H. B. 4114


(By Delegate Houston)
[Introduced January 21, 2000; referred to the
Committee on Education then Finance.]




A BILL to amend and reenact section three-a, article three, chapter eighteen-b of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, relating to requiring the establishment of child care services for enrolled students at community and technical colleges.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section three-a, article three, chapter eighteen-b of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended and reenacted, to read as follows:
ARTICLE 3. BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE STATE COLLEGE SYSTEM.
§18B-3-3a. Community and technical college education; establishment; state level governance; formation of districts; college level administration and governance; programs; district consortia; implementation process; and implementation team.

(a) General. -- The purpose of this section is to establish community and technical college education that is well articulated with the public schools and four-year colleges; that makes maximum use of shared facilities, faculty, staff, equipment and other resources; that encourages traditional and nontraditional students and adult learners to pursue a life-time of learning; that serves as an instrument of economic development; and that has the independence and flexibility to respond quickly to changing needs. The respective governing boards shall provide for community and technical college education at state institutions of higher education under their jurisdiction to have the administrative, programmatic and budgetary control necessary to allow maximum flexibility and responsiveness to district and community needs consistent with the goal of sharing facilities, faculty, staff, equipment and other resources within and among the districts, the other systems of public and higher education and other education and training programs.
(b) State level governance. -- The board of directors and the board of trustees shall jointly employ a vice chancellor for community and technical college education. The vice chancellor for community and technical college education shall report directly to and provide assistance to the board of directors and the board of trustees on matters related to community and technical college education and shall serve at their will and pleasure. The vice chancellor for community and technical college education shall advise, assist and consult regularly with the administrative heads, institutional boards of advisors, and district consortia committees of each state institution of higher education involved in community and technical college education.
In appointing members to the institutional boards of advisors within the state college system pursuant to section one, article six of this chapter, the board of directors shall consider the relative distribution of baccalaureate and community and technical college enrollments of the respective institutions and shall make up to three of such appointments from the membership of district consortia committee on the basis of such proportional enrollments. All appointments shall be reflective of the economic, industrial, educational, community and employment characteristics of the institution's region and be geographically dispersed to the extent practical.
(c) Formation of community and technical college districts. -- The eleven community and technical college districts shall be comprised of contiguous areas of the state which have similar economic, industrial, educational, community and employment characteristics to facilitate specialization in mission and programming. For the purposes of initial implementation and organization, the districts shall be comprised as follows:
(1) Ohio, Brooke, Hancock, Marshall, Tyler and Wetzel counties;
(2) Wood, Jackson, Pleasants, Ritchie, Roane, Tyler and Wirt counties;
(3) Kanawha, Putnam and Clay counties;
(4) Cabell, Mason, Putnam and Wayne counties;
(5) Fayette, Clay, Kanawha, Raleigh and Nicholas counties;
(6) Logan, Boone, Lincoln, McDowell, Mingo, Raleigh and Wyoming counties;
(7) Mercer, Greenbrier, McDowell, Monroe, Pocohontas, Raleigh and Summers counties;
(8) Gilmer, Barbour, Braxton, Calhoun, Clay, Lewis, Nicholas, Upshur and Webster counties;
(9) Marion, Doddridge, Harrison, Monongalia, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, Barbour and Tucker counties;
(10) Jefferson, Berkeley, Grant, Hardy and Morgan counties; and
(11) Mineral, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy and Pendleton counties.
It is the intent of the Legislature that counties which are listed in more than one district shall be served by the associated community and technical colleges as a cooperative service area, or shall be divided as the board of directors determines. The boundaries of the eleven districts may be modified from time to time by the board of directors upon request of the affected community and technical colleges to better serve the needs within the districts. Such modifications are not required to follow county boundaries.
Subject to any restrictions imposed by the board of directors, the district boundaries shall not be employed to restrict other state institutions of higher education from offering programs of strength to meet underserved needs, consistent with the objective of not duplicating efforts as determined by the governing boards: Provided, That nothing herein shall be construed to prevent state institutions of higher education from offering courses at off-campus centers or locations now operating or established in the future which are not duplicative. Distance learning technology, resource networking and other cooperative and collaborative efforts shall be used to the maximum extent prudent and practical to avoid unnecessary duplication of program development and delivery.
The main campus of the community and technical college shall be identified under the name of the community and technical college for the district and the district shall be known as the "community and technical college district". In addition, the name of all branches, centers and programs shall reflect the name of the district.
(d) Allocation of resources and budgets. -- All funds for community and technical college education shall be proposed by the governing boards for their respective institutions and appropriated by the Legislature in an institutional control account under the jurisdiction of the board of directors for those institutions governed by the board of directors for their respective institutions and a separate institutional control account under the jurisdiction of the board of trustees for those institutions governed by the board of trustees. The board of directors and the board of trustees shall establish by joint legislative rule a formula for the allocation of such funds to control accounts of individual university system and state college system community and technical colleges, which rule shall include uniform guidelines for the allocation and reporting of student enrollments, costs, reimbursements and revenues for community and technical colleges located on the campus of another state institution of higher education.
(e) College level administration and governance. -- The administrative head of a state college system community and technical college shall be the president, in the case of the freestanding community and technical colleges, and the provost of the community and technical college in the case of all other state college system community and technical colleges. Such provost shall be employed by the president of the state institution of higher education upon which the main campus of the community and technical college is located and the provost shall serve at the will and pleasure of the president. The administrative head shall be responsible for coordination and other administrative arrangements with the host institution and other duties assigned pursuant to this section. Nothing in this section shall prohibit a current employee in community and technical education from being employed as a provost. The administrative and business offices and functions of community and technical colleges, except freestanding, shall be consolidated with those of the host institution to the extent practical. To enhance program flexibility and mobility, to enhance program coordination and delivery in the public schools and to take advantage of the expertise and experience of persons in business and industry, community and technical colleges shall make extensive use of combined courses with four-year colleges and universities, employ by contract or other arrangements college and university faculty to teach community and technical college courses, employ qualified public school teachers as adjunct professors and employ qualified business, industry and labor persons as adjunct professors in technical areas.
(f) Community and technical college programs. -- The mission of each community and technical college shall include the following programs which may be offered on or off campus, at the work site, in the public schools and at other locations at times that are convenient for the intended population:
(1) Career and technical education certificate, associate of applied science and selected associate of science degree programs for students seeking immediate employment, individual entrepreneurship skills; occupational development, skill enhancement and career mobility;
(2) Transfer education associate of arts and associate of science degree programs for students whose educational goal is to transfer into a baccalaureate degree program;
(3) Developmental/remedial education courses, tutorials, skills development labs and other services for students who need to improve their skills in mathematics, English, reading, study skills, computers and other basic skill areas;
(4) Work force training and retraining contract education with business and industry to train or retrain employees;
(5) Continuing development assistance and education credit and noncredit courses for professional and self-development, certification and licensure and literacy training; and
(6) Community service workshops, lectures, seminars, clinics, concerts, theatrical performances and other noncredit activities to meet the cultural, civic and personal interests and needs of the community; and
(7) Provide, staff and maintain within budget limitations a child care center to serve the child care needs of students who are attending class.

All administrative, programmatic and budgetary control over community and technical education within the district shall be vested in the administrative head and the institutional board of advisors of state college system community and technical colleges, subject to rules adopted by the board of directors. The administrative head and institutional board of advisors shall be responsible for the regular review, revision, elimination and establishment of programs within the district to assure that the needs of the district for community and technical college programs are met. It is the intent of the Legislature that the program review and approval process for community and technical education be separate and distinct from baccalaureate education. The administrative head and institutional board of advisors shall seek assistance from and utilize a district consortia committee in fulfilling this responsibility.
(g) District consortia committee. -- The administrative head of each university system and state college system community and technical college shall form a district consortia committee which shall include representatives distributed geographically to the extent practical of the major community college branches, vocational-technical centers, comprehensive high schools, four-year colleges and universities, community service or cultural organizations, economic development organizations, business, industry, labor, elected public officials and employment and training programs and offices within the district. The consortia committee shall be chaired by the administrative head or his or her designee and shall advise and assist the administrative head with the following:
(1) Completing a comprehensive assessment of the district to determine what education and training programs are necessary to meet the short and long-term work force development needs of the district;
(2) Coordinating efforts with regional labor market information systems that identify the ongoing needs of business and industry, both current and projected, and provide information to assist in an informed program of planning and decision making;
(3) Planning and development of a unified effort to meet the documented work force development needs of the district through individual and cooperative programs, shared facilities, faculty, staff, equipment and other resources and the development and use of distance learning and other educational technologies;
(4) Increasing the integration of secondary and post- secondary curriculum and programs that are targeted to meet regional labor market needs, including the planning and implementation of a comprehensive school-to-work transition system that helps students focus on career objectives, builds upon current programs such as high schools that work, tech prep associate degree programs, registered apprenticeships and rural entrepreneurship through action learning and addresses the needs of at-risk students and school dropouts;
(5) Planning and implementation of integrated professional development activities for secondary and post-secondary faculty, staff and administrators and other consortia partners throughout the district;
(6) Ensuring that program graduates have attained the competencies required for successful employment through the involvement of business, industry and labor in establishing student credentialing;
(7) Performance assessment of student knowledge and skills which may be gained from multiple sources so that students gain credit toward program completion and advance more rapidly without repeating coursework in which they already possess competency;
(8) Establishing one-stop-shop career centers with integrated employment and training and labor market information systems that enable job seekers to assess their skills, identify and secure needed education training and secure employment and employers to locate available workers;
(9) Increasing the integration of adult literacy, adult basic education, federal job opportunities and basic skills, and community and technical college programs and services to expedite the transition of adults from welfare to gainful employment; and
(10) Establish a single point of contact for employers and potential employers to access education and training programs throughout the district.
(h) Implementation process. -- The implementation of community and technical college education as set forth in this article shall be accomplished over a three-year period. Major program elements shall be accomplished within the following time frames:
(1) One thousand nine hundred ninety-five--ninety-six:
(i) Form necessary governance structures and make necessary appointments;
(ii) Form consortia committees and complete a survey of the educational and training needs of the community college district;
(iii) Establish the information necessary to separately budget the community and technical college education for fiscal year one thousand nine hundred ninety-six--ninety-seven, including the rules required pursuant to subsection (d) of this section;
(iv) Establish an ongoing method of providing funding for appropriate staff from the public schools and the community and technical colleges for personnel and other costs related to shared facility projects, including recommendations for any necessary legislative enactments; and
(v) Make recommendations to the governor and Legislature as may be necessary.
(2) One thousand nine hundred ninety-six--ninety-seven:
(i) Begin separate budgeting; and
(ii) Begin full operations of the community and technical colleges as provided in this article.
(3) One thousand nine hundred ninety-seven--ninety-eight:
(i) Review and evaluation.
(i) Implementation team. -- There is hereby established an implementation team to monitor and oversee implementation of the community and technical college education in accordance with the provisions of this article. The implementation team shall report to the governor and the legislative oversight commission on education accountability no later than the first day of December, in the years one thousand nine hundred ninety-five, one thousand nine hundred ninety-six and one thousand nine hundred ninety-seven, on the status of such implementation and any further needs for legislative enactment. The implementation oversight team shall be composed of the secretary of education and the arts, one representative of public education, one representative of community and technical colleges, one representative of four-year colleges, one representative of the private sector, one representative of employment and training programs, one representative of vocational-technical-occupational education, four members of the Senate and four members of the House of Delegates, all appointed by the governor. The secretary of education and the arts shall be responsible for staffing the implementation oversight team utilizing existing personnel, equipment and offices of the affected agencies.


NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to make enrollment in programs more viable for persons with preschool children.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.