of any personally
identifiable
information
about any
student, except for the purpose
of assigning
the data
verification
code required by division
(D)(2) of this
section, to
any
other
person
unless such person
is
employed by
the
school
district or
the data
acquisition site
operated under
section
3301.075 of the
Revised Code
and is
authorized
by the
district or
acquisition
site
to have
access to
such
information.
The
guidelines may
require
school
districts to
provide the social
security numbers
of
individual
staff members. (2) The guidelines shall provide for each school district or
community school to assign a data verification code
that is unique
on a statewide basis over time to each
student whose
initial Ohio
enrollment is in that district or
school and to report
all
required individual student data for that
student utilizing such
code. The guidelines shall also provide
for assigning
data
verification codes to all students enrolled in
districts or
community
schools on the
effective date of the
guidelines
established under this section. Individual student data shall be reported to the department
through the
data
acquisition sites utilizing the code but at no
time shall
the state board
or the department have access to
information
that would enable any
data verification code to be
matched to personally
identifiable
student data. Each school district shall ensure that the data verification
code is
included in the student's records reported to any
subsequent school district
or community school in which the
student enrolls and shall remove all
references to the code in any
records retained in the district or school that
pertain to any
student no longer enrolled. Any such subsequent
district or
school shall utilize the same identifier in its reporting of data
under this section. (E) The guidelines adopted under this section may require
school districts to collect and report data, information, or
reports other than that described in divisions (A), (B), and (C)
of this section for the purpose of complying with other reporting
requirements established in the Revised Code. The other data,
information, or reports may be maintained in the education
management information system but are not required to be compiled
as part of the profile formats required under division (G) of
this
section or the annual statewide report required under
division (H)
of this section. (F) Beginning with the school year that begins July 1,
1991,
the board of education of each school district shall
annually
collect and report to the state board, in
accordance
with the
guidelines established by the board, the data
required
pursuant to
this section. A school district may collect and
report these data
notwithstanding section 2151.358 or 3319.321 of
the Revised Code. (G) The state board shall, in accordance with the
procedures
it adopts, annually compile the data reported by each
school
district pursuant to division (D) of this section. The
state
board shall design formats for profiling each
school
district as a
whole and each school building within each district
and shall
compile the data in accordance with these formats. These profile
formats shall: (1) Include all of the data gathered under this section in
a
manner that facilitates comparison among school districts and
among school buildings within each school district; (2) Present the data on academic achievement levels as
assessed by the testing of student
achievement
maintained
pursuant to division (B)(1)(e) of this section so that
the
academic achievement levels of students who are excused from
taking any such test pursuant to division (C)(1) of section
3301.0711 of the Revised Code are distinguished from the academic
achievement levels of students who are not so excused. (H)(1) The state board shall, in accordance with the
procedures it adopts, annually prepare a statewide report for all
school districts and the general public that includes the profile
of each of the school districts developed pursuant to division
(G)
of this section. Copies of the report shall be sent to each
school district. (2) The state board shall, in accordance with the
procedures
it adopts, annually prepare an individual report for
each school
district and the general public that includes the
profiles of each
of the school buildings in that school district
developed pursuant
to division (G) of this section. Copies of
the report shall be
sent to the superintendent of the district
and to each member of
the district board of education. (3) Copies of the reports received from the state board
under divisions
(H)(1) and (2) of this section shall be made
available to the general public at each school district's
offices.
Each district board of education shall make copies of
each report
available to any person upon request and payment of a
reasonable
fee for the cost of reproducing the report. The board
shall
annually publish in a newspaper of general circulation in
the
school district, at least twice during the two weeks prior to
the
week in which the reports will first be available, a notice
containing the address where the reports are available and the
date on which the reports will be available. (I) Any data that is collected or maintained pursuant to
this section and that identifies an individual pupil is not a
public record for the purposes of section 149.43 of the Revised
Code. (J) As used in this section: (1) "School district" means any city, local, exempted
village, or joint vocational school district. (2) "Cost" means any expenditure for operating expenses
made
by a school district excluding any expenditures for debt
retirement except for payments made to any commercial lending
institution for any loan approved pursuant to section 3313.483 of
the Revised Code. (K) Any person who removes data from the information
system
established under this section for the purpose of
releasing it to
any person not entitled under law to have access
to such
information is subject to section 2913.42 of the Revised
Code
prohibiting tampering with data. (L) Any time the department of education determines that a
school district
has taken any of the actions described under
division
(L)(1), (2), or (3) of this section, it shall make a
report of the actions of the district, send a copy of the report
to the superintendent of such school district, and maintain a
copy
of the report in its files: (1) The school district fails to meet any deadline
established pursuant to this section for the reporting of any
data
to the education management information system; (2) The school district fails to meet any deadline
established pursuant to this section for the correction of any
data reported to the education management information
system; (3) The school district reports data to the education
management
information system in a condition, as determined by
the
department, that indicates that the district did not make a good
faith effort in reporting the data to the system. Any report made under this division shall include
recommendations
for corrective action by the school district. Upon making a report for the first time
in a fiscal year, the
department shall
withhold ten per cent of the total amount due
during that fiscal
year under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code to
the school district to which
the report applies. Upon making a
second
report in a fiscal year, the department shall withhold
an
additional twenty per cent of such total amount due during
that
fiscal year to the school district to which the report
applies.
The department shall not release such funds
unless it determines
that the district has taken corrective action.
However, no such
release of funds shall occur if the district
fails to take
corrective action within
ninety
forty-five days of the date
upon
which the
report was made by the department. (M) The department of education, after consultation
with the
Ohio education computer network, may provide at
no cost to school
districts uniform computer software for use in
reporting data to
the education management information system,
provided that no
school district shall be required to utilize
such software to
report data to the education management
information system if such
district is so reporting data in an
accurate, complete, and timely
manner in a format compatible
with that required by the education
management information
system. (N) The state board of education, in accordance with
sections 3319.31 and
3319.311 of the Revised Code, may suspend or
revoke a license as defined under
division (A) of section 3319.31
of the Revised Code that has been issued to
any school district
employee found to have willfully reported
erroneous, inaccurate,
or incomplete data to the education
management information system. (O) No person shall release or maintain any information
about any
student in violation of this section. Whoever violates
this division is
guilty of a misdemeanor of the fourth degree.
(P) The department shall disaggregate the data collected
under
division (B)(1)(o) of this section according to the race and
socioeconomic status of the students assessed. No data collected
under that division shall be included on the report cards required
by section 3302.03 of the Revised Code. (Q) If the department cannot compile any of the information
required by division (D)(5) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code
based upon the data collected under this section, the department
shall develop a plan and a reasonable timeline for the collection
of any data necessary to comply with that division.
Sec. 3302.03. (A)
Annually the
department
of
education
shall
report for each
school district
the extent to which it
meets each of the
performance indicators
created by the
state
board of
education under
section 3302.02 of the Revised Code and
shall
specify for each
such district the
number of
performance
indicators that have been
achieved and
whether the district is an
excellent school district,
an
effective
school district,
needs
continuous improvement, is
under an
academic
watch, or is in
a
state of academic emergency.
When possible, the department shall also determine for each
school building
in a district the extent to which it meets any of
the performance
indicators applicable to the grade levels of the
students in that
school building and whether the school building
is an excellent school, an effective
school, needs continuous
improvement, is under an academic watch,
or is in a state of
academic emergency. (B)
If the state board establishes seventeen performance
indicators applicable to a school district or building under
section 3302.02 of the Revised Code: (1) A school district or building shall be declared
excellent if it meets at least sixteen of the applicable state
performance indicators. (2)
A school district
or building shall be declared
effective
if it meets
thirteen through fifteen of
the
applicable
state performance
indicators. (3) A school district
or building shall be declared to be
in
need of
continuous improvement if it meets more than
eight but
less than
thirteen of the
applicable state
performance
indicators. (4) A school district
or building shall be declared to be
under an
academic watch if it meets more than
five but
not more
than
eight of the
applicable
state
performance
indicators. (5) A school district
or building shall be declared to be
in
a state
of academic emergency if it does not meet more than
five
of the
applicable state performance
indicators. (C)
If the state board establishes more than seventeen
performance
indicators under section 3302.02 of the Revised Code,
or if less
than seventeen performance indicators are applicable to
a school
building, the state board shall establish the number of
indicators
that must be met in order for a district or building to
be
designated as excellent, effective, needs continuous
improvement,
is under an academic watch, or is in a state of
academic
emergency. The number established for each such
category under
this division shall bear a similar relationship to
the total
number of indicators as the number of indicators
required for the
respective categories stated in division (B) of
this section bears
to seventeen. (D)(1) The department shall issue annual report cards for
each school
district, each building within each district, and for
the state as a whole
reflecting performance on the
indicators
created by the state board under section 3302.02 of the
Revised
Code. (2) The department shall include on the report card for each
district information pertaining to any change
from the previous
year made by the school district or school
buildings within the
district on any performance indicator.
(3) When reporting data on student performance, the
department shall disaggregate that data according to the following
categories: (a) Performance of students by age group; (b) Performance of students by race and ethnic group; (c) Performance of students by gender; (d) Performance of students grouped by those who have been
enrolled in a district or school for three or more years; (e) Performance of students grouped by those who have been
enrolled in a district or school for more than one year and less
than three years; (f) Performance of students grouped by those who have been
enrolled in a district or school for one year or less; (g) Performance of students grouped by those who are
classified as vocational education students pursuant to guidelines
adopted by the department for purposes of this division; (h) Performance of students grouped by those who are
economically disadvantaged, to the extent that such data is
available from the education management information system
establised
established under section 3301.0714 of the Revised
Code; (i) Performance of students grouped by those who are enrolled
in a conversion community school established under Chapter 3314.
of the Revised Code. The department may disaggregate data on student performance
according to other categories that the department determines are
appropriate. In reporting data pursuant to division (D)(3) of this
section, the
department shall not include in the report cards any
data statistical in nature that is statistically unreliable or
that could result in the identification of individual students. (4) The department may include with the report cards any
additional education and fiscal
performance data
it deems
valuable. (5) The department shall include on each report card a list
of additional information collected by the department that is
available regarding the district or building for which the report
card is issued. When available, such additional information shall
include student mobility data disaggregated by race and
socioeconomic status, college enrollment data, and the reports
prepared under section 3302.031 of the Revised Code. The department shall maintain a site on the world wide web.
The report card shall include the address of the site and shall
specify that such additional information is available to the
public at that site. The department shall also provide a copy of
each item on the list to the superintendent of each school
district. The district superintendent shall provide a copy of any
item on the list to anyone who requests it.
(6) For any district that sponsors a conversion community
school under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code, the department
shall combine data regarding the academic performance of students
enrolled in the community school with comparable data from the
schools of the district for the purpose of calculating the
performance of the district as a whole on the report card issued
for the district. (E) In calculating
reading, writing, mathematics, social
studies, or science proficiency
or achievement test
passage rates
used to determine school district performance under
this
section,
the department shall include all
students
taking a test with
accommodation
or to
whom an
alternate assessment is administered
pursuant to
division
(C)(1)
of section 3301.0711 of the
Revised
Code,
but shall
not include
any student excused from taking a test
pursuant to
division (C)(3)
of that section, whether or not
the
student chose
to take the
test
voluntarily in spite of the
exemption granted in
that division.
Sec. 3309.51. (A) Each employer shall pay annually into the
employers' trust fund, in such monthly or less frequent
installments as the school employees retirement board requires,
an
amount certified by the school employees retirement board,
which
shall be as required by Chapter 3309. of the Revised Code. Payments by
school district boards of education
and governing
authorities of community
schools to the employers' trust
fund of
the school employees retirement system may be made from
the
amounts allocated under
section 3314.08 or Chapter 3317. of the
Revised Code
prior to their distribution to the individual school
districts
or community
schools. The amount due from each school
district
or
community school may be certified by the
secretary of
the system to the
state superintendent of public
instruction
monthly, or at such times as is determined by the
school employees
retirement board. Payments by governing authorities of community schools to the
employers' trust fund of the school employees retirement system
shall be made from the amounts allocated under section 3314.08 of
the Revised Code prior to their distribution to the individual
community schools. The amount due from each community school
shall be certified by the secretary of the system to the
superintendent of public instruction monthly, or at such times as
determined by the school employees retirement board. (B) The superintendent shall deduct from the amount allocated
to each
district or community school under section 3314.08 or
to
each school district under
Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code the
entire amounts due to the system from such
district or school
or
school district upon the
certification to the superintendent by
the secretary
thereof. (C) Where an employer fails
or has failed or refuses to make
payments to the
employers' trust fund, as provided for under
Chapter 3309. of the
Revised Code, on a direct pay basis, the
secretary of the school
employees retirement system may certify to
the state
superintendent of public instruction, monthly or at such
times as
is determined by the school employees retirement board,
the
amount due from such employer, and the superintendent shall
deduct from the amount allocated to each district or community
school
under section 3314.08 or Chapter
3317. of the Revised Code
the entire amounts due to the system
from such districts or
schools upon the certification to
the superintendent
by the
secretary of the school employees retirement system. (D) The superintendent shall certify to the director of
budget
and management the amounts thus due the system for payment.
Sec. 3313.375. The board of education of a city, local,
exempted village, or joint vocational school district
or, the
governing board of an educational service center, or the governing
authority of a community school may enter
into a
lease-purchase
agreement
providing for construction; enlarging or
other
improvement, furnishing, and equipping;
lease; and eventual
acquisition of a building
or improvements to a building
for any
school district
or, educational service center, or community
school purpose. The
agreement shall provide for a lease for
a
series of one-year
renewable lease terms totaling
not more than
thirty years. The
agreement shall provide that at the
end of the
series of lease
terms provided for in the agreement
the title to
the leased
property shall be vested in the
school district
or
educational
service center, if all obligations of the school
district
or, educational service center, or community school
provided
for in the agreement have been
satisfied. The
agreement
may, in addition to the rental payments,
require the school
district
or, educational service center, or community school
to
pay
the lessor a lump-sum
amount as a condition of obtaining title
to
the
leased property. In
conjunction with the agreement,
a
school
district board of education
or, an educational service
center
governing board, or a governing authority of a community
school
may grant leases, easements, or licenses
for
underlying
land or facilities under the board's control for
terms
not
exceeding five years beyond the final
renewal term of the
lease-purchase agreement entered into pursuant
to this section.
Payments under the
agreement may be deemed to
be, and paid as,
current operating expenses. The obligations under a lease-purchase agreement entered into
pursuant to this
section shall not be considered to be net
indebtedness of a school district
under section 133.06 of the
Revised Code.
Sec. 3313.648. No board of education of a city, exempted
village, or local school district shall offer a monetary payment
or other in-kind gift to any student or such student's parent or
guardian as an incentive for that student to enroll in a school
operated by the district. The prohibition in this section shall
not apply to any books, supplies, equipment, or other goods that
are necessary to enable a student to participate fully in the
course of instruction provided by the district.
Sec. 3314.011. Every community school established
under this
chapter shall have a designated fiscal officer. The
auditor of
state
may require by rule that the fiscal officer of
any community
school,
before entering upon duties as fiscal
officer of the
school, execute a
bond in an amount and with surety
to be approved
by the governing
authority of the school, payable
to the state,
conditioned for the
faithful performance of all the
official
duties required of the
fiscal officer. Any such bond
shall be
deposited with the
governing authority of the school, and
a copy
thereof, certified
by the governing authority, shall be
filed with
the county
auditor.
Prior to assuming the duties of fiscal officer, the fiscal
officer designated under this section shall be
licensed under
section 3301.074 of the Revised Code or
shall
complete not less
than sixteen hours of continuing education
classes, courses, or
workshops in the area of school accounting as
approved by the
sponsor of the
community school. Any fiscal officer who is not
licensed under section 3301.074 of the Revised Code shall complete
an additional twenty-four hours of continuing education classes,
courses, or workshops in the area of school accounting as approved
by the sponsor of the school within one year after assuming the
duties of fiscal officer of the school. However, any such
classes, courses, or workshops in excess of sixteen hours
completed by the fiscal officer prior to assuming the duties of
fiscal officer shall count toward the additional twenty-four hours
of continuing education required under this section. In each
subsequent year, any fiscal officer who is not licensed under
section 3301.074 of the Revised Code shall complete eight hours of
continuing education classes, courses, or workshops in the area of
school accounting as approved by the sponsor of the school.
Sec. 3314.013. (A)(1) Until July 1, 2000, no
more than
seventy-five contracts between start-up schools and the state
board of
education may be in effect outside the pilot project area
at any time under
this chapter. (2) After July 1, 2000, and until July 1, 2001, no more
than
one
hundred twenty-five contracts between start-up schools and the
state board of
education may be in effect outside the pilot
project area at any time
under this chapter.
(3) This division applies only to contracts between start-up
schools and the state board of education and contracts between
start-up schools and entities described in divisions (C)(1)(b) to
(f) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code. Until July 1, 2005, not more than two hundred twenty-five
contracts
to which this
division applies may be in effect at any
time
under
this chapter. (B) Within twenty-four hours of a request by any person, the
superintendent of public instruction shall indicate the number of
preliminary agreements for
state board-sponsored start-up schools
currently outstanding and the number of contracts for these
schools in effect at the time of the request.
(C) It is the intent of the general assembly to consider
whether
to provide limitations on the number of start-up community
schools after
July 1, 2001, following its examination of the
results of
the studies by the legislative office of education
oversight required under
section
Section 50.39 of
Am.
Sub.
H.B.
No. 215 of the 122nd general
assembly and
section
Section 50.52.2
of
Am.
Sub.
H.B.
No. 215 of the 122nd general
assembly, as amended
by Am.
Sub.
H.B.
No. 770 of the 122nd general
assembly.
Sec.
3314.015. (A) The department of education shall be
responsible for the oversight of sponsors of the community schools
established
under this chapter and shall provide technical
assistance to schools and sponsors in their compliance with
applicable laws and the terms of the contracts entered into under
section 3314.03 of the Revised Code and in the development and
start-up activities of those schools. In carrying out its duties
under this section, the department shall do all of the following:
(1) In providing technical assistance to proposing parties,
governing authorities, and sponsors, conduct training sessions and
distribute informational materials; (2) Approve entities to be sponsors of community schools and
monitor the effectiveness of those sponsors in their oversight of
the schools with which they have contracted;
(3) By December thirty-first of each year, issue a report
to the governor, the speaker of
the house of representatives, the
president of the senate, and the
chairpersons of the house and
senate committees principally
responsible for education matters
regarding the effectiveness of
academic programs, operations, and
legal compliance and of the financial condition of all
community
schools established under this chapter;
(4) From time to time, make legislative recommendations to
the general assembly designed to enhance the operation and
performance of community schools.
(B)(1) No entity listed in division (C)(1) of section
3314.02 of the Revised Code shall enter into a preliminary
agreement under division (C)(2) of section 3314.02 of the Revised
Code until it has received approval from the department of
education to sponsor community schools under this chapter and has
entered into a written agreement with the department regarding the
manner in which the entity will conduct such sponsorship. The
department shall adopt in accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code rules containing criteria, procedures, and
deadlines
for
processing applications for such approval, for oversight of
sponsors, for revocation of the approval of sponsors, and for
entering into written agreements with sponsors. The
rules shall
require an entity to submit evidence of the entity's
ability and
willingness to comply with the provisions of division
(D) of
section 3314.03 of the Revised Code. An entity that is approved to sponsor community schools may
enter into any number of preliminary agreements and sponsor any
number of schools, provided each school and the contract for
sponsorship meets the requirements of this chapter. (2) The department of education shall determine, pursuant to
criteria adopted by rule of the department, whether the mission
proposed to be specified in the contract of a community school to
be sponsored by a state university board of trustees or the
board's designee under division (C)(1)(e) of section 3314.02 of
the Revised Code complies with the requirements of that division.
Such determination of the department is final. (3) The department of education shall determine, pursuant to
criteria adopted by rule of the department, if any tax-exempt
entity under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code that
is proposed to be a sponsor of a community school is an
education-oriented entity for purpose of satisfying the condition
prescribed in division (C)(1)(e)(iv) of section 3314.02 of the
Revised Code. Such determination of the department is final. (C) If at any time the state board of education
finds that a
sponsor is not in compliance or is no longer willing
to comply
with its contract with any community school or with the
department's rules for sponsorship, the
state board or designee
shall conduct a hearing in accordance with Chapter
119. of the
Revised Code on that matter. If after the hearing,
the state
board or designee has confirmed the original finding, the
department of education may revoke the sponsor's approval to
sponsor
community schools and may assume the sponsorship of any
schools
with which the sponsor has contracted until the earlier of
the
expiration of two school years or until a new sponsor as
described
in division (C)(1) of section 3314.02 of the Revised
Code is
secured by the school's governing authority. The
department may
extend the term of the contract in the case of a
school for which
it has assumed sponsorship under this division as
necessary to
accommodate the term of the department's
authorization to sponsor
the school specified in this division. (D) The decision of the department to disapprove an entity
for sponsorship of a community school or to revoke approval for
such sponsorship, as provided in division (C) of this section, may
be appealed by the entity in accordance with section 119.12 of the
Revised Code. (E) In carrying out its duties under this chapter, the
department shall not impose requirements on community schools or
their sponsors that are not permitted by law or duly adopted
rules.
Sec. 3314.02. (A) As used in this chapter: (1)
"Sponsor" means
a public
an entity listed in division
(C)(1)
of
this
section, which has been approved by the department
of education to sponsor community schools and
with which the
governing
authority of the
proposed
community school enters into a
contract pursuant to this
section. (2)
"Pilot project area" means
the school districts
included
in the territory of the former community
school pilot project
established by former Section 50.52 of Am. Sub. H.B. No. 215
of
the 122nd general assembly. (3)
"Challenged school district"
means any of the following: (a) A school district that is part of the pilot project
area; (b) A school district that is
either in a state of academic
emergency
or in a state of academic watch under section 3302.03 of
the Revised
Code; (c) A big eight school district; (d) An urban school district. (4)
"Big eight school district" means
a school district that
for fiscal year 1997 had
both of the following: (a) A percentage of children residing in the
district and
participating in the predecessor of
Ohio works first greater than
thirty per cent, as reported pursuant to section 3317.10 of the
Revised
Code; (b) An average daily membership greater than
twelve
thousand, as reported pursuant to former division
(A) of section
3317.03 of the
Revised Code. (5)
"New start-up school" means a community school other
than
one created
by converting all or part of an existing public
school, as designated in the
school's contract pursuant to
division (A)(17) of section 3314.03
of the Revised Code. (6)
"Urban school district" means one of the state's
twenty-one
urban school districts as defined in division (O) of
section 3317.02
of the Revised Code as that section existed prior
to July 1, 1998.
(7) "Internet- or
computer-based community school" means a
community school
established under this chapter in which the
enrolled students work primarily from their residences on
assignments provided via an internet- or other computer-based
instructional method that does not rely on regular classroom
instruction. (B) Any person or group of
individuals may initially propose
under this
division the conversion of all or a portion of a public
school to a community
school.
No conversion community school shall
be an internet- or computer-based community school. The proposal
shall be made to the
board of education of
the city, local, or
exempted village school
district
in
which the public school is
proposed to be converted.
Upon receipt of a
proposal, a board may
enter into a preliminary
agreement with the person or
group
proposing the conversion of the
public school, indicating the
intention of the board of education
to
support the conversion to a
community school. A proposing
person or group
that has a
preliminary
agreement under this
division may proceed to finalize
plans for the school,
establish a
governing authority for the
school, and negotiate a contract with
the board of education.
Provided the proposing person or group
adheres to the
preliminary
agreement and all provisions of this
chapter, the board of
education shall negotiate in good faith to
enter into a contract
in accordance
with section 3314.03 of the
Revised Code and
division (C) of this section. (C)(1) Any person or group of
individuals may propose under
this division the
establishment of a new start-up school to be
located in
a challenged
school district. The proposal may be
made
to
any of the following
public
entities: (a) The board of education of the
district in which the
school is proposed to be
located; (b) The board of education of any joint
vocational school
district with territory in the county in which is
located the
majority
of the territory of the district in which the
school is
proposed to be located; (c) The board of education of any other
city, local, or
exempted village school district having
territory in the same
county where the
district in which the school is proposed to be
located has the major
portion of its territory; (d) The
state board of education; (e)
If the school is proposed to be located in the pilot
project
area, the governing
board of
the
any educational service
center
serving the county
containing the majority
of the territory
of the
pilot project area
as long as the proposed school will be
located in a county within the territory of the service center or
in a county contiguous to such county;
(f)
If the school is proposed to be located in the pilot
project
area, a
(e) A
sponsoring
authority designated by the
board
of
trustees of
a state
university located in the
pilot
project
area,
any of the thirteen state universities listed in section
3345.011 of the Revised Code
or the board of
trustees itself
as
long as a mission of the proposed school to be specified in the
contract under division (A)(2) of section 3314.03 of the Revised
Code and as approved by the department of education under division
(B)(2) of section 3314.015 of the Revised Code will be the
practical demonstration of teaching methods,
educational
technology, or other teaching practices that are
included in the
curriculum of the university's teacher preparation
program
approved by the state board of education;
(f) Any qualified tax-exempt entity under section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code as long as all of the
following conditions are satisfied:
(i) The entity has been in operation for at least five
years prior to applying to be a community school sponsor.
(ii) The entity has assets of at least five hundred
thousand dollars.
(iii) The department of education has determined that the
entity is an education-oriented entity under division (B)(3) of
section 3314.015 of the Revised Code.
Until July 1, 2005, any entity described in division
(C)(1)(f) of this section may sponsor only schools that formerly
were sponsored
by the state board of education under division
(C)(1)(d) of this
section, as it existed prior to the effective
date of this
amendment. After July 1, 2005, such entity may
sponsor any new or
existing school. The public
Any entity
described in division (C)(1) of this
section may enter
into a
preliminary agreement
pursuant
to
division (C)(2) of this
section with the proposing
person or
group.
(2) A preliminary agreement indicates the
intention of
a
public
an entity described in division (C)(1)
of this section
to
sponsor the community school. A proposing person or
group that
has such a preliminary agreement may proceed to
finalize plans for
the school, establish a governing authority
as described in
division (E) of this section
for the school, and
negotiate a
contract with the
public entity. Provided the
proposing person or
group adheres to the
preliminary agreement and
all provisions of
this chapter, the
public entity shall negotiate
in good faith to
enter into a
contract in accordance with section
3314.03 of the
Revised
Code. (3) A new start-up school that is established in a school
district while that district is
either in a state of academic
emergency
or in a state of academic watch under section
3302.03 of
the Revised Code may
continue in
existence once the school
district is no longer
in a
state of
academic emergency
or academic
watch, provided there is a valid
contract between
the
school and a
sponsor.
(4) A copy of every preliminary agreement entered into under
this
division shall be filed with the superintendent of public
instruction. (D) A majority vote of
the board of a sponsoring
school
district board
entity
and a
majority vote of the members of the
governing authority of a
community school shall be required to
adopt a contract and
convert
the public school to a community
school or establish the new
start-up school.
An
Up to the
statewide limit prescribed in section 3314.013 of the Revised
Code, an unlimited number
of
community schools
may be
established
in any school district
provided that a contract is
entered into
for each community school
pursuant to
this chapter. (E) As used in this division, "immediate relatives" are
limited to spouses, children, parents, grandparents, siblings, and
in-laws. Each new start-up community school established under
this
chapter shall be under the direction of a governing authority
which shall consist of a board of not less than five individuals
who are not owners or employees, or immediate relatives of owners
or employees, of any for-profit firm that
operates or
manages a
school for the governing authority.
No person shall serve on the governing authority or
operate the community school under contract with the governing
authority so long as the person owes the state any money or is in
a dispute over whether the person owes the state any money
concerning the operation of a community school that has closed. (F) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to permit the
establishment of a community school in more than one school
district under the same contract.
Sec. 3314.022. The governing authority of any community
school established under this chapter may contract with the
governing authority of another community school, the board of
education of a school district, the governing board of an
educational service center, a county MR/DD board, or the
administrative authority of
a
nonpublic school for provision of
services for any disabled
student enrolled at the school. Any
school district
board of
education or educational service center
governing board shall
negotiate with a community school
governing
authority that seeks
to contract for the provision of
services for
a disabled student
under this section in the same
manner as it
would with the board
of education of a school
district that
seeks
to contract for such
services.
Sec. 3314.023. In order to provide monitoring and technical
assistance, the sponsor of a community school shall be located or
have representatives located within fifty miles of the location of
the community school, or in the case of an internet- or
computer-based community school, within fifty miles of the
school's base of operation. A representative of the sponsor shall
meet
with the governing authority of the school and shall review
the
financial records of the school at
least once every two
months.
Sec. 3314.024. A management company that provides services
to
a community school that amounts to more than twenty per cent of
the annual gross revenues of the school shall provide a detailed
accounting including the nature and costs of the services it
provides to the community school. This information shall be
included in the footnotes of the financial statements of the
school and be subject to audit during the course of the regular
financial audit of the community school.
Sec. 3314.03.
(A)
A copy of every contract entered into
under this section shall be filed with the superintendent of
public instruction. (A) Each contract entered into
under section
3314.02 of the
Revised Code between a sponsor and the governing
authority of a
community school shall specify the following: (1) That the school shall
be established as
a
either of the
following: (a) A nonprofit
corporation established
under Chapter 1702.
of the Revised Code,
if established prior to the effective date of
this amendment; (b) A public benefit corporation established under Chapter
1702. of the Revised Code, if established after the effective date
of this amendment;
(2) The education program of the school, including the
school's mission,
the characteristics of the students the school
is expected to attract, the ages and grades of students, and the
focus of the
curriculum; (3) The academic goals to be achieved and the method of
measurement that
will be used to determine progress toward those
goals, which shall include the statewide
achievement
tests; (4) Performance standards by which the success of the
school
will be evaluated by the sponsor; (5) The admission standards of section 3314.06 of the
Revised Code; (6)(a) Dismissal procedures;
(b) A requirement that the governing authority adopt an
attendance policy that includes a procedure for automatically
withdrawing a student from the school if the student without a
legitimate excuse fails to participate in one hundred five
cumulative hours of the learning opportunities offered to the
student. Such a policy shall provide for withdrawing the student
by the end of the thirtieth day after the student has failed to
participate as required under this division. (7) The ways by which the school will achieve racial and
ethnic balance
reflective of the community it serves; (8) Requirements
and procedures for
financial audits by the
auditor of state. The contract shall require
financial records of
the school to be maintained in
the same manner as are financial
records of school districts, pursuant to
rules of the auditor of
state, and the audits shall be conducted in
accordance with
section 117.10 of the Revised Code. (9) The facilities to be used and
their locations; (10) Qualifications of teachers,
including a requirement
that the school's
classroom teachers be licensed in accordance
with sections 3319.22 to
3319.31 of the Revised Code, except that
a community school may engage
noncertificated persons to teach up
to twelve
hours per week pursuant to section 3319.301 of the
Revised Code; (11) That the school will comply with the following
requirements: (a) The school will provide learning opportunities to a
minimum
of twenty-five students for a minimum of nine
hundred
twenty hours per school year; (b) The governing authority will
purchase liability
insurance, or otherwise provide for the
potential liability of the
school; (c) The school will be
nonsectarian in its programs,
admission policies,
employment practices, and all other
operations, and will not be
operated by a sectarian school or
religious institution; (d) The school will comply with
divisions (A), (B), and (C)
of section 3301.0715 and sections 9.90, 9.91, 109.65,
121.22,
149.43, 2151.358, 2151.421, 2313.18,
3301.0710, 3301.0711,
3301.0712,
3301.0714
3301.0715,
3313.50,
3313.608, 3313.6012,
3313.643,
3313.648, 3313.66, 3313.661,
3313.662,
3313.67,
3313.671,
3313.672,
3313.673, 3313.69, 3313.71, 3313.716,
3313.80,
3313.96,
3319.073, 3319.321, 3319.39, 3321.01,
3321.13, 3321.14,
3321.17,
3321.18, 3321.19, 3321.191, 3327.10, 4111.17,
and
4113.52, and
5705.391
and
Chapters 117., 1347.,
2744., 3365.,
4112., 4123.,
4141., and
4167. of
the Revised Code
as if it were a
school
district
and will comply with section
3301.0714 of the
Revised
Code in the manner specified in section
3314.17 of the
Revised
Code; (e) The school shall comply with Chapter 102. of the Revised
Code except that
nothing in that chapter shall prohibit a
member
of the school's governing board from also being an employee
of the
school and nothing in that chapter or section 2921.42 of
the
Revised Code shall prohibit a member of the
school's governing
board from having an interest in a
contract into which the
governing board enters
that is not a contract with a for-profit
firm for the operation or
management of a school under the
auspices of the governing
authority; (f) The school will comply with sections 3313.61,
3313.611,
and 3313.614 of the Revised Code, except that the
requirement in
sections
3313.61 and 3313.611 of the Revised
Code that a person
must successfully
complete the curriculum
in
any high school prior
to receiving a
high school diploma may be
met by completing the
curriculum adopted by the
governing
authority of the community
school
rather than the curriculum
specified in Title XXXIII of the
Revised Code or any rules of the
state board of education; (g) The school governing authority will submit
an annual
within four months after the end of each school year a
report
of
its activities and progress in meeting the goals and
standards of
divisions
(A)(3) and (4) of this section and its
financial status
to the
sponsor, the parents of all students
enrolled in the
school, and the legislative office of education
oversight. The
school will
collect and provide
any data that the
legislative
office of education oversight requests in
furtherance
of any study
or research that the general assembly requires the
office to
conduct, including the studies required under Section
50.39
of Am.
Sub. H.B. 215 of the
122nd general assembly and
Section 50.52.2 of
Am. Sub. H.B. 215 of the
122nd general
assembly, as amended. (12) Arrangements for providing health and other benefits
to
employees; (13) The length of the contract, which shall begin at the
beginning of an
academic year
and. No contract shall
not exceed
five years;
unless such contract has been renewed pursuant to
division (E) of this section. (14) The governing authority of the school, which shall be
responsible for carrying out the provisions of the contract; (15) A financial plan detailing an estimated school budget
for each year
of the period of the contract and specifying the
total estimated per pupil
expenditure amount for each such year.
The plan shall specify for
each year the base formula amount
that
will be used for purposes of funding calculations under section
3314.08
of the Revised Code. This base formula amount for any
year shall not exceed
the formula amount defined under section
3317.02
of the Revised Code. The plan may also
specify for any
year a percentage figure to be used for reducing the per pupil
amount of disadvantaged pupil impact aid calculated pursuant to
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code the school is to
receive that
year under section 3314.08 of the Revised Code. (16) Requirements and procedures regarding the disposition
of
employees of the school in the event the contract is terminated
or not renewed pursuant to section 3314.07 of the Revised Code; (17) Whether the school is to be created by
converting all
or part of an existing public school or is to be a new start-up
school, and if it is a converted public school, specification of
any duties or
responsibilities of an employer that the board of
education that operated the
school before conversion is delegating
to the governing board of the community
school with respect to all
or any specified group of employees provided the
delegation is not
prohibited by a collective bargaining agreement applicable
to such
employees; (18) Provisions establishing procedures for resolving
disputes or
differences of opinion between the sponsor and the
governing authority of the
community school; (19) A provision requiring the governing authority to adopt
a policy
regarding
the admission of students who reside outside
the district in which the school
is located. That policy shall
comply with the admissions procedures specified
in section 3314.06
of the Revised Code and, at the sole
discretion of the authority,
shall do one of the following: (a) Prohibit the enrollment of students who reside outside
the
district in which the school is located; (b) Permit the enrollment of students who reside in
districts
adjacent to the district in which the school is located; (c) Permit the enrollment of students who reside in any
other
district in the state.
(20) A provision recognizing the authority of the department
of education to take over the sponsorship of the school in
accordance with the provisions of division (C) of section 3314.015
of the Revised Code; (21) A provision recognizing the sponsor's authority to
assume the operation of a school under the conditions specified in
division (B) of section 3314.073 of the Revised Code;
(22) A provision recognizing both of the following: (a) The authority of public health and safety officials to
inspect the facilities of the school and to order the facilities
closed if those officials find that the facilities are not in
compliance with health and safety laws and regulations; (b) The authority of the
department of education as the
community school oversight body to
suspend the operation of the
school under section 3314.072 of the
Revised Code if the
department has evidence of conditions or
violations of law at the
school that pose an imminent danger to
the health and safety of
the school's students and employees and
the sponsor refuses to
take such action;
(23) A description of the learning opportunities that will
be offered to students including both classroom-based and
non-classroom-based learning opportunities that is in compliance
with criteria for student participation established by the
department under division (L)(2) of section 3314.08 of the Revised
Code.
(B) The community school shall also submit to the sponsor a
comprehensive plan for the
school. The plan shall specify the
following: (1) The process by which the governing authority of the
school will be
selected in the future; (2) The management and administration of the school; (3) If the community school is a currently existing
public
school, alternative arrangements
for current public school
students who choose
not to attend the school and teachers who
choose not to teach in
the school after conversion; (4) The instructional program and educational philosophy of
the
school; (5) Internal financial controls. (C) A contract entered into under section 3314.02 of the
Revised
Code between a sponsor and the governing
authority of a
community school may provide for the community school governing
authority to make payments to the sponsor, which is hereby
authorized to
receive such payments as set forth in the contract
between the governing
authority and the sponsor.
The total amount
of such payments for oversight and monitoring of the school shall
not exceed three per cent of the total
amount of payments for
operating expenses that the school receives
from the state. (D) The contract shall specify the duties of the sponsor
which shall be in accordance with the written agreement entered
into with the department of education under division (B) of
section 3314.015 of the Revised Code and shall include the
following:
(1) Monitor the community school's compliance with all laws
applicable to the school and with the terms of the contract;
(2) Monitor and evaluate the academic and fiscal
performance and the organization and operation of the community
school on at least an annual basis;
(3) Report on an annual basis the results of the evaluation
conducted under division (D)(2) of this section to the department
of education and to the parents of students enrolled in the
community school;
(4) Provide technical assistance to the community school
in complying with laws applicable to the school and terms of the
contract;
(5) Take steps to intervene in the school's operation to
correct problems in the school's overall
performance, declare the
school to be on probationary status
pursuant to section 3314.073
of the Revised Code, suspend the
operation of the school pursuant
to section 3314.072 of the
Revised Code, or terminate the contract
of the school pursuant to
section 3314.07 of the Revised Code as
determined necessary by the
sponsor;
(6) Have in place a plan of action to be undertaken in the
event the community school experiences financial difficulties or
closes prior to the end of a school year.
(E) Upon the expiration of a
contract entered into under
this section, the sponsor of a
community school may, with the
approval of the governing authority
of the school, renew that
contract for
a period of time determined by the sponsor, but not
ending earlier
than the end of any school year, if the sponsor
finds that the
school's compliance with applicable laws and terms
of the contract
and the school's progress in meeting the academic
goals prescribed
in the contract have been satisfactory. Any
contract that is renewed
under this division remains subject to
the provisions of sections
3314.07, 3314.072, and 3314.073 of the
Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.031. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Harmful to juveniles" has the same meaning as in
section 2907.01 of the Revised Code. (2) "Obscene" has the same meaning as in division (F) of
section 2907.01 of the Revised Code as that division has been
construed by the supreme court of this state.
(B) It is the intent of the general assembly that teachers
employed by internet- or computer-based community schools conduct
visits with their students in person throughout the school year. (C) For any internet- or computer-based community school,
the
contract between the sponsor and the governing authority of
the
school described in section 3314.03 of the Revised Code shall
specify each of the following:
(1) A requirement that the school use a filtering device or
install filtering software
that protects against internet access
to materials that are
obscene or harmful to juveniles on each
computer provided to
students for instructional use. The school
shall provide such
device or software at no cost to any student
who works primarily from the
student's residence on a computer
obtained from a source other
than the school.
(2) A plan for fulfilling the intent of the general assembly
specified in division (B) of this section. The plan shall
indicate the number of times teachers will visit each student
throughout the school year and the manner in which those visits
will be conducted. (3) That the school will set up a central base of operation
and the sponsor will maintain a representative within fifty miles
of that base of operation to provide monitoring and assistance.
Sec. 3314.032. (A)(1) Each child enrolled in an internet- or
computer-based community school is entitled to a computer supplied
by the school. (2) Notwithstanding division (A)(1) of this section, if
more
than one child living in a single household is enrolled in an
internet- or computer-based community school, at the option of the
parent of those children, the school may supply less than one
computer per child, as long as at least one computer is supplied
to the household. The parent may amend the decision to accept
less than one computer per child anytime during the school year,
and, in such case, within thirty days after the parent notifies
the school of such amendment, the school shall provide any
additiona1 computers requested by the parent up to the number
necessary to comply with division (A)(1) of this section. (B) Each internet- or computer-based community school shall
provide to each parent who is considering enrolling the parent's
child in the school and to the parent of each child already
enrolled in the school a written notice of the provisions
prescribed in divisions (A)(1) and (2) of this section.
Sec. 3314.041. The governing authority of each community
school and any operator of such school shall place in a
conspicuous manner in all documents that are distributed to
parents of students of the school or to the general public the
following statement:
"The .............. (here fill in name of the school) school
is a community school established under Chapter 3314. of the
Revised Code. The school is a public school and students enrolled
in and attending the school are required to take proficiency tests
and other examinations prescribed by law. In addition, there may
be other requirements for students at the school that are
prescribed by law. Students who have been excused from the
compulsory attendance law for the purpose of home education as
defined by the Administrative Code shall no longer be excused for
that purpose upon their enrollment in a community school. For more
information about this matter contact the school administration or
the Ohio Department of Education."
Sec. 3314.05. The
Division (A) of this section shall not
apply to internet- or computer-based community schools.
The contract between the community school and the sponsor
shall specify the facilities to be used for the
community school
and the
method of acquisition.
A (A) A school may be located in multiple
facilities under the
same contract only if the limitations on availability of
space
prohibit serving all the grade levels specified in the contract in
a
single facility. The school shall not offer the same grade
level classrooms
in more than one facility. Any facility used for a community school shall
meet all
health and safety standards established by law for school
buildings. (B) In the case where a community school is proposed to be
located in a facility owned by a school district or educational
service
center, the facility may not be used
for such community
school unless the district or service center board
owning the
facility enters into an agreement for the community school to
utilize the facility. Use of the facility may be
under any terms
and conditions agreed to by the district or service center
board
and the school.
Sec. 3314.06. The governing authority of each community
school
established under this chapter shall adopt admission
procedures that specify
the following: (A) That except as otherwise provided in this section,
admission to the
school shall be open to any individual
age
five
to twenty-two
entitled to
attend school pursuant to section
3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code in
a school district in the
state. (B)(1) That admission to the school may be limited to
students
who
have attained a specific grade level or are within
a
specific
age group; to students that meet a definition of
"at-risk," as
defined in the contract; or to residents of a
specific geographic
area
within the district,
as defined in the
contract.
(2) For purposes of division (B)(1) of this section,
"at-risk" students may include those students identified as gifted
students under section 3324.03 of the Revised Code. (C) Whether enrollment is limited to students who reside in
the district
in which the school is located or is open to
residents of other districts, as
provided in the policy adopted
pursuant to the contract. (D)(1) That there will be no discrimination in the admission
of
students to the school on the basis of race, creed, color,
handicapping
condition, or sex; and
that,
except that the
governing
authority may establish single-gender schools for the
purpose
described in division (G) of this section provided
comparable facilities and learning opportunities are offered for
both boys and girls. Such comparable facilities and opportunities
may be offered for each sex at separate locations. (2) That upon
admission of any
handicapped student, the
community
school will
comply with all
federal and state laws
regarding the
education of
handicapped
students. (E) That the school may not limit admission to students on
the
basis of intellectual ability, measures of achievement or
aptitude, or
athletic ability, except that a school may limit its
enrollment to students as described in division (B)(2) of this
section. (F) That the community school will admit the number of
students
that does not exceed
the capacity of the school's
programs, classes, grade levels, or
facilities. (G)
That the purpose of single-gender schools that are
established shall be to take advantage of the academic benefits
some students realize from single-gender instruction and
facilities and to offer students and parents residing in the
district the option of a single-gender education. (H) That, except as otherwise provided under division
(B) of
this section, if the number of applicants exceeds the capacity
restrictions of division (F) of this section, students
shall be
admitted by lot from all those submitting applications,
except
preference shall be given to students attending the
school the
previous year and to students who reside in the district in
which
the school is located. Preference may be given to siblings of
students attending the school the previous year. Notwithstanding divisions (A)
through
(G)
to (H) of this
section,
in the event the racial composition of the enrollment of
the
community school is violative of a federal desegregation
order,
the
community school shall take any and all corrective
measures to
comply with the desegregation order.
Sec. 3314.07. (A) The expiration of the contract for a
community school between a sponsor and a school shall be the
date
provided in the contract. A successor contract may
be entered
into
pursuant to division (E) of section 3314.03 of the Revised
Code unless the contract is terminated or not renewed pursuant to
this section. (B)(1) A sponsor may choose not to renew a contract at its
expiration or may choose to terminate a contract prior to its
expiration for
any of the following reasons: (a) Failure to meet student
performance requirements stated
in the contract; (b) Failure to meet generally accepted standards of fiscal
management; (c)
Violation of any provision of the
contract or applicable
state or federal law; (d) Other good cause. (2)
A
sponsor may choose to terminate a contract prior to its
expiration if the sponsor has suspended the operation of the
contract under section 3314.072 of the Revised Code. (3) At least
ninety
days prior to the
termination or
nonrenewal of a contract, the sponsor shall notify
the school
of
the proposed action in writing. The notice shall
include the
reasons for the proposed action in detail, the
effective date of
the termination or nonrenewal, and
a statement
that the
school
may, within fourteen days of receiving the notice,
request
an
informal hearing before the sponsor. Such request must
be in
writing.
The informal hearing shall be held within
seventy
days of
the receipt of a request for the hearing.
Promptly
following the
informal hearing, the sponsor shall issue
a
written
decision
either affirming or rescinding the decision to
terminate
or not
renew the contract. (4) A decision by the sponsor to terminate a contract may
be
appealed to the state board of education. The decision by the
state board pertaining to an
appeal under this division is final.
If the sponsor is the state board, its decision to terminate a
contract under division (B)(4)(3) of this section shall be final. (5) The termination of a contract under this section shall
be effective upon the occurrence of the later of the following
events: (a) Ninety days following the date the sponsor notifies the
school of its decision to terminate the contract as prescribed in
division (B)(3) of this section; (b) If an informal hearing is requested under division
(B)(3) of this section and as a result of that hearing the sponsor
affirms its decision to terminate the contract, the effective date
of the termination specified in the notice issued under division
(B)(3) of this section, or if that decision is appealed to the
state board under division (B)(4) of this section and the state
board affirms that decision, the date established in the
resolution of the state board affirming the sponsor's decision. (C) A child attending a community school whose contract has
been
terminated,
nonrenewed, or suspended or that closes for
any
reason shall
be admitted to
the schools of the district in
which
the child is
entitled to attend
under section 3313.64 or
3313.65
of the Revised
Code. Any
deadlines established for the
purpose of
admitting
students under section
3313.97 or 3313.98
of the Revised
Code
shall be
waived for
students to whom this division
pertains. (D) A sponsor of a community school and the officers,
directors,
or employees of such a sponsor are not liable in
damages in a tort or other
civil action for harm allegedly arising
from either of the following: (1) A failure of the community school or any of its
officers, directors,
or employees to perform any statutory or
common law duty or responsibility or
any other legal obligation; (2) An action or omission of the community school or any of
its officers,
directors, or employees that results in harm. (E) As used in this section: (1)
"Harm" means injury, death, or loss to person or
property. (2)
"Tort action" means a civil action for damages for
injury, death, or
loss to person or property other than a civil
action for damages for a breach
of contract or another agreement
between persons.
Sec. 3314.072. The provisions of this section are enacted to
promote the public health, safety, and welfare by establishing
procedures under which the governing authorities of community
schools established under this chapter will be held accountable
for their compliance with the terms of the contracts they enter
into with their school's sponsors and the law relating to the
school's operation. Suspension of the operation of a school
imposed under this section is intended to encourage the governing
authority's compliance with the terms of the school's contract and
the law and is not intended to be an alteration of the terms of
that contract. (A) If a sponsor of a community school established under
this chapter suspends the operation of that school pursuant to
procedures set forth in this section, the governing authority
shall not operate that school while the suspension is in effect.
Any such suspension shall remain in effect until the sponsor
notifies the governing authority that it is no longer in effect.
The contract of a school of which operation is suspended under
this section also may be subject to termination or nonrenewal
under section 3314.07 of the Revised Code. (B) If at any time
the sponsor of a community school
established under this chapter determines that conditions at the
school do not comply with a health and safety standard established
by law for school buildings, the sponsor shall immediately suspend
the operation of the school pursuant to procedures set forth in
division (D) of this section.
If the sponsor fails to take action
to suspend the operation of a school to which this division
applies, the department of education may take such action. (C)(1) For any of the reasons prescribed in division
(B)(1)(a) to
(d) of section 3314.07 of the Revised Code, the
sponsor of a community school established under this chapter may
suspend the operation of the school only if it first issues to the
governing authority notice of the sponsor's intent to suspend the
operation of the contract. Such notice shall explain the reasons
for the sponsor's intent to suspend operation of the contract and
shall provide the school's governing authority with five business
days to submit to the sponsor a proposal to remedy the conditions
cited as reasons for the suspension. (2) The sponsor shall promptly review any proposed remedy
timely submitted by the governing authority and either approve or
disapprove the remedy. If the sponsor disapproves the remedy
proposed by the governing authority, if the governing authority
fails to submit a proposed remedy in the manner prescribed by the
sponsor, or if the governing authority fails to implement the
remedy as approved by the sponsor, the sponsor may suspend
operation of the school pursuant to procedures set forth in
division (D) of this section. (D)(1) If division (B) of this section applies or if the
sponsor of a community school established under this chapter
decides to suspend the operation of a school as permitted in
division (C)(2) of this section, the sponsor shall promptly send
written notice to the governing authority stating that the
operation of the school is immediately suspended, and explaining
the specific reasons for the suspension. The notice shall state
that the governing authority has five business days to submit a
proposed remedy to the conditions cited as reasons for the
suspension or face potential contract termination. (2) Upon receipt of the notice of suspension prescribed
under division (D)(1) of this section, the governing authority
shall immediately notify the employees of the school and the
parents of the students enrolled in the school of the suspension
and the reasons therefore, and shall cease all school operations
on the next business day.
Sec. 3314.073. (A) In lieu of termination of a contract or
suspension of the operation of a school as provided for in
sections
3314.07 and 3314.072 of the Revised Code, respectively,
after
consultation with the governing authority of a community
school
under its sponsorship, if a sponsor finds that any of the
conditions prescribed in division (B)(1) of section 3314.07 of the
Revised Code apply to the school, the sponsor may declare in
written notice to the governing authority that the school is in a
probationary status which shall not extend beyond the end of the
current school year. The notice shall specify the conditions that
warrant probationary status. The sponsor may declare a school to
be in such status only if it has received from the governing
authority reasonable assurances to the satisfaction of the sponsor
that the governing authority can and will take actions necessary
to remedy the conditions that have warranted such probationary
status as specified by the sponsor. (B) The sponsor shall monitor the actions taken by the
governing authority to remedy the conditions that have warranted
probationary status as specified by the sponsor and may take over
the operation of the school as provided in the contract or may
take steps to terminate the contract with the governing authority
or to suspend operation of the school if the sponsor at any time
finds that the governing authority is no longer able or willing to
remedy those conditions to the satisfaction of the sponsor.
Sec. 3314.074. Divisions (A) and (B) of this section apply
only to the extent permitted under Chapter 1702. of the Revised
Code. (A) If any community school established under this
chapter
permanently closes and ceases its operation as a community
school,
the assets of that school shall be distributed first to
the
retirement
funds of employees of the school, employees of the
school, and private creditors who are owed
compensation and
then
any remaining funds shall be paid to the
state treasury to
the
credit of the general revenue fund.
(B) If a community school closes and ceases to operate as a
community school and the school has received computer hardware or
software from the Ohio SchoolNet commission, such hardware or
software shall be returned to the commission, and the commission
shall redistribute the hardware and software, to the extent such
redistribution is possible, to school districts in conformance
with the provisions of the programs operated and administered by
the commission.
(C) If the assets of the school
are insufficient to pay all
persons or entities to whom
compensation is owed, the
prioritization of the distribution of
the assets to individual
persons or entities within each class of
payees may be determined
by decree of a court in accordance with
this section and Chapter
1702. of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.08. (A) As used in this section: (1)
"Base formula amount" means the
amount specified as such
in a community school's financial plan for a school
year pursuant
to division (A)(15) of section 3314.03 of the
Revised Code.
(2)
"Cost-of-doing-business factor" has the same meaning as
in section
3317.02 of the Revised Code. (3)
"IEP" means an
individualized education program as
defined in section 3323.01 of
the Revised Code. (4)
"Applicable
special education weight" means the
multiple
specified in section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code for a handicap
described
in that
section. (5)
"Applicable vocational education weight" means: (a) For a student enrolled in vocational education programs
or
classes described in division (A) of section 3317.014 of the
Revised Code, the
multiple specified in that division; (b) For a student enrolled in vocational education programs
or
classes described in division (B) of section 3317.014 of the
Revised Code, the
multiple specified in that division. (6)
"Entitled to attend school" means entitled to attend
school
in a district under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code. (7)
A community school student
is "included in the DPIA
student count" of a school district if
the student is entitled to
attend school in the district and: (a) For school years prior to fiscal year 2004, the
student's family receives assistance under the Ohio works first
program. (b) For school years in and after fiscal year 2004, the
student's family income does not exceed the federal poverty
guidelines, as defined in section 5101.46 of the Revised Code, and
the student's family receives family assistance, as defined in
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code. (8) "DPIA reduction factor" means the
percentage figure,
if
any, for reducing the per pupil amount
of disadvantaged pupil
impact aid
a community school is entitled to receive pursuant to
divisions (D)(5) and
(6) of this
section in any year,
as
specified
in the school's financial plan for the year pursuant to
division
(A)(15) of section 3314.03 of the Revised Code. (9)
"All-day kindergarten" has the same meaning as in
section
3317.029 of the Revised Code. (B) The state board of education shall adopt rules requiring
both
of the following: (1) The board of education of each city, exempted village,
and local school district to annually report the number of
students entitled to attend school in the district who are
enrolled in grades
one through
twelve in a
community school
established under this chapter, the number of
students entitled to
attend school in the district who are enrolled in
kindergarten in
a community school,
the number of those
kindergartners who are
enrolled in all-day kindergarten in their
community school,
and
for each child,
the
community school in which the child is
enrolled.
(2) The governing authority of each community school
established under this chapter to annually report all of the
following: (a) The number of
students enrolled in grades one through
twelve and the number
of
students enrolled in kindergarten in the
school
who are not receiving special education and
related
services pursuant to an IEP; (b) The number of enrolled students in grades one through
twelve and the number of enrolled students in
kindergarten,
who
are receiving special
education and related services
pursuant to
an IEP; (c) The number of students reported under division
(B)(2)(b)
of
this section receiving special education and related services
pursuant to
an IEP for a handicap described in each of divisions
(A)
to (F)
of section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code; (d)
The full-time equivalent number of students reported
under divisions
(B)(2)(a) and (b) of this section who are
enrolled
in vocational education programs or classes described in each of
divisions (A) and (B) of section 3317.014 of the Revised Code that
are
provided by the community school; (e)
One-fourth of the number of students reported under
divisions (B)(2)(a) and (b) of this section who are not reported
under division (B)(2)(d) of this section but who are enrolled in
vocational education programs or classes described in each of
divisions (A) and (B) of section 3317.014 of the Revised Code at a
joint vocational school district under a contract between the
community school and the joint vocational school district and are
entitled to attend school in a city, local, or exempted village
school district whose territory is part of the territory of the
joint vocational district; (f) The number of
enrolled preschool handicapped students
receiving special education
services in a state-funded unit; (f)(g) The community
school's base formula amount;
(g)(h) For each student, the
city, exempted village, or
local
school district in which the
student is
entitled to attend
school;
(h)(i) Any DPIA reduction factor that applies to a
school
year.
(C) From the payments made to a city, exempted village, or
local
school district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code and,
if necessary,
sections 321.14 and 323.156 of the Revised Code, the
department of education
shall annually subtract all of the
following: (1) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when,
for each
community school where the district's students are
enrolled, the number of the
district's students reported under
divisions
(B)(2)(a)
and, (b), and (e) of this section who are
enrolled in
grades one through twelve, and one-half the number of
students
reported under those divisions who are enrolled in
kindergarten,
in that community school
is multiplied by
the base
formula amount
of that community school
as adjusted by the school
district's
cost-of-doing-business factor. (2) The
sum of the
amounts calculated under divisions
(C)(2)(a)
and
(b) of this
section: (a) For each of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(c) of this section as enrolled in a community
school in
grades one through twelve and receiving special
education and related services
pursuant to an IEP for a handicap
described in section 3317.013 of
the Revised Code, the product of
the applicable special education weight
times
the
community
school's base formula
amount; (b) For each of the district's students reported under
division (B)(2)(c) of this section as enrolled in kindergarten
in
a
community school and receiving special education and related
services
pursuant to
an IEP for a handicap described in section
3317.013 of the
Revised
Code, one-half of the amount calculated as
prescribed in division
(C)(2)(a) of this section. (3)
For each of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(d) of this section for whom payment is made under
division (D)(4) of this section, the amount of that payment; (4) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when,
for each
community school where the district's students are
enrolled, the number of the
district's students enrolled in that
community school
who are included in the district's DPIA student
count
is multiplied by the per pupil amount of
disadvantaged pupil
impact aid the school district receives that
year pursuant
to
division (B) or (C) of section 3317.029 of
the
Revised
Code, as
adjusted by any DPIA reduction factor of that
community
school.
If
the district receives
disadvantaged pupil
impact aid under
division (B) of that section,
the per pupil
amount of that aid is
the quotient of the amount the district
received under that
division divided by the
district's DPIA student count,
as defined
in that section.
If
the
district receives
disadvantaged pupil
impact aid under division
(C) of section
3317.029 of the Revised
Code, the
per pupil
amount
of that aid is
the per pupil dollar
amount prescribed for the
district in
division (C)(1) or (2) of
that section. (5) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained
when,
for
each community school where the district's students are
enrolled, the
district's per pupil amount of aid received under
division (E) of
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted
by any
DPIA
reduction factor of the community school, is
multiplied by the sum of the
following: (a) The number of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(a) of this section who are enrolled in grades one
to
three in
that community school and who are not receiving
special education and related
services pursuant to
an IEP; (b) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day or any other kindergarten class in that community school
and who are
not receiving special education and related
services
pursuant to an IEP; (c) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day kindergarten in that community school and who are not
receiving
special education and related services pursuant to an
IEP. The district's per pupil amount of aid under division (E) of
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code is the quotient of the
amount
the district received under that division divided by the
district's
kindergarten through third grade ADM, as defined in
that
section. (D) The department shall annually pay to a community school
established under
this chapter all of the following: (1) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when
the number of students enrolled in grades one through twelve, plus
one-half of the kindergarten students in the school,
reported
under
divisions (B)(2)(a)
and, (b), and (e) of
this
section who
are not
receiving special education and related services pursuant
to an
IEP for a handicap described in
section
3317.013
of the
Revised
Code
is
multiplied by the community school's base formula
amount,
as
adjusted by the cost-of-doing-business factor of the
school
district in which the student is
entitled to attend school; (2) The greater of the following: (a) The aggregate amount that the department paid to the
community school in fiscal year 1999 for students receiving
special education
and related services
pursuant to IEPs, excluding
federal funds and state
disadvantaged
pupil impact aid funds; (b) The sum of the amounts calculated under divisions
(D)(2)(b)(i) and (ii) of
this section: (i) For
each student reported under division (B)(2)(c)
of
this section as enrolled in the school in
grades one through
twelve and receiving special education
and related services
pursuant to an IEP
for a handicap described in
section
3317.013
of the
Revised
Code, the following amount: (the community school's base formula amountX the cost-of-doing-business factorof the district where the studentis entitled to attend school) +
(the applicable
special education
weight Xthe community school's base formula amount);(ii) For each student reported under division
(B)(2)(c)
of
this section as enrolled in kindergarten and receiving special
education and related services pursuant to an IEP for a
handicap
described in
section
3317.013
of the Revised
Code, one-half
of
the
amount calculated under the formula prescribed in division
(D)(2)(b)(i) of this section. (3) An amount received from federal
funds to provide special
education and related services to students in the
community
school, as
determined by the superintendent of
public instruction. (4)
For each student reported under division (B)(2)(d)
of
this section as enrolled in vocational education programs or
classes that
are described in section 3317.014 of the Revised
Code, are provided by the community school,
and are comparable as
determined by the superintendent of public instruction to
school
district vocational education programs and classes eligible for
state
weighted funding under section 3317.014 of the Revised Code,
an amount equal to the applicable
vocational education weight
times the community school's base formula amount
times the
percentage of time the student spends in the vocational education
programs or classes. (5) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained
when,
for each
school district where the community school's students are
entitled to attend
school,
the number of that district's students
enrolled in the community
school
who are included in the
district's DPIA student count is
multiplied by the per pupil
amount of disadvantaged
pupil
impact
aid that school district
receives that year pursuant to
division
(B) or (C) of
section
3317.029 of the Revised Code, as
adjusted by
any DPIA reduction
factor of the community school.
The
per pupil
amount of
aid shall
be determined as described in
division
(C)(4) of this
section. (6) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained
when,
for
each school district where the community school's
students are
entitled to attend school, the district's per pupil
amount of aid
received under division (E) of section 3317.029 of
the
Revised
Code, as adjusted by any DPIA
reduction factor of the
community
school, is multiplied by the sum of the
following: (a) The number of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(a) of this section who are enrolled in grades one
to
three in
that community school and who are not receiving
special education and related
services pursuant to
an IEP; (b) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day or any other kindergarten class in that community school
and who are
not receiving special education and related
services
pursuant to an IEP; (c) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day kindergarten in that community school and who are not
receiving
special education and related services pursuant to an
IEP.
The district's per pupil amount of aid under division (E) of
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code shall be determined as
described in division (C)(5) of this section. (E)(1) If a community school's costs for a fiscal year for a
student
receiving special education and related services pursuant
to an
IEP for a handicap
described in
divisions (B) to
(F) of
section
3317.013 of the
Revised
Code
exceed the threshold
catastrophic cost for serving the student as specified in division
(C)(3)(b) of section 3317.022 of the Revised Code, the school may
submit
to the
superintendent of
public instruction documentation,
as
prescribed
by the
superintendent, of all its costs for that
student. Upon
submission of documentation for a student of the
type and in the
manner prescribed, the department shall pay to the
community
school an amount equal to the school's costs
for the
student in
excess of
the threshold catastrophic costs. (2) The community school shall only report
under division
(E)(1) of this section, and the department
shall
only pay
for, the
costs of educational expenses and the
related
services
provided to
the student in accordance with the
student's
individualized
education program. Any legal fees, court
costs, or
other costs
associated with any cause of action relating
to the
student may
not be included in the amount. (F) A community school may apply to the department of
education for
preschool handicapped or gifted unit funding the
school would receive if it were a school district. Upon request
of its
governing authority, a community school that received
unit
funding as a school district-operated school before it became a
community
school shall retain any units awarded to it as a school
district-operated
school provided the school continues to meet
eligibility standards for the
unit. A community school shall be considered a school district
and
its governing authority shall be considered a board of
education
for the purpose of applying to any state or federal
agency for
grants that a school district may receive under
federal or state
law or any appropriations act of the general
assembly. The
governing authority of a community school may apply to any
private
entity for additional funds. (G) A board of education sponsoring a community school may
utilize local funds to make enhancement grants to the school or
may agree,
either as part of the contract or separately, to
provide any specific services
to the community school at no cost
to the school. (H) A community school may not levy taxes or issue bonds
secured by tax revenues. (I) No community school shall charge tuition for the
enrollment of any student. (J)(1)(a) A community school may borrow money to pay any
necessary
and actual
expenses of the school in anticipation of the
receipt
of any portion of the
payments to be received by the
school
pursuant to division (D) of this
section. The school may
issue
notes to evidence such borrowing
to mature no
later than the
end
of the fiscal year in which such money was borrowed. The
proceeds
of the notes shall be used only for the purposes for
which the
anticipated receipts may be lawfully expended by the
school.
(2)(b) A school may also borrow money for a term not to
exceed
fifteen years for the purpose of acquiring facilities, as
described in division (B) of section 3318.50 of the Revised Code.
(2) Except for any amount guaranteed under section 3318.50 of
the Revised Code, the state is not liable for debt incurred by the
governing authority of a community school. (K) For purposes of determining the
number of students for
which divisions
(D)(5) and
(6) of this section applies in
any
school year, a community school may submit to
the department
of
job and family services, no
later than the first day of
March,
a
list of the students enrolled in the
school. For each student
on
the list, the community school shall indicate the
student's
name,
address, and date of birth and the school district where the
student is entitled to attend school. Upon receipt of a list
under this
division, the department
of
job and family services
shall determine,
for each school district where one or more
students on the list is entitled
to attend school,
the
number
of
students residing in that school district who were included in the
department's report
under section 3317.10 of the Revised Code.
The
department shall make this
determination on the basis of
information readily available to it. Upon
making this
determination
and no later than ninety days after submission of
the list by the community
school, the department shall report to
the state department of education the
number of students on the
list who reside in each school
district who were included in the
department's report
under section 3317.10 of the Revised Code. In
complying with this division,
the department of job and family
services shall not report
to the state department of
education any
personally identifiable information on any student. (L) The department
of education shall adjust the amounts
subtracted and paid under divisions (C) and (D) of this
section to
reflect any enrollment of students in community schools for less
than the equivalent of a full school year. The state board of
education within ninety
days after the effective date of this
amendment shall adopt in
accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code rules governing
the payments to community schools
under this section including
initial payments in a school year and
adjustments and reductions
made in subsequent periodic payments to
community schools and
corresponding deductions from school
district accounts as provided
under divisions (C) and (D) of this
section. For
purposes of this
section, a: (1) A
student shall be considered enrolled in the community
school for any portion
of the school year the student is
participating at a college under
Chapter 3365. of the Revised
Code. (2) A student shall be considered to be enrolled in a
community school during a school year for the period of time
between the date on which the school both has received
documentation of the student's enrollment from a parent and has
commenced participation in learning opportunities as defined in
the contract with the sponsor. For purposes of
applying this
division to a community school student, "learning
opportunities"
shall be defined in the contract, which shall
describe both
classroom-based and non-classroom-based learning
opportunities and
shall be in compliance with criteria and
documentation
requirements for student participation which shall
be established
by the department. Any student's instruction time
in
non-classroom-based learning opportunities shall be certified
by
an employee of the community school. A student's enrollment
shall
be considered to cease on the date on which any of the following
occur:
(a) The community school receives documentation from a
parent terminating enrollment of the student.
(b) The community school is provided documentation of a
student's enrollment in another public or private school.
(c) The community school ceases to offer learning
opportunities to the student pursuant to the terms of the contract
with the sponsor or the operation of any provision of this
chapter.
(3) A student's percentage of full-time equivalency shall
be considered to be the percentage the hours of learning
opportunity offered to that student is of nine hundred and twenty
hours. (M) The department of education shall reduce the amounts
paid
under division (D) of this section to reflect payments made
to
colleges under division (B) of section 3365.07 of the Revised
Code.
(N)
Beginning with the school year that starts on July 1,
2001, in
No student shall be considered enrolled in any
internet-
or computer-based community school unless the student
possesses or
has been provided with all required hardware and
software
materials and all such materials are fully operational and the
school is in compliance with division (A)(1) or (2) of section
3314.032 of the Revised Code, relative to such student.
In
accordance with policies adopted jointly by the
superintendent
of
public instruction,
and the auditor of state,
the
department
shall
reduce the amounts otherwise payable
under
division (D) of
this
section to any
internet
internet- or
computer-based
community
school that
includes in its program the
provision of
computer
hardware and
software materials to each
student, if such
hardware
and software
materials have not been
delivered,
installed, and
activated for
all students in a timely manner or
other educational
materials or
services have not been provided
according to the
contract between
the individual community school
and its sponsor. The superintendent of public instruction,
and the auditor of
state, shall jointly
establish a method for auditing any community
school to which this
division pertains to ensure compliance with
this section. The superintendent, auditor of state, and the governor shall
jointly
make recommendations to the general assembly for
legislative
changes that may be required to assure fiscal and
academic
accountability for such
internet
internet- or
computer-based
schools.
(O)(1) If the department determines that a review of a
community school’s enrollment is necessary, such review shall be
completed and written notice of the findings shall be provided to
the governing authority of the community school and its sponsor
within ninety days of the end of the community school’s fiscal
year, unless extended for a period not to exceed thirty additional
days for one of the following reasons:
(a) The department and the community school mutually agree
to the extension.
(b) Delays in data submission caused by either a community
school or its sponsor. (2) If the review results in a finding that additional
funding is owed to the school, such payment shall be made within
thirty days of the written notice. If the review results in a
finding that the community school owes moneys to the state, the
following procedure shall apply:
(a) Within ten business days of the receipt of the notice of
findings, the community school may appeal the department’s
determination to the state board of education or its designee.
(b) The board or its designee shall conduct an informal
hearing on the matter within thirty days of receipt of such an
appeal and shall issue a decision within fifteen days of the
conclusion of the hearing.
(c) If the board has enlisted a designee to conduct the
hearing, the designee shall certify its decision to the board.
The
board may accept the decision of the designee or may reject
the
decision of the designee and issue its own decision on the
matter.
(d) Any decision made by the board under this division is
final.
(3) If it is decided that the community school owes moneys
to the state, the department shall deduct such amount from the
school's future payments in accordance with guidelines issued by
the superintendent of public instruction.
Sec. 3314.081. To the extent permitted by federal law, the
department of education shall include community schools
established under this chapter in its annual allocation of federal
moneys under Title I of the "Elementary and Secondary Education
Act
of 1965," 20 U.S.C. 6301, et seq.
Sec. 3314.082. It is the intent of the general assembly that
no state moneys paid to a community school under section 3314.08
of the Revised Code be used by the school to pay any taxes the
school might owe on its own behalf, including, but not limited to,
local, state, and federal income taxes, sales taxes, and personal
and real property taxes. This intent does not apply to any moneys
withheld from an employee of the community school that are payable
by the school to a government entity as taxes on behalf of the
employee.
Sec. 3314.09.
(A) As used in this section
and section
3314.091
of the Revised Code,
"native student" means a
student
entitled to
attend school in the school district under section
3313.64
or
3313.65 of the Revised Code. (B) Except as provided in section 3314.091 of the
Revised
Code, the board of
education of each
city, local, and
exempted
village school district shall provide
transportation to
and from
school for its district's native students
enrolled in
a
community
school located in that district or another district on
the
same
basis
that it
provides transportation for its native
students
enrolled in
schools
to which
they are assigned by the
board of
education at the same grade level and who
live the same
distance
from school except when, in the judgment of the
board,
confirmed
by the state board of education,
the transportation is
unnecessary
or unreasonable. A board shall not be
required to
transport
nonhandicapped
students to and from a community school
located in
another school district if the transportation would
require more
than thirty
minutes of direct travel time as measured
by school
bus from the collection
point designated by the
district's
coordinator of school transportation
in accordance with section
3327.01 of the Revised Code. (C) Where it is impractical to transport a pupil to and from
a
community school by school conveyance, a board may, in lieu of
providing the transportation, pay a parent, guardian, or other
person in charge of the child. The amount paid per pupil shall
in
no event exceed the average transportation cost per pupil,
which
shall be based on the cost of transportation of children
by all
boards of education in this state during the next
preceding year.
Sec. 3314.091.
(A) A school district is not required to
provide
transportation
for any native student enrolled in a
community school if the district board
of education has entered
into an agreement with the
community school's governing authority
that designates the
community school as responsible for providing
or arranging for the
transportation of the district's native
students to and from the community
school. For any such
agreement
to be effective, it must be certified by the
superintendent of
public instruction
as having met
both
all of the following
requirements: (1) It is submitted to the
department
of education
by a
deadline which shall be established by the
department. (2) It specifies qualifications, such as residing a minimum
distance from
the school, for students to have their
transportation provided or arranged. (3) The transportation provided by the community school is
subject to all provisions of the Revised Code and all rules
adopted under the Revised Code pertaining to pupil transportation.
(4) The sponsor of the community school also has signed the
agreement. (B)(1) A community school governing
board
authority that
enters into
an agreement to provide transportation under this
section shall
provide or arrange transportation free of any charge
for each of
its enrolled students
in grades kindergarten through
eight who
live more than two miles from the school,
except that
the
governing board may make a payment in lieu of providing
transportation to the parent, guardian, or person in charge of the
student at the same rate as specified for a school district board
in division (C) of section 3314.09 of the Revised Code
if the
drive time measured by the vehicle specified by the school
for
transporting
the students
from the student's
residence to the
school is more than thirty minutes
eligible for transportation as
specified in section 3327.01 of the Revised Code.
The The governing
board
authority may
provide or arrange
transportation for any other enrolled student
who is not eligible
for transportation
and may charge a fee
for such service
up to the
actual cost of the service.
The governing
board
may
request the
payment specified under division (C) of this section
for any
student it transports, for whom it arranges
transportation, or for
whom it makes a payment in lieu of
providing transportation if the
student lives more than one mile
from the community school or is
disabled and the individual
education program requires
transportation. (2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in division
(B)(1) of this section, a community school governing
board
authority shall
provide or arrange transportation free of any
charge for any
disabled student enrolled in the school for whom
the student's
individualized education program developed under
Chapter 3323. of
the Revised Code specifies transportation.
(C)(1) If a school district board and a community school
governing authority elect to enter into an
agreement
under this
section, the department of education annually shall pay
the
community school the amount specified in division (C)(2) of this
section
for each of the enrolled
students for whom the school's
governing
authority provides or arranges
transportation to and
from school.
The department shall deduct the payment from the
state payment under Chapter 3317. and, if
necessary, sections
321.14 and 323.156 of the Revised Code that is otherwise paid to
the school district in which the student enrolled in the community
school resides.
The
department shall
include the number of the
district's native
students for whom
payment is made to a community
school under this division in the
calculation of the
district's
transportation payment under
division
(D) of section
3317.022 of
the Revised Code. A community school shall be paid under this division only for
students who
live more than one mile from the school
are eligible
as specified in section 3327.01 of the Revised Code or who are
disabled and whose individualized education program requires
transportation and whose
transportation
to and from school is
actually provided or arranged
or for whom a payment in lieu of
transportation is made by the
community school's governing
authority.
To
qualify for
the
payments, the community school
shall report to
the department, in
the form
and
manner required
by the department, data
on the
number of students transported or
whose transportation is
arranged, the
number of miles traveled,
cost to transport, and any
other information requested by the
department. A community school shall use payments received under this
division solely
to pay the costs of providing or arranging for the
transportation of students who
live more than one mile from the
school
are eligible as specified in section 3327.01 of the Revised
Code or who are disabled and whose individualized education
program requires transportation, which may
include payments to a
parent, guardian,
or other
person in charge
of a child in lieu of
transportation. (2) The payment to a community school governing authority
under this section for
each student who lives more than one mile
from the school or who is disabled and whose individualized
education program requires transportation and for whom the school
actually provides or arranges transportation or makes a payment in
lieu of providing transportation,
eligible students shall be made
according to the
following schedule: (a) In fiscal year 2002, four-hundred fifty dollars per
student;
(b) In fiscal year 2003 and every fiscal year thereafter,
the amount specified in division (C)(2)(a) of this section
multiplied by the negative or positive percentage of change
reported in the consumer price index (all urban consumers,
transportation) by the bureau of labor statistics of the United
States department of labor from the beginning of the calendar year
that ended just prior to the beginning of the fiscal year to the
end of that calendar year
terms of the agreement entered into
under this section.
(D) Except when arranged through payment to a parent,
guardian,
or person in charge of a child, transportation provided
or arranged for by a
community school
pursuant to an agreement
under this section is subject to all
provisions of the Revised
Code, and all rules adopted under
the Revised
Code, pertaining to
the
construction,
design, equipment, and
operation of school buses
and other vehicles
transporting students
to and from school. The
drivers and
mechanics of the vehicles are
subject to all
provisions of the
Revised Code, and all rules
adopted under the
Revised Code, pertaining to
drivers
and mechanics of such
vehicles. The community school also shall
comply
with sections
3313.201, 3327.09, and 3327.10 and division
(B)
of section 3327.16
of the Revised Code as if it were a
school
district. For purposes
of complying with section 3327.10 of the
Revised Code, the
educational
service center that serves the
county in which the
community
school is located shall be the
certifying agency, unless
the
agreement designates the school
district as the certifying
agency.
Sec. 3314.11. The department of education shall establish
the
state
office of
school options
community schools to provide
advice and services for the community schools program, established
pursuant to
Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code, and the pilot
project scholarship program,
established pursuant to sections
3313.974 to 3313.979 of the Revised Code.
The
office shall
provide services that facilitate the
management of the community
schools program
and the pilot project scholarship
program,
including providing technical assistance and
information to
persons or groups considering proposing a community school, to
governing authorities of community schools, and to public entities
sponsoring or considering sponsoring a community school.
Sec. 3314.111. The department of education shall establish
the state office of school options to provide advice and services
for the pilot project scholarship program, established pursuant to
sections 3313.974 to 3313.979 of the Revised Code that facilitate
the management of that program. Sec. 3314.13. (A) As used in this section: (1)
"All-day kindergarten"
has the same meaning as in
section
3317.029 of
the
Revised Code. (2)
"Formula amount" has the same meaning as in section
3317.02 of the Revised Code. (B) The department of education annually shall pay each
community school
established under this chapter one-half of the
formula
amount for each student to whom both of the following
apply: (1) The student is entitled to attend school under section
3313.64 or
3313.65 of the Revised Code in a school district that
is
eligible to receive a payment under division (D) of section
3317.029
of the Revised Code if it provides all-day kindergarten; (2) The student is reported by the community school
under
division (B)(3) of section 3314.08 of the Revised Code as enrolled
in
all-day
kindergarten at the community school.
(C) If a student for whom payment
is made under division (B)
of this section is entitled to
attend school in a district that
receives any payment
for all-day kindergarten under division (D)
of section 3317.029 of the
Revised Code, the department shall
deduct the payment to the community school under this section
from
the amount paid that school district under that division.
If that
school district does not receive payment for all-day
kindergarten
under that division because it does not provide all-day
kindergarten, the department shall pay the community school from
state
funds appropriated generally for disadvantaged pupil impact
aid. (D) The department shall
adjust the amounts deducted from
school districts and paid to
community schools under this section
to reflect any enrollments
of students in all-day kindergarten in
community schools for
less than the equivalent of a full school
year. Sec. 3314.17. (A) Each community school established under
this chapter shall participate in the statewide education
management information system established under section 3301.0714
of the Revised Code. All provisions of that section and the
rules
adopted under that section apply to each community
school as if it
were a school district, except as modified for
community schools
under division (B) of this section. (B) The rules adopted by the state board of education
under
section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code may distinguish
methods and
timelines for community schools to annually report
data, which
methods and timelines differ from those prescribed for
school
districts. Any methods and timelines prescribed for
community
schools shall be appropriate to the academic schedule
and
financing of community schools. The guidelines, however,
shall
not modify the actual data required to be reported under
that
section. (C) Each fiscal officer appointed under section 3314.011
of
the Revised Code is responsible for annually reporting the
community school's data under section 3301.0714 of the Revised
Code. If the superintendent of public instruction determines that
a community school fiscal officer has willfully failed to
report
data or has willfully reported erroneous, inaccurate, or
incomplete data in any year, or has negligently reported
erroneous, inaccurate, or incomplete data in the current and any
previous year, the superintendent may impose a civil penalty of
one hundred dollars on the fiscal officer after providing the
officer with notice and an opportunity for a hearing in accordance
with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code. The superintendent's
authority to impose civil penalties under this division does not
preclude the state board of education from suspending or revoking
the license of a community school employee under division (N) of
section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.30. (A) As used in this section: (1) "Start-up community school" means a "new start-up
school" as that term is defined in division (A) of section 3314.02
of the Revised Code.
(2) A "school's contract" means the contract entered into
between the governing authority and the sponsor of a community
school under section 3314.03 of the Revised Code.
(B) There is hereby created in the state treasury the
community school revolving loan fund. The fund shall consist of
federal moneys allocated to the state for development and
operation of community schools.
(C) The department of education may make a loan from the
fund created in division (B) of this section to the governing
authority or the sponsor of any start-up community school upon
approval of the loan by the superintendent of public instruction.
Moneys loaned from the fund shall be used only to pay the costs
associated with any provision of the school's contract. A
start-up community school may receive more than one loan from the
fund; however, no school shall receive a cumulative loan amount
throughout the term of the school's contract that is greater than
two hundred fifty thousand dollars.
(D) The superintendent of public instruction may consider
all of the following when determining whether to approve a loan
from the fund created in division (A) of this section:
(1) Soundness of the school's business plan;
(2) Availability of other sources of funding for the
school;
(3) Geographic distribution of other such loans;
(4) Impact of receipt of the loan on a school's ability to
secure other public and private funding;
(5) Plans for the creative use of the loan amounts to
create further financing, such as loan guarantees or other types
of credit enhancements;
(6) Financial needs of the community school.
(E) The superintendent of public instruction shall give
priority for loans under this section to newly established
community schools to pay start-up costs.
(F) The rate of interest charged on any loan under this
section shall be the rate that would be applicable to the same
money if invested in the Ohio subdivision's fund created in
section 135.45 of the Revised Code as of the date the loan is
disbursed to the community school.
(G) Commencing in the first fiscal year that next
succeeds the fiscal year that a community school receives a loan
under this section, the department shall deduct from the periodic
payments made to the school under section 3314.08 of the Revised
Code a prorated amount of the annual repayment amount due under
the loan. The amount deducted from a school's periodic payments
under this division that is attributed to the principal of the
loan shall be deposited into the fund created in division (B) of
this section. The amount deducted from a school's periodic
payments under this division that is attributed to the interest on
the loan shall be deposited into the fund created in section
3314.31 of the Revised Code. The repayment period for any loan
made under this section shall not exceed five consecutive fiscal
years.
(H) The office of budget and management and the
department of education shall monitor the adequacy of moneys on
hand in the fund created in division (B) of this section and shall
report annually to the general assembly on such adequacy and any
recommended
changes in the interest rate charged on loans
under
this section or changes in default recovery procedures.
Sec. 3314.31. There is hereby created in the state treasury
the community school security fund. The fund shall consist of
moneys paid into the fund under division (G) of section 3314.30 of
the Revised Code. Moneys in the fund shall be paid into
the fund
created in division (B) of section 3314.30 of the Revised
Code in
the case of default on a loan made under section 3314.30
of the
Revised Code in an amount up to the amount of such
default.
Sec. 3317.029. (A) As used in this section: (1)
"DPIA percentage" means: (a) In fiscal years prior to fiscal year 2004, the quotient
obtained by
dividing
the five-year average number of children
ages
five to
seventeen
residing in the school district and
living in a
family
receiving
assistance
under the Ohio works first
program or
an antecedent program known as TANF or ADC, as
certified or
adjusted
under
section 3317.10
of the Revised Code,
by the
district's
three-year
average formula
ADM.
(b) Beginning in fiscal year 2004, the
five-year average,
unduplicated number of children ages five to seventeen residing in
the school district and living in a family that has family income
not exceeding the federal poverty guidelines and that receives
family assistance, as certified or adjusted under section 3317.10
of the Revised Code, divided by the district's three-year average
formula ADM. (2)
"Family assistance" means assistance received under
one
of
the
following: (a) The
Ohio works first program; (b) The food stamp program; (c) The medical assistance program, including the healthy
start program, established under Chapter 5111. of the Revised
Code; (d) The children's health insurance program part I
established under section 5101.50 of the Revised Code or, prior to
fiscal year 2000, an executive order issued under section 107.17
of the Revised Code; (e) The disability assistance program established under
Chapter 5115. of the Revised Code.
(3)
"Statewide DPIA
percentage" means: (a) In fiscal years prior to fiscal year 2004, the five-year
average
of the total number of
children ages five to seventeen
years
residing in the state and
receiving
assistance
under
the
Ohio works first program or an antecedent program known as
TANF or
ADC, divided by
the
sum of the three-year average formula
ADMs
for
all school
districts in the state.
(b) Beginning in fiscal year 2004, the
five-year average of
the total, unduplicated number of children ages five to seventeen
residing in the state and living in a family that has family
income not exceeding the federal poverty guidelines and that
receives family assistance, divided by the sum of the three-year
average formula ADMs for all school districts in the state. (4)
"DPIA index"
means the quotient obtained by dividing the
school district's DPIA percentage
by the statewide DPIA
percentage. (5)
"Federal poverty
guidelines" has the same meaning as in
section 5101.46 of the
Revised Code. (6) "DPIA student count" means: (a) In fiscal years prior to fiscal year 2004, the
five-year
average number of children ages five to seventeen
residing in the
school district and living in a family receiving
assistance under
the Ohio works first program or an antecedent
program known as
TANF or ADC, as certified under section 3317.10
of the Revised
Code; (b) Beginning in fiscal year 2004, the
five-year average,
unduplicated number of children ages five to seventeen residing in
the school district and living in a family that has family income
not exceeding the federal poverty guidelines and that receives
family assistance, as certified or adjusted under section 3317.10
of the Revised Code. (7) "Kindergarten ADM" means the number of
students reported
under section 3317.03 of the Revised Code as enrolled in
kindergarten. (8)
"Kindergarten through third grade
ADM" means the
amount
calculated as follows: (a) Multiply the kindergarten
ADM by the sum of one plus the
all-day
kindergarten percentage; (b) Add the number of students in grades one through three; (c) Subtract from the sum calculated under division
(A)(6)(b) of this section the
number of special education students
in grades kindergarten
through three. (9)
"Statewide average teacher salary" means
forty-two
thousand
four hundred
sixty-nine
dollars in
fiscal year
2002,
and
forty-three
thousand
six hundred
fifty-eight dollars
in
fiscal
year
2003,
which
includes an amount for the
value of
fringe
benefits. (10)
"All-day kindergarten" means a
kindergarten class
that
is
in session five days per week for not
less than the same
number
of
clock hours each day as for pupils
in grades one through
six. (11)
"All-day kindergarten percentage" means the
percentage
of
a
district's actual total number of students
enrolled in
kindergarten who are
enrolled in all-day kindergarten. (12)
"Buildings with the highest concentration of need"
means: (a) In fiscal years prior to fiscal year 2004,
the school
buildings in a district with percentages of
students
in grades
kindergarten
through three
receiving
assistance under Ohio works
first
at least as high as the
district-wide percentage of
students
receiving
such
assistance.
(b) Beginning in fiscal year 2004, the school buildings in
a
district with percentages of students in grades kindergarten
through three receiving family assistance at least as high as the
district-wide percentage of students receiving family assistance. (c) If, in any fiscal year, the
information
provided by the
department of
job and family services
under
section 3317.10 of the
Revised
Code is insufficient to
determine
the
Ohio works first or
family assistance percentage in each building,
"buildings with
the
highest concentration of need" has the
meaning
given in rules
that
the department of education shall
adopt. The
rules shall
base the
definition of
"buildings with
the highest
concentration
of need"
on family income of students in
grades
kindergarten
through three
in a manner that, to the extent
possible
with
available data,
approximates the intent of this
division
and
division (G) of this
section to designate buildings
where the
Ohio works first or
family assistance
percentage in those grades equals or
exceeds the
district-wide
Ohio works first or
family assistance percentage. (B) In addition to the
amounts required to be paid to a
school district under section
3317.022 of the Revised Code, a
school district shall
receive the greater of the amount the
district received in fiscal
year 1998 pursuant to division (B) of
section
3317.023 of the Revised Code as it
existed at that time or
the sum of the
computations made under divisions (C) to (E) of
this section. (C) A supplemental payment that may be utilized for measures
related to safety and security and for remediation or similar
programs,
calculated as follows: (1) If the DPIA index
of the school district is greater than
or equal to
thirty-five-hundredths, but less than one, an amount
obtained by
multiplying the
district's DPIA student
count by two
hundred thirty
dollars; (2) If the DPIA index
of the school district is greater than
or equal to one,
an amount obtained by multiplying the
DPIA index
by two
hundred thirty dollars and multiplying that product by the
district's DPIA student count. Except as otherwise provided in division (F) of this section,
beginning with the school year that starts July 1, 2002, each
school district annually shall use at least twenty per cent of the
funds calculated for the district under this division for
intervention services required by section 3313.608 of the Revised
Code. (D) A payment for all-day kindergarten if the
DPIA index of
the school district is greater
than or equal to one
or if the
district's three-year average formula ADM exceeded
seventeen
thousand five hundred, calculated by
multiplying the all-day
kindergarten percentage
by the
kindergarten ADM and multiplying
that product by the formula
amount. (E) A class-size
reduction payment based on calculating the
number of new
teachers necessary to achieve a lower
student-teacher
ratio, as follows: (1) Determine or calculate a formula number of teachers per
one
thousand students based on the
DPIA index of the school
district as follows: (a) If the DPIA
index of the school district is less than
six-tenths, the
formula number of teachers is 43.478, which is the
number of
teachers per one thousand students at a student-teacher
ratio
of twenty-three to one; (b) If the DPIA index of the school
district is greater than
or equal to six-tenths, but less than
two and one-half, the
formula number of teachers is calculated as
follows: 43.478 + {[(DPIA index-0.6)/
1.9] X 23.188}Where 43.478 is the number of teachers per one thousand
students at a student-teacher ratio of twenty-three to one; 1.9
is
the interval from a DPIA
index of six-tenths to a
DPIA index of
two and
one-half; and 23.188 is the difference in the number of
teachers per one thousand students at a student-teacher ratio of
fifteen to one and the number of teachers per one thousand
students at a student-teacher ratio of twenty-three to
one. (c) If the DPIA
index of the school district is greater than
or equal to
two and one-half, the formula number of teachers is
66.667,
which is the number of teachers per one thousand students
at a
student-teacher ratio of fifteen to one. (2) Multiply the formula number of teachers determined or
calculated in
division (E)(1) of this section by the
kindergarten
through third grade ADM for the district and divide that
product
by one thousand; (3) Calculate the number of new teachers as follows: (a) Multiply the kindergarten through third grade ADM
by
43.478, which is the
number of teachers per one thousand students
at a student-teacher ratio of
twenty-three to one, and divide that
product by one thousand; (b) Subtract the quotient obtained in
division (E)(3)(a) of
this section
from the product in division (E)(2) of this section. (4) Multiply the greater of the difference obtained under
division (E)(3) of this section
or zero by the statewide average
teachers salary. (F) This division applies only to school districts whose
DPIA index is one or greater. (1) Each school district subject to this division shall
first utilize
funds received under this section so that, when
combined with other funds
of the district, sufficient funds exist
to provide all-day
kindergarten to at least the number of children
in the district's all-day
kindergarten percentage. (2) Up to an amount equal to the district's DPIA index
multiplied by
its DPIA student count multiplied by
two hundred
thirty
dollars of the money
distributed under
this
section may be
utilized for one or both of the
following: (a) Programs designed to ensure that
schools are free of
drugs and violence and have a disciplined
environment conducive to
learning; (b) Remediation for students who have
failed or are in
danger of failing any of the tests
administered
pursuant to
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code. Beginning with the school year that starts on July 1, 2002,
each school district shall use at least twenty per cent of the
funds set aside for the purposes of divisions (F)(2)(a) and (b) of
this section to provide intervention services required by section
3313.608 of the Revised Code. (3) Except as otherwise required by division (G) or
permitted under division (K) of this section,
all other funds
distributed under this section to districts subject to
this
division shall be utilized for the purpose of
the third grade
guarantee. The third grade guarantee consists
of increasing the
amount of
instructional attention received per pupil in
kindergarten
through third grade, either by reducing the ratio of
students to
instructional personnel or by increasing the amount of
instruction and curriculum-related activities by extending the
length of the school day or the school year. School districts may implement a reduction of the ratio of
students to instructional personnel through any or all of the
following methods: (a) Reducing the number of students in a
classroom taught by
a single teacher; (b) Employing full-time educational aides or
educational
paraprofessionals issued a permit or license under
section
3319.088 of the Revised Code; (c) Instituting a team-teaching method
that will result in a
lower student-teacher ratio in a classroom. Districts may extend the school day either by increasing
the
amount of time allocated for each class, increasing the
number of
classes provided per day, offering optional academic-related
after-school programs, providing curriculum-related
extra
curricular activities, or establishing tutoring or
remedial
services for students who have demonstrated an
educational need.
In accordance with section 3319.089 of the Revised Code, a
district
extending the school day pursuant to this division may
utilize a participant
of the work experience program who has a
child enrolled in a public school in
that district and who is
fulfilling the work requirements of that program by
volunteering
or working in that public school. If the work experience program
participant is compensated, the school district may use the funds
distributed
under this section for all or part of the
compensation. Districts may extend the school year either through adding
regular days of instruction to the school calendar or by
providing
summer programs. (G) Each district subject to division
(F) of this section
shall not expend any funds
received under division (E) of this
section in
any school buildings that are not buildings with the
highest concentration of
need, unless there is a ratio of
instructional personnel to students of no
more than fifteen to one
in each kindergarten and first grade class in all
buildings with
the highest concentration of need.
This division does not require
that the funds used in
buildings with the highest concentration of
need be spent solely
to reduce the ratio of instructional
personnel to students in
kindergarten and first grade. A school
district may spend the
funds in those buildings in any manner
permitted by division
(F)(3) of this section, but may
not spend
the money in other buildings unless the fifteen-to-one ratio
required by this division is attained. (H)(1) By the first day of August of each fiscal year, each
school district wishing to receive any funds under division (D)
of
this section shall submit to the department of
education an
estimate of its
all-day kindergarten percentage.
Each district
shall update its estimate throughout the
fiscal year in the form
and manner required by the department,
and the department shall
adjust payments under this section to
reflect the updates. (2) Annually by the end of December, the department of
education, utilizing data from the information system
established
under section 3301.0714
of the Revised Code and after consultation
with the
legislative office of education oversight, shall
determine for each school district subject to division (F) of
this
section whether in the preceding fiscal year the
district's ratio
of instructional personnel to students and its number
of
kindergarten students receiving all-day kindergarten appear
reasonable, given the amounts of money the district
received for
that fiscal year pursuant to divisions (D) and (E) of
this
section. If the department is unable to verify from the
data
available that students are receiving reasonable amounts of
instructional attention and all-day kindergarten, given the funds
the district
has received under this section
and that class-size
reduction
funds are being used in school buildings with the
highest concentration of
need as required by division (G) of this
section, the
department shall conduct a more intensive
investigation to
ensure that funds have been expended as required
by this
section. The department shall file an annual report of
its findings under
this division with the chairpersons of the
committees in each house of the
general assembly dealing with
finance and education. (I) Any school district with a DPIA index less than one
and
a three-year average formula ADM exceeding seventeen thousand five
hundred shall first utilize funds received
under
this section so
that,
when combined with other funds of the
district,
sufficient
funds
exist to provide all-day kindergarten
to at least the
number
of
children in the district's all-day
kindergarten
percentage.
Such
a district shall expend at least
seventy per
cent of the
remaining
funds received under this
section, and
any other
district with a
DPIA
index less than
one shall expend at
least
seventy per cent of
all funds received
under this
section, for any
of the following
purposes: (1) The purchase of technology for
instructional purposes; (2) All-day kindergarten; (3) Reduction of class sizes; (4) Summer school remediation; (5) Dropout prevention programs; (6) Guaranteeing that all third graders are
ready to
progress to more advanced work; (7) Summer education and work programs; (8) Adolescent pregnancy programs; (9) Head start or preschool programs; (10) Reading improvement programs described
by the
department of education; (11) Programs designed to ensure that schools
are free of
drugs and violence and have a disciplined
environment conducive to
learning; (12) Furnishing, free of charge, materials used in
courses
of instruction, except for the necessary textbooks
or electronic
textbooks required to be furnished without charge pursuant to
section 3329.06 of the Revised Code, to pupils living in families
participating in Ohio works first in accordance with section
3313.642 of the Revised Code; (13) School breakfasts provided pursuant to section
3313.813
of the Revised Code. Each district shall submit to the department, in such format
and at such
time as the department shall specify, a report on the
programs for which it
expended funds under this division. (J) If at any time the superintendent of public instruction
determines that a school district receiving funds
under division
(D) of this section has enrolled less than the all-day
kindergarten
percentage reported for that fiscal year, the
superintendent
shall withhold from the funds otherwise due the
district under
this section a proportional amount as determined by
the difference in the
certified all-day
kindergarten percentage
and the percentage actually enrolled in
all-day kindergarten. The superintendent shall also withhold an appropriate amount
of funds
otherwise due a district for any other misuse of funds
not in accordance with
this section. (K)(1) A district may use a portion of the funds calculated
for
it under division (D) of this section to modify or purchase
classroom space to provide all-day kindergarten, if both of the
following
conditions are met: (a) The district certifies to the department, in a manner
acceptable to the department, that it has a shortage of space for
providing all-day kindergarten. (b) The district provides all-day kindergarten to the number
of children in
the all-day kindergarten percentage it certified
under this section. (2) A district may use a portion of the funds described in
division (F)(3) of this section to modify or purchase classroom
space to enable it to further reduce class size in grades
kindergarten through two with a goal of attaining class sizes of
fifteen students per licensed teacher. To do so, the district
must certify its need for additional space to the department, in a
manner satisfactory to the department.
Sec. 3317.03. Notwithstanding divisions
(A)(1), (B)(1), and
(C) of this section, any
student enrolled in kindergarten more
than half time shall be reported as
one-half student under this
section. (A) The superintendent of each city and exempted
village
school district and of each educational service center shall,
for
the schools under the superintendent's supervision,
certify to the
state board of
education on or before the fifteenth day of October
in each year for
the first full school week in October the formula
ADM,
which shall consist of the average daily membership during
such week of the
sum of the following: (1) On an FTE basis, the number of
students in grades
kindergarten through twelve receiving any educational
services
from the district,
except that the following categories of
students shall not be
included in the determination: (a) Students enrolled in adult education classes; (b) Adjacent or other district students enrolled in the
district under an open enrollment policy pursuant to section
3313.98 of the Revised Code; (c) Students receiving services in the district pursuant to
a compact,
cooperative education agreement, or a contract, but who
are entitled to attend
school in another district pursuant to
section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised Code; (d) Students for whom tuition is
payable pursuant to
sections 3317.081 and 3323.141 of the
Revised Code. (2) On an FTE basis, the number of
students entitled to
attend school in the district pursuant to
section 3313.64 or
3313.65 of the
Revised Code, but receiving educational
services in
grades kindergarten through twelve from one or more of the
following entities: (a) A community school pursuant to Chapter
3314. of the
Revised Code, including any participation in a college
pursuant to
Chapter 3365. of the Revised Code while enrolled in such community
school; (b) An alternative school pursuant to sections 3313.974 to
3313.979 of the Revised Code as described in division
(I)(2)(a) or
(b) of this section; (c) A college pursuant to Chapter 3365. of the Revised Code,
except
when the student is enrolled in the college while also
enrolled in a community
school pursuant to Chapter 3314. of the
Revised Code; (d) An adjacent or other
school district under an open
enrollment policy adopted pursuant
to section 3313.98 of the
Revised Code; (e) An educational service
center or cooperative education
district; (f) Another school district
under a cooperative education
agreement, compact, or contract. (3) One-fourth of the number of students enrolled in a joint
vocational school district or under a vocational education
compact,
excluding any students
entitled to attend school in the
district under section 3313.64 or
3313.65 of the Revised Code who
are enrolled in another
school district through an open enrollment
policy as reported under
division (A)(2)(d) of this section and
then enroll in
a joint vocational school district or under a
vocational education
compact; (4) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, entitled to attend school in the
district pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code who are placed with a
county MR/DD board, minus the
number of
such children placed with a county
MR/DD board in fiscal year
1998. If this calculation produces a negative number, the
number
reported under division
(A)(4) of this section shall be
zero. (B) To enable the
department of education to obtain the data
needed to complete
the calculation of payments pursuant to this
chapter, in
addition to the formula ADM, each
superintendent shall
report separately the following student
counts: (1) The total average daily membership in regular day
classes included in the report under division (A)(1) or (2) of
this
section for kindergarten, and each of grades one through
twelve in
schools under the
superintendent's supervision; (2) The number of all handicapped
preschool
children
enrolled as of the first day of
December in classes in the
district that are eligible for approval by the state board of
education
under division (B) of section 3317.05 of the Revised
Code
and the number of those classes, which shall be reported not
later than the
fifteenth day of December, in accordance with rules
adopted under
that section; (3) The number of children entitled to attend school in
the
district pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code who are participating in a
pilot project scholarship program
established under sections
3313.974 to 3313.979 of the Revised
Code as described in division
(I)(2)(a) or (b) of this section,
are enrolled in a college under Chapter
3365. of the Revised Code,
except when the
student is enrolled in the college while also
enrolled in a community school
pursuant to Chapter 3314. of the
Revised Code, are enrolled in an adjacent or
other school district
under section 3313.98 of the Revised Code,
are enrolled in a
community school
established under Chapter 3314.
of the Revised
Code, including any participation in a college
pursuant to Chapter
3365. of the Revised Code while enrolled in such community
school,
or are participating in a
program operated by a county MR/DD board
or a state
institution; (4) The number of pupils enrolled in joint vocational
schools; (5) The average daily membership of
handicapped children
reported under division (A)(1) or (2) of this
section receiving
special education
services
for the category one
handicap described
in division (A)
of section 3317.013 of the
Revised Code; (6) The average daily membership of handicapped children
reported under
division (A)(1) or (2) of this section receiving
special
education services
for category two
handicaps
described
in division
(B)
of section 3317.013 of the
Revised Code; (7) The average daily membership of handicapped children
reported under
division (A)(1) or (2) of this section
receiving
special education services for
category three handicaps
described
in division
(C)
of
section
3317.013
of the Revised Code; (8)
The average daily
membership of handicapped children
reported under division (A)(1)
or (2) of this section receiving
special education services for
category four handicaps described
in division (D) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code; (9) The average daily membership of handicapped children
reported under division (A)(1) or (2) of this section receiving
special education services for the category five handicap
described
in division (E) of section 3317.013 of the Revised Code; (10) The average daily membership of handicapped children
reported under division (A)(1) or (2) of this section receiving
special education services for category six handicaps described in
division (F) of section 3317.013 of the Revised Code; (11) The average daily membership of pupils reported under
division
(A)(1) or (2) of this section enrolled in category one
vocational education programs or classes, described in division
(A) of section 3317.014 of the Revised Code, operated by the
school
district or by another district, other than a joint
vocational school
district, or by an educational service center; (12) The average daily membership of pupils reported
under
division
(A)(1) or (2) of this section enrolled in category
two
vocational
education programs or services, described in
division
(B) of section
3317.014 of the Revised Code, operated by
the
school district or another school district,
other than a joint
vocational school district, or by an educational service
center; (13) The average number of
children transported by the
school district on board-owned or contractor-owned and -operated
buses,
reported in accordance with rules adopted by
the department
of education; (14)(a) The number of children, other than
handicapped
preschool children, the district placed with a
county MR/DD board
in fiscal
year 1998; (b) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, placed with a county
MR/DD board
in the current
fiscal year to receive
special
education services
for the category one handicap
described in
division (A) of
section
3317.013
of the Revised
Code; (c) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, placed with a county
MR/DD board
in the current
fiscal year to receive
special
education services
for category two handicaps
described in
division (B) of
section
3317.013
of the Revised
Code; (d) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, placed with a county
MR/DD board
in the current
fiscal year to receive
special
education
services
for category three handicaps described in
division
(C) of section
3317.013 of the Revised
Code; (e) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, placed with a county MR/DD board
in the current fiscal year to receive special education services
for category four handicaps described in division (D) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code; (f) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, placed with a county MR/DD board
in the current fiscal year to receive special education services
for the category five handicap described in division (E) of
section
3317.013 of the Revised Code; (g) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, placed with a county MR/DD board
in the current fiscal year to receive special education services
for category six handicaps described in division (F) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code.
(C)(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section for
kindergarten students, the average daily membership in divisions
(B)(1) to
(12) of this section shall be based
upon the number
of
full-time equivalent students. The state board of
education
shall
adopt rules defining full-time equivalent students and for
determining the average daily membership therefrom
for the
purposes of divisions (A), (B), and
(D) of this section.
No (2) A student enrolled in a community school established
under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code shall be counted in the
formula ADM and, if applicable, the category one, two, three,
four, five, or six
special education ADM of the school district in
which the student
is entitled to attend school under section
3313.64 or 3313.65 of
the Revised Code for the same proportion of
the school year that
the student is counted in the enrollment of
the community school
for purposes of section 3314.08 of the
Revised Code.
(3) No child
shall be
counted as more than a total of one
child in the
sum of
the average daily memberships of a
school
district under division
(A), divisions
(B)(1) to
(12), or division
(D) of this
section,
except as follows: (1)(a) A child with a handicap described in section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code may be
counted both in formula
ADM and in
category one, two,
three,
four, five, or six
special education
ADM and, if applicable, in
category one or two
vocational
education
ADM. As provided in
division (C) of section
3317.02 of
the Revised Code,
such a child
shall be counted in
category one,
two,
three, four, five, or
six special education
ADM in the same
proportion that the child is
counted in formula
ADM.
(2)(b) A child enrolled in vocational education programs or
classes described
in section
3314.014
3317.014 of the Revised Code
may be
counted both in formula ADM and
category one or two
vocational
education ADM and, if applicable, in
category one, two,
three,
four, five, or six
special education ADM. Such a child
shall be
counted in category
one or two vocational education ADM
in
the
same proportion as the
percentage of time that the child
spends in
the
vocational
education programs or classes.
(4) Based on the information reported
under this section,
the
department of education shall determine the total
student
count,
as defined in section 3301.011 of the Revised Code, for
each
school district. (D)(1) The superintendent of each joint vocational school
district
shall certify to
the superintendent of public instruction
on or before the fifteenth
day of October in each year for the
first full school week in
October the formula ADM, which, except
as otherwise provided in this division, shall
consist of
the
average daily
membership during such week, on an
FTE basis, of the
number of
students receiving any educational
services from the
district,
except that the
including students enrolled in a
community school established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised
Code who are attending the joint vocational district under an
agreement between the district board of education and the
governing authority of the community school and are entitled to
attend school in a city, local, or exempted village school
district whose territory is part of the territory of the joint
vocational district.
The following categories
of students shall not be
included
in the determination
made under division (D)(1) of this section: (a) Students enrolled in adult education classes; (b) Adjacent or other district joint vocational students
enrolled
in the district under an open enrollment policy pursuant
to section
3313.98 of the Revised Code; (c) Students receiving services in the district pursuant
to
a compact, cooperative education agreement, or a contract, but who
are
entitled to attend school in a city, local, or
exempted
village school district whose territory is not part of
the
territory of the joint vocational district; (d) Students for whom tuition is payable pursuant to
sections
3317.081 and 3323.141 of the Revised Code. (2) To enable the department of education to obtain the data
needed to complete the calculation of payments pursuant to this
chapter,
in addition to the formula ADM, each superintendent shall
report
separately the average daily membership included in the
report under division
(D)(1) of this section for each of the
following categories of
students: (a) Students enrolled in each grade included in the joint
vocational district schools; (b) Handicapped children receiving
special
education
services
for the category one handicap described in
division (A)
of section 3317.013
of the Revised Code; (c) Handicapped children receiving
special
education
services
for the category two handicaps described in
division (B)
of section 3317.013
of the Revised Code; (d) Handicapped children
receiving special education
services for category three
handicaps
described in division
(C)
of section
3317.013 of the
Revised Code; (e)
Handicapped children
receiving special education services
for category four handicaps
described in division (D) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code; (f) Handicapped children receiving special education
services for the category five handicap described in division (E)
of
section 3317.013 of the Revised Code; (g) Handicapped children receiving special education
services for category six handicaps described in division (F) of
section 3317.013 of the Revised Code; (h)
Students receiving category one vocational education
services, described in division (A) of section 3317.014 of the
Revised Code; (i) Students receiving category two vocational education
services, described in division (B) of section 3317.014 of the
Revised Code. The superintendent of each joint vocational school district
shall also indicate the city, local, or
exempted village school
district in which each
joint vocational district pupil is entitled
to attend school
pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised Code. (E) In each school of each city, local, exempted village,
joint vocational, and cooperative education school district there
shall be maintained a record of school membership, which record
shall accurately show, for each day the school is in session, the
actual membership enrolled in regular day classes. For the
purpose of determining average daily membership, the membership
figure of any school shall not include any pupils except those
pupils described by division (A) of this section. The
record of
membership for each school shall be maintained in such
manner that
no pupil shall be counted as in membership prior to
the actual
date of entry in the school and also in such
manner that where for
any cause a pupil permanently withdraws
from the school that pupil
shall not be counted as in
membership from and
after the date of
such withdrawal. There shall not be included
in the membership of
any school any of the following: (1) Any pupil who has graduated from
the twelfth grade of a
public high school; (2) Any pupil who is not a resident of the state; (3) Any pupil who was enrolled in the schools
of the
district during the previous school year when tests were
administered under section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code but did
not take one or more of the tests required by that section and
was
not excused pursuant to division (C)(1) of that section; (4) Any pupil who has attained the age of twenty-two years,
except for veterans of the armed services whose attendance was
interrupted before completing the recognized twelve-year course
of
the public schools by reason of induction or enlistment in the
armed forces and who apply for reenrollment in the public school
system of their residence not later than four years after
termination of war or their honorable discharge.
If, however, any veteran described by
division (E)(4) of
this
section elects to
enroll in special courses organized for
veterans
for whom tuition is paid under the provisions of federal
laws, or
otherwise, that veteran shall not be included in
average
daily
membership. Notwithstanding division (E)(3) of this section, the
membership of any school may include a pupil who did not take a
test required by section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code if the
superintendent of public instruction grants a waiver from the
requirement to take the test to the specific pupil. The
superintendent may grant such a waiver only for good cause in
accordance with rules adopted by the state board of education. Except as provided in
division
divisions (B)(2)
and (F) of
this section,
the
average daily membership figure of any local,
city,
exempted
village, or joint vocational school district shall
be
determined
by dividing
the figure representing the sum of the
number of
pupils enrolled during each
day the school of attendance
is
actually open for
instruction during the first full school week
in
October by the total number
of days the school was actually
open
for instruction during that
week. For purposes of state
funding,
"enrolled" persons are only
those pupils who are
attending school,
those who have attended
school during the
current school year and
are absent for
authorized reasons, and
those handicapped children
currently
receiving home instruction. The average daily membership figure of any cooperative
education school
district shall be determined in accordance with
rules adopted by the state
board of education. (F)(1) If the formula ADM for the first full school
week in
February is at
least three per cent greater than that certified
for the first
full school week in the preceding October, the
superintendent of
schools of any city, exempted village, or joint
vocational school district
or educational service center shall
certify such increase to the
superintendent of public
instruction.
Such certification shall be submitted no later than
the fifteenth
day of February. For the balance of the fiscal
year, beginning
with the February payments, the superintendent of
public
instruction shall use the increased formula
ADM in calculating or
recalculating the amounts to be allocated in
accordance with
section 3317.022 or 3317.16 of
the Revised
Code. In no event
shall the superintendent use an increased
membership certified to
the superintendent after the
fifteenth day of February. (2) If on the first school day of April the total number
of
classes or units for handicapped
preschool children that
are
eligible for approval under division (B) of section 3317.05
of the
Revised Code exceeds the number of units
that have been approved
for the year under that division, the
superintendent of schools of
any city, exempted village,
or cooperative education school
district or educational
service center shall make the
certifications required by this
section for that day. If the
state board of education
determines additional units can be
approved for the
fiscal year within any limitations set forth in
the acts
appropriating moneys for the funding of such units,
the
board shall approve additional units for the fiscal year on
the
basis of such average daily membership. For each unit so
approved, the department of education shall pay an amount
computed
in the manner prescribed in section
3317.052 or 3317.19
and
section
3317.053 of the Revised Code. (3) If a student attending a community school under Chapter
3314. of the Revised Code is not included in the formula ADM
certified for the first full school week of October for the school
district in which the student is entitled to attend school under
section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code, the department of
education shall adjust the formula ADM of that school district to
include the community school student in accordance with division
(C)(2) of this section, and shall recalculate the school
district's payments under this chapter for the entire fiscal year
on the basis of that adjusted formula ADM. This requirement
applies regardless of whether the student was enrolled, as defined
in division (E) of this section, in the community school during
the first full school week in October. (G)(1)(a) The superintendent of an institution operating a
special education program pursuant to section 3323.091 of the
Revised Code shall, for the programs under such
superintendent's
supervision,
certify to the state board of education the average
daily
membership of all handicapped children in classes or
programs
approved annually by the state board of education, in the
manner prescribed
by the superintendent of public instruction. (b) The superintendent of an
institution with vocational
education units approved under
division (A) of section 3317.05 of
the Revised
Code shall, for the units under
the superintendent's
supervision, certify to the state board of
education the average
daily membership in those units, in the
manner prescribed by the
superintendent of public
instruction. (2) The superintendent of each county MR/DD board that
maintains special education classes
under section 3317.20 of the
Revised Code or units approved by the state
board of education
pursuant to section
3317.05 of the Revised Code shall
do both of
the following: (a) Certify to the state board, in the
manner prescribed by
the board, the average daily
membership in classes
under section
3317.20 of
the Revised Code for each
school district that has
placed children
in the classes; (b) Certify to the state board, in the manner prescribed by
the
board, the number of all handicapped preschool children
enrolled as of
the first day of December in classes eligible for
approval
under division (B) of
section 3317.05 of the Revised
Code, and the number of those
classes. (3)(a)
If on the first school day of
April the number of
classes or units maintained for handicapped preschool
children by
the county MR/DD board
that are eligible for approval under
division (B) of section 3317.05 of the
Revised Code is greater
than the number of units approved for the year under
that
division,
the superintendent shall make the
certification required
by this section for that day.
(b) If the state board determines that additional classes
or
units can be
approved for the fiscal year within any
limitations
set forth in
the acts appropriating moneys for the
funding of the
classes and units described in division (G)(3)(a)
of this
section, the board shall approve and
fund
additional units for the
fiscal year on the basis of such average
daily membership. For
each
unit so approved, the department of
education shall pay an
amount
computed in the manner prescribed in
sections
3317.052 and
3317.053 of the Revised
Code. (H) Except as provided in division (I)
of this section, when
any city, local, or exempted village school
district provides
instruction for a nonresident pupil whose
attendance is
unauthorized attendance as defined in section
3327.06 of the
Revised Code, that pupil's membership shall not be
included in
that district's membership figure used in the
calculation of that
district's formula
ADM or included in the determination of any
unit approved for
the district under section 3317.05 of the
Revised Code. The
reporting official shall report separately the
average daily
membership of all pupils whose attendance in the
district is
unauthorized attendance, and the membership of each
such pupil
shall be credited to the school district in which the
pupil is
entitled to attend school under division (B) of section
3313.64
or section 3313.65 of the Revised Code as determined by
the
department of education. (I)(1) A city, local, exempted village, or joint vocational
school
district admitting
a scholarship student
of a pilot project
district pursuant to division (C) of section 3313.976
of the
Revised Code may count such student in its average daily
membership. (2) In any year for which funds are appropriated for pilot
project
scholarship programs, a school district implementing a
state-sponsored pilot
project scholarship program that year
pursuant to
sections 3313.974
through
to
3313.979 of the Revised
Code
may count in average daily membership: (a) All children residing in the district and utilizing a
scholarship to attend kindergarten in any alternative school, as
defined in
section 3313.974 of the Revised Code; (b) All children who were enrolled in the district in the
preceding year who are utilizing a scholarship to attend any such
alternative
school. (J) The superintendent of each cooperative education school
district shall certify to the superintendent of public
instruction, in a
manner prescribed by the state board of
education, the applicable average
daily memberships for all
students in the cooperative education district, also
indicating
the city, local, or exempted village district where each pupil is
entitled to attend school under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code.
Sec. 3318.50. (A) As used in this section and in section
3318.52 of the Revised Code: (1)
"Start-up community school" means a
"new start-up
school"
as that term is defined in division (A) of section 3314.02
of the
Revised Code.
(2)
"Classroom, "classroom facilities"
has the same meaning
as
in
section 3318.01
means buildings, land, grounds, equipment,
and
furnishings used by a community school in furtherance of its
mission and contract entered into by the school's governing
authority under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code.
(B) There is hereby established the community school
classroom facilities loan guarantee program. Under the program,
the Ohio school facilities commission may guarantee for up to
fifteen
years up to eighty-five per cent of the sum of the
principal and interest on a loan made to the governing authority
of a
start-up
community school established under Chapter 3314. of
the
Revised
Code for the sole purpose of assisting the governing
board
authority
in
acquiring, improving, or replacing classroom
facilities for the
community school
by
lease,
purchase, remodeling
of existing
facilities, or any
other
means
except by
including new
construction. The commission shall not make any loan guarantee under this
section unless the commission has determined both that the
applicant is creditworthy and that the classroom facilities
meet
specifications established by the commission under section 3318.51
of the Revised Code
that have been acquired,
improved, or replaced
under the loan meet applicable health and
safety standards
established by law for school buildings or those
facilities that
will be acquired, improved, or replaced under the
loan will meet
such standards. The commission shall not guarantee any loan under this
section unless the loan is obtained from a financial institution
regulated by the United States or this state. (C)
At no time shall the commission exceed an aggregate
liability of ten million dollars to repay loans guaranteed under
this section. (D) Any payment made to a lending institution as a result
of
default on a loan guaranteed under this section shall be made
from
moneys in the community school classroom facilities loan
guarantee
fund established under section 3318.52 of the Revised
Code. (E) The commission may assess a fee of up to five hundred
dollars for each loan guaranteed under this section.
(F) Not later than ninety days after
the effective date
of
this section
September 5, 2001, the commission shall adopt
rules
that prescribe loan
standards and procedures consistent with
this
section that are
designed to protect the state's interest in
any
loan guaranteed by
this section and to ensure that the state
has a
reasonable chance
of recovering any payments made by the
state in
the event of a
default on any such loan.
Sec. 3327.01. Notwithstanding division (D) of section
3311.19 and division (D) of section 3311.52 of the Revised Code,
this section and sections 3327.011
and, 3327.012, and 3327.02 of
the Revised
Code do not apply to any joint vocational or
cooperative
education school district. In all city, local, and exempted village school districts
where resident school pupils in grades kindergarten through eight
live more than two miles from the school for which the state
board
of education prescribes minimum standards pursuant to
division (D)
of section 3301.07 of the Revised Code and to which
they are
assigned by the board of education of the district of
residence or
to and from the nonpublic
or community school which they attend
the board of education shall provide transportation for such
pupils to and from such school except
when, in the judgment of
such board, confirmed by the state board of education, such
transportation is unnecessary or unreasonable
as provided in
section 3327.02 of the Revised Code. In all city, local, and exempted village school districts
the
board may provide transportation for resident school pupils
in
grades nine through twelve to and from the high school to
which
they are assigned by the board of education of the district
of
residence or to and from the
non-public
nonpublic or community
high school which they
attend for which the state board of
education prescribes minimum
standards pursuant to division (D) of
section 3301.07 of the
Revised Code. In determining the necessity for transportation,
availability
of facilities and distance to the school shall be
considered.
A board of education shall not be required to transport
elementary or high school pupils to and from a
non-public
nonpublic or community school
where such transportation would
require more than thirty minutes
of direct travel time as measured
by school bus from the
collection point as designated by the
coordinator of school
transportation, appointed under section
3327.011 of the Revised
Code, for the attendance area of the
district of residence. Where it is impractical to transport a pupil by school
conveyance, a board of education may
offer payment, in lieu of
providing such
transportation, pay a parent, guardian, or other
person in charge
of such child, an amount per pupil which shall in
no event exceed
the average transportation cost per pupil, such
average cost to
be
based on the cost of transportation of children
by all boards
of
education in this state during the next preceding
year
in accordance with section 3327.02 of the Revised Code. In all city, local, and exempted village school districts
the
board shall provide transportation for all children who are
so
crippled that they are unable to walk to and from the school
for
which the state board of education prescribes minimum
standards
pursuant to division (D) of section 3301.07 of the
Revised Code
and which they attend. In case of dispute whether
the child is
able to walk to and from the school, the health
commissioner shall
be the judge of such ability. In all city,
exempted village, and
local school districts the board shall
provide transportation to
and from school or special education
classes for educable mentally
retarded children in accordance
with standards adopted by the
state board of education. When transportation of pupils is provided the conveyance
shall be run on a time schedule that shall be adopted and put in
force by the board not later than ten days after the beginning of
the school term. The cost of any transportation service authorized by this
section shall be paid first out of federal funds, if any,
available for the purpose of pupil transportation, and secondly
out of state appropriations, in accordance with regulations
adopted by the state board of education. No transportation of any pupils shall be provided by any
board of education to or from any school which in the selection
of
pupils, faculty members, or employees, practices
discrimination
against any person on the grounds of race, color,
religion, or
national origin.
Sec. 3327.02. If the board of education of a local school
district deems the transportation, required under any law, of
certain children to school by school conveyances impracticable
and
if it is unable to secure a reasonable offer for the
transportation of such children the local board shall so report
to
the county board
(A) After considering each of the following
factors, the board of education of a city, exempted village, or
local school district may determine that it is impractical to
transport a pupil who is eligible for transportation to and from a
school under section 3327.01 of the Revised Code:
(1) The time and distance required to provide the
transportation;
(2) The number of pupils to be transported;
(3) The cost of providing transportation in terms of
equipment, maintenance, personnel, and administration;
(4) Whether similar or equivalent service is provided to
other pupils eligible for transportation;
(5) Whether and to what extent the additional service
unavoidably disrupts current transportation schedules;
(6) Whether other reimbursable types of transportation are
available.
(B)(1) Based on its consideration of the factors
established in division (A) of this section, the board may pass a
resolution declaring the impracticality of transportation. The
resolution shall include each pupil’s name and the reason for
impracticality.
(2) The board shall report its determination to the state
board of education in a manner determined by the state board.
(3) The board of education of a local school district
additionally shall submit the resolution for concurrence to the
educational service center that contains the local district's
territory. If the
county
educational service center governing
board
deems such
considers transportation by school conveyance
practicable
or the offers
reasonable, it shall so inform the local
board and transportation
shall be provided by such local board.
If
the
county
educational service center board
agrees with the
view
of the local board
it is compliance with
section 3327.01 of
the
Revised Code, by such local board if such
board agrees to pay
the
parent or other person in charge of the
child for the
transportation of such child to school at a rate
determined for
the particular case by, the local board
for each
day of actual
may
offer payment in lieu of transportation
as provided in this
section. The teachers in charge of such children shall keep an
accurate account of the days the children are transported to and
from school. A failure of a parent or guardian to arrange to have
his child transported to school, or
his failure to have the child
attend on the ground that the transportation is not supplied
cannot be pleaded as an excuse for the failure of such parent or
guardian to send such child to school or for the failure of the
child to attend school.
(C) After passing the resolution declaring the
impracticality of transportation, the district board shall offer
to provide payment in lieu of transportation by doing the
following:
(1) In accordance with guidelines established by the
department of education, informing the pupil's parent, guardian,
or other person in charge of the pupil of both of the following:
(a) The board's resolution;
(b) The right of the pupil's parent, guardian, or other
person in charge of the pupil to accept the offer of payment in
lieu of transportation or to reject the offer and instead request
the department to initiate mediation procedures.
(2) Issuing the pupil's parent, guardian, or other person
in
charge of the pupil a contract or other form on which the
parent,
guardian, or other person in charge of the pupil is given
the
option to accept or reject the board’s offer of payment in
lieu of
transportation.
(D) If the parent, guardian, or other person in charge of
the pupil accepts the offer of payment in lieu of providing
transportation, the board shall pay the parent, guardian, or other
person in charge of the child an amount that shall be not less
than
the amount determined by the department of education as the
minimum for payment in lieu of transportation, and not more than
the amount determined by the department as the average cost of
pupil transportation for the previous school year. Payment may be
prorated if the time period involved is only a part of the school
year.
(E)(1)(a) Upon the request of a parent, guardian, or other
person in charge of the pupil who rejected the payment in lieu of
transportation, the department shall conduct mediation procedures.
(b) If the mediation does not resolve the dispute, the
state board of education shall conduct a hearing in accordance
with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code. The state board may
approve the payment in lieu of transportation or may order the
board of education to provide transportation. The decision of the
state board is binding in subsequent years and on future parties
in interest provided the facts of the determination remain
comparable.
(2) The school district shall provide transportation for
the pupil from the time the parent, guardian, or other person in
charge of the pupil requests mediation until the matter is
resolved under division (E)(1)(a) or (b) of this section.
(F)(1) If the department determines that a school district
board has failed or is failing to provide transportation as
required by division (E)(2) of this section or as ordered by the
state board under division (E)(1)(b) of this section, the
department shall order the school district board to pay to the
pupil's parent, guardian, or other person in charge of the pupil,
an amount equal to the state average daily cost of transportation
as determined by the state board of education for the previous
year. The school district board shall make payments on a schedule
ordered by the department.
(2) If the department subsequently finds that a school
district board is not in compliance with an order issued under
division (F)(1) of this section and the affected pupils are
enrolled in a nonpublic or community school, the department shall
deduct the amount that the board is required to pay under that
order from any payments the department makes to the school
district board under division (D) of section 3317.022 of the
Revised Code. The department shall use the moneys so deducted to
make payments to the nonpublic or community school attended by the
pupil. The department shall continue to make the deductions and
payments required under this division until the school district
board either complies with the department’s order issued under
division (F)(1) of this section or begins providing
transportation.
(G) A nonpublic or community school that receives payments
from the department under division (F)(2) of this section shall do
either of the following:
(1) Disburse the entire amount of the payments to the
parent, guardian, or other person in control of the pupil affected
by the failure of the school district of residence to provide
transportation;
(2) Use the entire amount of the payments to provide
acceptable transportation for the affected pupil.
Sec. 3331.01. (A) As used in this chapter: (1) "Superintendent" or
"superintendent of schools" of a
school district
means the person
employed as
the superintendent
or that person's designee.
In the case of a local school district,
such designee may be the superintendent of the educational service
center to which the school district belongs. (2) "Chief administrative officer" means the chief
administrative officer of a nonpublic or community school or that
person's designee. (B)(1) Except as provided in division (B)(2) of this
section, an age and schooling certificate may be issued only by
the superintendent of
the city, local, joint vocational, or
exempted village school district
in
which
the child in whose name
such certificate is issued resides
or by the chief administrative
officer of the nonpublic or
community school the child attends,
and only upon satisfactory
proof that the child to whom the
certificate is issued is at
least
fourteen years of age. (2) A child who resides in this state shall apply for an age
and schooling certificate to the superintendent of the school
district in which the child resides, or to the chief
administrative officer of the school that the child attends.
Residents of other states
who work
in Ohio
shall
apply to the
superintendent of the
school district
in
which
the
place of
employment is located, as a
condition of employment or service. (C) Any such age and schooling certificate may be issued
only
upon satisfactory proof that the employment contemplated by
the
child is not prohibited by any law regulating the employment
of
such children. Section 4113.08 of the Revised
Code does not
apply to such employer in respect to such child
while engaged in
an employment legal for a child of the age stated
therein. (D) Age and schooling certificate forms shall be
approved
by
the state board of education, including forms submitted
electronically.
Forms shall not display the social security number
of the child. Except as otherwise provided in
this section,
every
application for an age and schooling certificate must
be
signed in
the
presence of the officer issuing it by the child
in
whose name
it
is issued. (E) A child
shall furnish the
superintendent
or
chief
administrative officer all information
required by this
chapter in
support of the
issuance of a
certificate.
(F) On and after September 1, 2002, each superintendent and
chief administrative officer who
issues an age and schooling
certificate shall file electronically
the certificate with the
director of commerce in accordance with
rules adopted by the
director of administrative services pursuant
to section 1306.21 of
the Revised Code. On and after September 1,
2002, only
electronically filed certificates are valid to satisfy
the
requirements of Chapter 4109. of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3365.08. (A) A college that expects to receive or
receives reimbursement under section 3365.07 of the Revised Code
shall furnish to a participant all textbooks and materials
directly related to a course taken by the participant under
division (B) of section 3365.04 of the Revised Code. No college
shall charge such participant for tuition, textbooks, materials,
or other fees directly related to any such course. (B) No student enrolled under this chapter in a course for
which credit toward high school graduation is awarded shall
receive
direct financial aid through any state or federal program. (C) If a school district provides transportation for
resident school students in grades eleven and twelve under
section
3327.01 of the Revised Code, a parent of a pupil enrolled
in a
course under division (B) of section 3365.04 of the Revised
Code
may apply to the board of education for full or partial
reimbursement for the necessary costs of transporting the student
between the secondary school the student attends and the
college
in which the student is enrolled. Reimbursement may
be paid
solely from funds received by the district under division
(D) of
section 3317.022
of the Revised Code. The state board of
education shall
establish guidelines, based on financial need,
under which a
district may provide such reimbursement. (D) If a community school provides or arranges
transportation
for its
pupils in grades nine through twelve under
section 3314.091 of the
Revised Code, a parent of a pupil of the
community school
who is enrolled in a course under division (B) of
section 3365.04 of
the
Revised
Code may apply to the governing
authority of the community school for
full or partial
reimbursement of the necessary costs of
transporting the student
between the community school and the
college. The governing
authority may pay the reimbursement in
accordance with the state
board's rules adopted under division (C)
of this section solely
from funds paid to it under section 3314.091 of the
Revised Code.
Sec. 4117.101. Notwithstanding sections 4117.08 and 4117.10
of the Revised
Code, no agreement entered into under this chapter
may contain any provision
that in any way limits the effect or
operation of Chapter 3314. of the Revised
Code or limits the
authority of a school district board of education,
or the
governing board of an educational service center described in
division (C)(1)(e)(d) of section 3314.02
of the Revised Code, to
enter
into a contract with a community school under that chapter.
However, nothing
in this section shall be construed to prohibit an
agreement entered into
under this chapter from containing
requirements and procedures
governing the reassignment of teachers
who are employed in a
school at the time it is converted to a
community school
pursuant to Chapter 3314. of the Revised
Code and
who do not choose or are not chosen to teach in
that community
school.
SECTION 2. That existing sections 2901.01, 2925.01,
3301.0714, 3302.03, 3309.51, 3313.375,
3314.011, 3314.013,
3314.02,
3314.03,
3314.05, 3314.06, 3314.07,
3314.072,
3314.08,
3314.09, 3314.091, 3314.11, 3314.13, 3317.029,
3317.03,
3318.50,
3327.01, 3327.02, 3331.01, 3365.08, and
4117.101, and
section
3314.021
of the
Revised Code
are hereby
repealed.
SECTION 3. That Sections 44.05 and 189 of Am. Sub. H.B. 94 of
the
124th General Assembly be amended to read as follows: Sec. 44.05. VOCATIONAL EDUCATION MATCH The foregoing appropriation item 200-416, Vocational
Education Match, shall be used by the Department of Education to
provide vocational administration matching funds pursuant to 20
U.S.C. 2311. TECHNICAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT The foregoing appropriation item 200-420, Technical Systems
Development, shall be used to support the development and
implementation of information technology solutions
designed to
improve the performance
and customer service of the Department of
Education. Funds may be used for personnel, maintenance, and
equipment costs related to the development and implementation of
these technical system projects.
Implementation of these systems
shall allow the department to
provide greater levels of assistance
to school districts and to provide more timely information
to the
public, including school districts, administrators, and
legislators. ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION PROGRAMS There is hereby created the Alternative Education
Advisory
Council, which shall consist of one representative
from each of
the following agencies: the Ohio Department of
Education; the
Department of Youth
Services; the Ohio Department of Alcohol
and
Drug Addiction Services; the
Department of Mental Health; the
Office of
the Governor or, at the Governor's discretion, the
Office of the Lieutenant Governor;
and the
Office of the Attorney
General; and, beginning on the effective date of
this section, the
Office of the Auditor
of State. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-421, Alternative
Education Programs, not less than $8,253,031 in each fiscal year
shall be used
for the renewal of successful implementation grants
and for
competitive matching grants to the 21 urban school
districts as
defined in division (O) of section 3317.02 of the
Revised Code as
it
existed prior to July 1, 1998, and not less
than $8,163,031 in each
fiscal
year shall be used for the renewal
of successful implementation of
grants and for competitive
matching grants to rural and suburban
school districts for
alternative educational programs for existing
and new
at-risk and
delinquent youth. Programs shall be focused
on youth in one or
more of the following categories: those who
have been expelled or
suspended,
those who have dropped out of
school or who are at risk
of dropping out of
school, those who are
habitually truant or
disruptive, or those on probation
or on
parole from a Department
of Youth Services
facility. Grants shall
be awarded according to
the criteria established by the
Alternative Education Advisory
Council in 1999. Grants shall
be
awarded only to programs where
the grant would not serve as the
program's
primary source of
funding. These grants shall be
administered by the
Department of
Education. The Department of Education may waive
compliance with any
minimum education standard established under section
3301.07 of
the Revised Code for any alternative school that
receives a grant
under this section on
the grounds that the waiver will enable the
program to more effectively
educate students enrolled in the
alternative school. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-421, Alternative
Education Programs, up to $480,552 in each fiscal year may
be used
for program
administration, monitoring, technical assistance,
support,
research, and evaluation. Any unexpended balance may be
used to
provide
additional matching grants to urban, suburban, or
rural
school districts as
outlined above. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-421, Alternative
Education Programs, $313,386 in each fiscal year shall be used to
contract with the Center for Learning Excellence at The Ohio State
University to provide technical support for the project and the
completion of formative and summative evaluation of the grants.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-421, Alternative
Education Programs, up to $700,000 in each fiscal year shall be
used to support Amer-I-Can. Of this set aside, no funds shall be
disbursed without approval of the Controlling Board. Amer-I-Can
programs shall submit to the Controlling Board a biennial spending
plan that delineates how these funds will be spent. Amer-I-can
programs also shall demonstrate to the Controlling Board that they
have hired an independent evaluator and have selected valid and
reliable instruments to assess pre and post changes in student
behavior. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-421, Alternative
Education Programs, $75,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to
support the Turning Point Applied Learning Center. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-421, Alternative
Education Programs, $15,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to
support the Bucyrus After School Enrichment Program. SCHOOL MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-422, School
Management Assistance, $700,000 in fiscal year 2002 and $400,000
in fiscal year 2003 shall be used by the Auditor of State for
expenses incurred in the Auditor of State's role relating to
fiscal caution activities as defined in Chapter 3316. of the
Revised Code. Expenses include duties related to the completion of
performance audits for school districts that the Superintendent of
Public Instruction determines are employing fiscal practices or
experiencing budgetary conditions that could produce a state of
fiscal watch or fiscal emergency. The remainder of foregoing appropriation item 200-422, School
Management
Assistance, shall be used by the Department of
Education to
provide fiscal technical assistance and inservice
education for
school district management personnel
and to
administer, monitor,
and implement the fiscal watch and fiscal
emergency provisions
under Chapter 3316. of the Revised Code. POLICY ANALYSIS The foregoing appropriation item 200-424, Policy Analysis,
shall be used by the Department of Education to support a
system
of administrative, statistical, and legislative education
information to be used for policy analysis. Staff supported by
this appropriation shall administer the development of reports,
analyses, and briefings to inform education policymakers of
current
trends in education practice, efficient and effective use
of
resources, and evaluation of programs to improve education
results. The database shall
be kept current at all times. These
research efforts shall be used to
supply information and analysis
of data to the General Assembly
and other state policymakers,
including the Office of Budget and
Management and the Legislative
Service
Commission. The Department of Education may use funding from this
appropriation
item to purchase or contract for the development of
software
systems or contract for policy studies that will assist
in
the provision and analysis of policy-related information.
Funding from this appropriation item also may be used to monitor
and enhance quality assurance for research-based policy analysis
and program evaluation to enhance the effective use of education
information to inform education policymakers.
TECH PREP ADMINISTRATION
The foregoing appropriation item 200-425, Tech Prep
Administration, shall be used by the Department of Education to
support state-level activities designed to support, promote, and
expand tech prep programs. Use of these funds shall include, but
not be limited to, administration of grants, program evaluation,
professional development, curriculum development, assessment
development, program promotion, communications, and statewide
coordination of tech prep consortia. OHIO EDUCATIONAL COMPUTER NETWORK The foregoing appropriation item 200-426, Ohio Educational
Computer Network, shall be used by the Department of Education to
maintain a system of information technology throughout Ohio and
to
provide technical assistance for such a system in support of
the
State Education Technology Plan pursuant to section 3301.07
of the
Revised Code. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-426, Ohio Educational
Computer
Network, up to $20,571,198 in fiscal year 2002 and up to
$21,188,334 in fiscal year
2003 shall be used by the Department of
Education to support connection of
all public school buildings to
the state's education network, to each other, and to the Internet.
In each
fiscal year the Department of Education shall use these
funds to help
reimburse data acquisition sites or school districts
for the operational costs
associated with this connectivity. The
Department
of Education shall develop a formula and guidelines for
the distribution of
these funds to the data acquisition sites or
individual school districts. As used in this section,
"public
school building" means a school building of any city, local,
exempted village, or joint vocational school district, or any
community school established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised
Code, or any educational service center building used for
instructional purposes. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-426, Ohio Educational
Computer Network, up to $2,043,938 in fiscal year 2002 and up to
$2,095,037 in fiscal year 2003 shall be used for the Union Catalog
and InfOhio Network. The Department of Education shall use up
to $4,590,000 in
fiscal year 2002 and up to $4,727,700 in fiscal year 2003 to
assist designated
data acquisition sites with operational costs
associated with the increased
use
of the state's education network
by chartered nonpublic schools. The
Department of Education
shall
develop a formula and guidelines for
distribution of these funds
to designated data acquisition sites. The remainder in each fiscal year of appropriation item
200-426, Ohio Educational Computer Network, shall be used to
support development, maintenance, and operation of a network of
uniform and compatible computer-based information and
instructional systems. The technical assistance shall include, but
not be restricted to, development and maintenance of adequate
computer software systems to support network activities. Program
funds may be used, through a formula and guidelines devised by the
department, to subsidize the activities of not more than 24
designated data acquisition sites, as defined by State Board of
Education rules, to provide school districts and chartered
nonpublic schools with computer-based student and teacher
instructional and administrative information services, including
approved computerized financial accounting, and to ensure the
effective operation of local automated administrative and
instructional systems. To broaden the scope of the use of
technology for education, the department may use up to $250,000 in
each fiscal year to coordinate the activities of the computer
network with other agencies funded by the department or the state.
In order to improve the efficiency of network activities, the
department and data acquisition sites may jointly purchase
equipment, materials, and services from funds provided under this
appropriation for use by the network and, when considered
practical by the department, may utilize the services of
appropriate state purchasing agencies. ACADEMIC STANDARDS The foregoing appropriation item 200-427, Academic Standards,
shall be used by the Department of Education to develop and
disseminate academic content standards. These funds shall be used
to develop academic content standards and curriculum models and to
fund communication of expectations to teachers, school districts,
parents, and communities. Sec. 189. Not later than March 1, 2003, the Department of
Job
and Family Services
shall certify to the State Board of
Education,
for the month of
October
in 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, and
2002, the
unduplicated
number of children ages five through
seventeen
residing in each
school district and living in a family
that had
family income not
exceeding the federal poverty
guidelines, as
defined in section
5101.46 of the Revised Code, and
that
participated in one of the
following: (A) Ohio Works First; (B) The food stamp program; (C) The medical assistance program, including the Healthy
Start program, established under Chapter
5111. of the Revised
Code; (D) The Children's Health Insurance Program Part I
established under section 5101.50 of the Revised Code or, prior to
fiscal year 2000, an executive order issued under section 107.17
of the Revised Code; (E) The disability assistance program established under
Chapter 5115. of the Revised Code. The Department of Job and Family Services shall report this
information according to the school district of residence for each
child in the same manner as required by section 3317.10 of the
Revised Code. It is the intent of the General Assembly that in
making this report, the Department of Job and Family Services will
utilize the same, or substantially similar, computer programming
as it developed to assist the Legislative Office of Education
Oversight in developing the report "A New Poverty Indicator to
Distribute Disadvantaged Pupil Impact Aid (DPIA)." The Department of Education shall use the information
reported under this section to calculate
five-year averages in
order to make payments to school
districts under section 3317.029
of the Revised Code in fiscal
year 2004
and subsequent fiscal
years.
SECTION 4. That existing Sections 44.05 and 189 of Am. Sub.
H.B. 94
of
the 124th General Assembly are hereby repealed. SECTION 5. The Legislative Office of Education Oversight
shall conduct a study of the methodologies and statutory systems
used in other states to fund independent public charter schools
that are similar to the community schools established under
Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code and determine how those
methodologies and systems compare to those codified in Chapter
3314. of the Revised Code. The Office shall issue a written
report to the General Assembly not later than January 31, 2004.
SECTION 6. The State Board of Education shall continue to
sponsor any community school for which it has entered into a
contract at the time of the effective date of this section until
the earlier of the expiration of two school years or until
a new
sponsor, as described in division (C)(1) of section 3314.02
of the
Revised Code, as amended by this act, is secured by the
school's
governing authority. The State Board shall not
thereafter sponsor
any community school except as provided in
division (C) of section
3314.015 of the Revised Code. The State
Board may extend the term
of any existing contract with a
community school governing
authority only as necessary to accommodate the term of the Board's
authorization to sponsor the school as specified in this section. Notwithstanding the requirement for approval of sponsorship
by the Department of Education prescribed in division (B)(1) of
section 3314.015 of the Revised Code, as enacted by this act, and
any geographical restriction or mission requirement prescribed in
division (C)(1) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code, as amended
by this act, an entity other than the State Board of Education
that has entered into a contract to sponsor a community school on
the effective date of this section may continue to sponsor the
school in conformance with the terms of that contract as long as
the entity complies with all other sponsorship provisions of
Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code as amended by this act. Such an
entity also may enter into new contracts to sponsor community
schools after the effective date of this section and need not be
approved by the Department of Education for such sponsorship, as
otherwise required under division (B)(1) of section 3314.015 of
the Revised Code, as enacted by this act, as long as the contracts
conform to and the entity complies with all other provisions of
Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code as amended by this act.
SECTION 7. Not later than ninety days after the effective
date of this section, the Department of Education shall adopt
rules for
procedures, criteria, and deadlines for the
approval,
oversight, and revocation of approval of sponsors
of new
start-up
community schools; for criteria for determining if a tax-exempt
entity is an education-oriented entity; for criteria for
determining whether a mission of a community school proposed for
sponsorship by a state university, board of trustees, or the
board's designee complies with the requirements of division
(C)(1)(e) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code as amended by
this act; and
for procedures for
entering into written
agreements
with sponsors
as provided
for
under section
3314.015 of
the
Revised Code. The
rules may require
sponsors to respond in a
timely manner to
reasonable requests from
the Department for
information, data, and
documents. In
developing the rules, the
Department shall consult
with the other
entities that on the
effective date of this section
have existing
contracts to sponsor
community schools. SECTION 8. That the version of section 2925.01 of the
Revised Code that is scheduled to take effect January 1, 2004, be
amended to read as follows:
Sec. 2925.01. As used in this chapter: (A)
"Administer,"
"controlled substance,"
"dispense,"
"distribute,"
"hypodermic,"
"manufacturer,"
"official written
order,"
"person,"
"pharmacist,"
"pharmacy,"
"sale,"
"schedule I,"
"schedule II,"
"schedule III,"
"schedule IV,"
"schedule V," and
"wholesaler" have the same meanings as in
section 3719.01 of the
Revised Code. (B)
"Drug dependent person" and
"drug of abuse" have the
same
meanings as in section 3719.011 of the Revised Code. (C)
"Drug,"
"dangerous drug,"
"licensed health professional
authorized to
prescribe
drugs," and
"prescription" have the same
meanings as in section
4729.01 of the Revised Code. (D)
"Bulk amount" of a controlled substance means any of
the
following: (1) For any compound, mixture, preparation, or substance
included in schedule I, schedule II, or schedule III,
with the
exception of marihuana, cocaine, L.S.D., heroin, and hashish and
except as provided in division (D)(2) or (5) of this
section,
whichever of the following is applicable: (a) An amount equal to or exceeding ten grams or
twenty-five
unit doses of a compound, mixture, preparation, or
substance that
is or contains any amount of a schedule I opiate
or opium
derivative; (b) An amount equal to or exceeding ten grams
of a
compound,
mixture, preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount
of raw or gum opium; (c) An amount equal to or exceeding thirty
grams or ten
unit
doses of a compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that
is or
contains any amount of a schedule I hallucinogen other than
tetrahydrocannabinol or
lysergic acid
amide, or a schedule I
stimulant or
depressant; (d) An amount equal to or exceeding twenty
grams or five
times the maximum daily dose in the usual dose range specified in
a standard pharmaceutical reference manual of a compound,
mixture,
preparation, or substance that is or contains any amount
of a
schedule II opiate or opium derivative; (e) An amount equal to or exceeding five grams or ten unit
doses of a compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that is
or
contains any amount of phencyclidine; (f) An amount equal to or exceeding one hundred twenty
grams
or thirty times the maximum daily dose in the usual dose
range
specified in a standard pharmaceutical reference manual of
a
compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that is or
contains
any amount of a schedule II stimulant that is in a final
dosage
form manufactured by a person authorized by the
"Federal
Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act," 52 Stat. 1040 (1938), 21
U.S.C.A. 301, as
amended, and the federal drug abuse control
laws, as defined in
section 3719.01 of the Revised Code, that is or contains
any
amount of a schedule II depressant
substance or a schedule II
hallucinogenic substance; (g) An amount equal to or exceeding three
grams of a
compound, mixture, preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount of a schedule II stimulant, or any of its salts or
isomers, that is not in a final dosage form manufactured by a
person authorized by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and
the federal drug abuse control laws. (2) An amount equal to or exceeding one
hundred twenty
grams
or thirty times the maximum daily dose in the usual dose
range
specified
in a standard pharmaceutical reference manual of a
compound,
mixture,
preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount of a
schedule
III or IV substance other than an
anabolic
steroid or a schedule III opiate or opium derivative; (3) An amount equal to or exceeding twenty grams or five
times the maximum
daily dose in the usual dose range specified in
a standard pharmaceutical
reference manual of a compound, mixture,
preparation, or substance that is
or contains any amount of a
schedule III opiate or opium derivative; (4) An amount equal to or exceeding two hundred fifty
milliliters or two hundred fifty grams of a compound, mixture,
preparation, or substance that is or contains any amount of a
schedule V substance; (5) An amount equal to or exceeding two
hundred solid
dosage
units, sixteen grams, or sixteen milliliters of a
compound,
mixture, preparation, or substance that is or contains
any amount
of a schedule III anabolic steroid. (E)
"Unit dose" means an amount or unit of a compound,
mixture, or preparation containing a controlled substance that is
separately identifiable and in a form that
indicates that it is
the amount or unit by which
the controlled substance is separately
administered to or taken by an
individual. (F)
"Cultivate" includes planting, watering, fertilizing,
or
tilling. (G)
"Drug abuse offense" means any of the following: (1) A violation of division (A) of section 2913.02 that
constitutes theft of drugs, or a violation of section 2925.02,
2925.03, 2925.04,
2925.041, 2925.05, 2925.06, 2925.11, 2925.12,
2925.13,
2925.22, 2925.23, 2925.24, 2925.31,
2925.32, 2925.36, or
2925.37 of the Revised Code; (2) A violation of an existing or former law of this or
any
other state or of the United States that is substantially
equivalent to any section listed in division (G)(1) of this
section; (3) An offense under an existing or former law of this or
any other state, or of the United States, of which planting,
cultivating, harvesting, processing, making, manufacturing,
producing, shipping, transporting, delivering, acquiring,
possessing, storing, distributing, dispensing, selling, inducing
another to use, administering to another, using, or otherwise
dealing with a controlled substance is an element; (4) A conspiracy to commit, attempt to commit, or complicity
in
committing or attempting to commit any offense under division
(G)(1), (2), or (3) of this section. (H)
"Felony drug abuse offense" means any drug abuse
offense
that would constitute a felony under the laws of this
state, any
other state, or the United States. (I)
"Harmful intoxicant" does not include beer or
intoxicating liquor but means any
of the following: (1) Any compound, mixture,
preparation,
or substance the gas,
fumes, or vapor of which when
inhaled can
induce intoxication,
excitement, giddiness,
irrational behavior,
depression,
stupefaction, paralysis,
unconsciousness,
asphyxiation, or other
harmful physiological
effects, and
includes, but is not limited
to, any of the
following: (a) Any volatile organic solvent, plastic cement, model
cement, fingernail polish remover, lacquer thinner, cleaning
fluid, gasoline, or other preparation containing a volatile
organic solvent; (b) Any aerosol propellant; (c) Any fluorocarbon refrigerant; (d) Any anesthetic gas.
(2) Gamma Butyrolactone; (3) 1,4 Butanediol. (J)
"Manufacture" means to plant, cultivate, harvest,
process, make, prepare, or otherwise engage in any part of the
production of a drug, by propagation, extraction, chemical
synthesis, or compounding, or any combination of the same, and
includes packaging, repackaging, labeling, and other activities
incident to production. (K)
"Possess" or
"possession" means having control over a
thing or substance, but may not be inferred solely from mere
access to the thing or substance through ownership or occupation
of the premises upon which the thing or substance is found. (L)
"Sample drug" means a drug or pharmaceutical
preparation
that would be hazardous to health or safety if used
without the
supervision of a licensed health
professional authorized to
prescribe drugs, or a drug of abuse,
and that, at one time, had
been placed in a container plainly
marked as a sample by a
manufacturer. (M)
"Standard pharmaceutical reference manual" means the
current edition, with cumulative changes if any, of any of the
following reference works: (1)
"The National Formulary"; (2)
"The United States Pharmacopeia," prepared by
authority
of the United States Pharmacopeial Convention, Inc.; (3) Other standard references that are approved by the
state
board of pharmacy. (N)
"Juvenile" means a person under eighteen years of age. (O)
"Counterfeit controlled substance" means any of the
following: (1) Any drug that bears, or whose container or label
bears,
a trademark, trade name, or other identifying mark used
without
authorization of the owner of rights to that trademark,
trade
name, or identifying mark; (2) Any unmarked or unlabeled substance that is
represented
to be a controlled substance manufactured, processed,
packed, or
distributed by a person other than the person that
manufactured,
processed, packed, or distributed it; (3) Any substance that is represented to be a controlled
substance but is not a controlled substance or is a different
controlled substance; (4) Any substance other than a controlled substance that a
reasonable person would believe to be a controlled substance
because of its similarity in shape, size, and color, or its
markings, labeling, packaging, distribution, or the price for
which it is sold or offered for sale. (P) An offense is
"committed in the vicinity of a school" if
the
offender commits the offense on school premises, in a school
building, or
within one thousand feet of the boundaries of any
school premises. (Q)
"School" means any school operated by a board of
education, any community school established under Chapter 3314. of
the Revised Code, or any
nonpublic school for which the state
board of education
prescribes minimum standards under section
3301.07 of the Revised
Code, whether or not any instruction,
extracurricular activities,
or training provided by the school is
being conducted at the time
a criminal offense is committed. (R)
"School premises" means either of the following: (1) The parcel of real property on which any school is
situated, whether or not any instruction, extracurricular
activities, or training provided by the school is being conducted
on the premises at the time a criminal offense is committed; (2) Any other parcel of real property that is owned or
leased by a board of education of a school, the governing
authority of a community school established under Chapter 3314. of
the Revised Code, or the governing body
of a
nonpublic school for
which the state board of education prescribes
minimum standards
under section 3301.07 of the Revised Code and
on
which some of the
instruction, extracurricular activities, or
training of the school
is conducted, whether or not any
instruction, extracurricular
activities, or training provided by
the school is being conducted
on the parcel of real property at
the time a criminal offense is
committed. (S)
"School building" means any building in which any of
the
instruction, extracurricular activities, or training provided
by a
school is conducted, whether or not any instruction,
extracurricular activities, or training provided by the school is
being conducted in the school building at the time a criminal
offense is committed. (T)
"Disciplinary counsel" means the disciplinary counsel
appointed by the board of commissioners on grievances and
discipline of the supreme court under the Rules for the
Government
of the Bar of Ohio. (U)
"Certified grievance committee" means a duly
constituted
and organized committee of the Ohio state bar
association or of
one or more local bar associations of the state
of Ohio that
complies with the criteria set forth in Rule V,
section 6 of the
Rules for the Government of the Bar of Ohio. (V)
"Professional license" means any license, permit,
certificate, registration, qualification, admission, temporary
license, temporary permit, temporary certificate, or temporary
registration that is described in divisions (W)(1) to
(36) of
this
section and that qualifies a person as a professionally
licensed
person. (W)
"Professionally licensed person" means any of the
following: (1) A person who has obtained a license as a manufacturer
of
controlled substances or a wholesaler of controlled substances
under Chapter 3719. of the Revised Code; (2) A person who has received a certificate or temporary
certificate as a certified public accountant or who has
registered
as a public accountant under Chapter 4701. of the
Revised Code and
who holds an Ohio permit issued under that
chapter; (3) A person who holds a certificate of qualification to
practice architecture issued or renewed and registered under
Chapter 4703. of the Revised Code; (4) A person who is registered as a landscape architect
under Chapter 4703. of the Revised Code or who holds a permit as
a
landscape architect issued under that chapter; (5) A person licensed as an auctioneer or apprentice
auctioneer or licensed to operate an auction company under
Chapter
4707. of the Revised Code; (6) A person who has been issued a certificate of
registration as a registered barber under Chapter 4709. of the
Revised Code; (7) A person licensed and regulated to engage in the
business of a debt pooling company by a legislative authority,
under authority of Chapter 4710. of the Revised Code; (8) A person who has been issued a cosmetologist's
license,
manicurist's license, esthetician's license, managing
cosmetologist's license, managing manicurist's license, managing
esthetician's license, cosmetology instructor's license,
manicurist instructor's license, esthetician instructor's
license,
or tanning facility permit under Chapter 4713. of the
Revised
Code; (9) A person who has been issued a license to practice
dentistry, a general anesthesia permit, a conscious intravenous
sedation permit, a limited resident's license, a limited teaching
license, a dental hygienist's license, or a dental hygienist's
teacher's certificate under Chapter 4715. of the Revised Code; (10) A person who has been issued an embalmer's license, a
funeral director's license, a funeral home license, or a crematory
license, or
who has been registered for an embalmer's or funeral
director's apprenticeship
under Chapter 4717. of the Revised Code; (11) A person who has been licensed as a registered nurse
or
practical nurse, or who has been issued a certificate for the
practice of nurse-midwifery under Chapter 4723. of the Revised
Code; (12) A person who has been licensed to practice optometry
or
to engage in optical dispensing under Chapter 4725. of the
Revised
Code; (13) A person licensed to act as a pawnbroker under
Chapter
4727. of the Revised Code; (14) A person licensed to act as a precious metals dealer
under Chapter 4728. of the Revised Code; (15) A person licensed as a pharmacist, a pharmacy
intern, a
wholesale distributor of dangerous drugs, or a terminal
distributor of dangerous drugs under Chapter 4729. of the Revised
Code; (16) A person who is authorized to practice as a physician
assistant under
Chapter 4730. of the Revised Code; (17) A person who has been issued a certificate to
practice
medicine and surgery, osteopathic medicine and surgery,
a limited
branch of medicine, or podiatry under
Chapter 4731. of the Revised
Code; (18) A person licensed as a psychologist or school
psychologist under Chapter 4732. of the Revised Code; (19) A person registered to practice the profession of
engineering or surveying under Chapter 4733. of the Revised Code; (20) A person who has been issued a license to
practice
chiropractic under Chapter 4734. of the Revised Code; (21) A person licensed to act as a real estate broker or
real estate salesperson under Chapter 4735. of the Revised Code; (22) A person registered as a registered sanitarian under
Chapter 4736. of the Revised Code; (23) A person licensed to operate or maintain a junkyard
under Chapter 4737. of the Revised Code; (24) A person who has been issued a motor vehicle salvage
dealer's license under Chapter 4738. of the Revised Code; (25) A person who has been licensed to act as a steam
engineer under Chapter 4739. of the Revised Code; (26) A person who has been issued a license or temporary
permit to practice veterinary medicine or any of its branches, or
who is registered as a graduate animal technician under Chapter
4741. of the Revised Code; (27) A person who has been issued a hearing aid dealer's
or
fitter's license or trainee permit under Chapter 4747. of the
Revised Code; (28) A person who has been issued a class A, class B, or
class C license or who has been registered as an investigator or
security guard employee under Chapter 4749. of the Revised Code; (29) A person licensed and registered to practice as a
nursing home administrator under Chapter 4751. of the Revised
Code; (30) A person licensed to practice as a speech-language
pathologist
or audiologist under Chapter 4753. of the Revised
Code; (31) A person issued a license as an occupational
therapist
or physical therapist under Chapter 4755. of the
Revised Code; (32) A person who is licensed as a professional clinical
counselor or
professional counselor, licensed as a social worker
or independent social
worker, or registered as a social work
assistant under Chapter 4757. of the Revised Code; (33) A person issued a license to practice dietetics under
Chapter 4759. of the Revised Code; (34) A person who has been issued a license or
limited
permit to practice respiratory therapy under Chapter 4761. of
the
Revised Code; (35) A person who has been issued a real estate appraiser
certificate under Chapter 4763. of the Revised Code; (36) A person who has been admitted to the bar by order of
the supreme court in compliance with its prescribed and published
rules. (X)
"Cocaine" means any of the following: (1) A cocaine salt, isomer, or derivative, a salt of a
cocaine isomer or derivative, or the base form of cocaine; (2) Coca leaves or a salt, compound, derivative, or
preparation of coca leaves, including ecgonine, a salt, isomer,
or
derivative of ecgonine, or a salt of an isomer or derivative
of
ecgonine; (3) A salt, compound, derivative, or preparation of a
substance identified in division
(X)(1) or (2) of this section
that is chemically equivalent to or identical with any of those
substances, except that the substances shall not include
decocainized coca leaves or extraction of coca leaves if the
extractions do not contain cocaine or ecgonine. (Y)
"L.S.D." means
lysergic acid diethylamide. (Z)
"Hashish" means the resin or a preparation of the resin
contained in marihuana, whether in solid form or in a liquid
concentrate,
liquid extract, or liquid distillate form. (AA)
"Marihuana" has the same meaning as in section
3719.01
of the Revised Code,
except that it does not include hashish. (BB) An offense is
"committed in the vicinity of a
juvenile"
if
the offender commits the offense within one hundred feet of a
juvenile or
within the view of a juvenile, regardless of whether
the
offender knows the age of the juvenile, whether the offender
knows the offense
is being committed within one hundred feet of or
within view of the juvenile,
or whether the juvenile actually
views the commission of the offense. (CC)
"Presumption for a prison term" or
"presumption that a
prison term shall be imposed" means a presumption, as described in
division
(D) of section 2929.13 of the Revised Code, that a prison
term is a necessary
sanction for a felony in order to comply with
the purposes and principles of
sentencing under section 2929.11 of
the Revised Code. (DD)
"Major drug offender" has the same meaning as in
section
2929.01 of the Revised Code. (EE)
"Minor drug possession offense" means either of the
following: (1) A violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code as
it
existed prior to July 1, 1996; (2) A violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code as it
exists on and
after July 1, 1996, that is a misdemeanor or a
felony of the fifth
degree. (FF)
"Mandatory prison term" has the same meaning as
in
section 2929.01 of the Revised Code. (GG)
"Crack cocaine" means a compound, mixture, preparation,
or
substance that is or contains any amount of cocaine that is
analytically
identified as the base form of cocaine or that is in
a form that resembles
rocks or pebbles generally intended for
individual use. (HH)
"Adulterate" means to cause a drug to be adulterated as
described in section 3715.63 of the Revised Code.
(II)
"Public premises" means any hotel, restaurant, tavern,
store, arena, hall, or other place of public accommodation,
business, amusement, or resort.
SECTION 9. That the existing version of section 2925.01 of
the Revised Code that is scheduled to take effect January 1, 2004,
is hereby repealed.
SECTION 10. Sections 8 and 9 of this act take effect January
1, 2004.
SECTION 11. The Legislative Office of Education Oversight
shall conduct a study of the cost of educating a student in an
Internet- or computer-based community school established under
Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code. The Office shall issue a
written report on its findings to the General Assembly not later
than December 31, 2003.
SECTION 12. (A) This section applies to any entity that is
exempt from taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code and that satisfies the conditions specified in
divisions (C)(1)(f)(ii) and (iii) of section 3314.02 of the
Revised Code but does not satisfy the condition specified in
division (C)(1)(f)(i) of that section.
(B) Notwithstanding division (C)(1)(f)(i) of section 3314.02
of the Revised Code, an entity described in division (A) of this
section may succeed the board of trustees of a state university
located in the Pilot Project Area or that board's designee as the
sponsor of a community school established under Chapter 3314. of
the Revised Code, and may sponsor such school for the remainder of
the term of the contract between the board of trustees or its
designee and the governing authority of the community school and
may renew that contract as provided in division (E) of section
3314.03 of the Revised Code. Such entity also may enter into new
contracts to sponsor additional community schools as long as it
satisfies all the requirements of Chapter 3314. of the Revised
Code except for the requirement prescribed in division
(C)(1)(f)(i) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code.
SECTION 13. Section 3317.029 of the Revised Code is
presented
in
this act as a composite of the section as amended by
both Am.
Sub. H.B. 94 and Am. Sub. S.B. 1 of
the 124th General
Assembly.
The General Assembly, applying the
principle stated in
division
(B) of section 1.52 of the Revised
Code that amendments
are to be
harmonized if reasonably capable of
simultaneous
operation, finds
that the composite is the resulting
version of
the section in
effect prior to the effective date of
the section
as presented in
this act.
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