Happy Friday folks! It is hard to believe that we have made it to the last few days of the 2023 Legislative Session. Sunday, April 23, also referred to as “Sine Die,” is the last scheduled day of session. There is no question that these last days are long ones, and budget negotiators will work straight through the weekend finalizing the last pieces of the three budgets: operating, transportation and capital. Each budget will be brought to the floors of each house for a final vote.
Both houses saw a week full of floor action, as we entered what is known as the, “concurrence phase,” of the legislative process. This term refers to when a bill passes a floor vote in both chambers, but was changed by the Second House, the bill then returns to the original house for a vote to concur with amendments from the Second House. Oftentimes, versions of the bill are sent back and forth between the House and the Senate until the dispute can be negotiated through the conference committee process. A conference committee is formed to try to resolve the differences between versions of the legislation. We see this frequently when it comes to budget bills.
As you will see below, many of the education bills we have been tracking have made their way to the governor’s desk, and those remaining are not far behind. Once these bills are sent to Governor Inslee for consideration, he has up to 20 days after the session ends to act on the bills.
Important Legislative Links
Legislative Website: Get information on bills, legislators, hearings and more.
Bill Tracker: Track specific bills, read bill reports.
TVW: Watch live and archived legislative proceedings.
Note about legislative updates:
CSTP relays these legislative updates to provide information on bills, budgets and legislative processes. CSTP doesn’t have a legislative agenda, but does track legislative issues most relevant to teaching.
Bills Signed by Governor Inslee
SHB 1015: which revises minimum employment requirements for paraeducators.
ESB 5650: which concerns salary inflationary increases for K-12 employees.
Bills Delivered to the Governor for Signature
2SHB 1013: which would require OSPI and Washington ESDs to jointly establish a regional apprenticeship pilot program with one site each in Eastern and Western Washington.
SHB 1207: which aims to prevent and respond to harassment, intimidation, bullying, and discrimination in schools through updated policies and procedures.
2SHB 1316: which would lower dual enrollment program costs for eligible students from $65 to $42.50 per credit by creating a subsidy program, incentivizing reduction of per college credit fees charged to college in the high school students, and revising eligibility for the Running Start (RS) program tuition fee waiver.
HB 1622: which aims to support the needs of students experiencing homelessness by aligning program goals, establishing common reporting requirements, and establishing examples of permitted expenditures for the OSPI program.
SHB 1658: which would authorize high school students aged 16 and above to earn up to two elective credits through paid work experience if approval and alignment with the student’s High School and Beyond Plan are met.
SSB 5072: which would establish new requirements for identifying students who may be eligible for highly capable services, including conducting universal screenings once in or before second grade, and again before sixth grade.
SSB 5127: which would clarify school districts’ ability to redact personal information related to a student.
Other Bills Still in Play
E2SHB 1238: which would require K-5 elementary public schools, beginning with the 2024-25 school year, to offer universal free breakfasts and lunches if up to 30% of students at the school qualify for free or reduced lunch.
HB 1308: which establishes a graduation pathway option that enables students to meet pathway requirements by completing a performance-based learning experience.
ESHB 1436: which would increase the enrollment limit for special education funding over several years until the 2027-28 school year, when the limit is removed, and would increase special education excess cost multipliers for kindergarten through age 21 over four school years to 1.059 for students who spend at least 80 percent of the school day in a general education setting.
2SHB 1550: which would establish the transition to kindergarten program to provide no-charge assistance to eligible children in need of additional preparation to be successful kindergarten students in the following school year.
SHB 1701: which concerns basic education services to youth who are served through institutional education programs.
SSB 5048: which would require colleges to provide enrollment and registration in College in the High School (CHS) courses at no cost to students in grades 9-12 at public high schools, and would require the legislature to appropriate funds to fund CHS courses, at inflation-adjusted rates.
E2SSB 5174: which would modify the student transportation allocation formula and expand the definition of “to and from school” to include the transportation of students participating in career connected and work based learning opportunities.
ESB 5175: which would allow employment contracts between a school board and principal to be up to three years in length, as opposed to limited to a term of one year.
E2SSB 5243: which revises high school and beyond plan (HSBP) requirements, and would require OSPI to facilitate the transition and adoption of a common online platform for HSBPs.
ESSB 5257: which would ensure that public schools provide daily recess for all elementary students with a minimum of 45 minutes when the school day is longer than five hours and a minimum of 30 minutes when the school day is shorter, as well as prohibit schools from withholding recess as a punitive action.
E2SSB 5315: which would require OSPI to establish standards for approval, monitoring, and investigating school district contracts with nonpublic agencies (NPAs) operating special education programs for students with disabilities, and requires that restraint and isolation procedures and notification requirements apply to NPAS.
ESB 5355: which requires school districts to provide instruction on sex trafficking prevention and identification at least once between grades 7 and 12 beginning in the 2024-25 school year.
SSB 5617: which would require interdistrict cooperative agreements in a skill center to stipulate that any course equivalencies approved by OSPI or a host district must be honored by other participating school districts.
Odds and Ends
This article from The Atlantic, Special Ed Shouldn’t Be Separate, feels both timely and appropriate as the issue of special ed funding is one of the top education priorities this session.
“Washington has one of the highest numbers of homeless students in the country, yet receives among the lowest federal funds per student,” this week from The Seattle Times, Lawmakers and Advocates Call for More WA Student Homelessness Funding.
Until next week, have a good weekend!
Samantha Miller