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Introduced Version House Bill 2002 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted

FISCAL NOTEWEST virginia Legislature

2019 regular session

Introduced

House Bill 2002

By Higginbotham, Foster, Martin, C., Cadle, Fast, Wilson, Espinosa, Waxman, Kessinger and Butler

[Introduced January 11, 2019; Referred
to the Committee on Education then Finance.]

A BILL to amend the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended,  by adding thereto a new article, designated §18-31-1, §18-31-2, §18-31-3, §18-31-4, §18-31-5, §18-31-6, §18-31-7, §18-31-8, and §18-31-9, all relating to enacting an Educational Savings Account Program; providing a short title and definitions; providing basic elements of an educational savings account; application requirements; responsibilities of the Treasurer; establishing a Parent Review Committee; providing eligibility requirements for and rights of education service providers; including responsibilities of resident school districts; and addressing legal proceedings.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:


ARTICLE 31. EDUCATION SAVINGS ACCOUNT PROGRAM.

§18-31-1. Short title.

This article shall be known as the “Education Savings Account Act” or “ESA Act.”  The program created by the ESA Act shall be known as the “Education Savings Account Program” or “ESA Program.”

§18-31-2. Definitions.


The following words have the meanings ascribed to them unless the context clearly indicates a different meaning:

“Account” or “ESA” means an education saving account, awarded pursuant to this article, to which funds are allocated by the Treasurer to the parent or parents of an ESA student in order to pay qualifying education expenses to educate the student pursuant to the requirements and conditions of this article;

“Treasurer” means the West Virginia State Treasurer’s Office or an organization that the Treasurer has contracted with to carry out any or all portions of this article;

“Curriculum” means a complete course of study for a particular content area or grade level, including any supplemental materials required by the curriculum.

“Education service provider” means a person or organization that receives payments from education savings accounts to provide educational goods and services to ESA students.

“Eligible student” means an exceptional child, other than gifted, as described in §18-20-1 of this code;

“ESA student” means a student who receives an account pursuant to this article;

“Parent” means a biological parent, legal guardian, custodian, or other person with legal authority to act on behalf of an eligible student or ESA student; and

“Resident school district” means the county school district in which the student resides.

§18-31-3. Basic elements of the Education Savings Account Program.


(a) The amount of funds deposited in an account pursuant to this article shall be an amount equivalent to the percentage provided to the Mountaineer Challenge Academy in §18-2-6(g)(6) of this code of the dollar amount the resident school district would have received from the Public School Support Program to educate the ESA student had the student enrolled there. This calculation shall include funds from state sources, but may not include any federal or local funds.

(b) In exchange for the parent’s agreement pursuant to §18-31-4(c)(4) of this code, the Department of Education shall transfer from the moneys that would otherwise be allocated to a recipient’s prior school district, or if the child is currently eligible to attend kindergarten, the moneys that the department would otherwise be allocated to a recipient’s expected school district of attendance, to the Treasurer for deposit into a West Virginia ESA in an amount that is equivalent to the percentage provided to the Mountaineer Challenge Academy in §18-2-6(g)(6) of this code.

(c) The State Superintendent of Schools shall, by rule, determine how the fund transfer to the Treasurer shall be accomplished.

(d) Parents of an ESA student shall agree to use the funds deposited in their student’s ESA only for the following qualifying expenses to educate the ESA student:

(1) Tuition and/or fees at a private school;

(2) Tuition and/or fees for nonpublic online learning programs;

(3) Tutoring services provided by an individual or a tutoring facility;

(4) Services contracted for and provided by a public district, charter, or magnet school, including without limitation, individual classes and extracurricular activities and programs;

(5) Textbooks, curriculum, or other instructional materials, including without limitation, any supplemental materials or associated online instruction required by either a curriculum or an education service provider;

(6) Computer hardware or other technological devices that are primarily used to help meet an ESA student’s educational needs;

(7) Educational software and applications;

(8) School uniforms;

(9) Fees for nationally standardized assessments, advanced placement examinations, any examinations related to college or university admission, and tuition and/or fees for preparatory courses for the aforementioned exams;

(10) Fees for summer education programs and specialized after-school education programs, but not after-school childcare;

(11) Tuition, fees, instructional materials, and examination fees at a career or technical school or education provider;

(12) Educational services and therapies, including, but not limited to, occupational, behavioral, physical, speech-language, and audiology therapies;

(13) Tuition and fees at an institution of higher education;

(14) Fees for transportation paid to a fee-for-service transportation provider for the student to travel to and from an education service provider; or

(15) Any other educational expense approved by the Treasurer.

(e) The funds in an ESA may only be used for educational purposes in accordance with §18-31-3(d) of this code.

(f) ESA funds may not be refunded, rebated, or shared with a parent or ESA student in any manner. Any refund or rebate for goods or services purchased with ESA funds shall be credited directly to the student’s ESA.

(g) Parents are allowed to make payments for the costs of educational goods and services not covered by the funds in their student’s ESA. However, personal deposits into an ESA is not permitted.

(h) Funds deposited in an ESA do not constitute taxable income to the parent or the ESA student.

(i) An ESA shall remain in force, and any unused funds shall roll over from quarter-to-quarter and from year-to-year until the parent withdraws the ESA student from the ESA Program or until the ESA student graduates from college with a bachelor’s degree, unless the ESA is closed because of a substantial misuse of funds. However, if an ESA student has not enrolled in a postsecondary institution within four years after graduating from high school, or if an ESA student turns 26 years of age, whichever occurs first, the ESA shall be closed and any unused funds revert to the Treasurer and be allocated to fund other ESAs.

(j) Nothing in this article requires that an ESA student must be enrolled, full or part-time, in either a private school or nonpublic online school.

§18-31-4. Application for an education savings account.


(a) A parent may apply to the Treasurer to establish an ESA for an eligible student.

(b) The Treasurer shall accept and approve applications year-round and shall establish procedures for approving applications in an expeditious manner.

(c) The Treasurer shall create a standard form that parents can submit to establish their student’s eligibility for the ESA Program and shall ensure that the application is readily available and may be submitted through various sources, including the Internet.

(d) The Treasurer shall approve an application for an ESA if:

(1) The parent submits an application for an ESA in accordance with any application procedures established by the Treasurer;

(2) The student on whose behalf the parent is applying is an eligible student;

(3) Funds are available for the ESA; and

(4) The parent signs an agreement with the Treasurer, promising:

(A) To provide an education for the eligible student in at least the subjects of reading, language, mathematics, science, and social studies;

(B) Not to enroll the ESA student, full time, in a district school, an Innovation in Education School, the West Virginia Virtual School, or a West Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind;

(C) To use the funds in the ESA only for qualifying expenses to educate the eligible student as established by the ESA Program; and

(D) To comply with the rules and requirements of the ESA Program.

(E) To afford the ESA student with opportunities for educational enrichment such as organized athletics, art, music, or literature;

(e) The signed agreement between the parent and the Treasurer shall satisfy the compulsory school attendance requirements of §18-8-1 et seq. of this code.

(f) The Treasurer shall annually renew a student’s ESA if funds are available.

(g) Upon notice to the Treasurer, an ESA student may choose to stop receiving ESA funding and enroll full-time in a public school.

(h) Enrolling as a full-time student in a public school shall result in the immediate suspension of payment of additional funds into the student’s ESA; however, the ESA shall remain open and active for the parent to make qualifying expenditures to educate the student from funds remaining in the ESA. When or if no funds remain in the student’s ESA, the Treasurer may close the ESA.

(i) If an eligible student decides to return to the ESA Program, payments into the student’s existing ESA may resume if the ESA is still open and active or a new ESA may be established if the student’s ESA was closed.

(j) The Treasurer may adopt rules and policies to provide the least disruptive process for ESA students who desire to stop receiving ESA payments and enroll full-time in a public school.

§18-31-5. Responsibilities of the Treasurer.


In addition to the Treasurer’s duties, obligations and authority stated in other parts of this article, the Treasurer has the following duties, obligations, and authority:

(1) The Treasurer shall maintain an updated list of education service providers and shall ensure that the list is publicly available through various sources, including the Internet.

(2) The Treasurer shall provide parents with a written explanation of the allowable uses of ESA funds, the responsibilities of parents, the duties of the Treasurer and the role of any private financial management firms or other private organizations that the Treasurer may contract with to administer the ESA Program or any aspect of the ESA Program.

(3) The Treasurer shall ensure that parents of students with a disability receive notice that participation in the ESA Program is a parental placement under 20 U.S.C. § 1412 of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) along with an explanation of the rights that parentally placed students possess under (IDEA) and any applicable state laws and regulations.

(4) The Treasurer shall contract with private organizations to administer the ESA Program. This includes, but is not limited to, private financial management firms to manage ESAs.

(5) The Treasurer may deduct an amount from education savings accounts to cover the costs of administering the ESA Program, up to a maximum of five percent annually in the first two years of the ESA Program and up to a maximum of three percent annually thereafter.

(6) The Treasurer shall implement or contract with a private organization to implement a commercially viable, cost effective, and parent-friendly system for payment for services from ESAs to education service providers by electronic or online funds transfer.

(A) The Treasurer shall not adopt a system that relies exclusively on requiring parents to be reimbursed for out-of-pocket expenses, but rather shall provide maximum flexibility to parents by facilitating direct payments to education service providers as well as requests for preapproval of and reimbursements for qualifying expenses, including expenses pursuant to §18-31 3(b)(15) of this code.

(B) The Treasurer may contract with private institutions to develop the payment system.

(7) The Treasurer shall also seek to implement a commercially viable, cost-effective, and parent-friendly system for publicly rating, reviewing, and sharing information about education service providers, ideally as part of the same system that facilitates the electronic or online funds transfers so as to create a one-stop-shop for parents and ESA students.

(8) If an education service provider requires partial payment of tuition or fees prior to the start of the academic year to reserve space for an ESA student admitted to the education service provider, such partial payment may be paid by the Treasurer prior to the start of the school year in which the ESA is awarded, and deducted in an equitable manner from subsequent ESA deposits to ensure adequate funds remain available throughout the school year; but if an ESA student decides not to use the education service provider, the partial reservation payment must be returned to the Treasurer by such education service provider and credited to the student’s ESA.

(9) The Treasurer shall continue making deposits into a student’s ESA until:

(A) The Treasurer determines that the ESA student is no longer an Eligible student;

(B) The Treasurer determines that there was substantial misuse of the funds in the ESA;

(C) The parent or ESA student withdraws from the ESA Program;

(D) The ESA student enrolls full-time in a public school; or

(E) The ESA student graduates from high school.

(10) The Treasurer shall have the authority to conduct or contract for the auditing of individual ESAs, and shall, at a minimum, conduct random audits of ESAs on an annual basis.

(11) The Treasurer shall have the authority to make any parent or ESA student ineligible for the ESA Program in the event of intentional and substantial misuse of ESA funds.

(A) The Treasurer shall create procedures to ensure that a fair process exists to determine whether an intentional and substantial misuse of ESA funds has occurred.

(B) The Treasurer shall have the authority to refer suspected cases of intentional and substantial misuse of ESA funds to the Attorney General for investigation if evidence of fraudulent use of ESA funds is obtained.

(C) A parent or ESA student may appeal the Treasurer’s decision to make a parent or ESA student ineligible for the ESA Program.

(12) The Treasurer may bar an education service provider from accepting payments from ESAs if the Treasurer determines that the education service provider has:

(A) Intentionally and substantially misrepresented information or failed to refund any overpayments in a timely manner; or

(B) Routinely failed to provide students with promised educational goods or services.

(13) The Treasurer shall create procedures to ensure that a fair process exists to determine whether an education service provider may be barred from receiving payment from ESAs.

(A) If the Treasurer bars an education service provider from receiving payments from ESAs, it shall notify parents and ESA students of its decision as quickly as possible.

(B) Education service providers may appeal the Treasurer’s decision to bar them from receiving payments from ESAs.

(14) The Treasurer may accept gifts and grants from any source to cover administrative costs, to inform the public about the ESA Program, or to fund additional ESAs.

(15) The Treasurer may adopt rules and policies that are not inconsistent with this article and that are necessary for the administration of this article, including:

(A) Establishing or contracting for the establishment of an online anonymous fraud reporting service;

(B) Establishing an anonymous telephone hotline for fraud reporting;

(C) Policies that require a surety bond for education service providers receiving more than $100,000 in ESA funds.

(D) Procedures for refunding payments from education service providers back to ESAs.

(E) Procedures for entering into reciprocal agreements with other state ESA agencies or entities, whether public or private, to recognize and allow education service providers approved in other states to receive payments from ESAs under this article.

(16) Any rules or policies adopted by the Treasurer should avoid excessive bureaucracy and overly prescriptive mandates and instead focus on easing parental involvement and encouraging education service providers to provide parents and ESA students with a broad array of educational options.

§18-31-6. Parent Review Committee.


(a) There is created the Parent Review Committee to assist the Treasurer in determining whether questionable expenditures meet the requirements to be considered qualifying expenses to educate the ESA student pursuant to §18-31-3(d) of this code, and to provide recommendations to the Treasurer about how to implement, administer, and improve the ESA Program.

(b) (1) The Parent Review Committee:

(A) Consists of seven members who are parents of ESA students and represent no fewer than four counties in the state; and

(B) Shall be appointed by the State Treasurer and serve at the State Treasurer’s pleasure for one calendar year and may be reappointed; and

(2) The State Treasurer, or the director’s designee, serves as the nonvoting chair of the committee.

(c) The Treasurer may request the committee to meet, in person or virtually, to determine whether an expenditure of ESA funds is or was a qualifying expense to educate an ESA student pursuant to §18-31-3(d) of this code.  The committee may deny or approve questionable expenditures by a majority vote.

(d) The Treasurer may also request the committee to meet, in person or virtually, to review appeals of education service provider denials pursuant to §18-31-7 of this code, and to provide a recommendation to the Treasurer as to whether an education service provider should be allowed to receive, or continue receiving, payments from ESAs.

§18-31-7. Requirements for and rights of education service providers.


(a) To be eligible to accept payments from an ESA, an education service provider shall:

(1) Submit notice to the Treasurer that they wish to participate in the ESA Program;

(2) Provide parents with a receipt for all qualifying educational expenses;

(3) Agree not to refund, rebate, or share ESA funds with parents or ESA students in any manner, except that funds may be remitted or refunded to an ESA in accordance with procedures established by the Treasurer;

(4) Certify that it will not discriminate based on race, color, ethnicity, or national origin; and

(5) Agree to submit any employee who will have contact with ESA students to a criminal background check.

(b) This article does not limit the independence or autonomy of an education service provider or makes the actions of an education service provider the actions of the state government.

(c) Education service providers shall be given maximum freedom to provide for the educational needs of ESA students without governmental control.

(d) This article does not expand the regulatory authority of the state, its officers, or any school district to impose any additional regulation of education service providers beyond those necessary to enforce the requirements of the program.

§18-31-8. Responsibilities of resident school districts.


The resident school district shall provide an education service provider that has enrolled an ESA student with a complete copy of the student’s school records, while complying with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (20 USC Section 1232 g).

§18-31-9. Legal proceedings.


(a) In any legal proceeding challenging the application of this chapter to a participating entity, the state bears the burden of establishing that the challenged action, rule or requirement is necessary and does not impose any undue burden on education service providers.

(b) No liability arises on the part of the Treasurer or the state or of any county school district based on the award or use of an ESA awarded pursuant to this article.

(c) If any part of this article is challenged in a state court as violating either the state or federal constitutions, parents of eligible and/or ESA students are permitted to intervene in the lawsuit for the purposes of defending the article’s constitutionality.  However, for the purposes of judicial administration, a court may limit the number of parents permitted to intervene or require that all parents file a joint brief, so long as they are not required to join any brief filed on behalf of any named state defendant.

(d) If any provision of this article, or the application thereof to any person or circumstances, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the article which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this article are declared to be severable.

 

NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to create an Educational Savings Account Program for students with disabilities and to provide for its administration.

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

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