San Antonio Express-News

K-12 bills target safety, sex education, budget

- By Meghan Mangrum

Texas lawmakers have unveiled dozens of bills aimed at tackling school safety, teacher quality and expanding school choice.

A heightened focus on school security after the Uvalde massacre and its contentiou­s aftermath is already a focus of the upcoming session. So is a renewed push for new school choice initiative­s following parents’ demands for more involvemen­t in their child’s education in recent years.

Legislator­s could “pre-file” bills as of last week, foreshadow­ing some of their priorities. The deluge of hundreds of bills was a fraction of bills that will be filed in the Legislatur­e’s 88th session that starts Jan. 10.

With more than 900 bills and proposed constituti­onal amendments filed as of noon last Tuesday, dozens address a range of education issues.

School safety

Several bills address how school leaders can respond to students who have a history of violent behavior or mental health issues, including HB 34 filed by Rep. Steve Toth, R-the Woodlands. The bill would codify the requiremen­t for every primary and secondary school to establish an annual “classroom safety review committee” that could oversee school safety initiative­s and even refer students with a history of violence to law enforcemen­t or alternativ­e schools.

Other bills would shift funding to schools to expand mental health services and hire more school psychologi­sts and/or social workers, as well as funding the new requiremen­t for all schools to have silent panic buttons proposed by the Texas Education Agency earlier this month.

Following the 2018 Santa Fe school shooting, Gov. Greg Abbott drafted a 40-point school safety plan, and though some of those recommenda­tions made it into policy, many school leaders say they still don’t receive enough funding to ensure students’ safety and well-being on campus.

Uvalde response

In response to the May 24 massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, some parents and educators argue that schools can only do so much without lawmakers addressing gun laws.

Several lawmakers, including state Sen. Roland Gutierrez, Dsan Antonio, who represents Uvalde, filed bills that would raise the age of purchase of assault-style long guns to 21. An 18year-old boy allegedly used such a weapon to kill 19 students and

two teachers and injure 17 others.

Gutierrez also filed legislatio­n that would create a $300 million fund for victims of the shooting and their families.

Education vouchers

Multiple bills also aim to renew previously failed efforts to launch school vouchers in Texas. Sen. Mayes Middleton, R-wallisvill­e, filed SB 176 Monday, which would establish the “Texas Parental Empowermen­t Program,” or an education savings account program to be administer­ed by the state comptrolle­r.

Education savings accounts are one type of controvers­ial school choice program that allows parents to use public tax dollars to send their children to private schools instead of public schools.

At least one other bill already filed addresses taxcredit opportunit­ies for individual­s donating to private schools and lays out requiremen­ts for private organizati­ons who hope to serve students that are part of a voucher program.

Many have anticipate­d efforts to push voucher legislatio­n this session. More bills, potentiall­y from top Republican leadership, are expected as Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Abbott both raised the issue on the campaign trail in recent months.

Opponents — including most public school leaders — have already begun calling on lawmakers not to divert much-needed funding from public schools.

Ethnic, social studies and other curriculum debates

Democrats also reintroduc­ed a bill that would require public schools to offer ethnic studies — a contentiou­s topic amid ongoing culture wars.

Lawmakers cite a need for students to understand their own history and culture, and the proposal comes as state education officials pause a revamping of the state’s social studies standards.

HB 45, filed by Houston Democrat Christina Morales, would add ethnic studies, specifical­ly Mexican American and African American history, to required high school social studies curriculum.

The bill might face opposition from Republican lawmakers who have banned the teaching of critical race theory in recent years and fought to restrict what books are available in school libraries.

A handful of other bills pre-filled Monday would require high school social studies curriculum to provide students informatio­n on voting, students to complete a course on the U.S. and Texas constituti­ons, schools to offer fine arts classes and would address how conception and human life are taught in health class.

Testing students

Though some Democrats, most notably failed gubernator­ial candidate Beto O’rourke, have dominated debates about state assessment­s in recent months, Plano Republican Matt Shaheen filed a bill, HB 680, that would limit how test results are used to evaluate teachers and require students to take tests developed to measure growth.

O’rourke said he would have canceled the state’s most well-known standardiz­ed test, STAAR, if he was elected. The state education agency has already unveiled changes to the test for 2023.

El Paso Democratic Rep. Mary González introduced a bill that would establish a commission to “to develop and make recommenda­tions for improvemen­ts to the current public school assessment and accountabi­lity systems.”

Teacher pensions

Rising taxes, medical expenses and inflation are severely impacting retired teachers in Texas, who haven’t seen a cost-of-living increase since 2004.

Almost a dozen bills, filed by both Democrats and Republican­s, seek changes to the Teacher Retirement System of Texas, including a 10 percent costof-living increase proposed by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-laredo, and a proposal by Rep. John Bucy III, D-austin, would require the state to conduct a biennial study on the impact of inflation on retiree benefits and the need for additional cost-of-living adjustment­s.

Some education advocates are also anticipati­ng possible changes to the retirement system such as a loosening of rules around what benefits retirees can receive if they go back to work to temporaril­y fill classroom vacancies during the ongoing teacher shortage.

Calculatin­g funding

Rep. Gina Hinojosa, Daustin, is also back with a previous effort to change how schools are funded.

Schools are largely funded based on who shows up to class, rather than the total enrollment for a school. Education finance experts say using such an attendance-based funding model exacerbate­s inequities — and that continuing to do so as districts work to recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic could be especially harmful.

HB 31 would replace attendance with enrollment in state code, potentiall­y boosting school funding for districts that serve larger percentage­s of lowincome families or students with disabiliti­es.

The DMN Education Lab is a community-funded journalism initiative. The Dallas Morning News retains full editorial control of the Education Lab’s journalism.

 ?? Billy Calzada/staff photograph­er ?? State Sen. Roland Gutierrez comforts Leon Hernandez, 9, a student at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, where a gunman shot and killed 19 students and two teachers.
Billy Calzada/staff photograph­er State Sen. Roland Gutierrez comforts Leon Hernandez, 9, a student at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, where a gunman shot and killed 19 students and two teachers.
 ?? Sam Owens/staff photograph­er ?? State Rep. Roland Gutierrez, D-san Antonio, addresses the crowd in Uvalde. Lawmakers have introduced dozens of education bills for the upcoming session.
Sam Owens/staff photograph­er State Rep. Roland Gutierrez, D-san Antonio, addresses the crowd in Uvalde. Lawmakers have introduced dozens of education bills for the upcoming session.

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