ALLOW CHILDREN OF SCHOOL EMPLOYEES TO ATTEND DISTRICTS WHERE PARENTS WORK
Senate Bill 599 as passed by the Senate
Sponsor: Sen. Raymond E. Basham
House Committee: Education
Senate Committee: Education
First Analysis (6-16-04)
BRIEF SUMMARY: The bill would amend the State School Aid Act to allow a school district
to count a pupil in membership without approval from the pupil's district of residence, if the pupil had a parent employed by the district counting the pupil.
FISCAL IMPACT: This bill would have a minimal, indeterminate state and local fiscal impact. At the state level, if a public school pupil transferred from one district to another, there would be a fiscal impact only if a difference existed in the districts’ foundation allowances. If so, the impact would be a state cost if a pupil transferred to a district with a higher foundation allowance, and would be a savings if a pupil transferred to a district with a lower allowance. The cost or savings would be an amount equal to the difference in foundation allowances, a difference which could not exceed $1,300 per pupil. There would be a state cost for each nonpublic or home schooled pupil who entered a public school due to this bill, the per-pupil amount of which would equal the foundation allowance of the public school district (average of $7,000 per pupil).
At the local level, school districts would receive additional revenue for each pupil who transfers into their district, and lose revenue for each pupil who transfers out. The revenue gained or lost locally would be the full amount of the district’s foundation allowance.
THE APPARENT PROBLEM:
Teachers and other school employees with school-aged children often prefer to
have their children attend school in the district where the parents work. Until
1996, when Michigan's Schools of Choice program began, doing so meant an
employee had to reside in the same district where he or she worked. Now, under
the Schools of Choice program, all parents may choose to send their children to
a district outside their home district, provided that the accepting district
participates in the program and operates in the same or a contiguous
intermediate school district (ISD). Therefore, a parent working for a district
participating in a School of Choice program but living outside of it may apply
to have his or her child attend school where the parent works.
A school district that does not participate in the Schools of Choice program
may accept students from other districts, but it must obtain the permission of
the home district before it may count the student "in membership"
(e.g., receive state aid for that student). A home district may refuse to
release a student in this case, and might be more likely to refuse if it is
experiencing declining enrollment. Some people believe that the children of
school employees should be allowed to attend school in the district where their
parents work, regardless of whether the parents' schools participate in the
Schools of Choice program, and legislation has been introduced to accomplish
this end.
THE CONTENT OF THE BILL:
The bill would amend the State School Aid Act to allow a district to count a pupil in membership without approval from the pupil's district of residence, if the pupil had a parent employed by the district counting the pupil. "Child" would include an adopted child or legal ward.
Currently, a district must have the approval of a pupil's district of residence
to count the pupil in membership, unless the pupil attends a public school
academy, attends classes less than half-time in the district, participates in a
school of choice program, has been expelled, is enrolled in Michigan Virtual
High School, or meets other conditions. The bill would add to these exemptions
a pupil with a parent who was employed by the district.
Also, the bill would exclude from the definition of "tuition pupil" a
pupil attending school in a district that employed his or her parent. A tuition
pupil is one who attends school in a district other than his or her district of
residence for whom tuition may be charged.
MCL 388.1606
HOUSE COMMITTEE ACTION:
The members of the House Education Committee reported the Senate-passed version of the bill without amendments. Information in this analysis is derived from the Senate Fiscal Agency’s analysis of that version of the bill dated 4-14-04.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
The Schools of Choice program is established in the State School Aid Act and, according to the Michigan Department of Education, was created to provide additional public education options. Under the program, parents may choose to have their children attend a school outside their home district if the receiving district participates in the program and has room for additional students.
The State School Aid Act creates two similar Schools of Choice programs, and
districts may choose to participate in one, both, or neither of them. In the
first, known as Section 105 after the section in the act that governs it, a
pupil may transfer from one school district to another within the same intermediate
school district (ISD). If a district chooses to participate, it must publish
the grades, schools, and special programs for which enrollment is available. (A
district may limit nonresident enrollment to a particular grade, school, or program.)
If a district has a limited number of positions available, it must, by the
second Friday in August, provide notice to the general pubic that nonresidents'
applications will be taken for a 15-day period. If more applications are
submitted than are positions available, enrollees are selected at random. If
more positions become available for the second semester, a district may accept
applications from and enroll nonresidents using similar notification and
enrollment procedures.
The second type of program, commonly referred to as a 105c program, was added
to the act in 1999. A district participating in a 105c program may accept
applications from non-resident students living in a district located in a
contiguous ISD. The notification and enrollment procedures are identical to
those for districts participating in the Section 105 program.
ARGUMENTS:
For:
It is advantageous for a child to attend school in the
district where his or her parent is employed for a number of reasons. First,
the parent is able to keep in closer touch with the child's teachers,
administrators, and peers. Many educators cite the importance of parental
involvement in a child's education, and a parent's regular contact with people
involved in his or her child's school life makes participation more likely.
Also, a parent employed by a district is knowledgeable about that district's
policies and special programs, and can help the child follow the rules as well
as take advantage of the school's successful offerings. Last, when both parent
and child are in the same school district, they are on the same vacation
schedule, eliminating the need for child care during breaks, and easing travel
plans. It makes sense to extend the Schools of Choice program a bit farther to
accommodate school employees who want to be in closer contact with their
children.
POSITIONS:
There are no positions at present.
Legislative Analyst: J. Hunault
Fiscal Analyst: Laurie Cummings
■ This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan House staff for use by House members in their deliberations, and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.