Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

MORE FROM day’s action at the Legislatur­e. Pages 7-9A, 1B.

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

The bill has the potential to affect the Little Rock and Dollarway school districts, both of which have been operating under state control without locally elected school boards for nearly five years.

Lawmakers have introduced a bill seeking to relax the requiremen­t that the state Board of Education must annex, consolidat­e or reconstitu­te a state-controlled school district that does not meet the criteria for release within five years.

Senate Bill 553, filed Tuesday, says the Arkansas Education Board “may” annex or consolidat­e a state-controlled district, rather than the mandatory “shall” that is currently in the law.

The bill has the potential to affect the Little Rock and Dollarway school districts, both of which have been operating under state control without locally elected school boards for nearly five years. The Pine Bluff and Earle school districts also are operating under state control.

The new bill goes on to list the conditions under which the state Education Board must return a state-controlled district to the operation of a locally elected school board.

One condition for release of a district would be if the number of schools classified as “Level 5 - in need of intensive support” has increased in the time that a school district has operated under the authority of the state board.

The bill also proposes that a state-controlled school district “shall be returned to local control if, after five years,” the district has demonstrat­ed substantia­l improvemen­t of the issues that caused the district to be labeled as needing intensive support.

A district would also be eligible for release from state authority if the Education Board concludes that:

■ The district has adopted a plan to correct the issues that caused the Level 5 classifica­tion.

■ All the schools within the labeled district are making demonstrab­le progress towards the removal of the label.

The bill was introduced in the Senate by Sens. Will Bond, Linda Chesterfie­ld and Joyce Elliott, all Democratic Party members from Little Rock.

House sponsors are Reps. Andrew Collins, Charles Blake and Tippi McCullough, also Democrats from Little Rock.

The Little Rock district’s seven-member school board was dismissed and its superinten­dent placed under the direction of the state’s education commission­er in January 2015 after six of its then 48 schools were labeled as academical­ly distressed for chronicall­y low scores on state-required math and literacy tests. Since then, the academic distress label has been removed from three of the six schools, and the state’s school accountabi­lity system has been overhauled and no longer tags individual schools as “distressed.”

The Little Rock district is labeled by the state as “Level 5 - in need of intensive support” under the new accountabi­lity system. Individual schools receive A to F letter grades from the state based on state test results, achievemen­t gains on those annual tests and on other factors such as student attendance and graduation rates. Little Rock has eight schools that have F grades based on the 2018 test. The 2019 tests will be given next month.

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