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Developed and maintained by the Division of Legislative Automated Systems.
2022 SESSION
22101111DBe it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That 22.1-7.1, 22.1-17.6, 22.1-20.1, 22.1-23.1, 22.1-47.2, 22.1-50, 22.1-57.3:1, 22.1-57.3:1.1, 22.1-57.3:1.2, 22.1-57.3:2.1, 22.1-57.3:3, 22.1-81, 22.1-98.2, 22.1-129, 22.1-175.4, 22.1-178, 22.1-199.1, 22.1-207.3, 22.1-209.2, 22.1-212.24, 22.1-212.25, 22.1-215.1, 22.1-253.13:3, 22.1-253.13:4, 22.1-254.1, 22.1-271.3, 22.1-274, 22.1-280.2, 22.1-280.2:2, 22.1-296.2, 22.1-296.3, 22.1-303, 22.1-321.1, 22.1-346.2, 42.1-36.1, 42.1-43, 42.1-60, 42.1-61, 42.1-63, 42.1-65, 42.1-70, and 42.1-77 of the Code of Virginia are amended and reenacted follows:
§ 22.1-7.1. Open school enrollment policy.
A. Any local school board may establish and implement policies to provide for the open enrollment to any school of any student residing within the school division upon the request of a parent or guardian. In developing such policies, a local school board may include the following conditions and limitations:
1. An application process whereby a parent or guardian indicates a school preference for purposes of his child attending a school in the child's school division but outside of the attendance area in which the child resides;
2. A requirement that the parent or guardian provide transportation for the student attending a school other than his assigned school;
3. A requirement that a student may be disqualified from attending a school other than his assigned school if he has been subject to a specified disciplinary action;
4. A prohibition on the recruitment of a student from one school to another by a school division employee;
5. A limitation on participation in certain athletic activities for a student who chooses to attend a school other than his assigned school;
6. A random, unbiased selection process in the event open enrollment requests exceed the capacity of a school;
7. A provision that a student shall be permitted to remain at the receiving school until the student has completed the highest grade level in the school; and
8. A preference to a student (i) who resides in a location that has been subject to a change in school attendance area during the previous two years, (ii) who has a sibling attending the receiving school, or (iii) whose parent or guardian is an employee of the receiving school.
B. A copy of the school division's policies for open enrollment, if any, shall be posted on the division's website and shall be available to the public upon request.
C. Nothing in this section shall interfere with a local school
board's authority to adopt a pupil placement assignment plan pursuant to §
22.1-79.
D. For the purposes of this section, "open enrollment" means a policy adopted and implemented by a local school board to allow any student to enroll in any school within the school division of attendance regardless of the location of the student's residence.
§ 22.1-17.6. Public elementary and secondary schools and local school divisions; information and forms.
A. The Board shall adopt policies to ensure that the
Department of Education does not require
public elementary or secondary schools or local school divisions to (i) provide
information that is already available to or housed within the Department of Education; (ii) provide the
same written information more than once during a school year, absent a change
in the underlying information; (iii) complete forms for students with
disabilities unless such forms are necessary to ensure compliance with the
federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. § 1431 et seq.);
or (iv) provide information that is not necessary to comply with state or
federal law unless such information is relevant to student outcomes or the
efficient operation of the public schools, provided that the Department of Education may require such
schools and local school divisions to provide any such information or complete
any such forms if the Department of Education
demonstrates a compelling need or demonstrates that it does not have a more
expeditious method for obtaining the information or completing the forms.
B. The Department of Education
shall study the transition to electronic submission of all information and
forms to the Department of Education by public elementary and secondary schools
and local school divisions and submit a report of its findings to the Chairmen
of the House Committee on Education and the Senate Committee on Education and
Health no later than November 1, 2016.
C. The
Department of Education shall annually
evaluate and determine the continued need for the information that it collects
from public elementary and secondary schools and local school divisions. In
making such evaluation and determination, the Department of
Education shall consider whether the information that it
collects is required by state or federal law.
D. C. The Board shall report to
the Chairmen of the House Committee on Education and the Senate Committee on
Education and Health by November 15 of each year on (i) information that public
elementary and secondary schools and local school divisions are required to
provide to the Department of Education
pursuant to state law, (ii) the results of the annual evaluation and
determination made by the Department of Education
pursuant to subsection C B, (iii) any reports required
of public elementary or secondary schools or local school divisions that the
Department of Education has consolidated,
(iv) any information that the Department of Education
no longer collects from public elementary or secondary schools or local school
divisions, and (v) any forms that the Department of
Education no longer requires public elementary or secondary
schools or local school divisions to complete.
§ 22.1-20.1. Powers and duties of the Board related to public broadcasting stations; disbursement of funds.
A. As used in this section, unless the context requires a different meaning:
"Public broadcasting station" means any noncommercial, educational television or radio station that (i) is licensed and regulated by the Federal Communications Commission as a noncommercial, educational broadcasting station; (ii) is operated by a public agency or a nonprofit private foundation, corporation, or association; (iii) has offices and studios located in Virginia; and (iv) on or before January 1, 1997, was qualified to receive or was the recipient of a Virginia community service grant or other instructional television service funds, or, after January 1, 1997, until July 1, 2012, was qualified by the Virginia Public Broadcasting Board to receive state funds under standards and criteria established by the Virginia Public Broadcasting Board pursuant to law, or, after July 1, 2012, was qualified by the Board of Education in accordance with this section. Public broadcasting station shall not include any institution of higher education that produces or transmits distance education and other credit and noncredit television programs, unless such institution requests qualification as a public broadcasting station and the Board of Education approves its request.
B. The Board shall have the power and duty to:
1. Receive, allocate, and dispense funds appropriated by the General Assembly and funds received by the Board from other sources, subject to the approval of the Director of the Department of Planning and Budget;
2. Develop reasonable and fair formulas for allocating and distributing state funds and other funds of the Board to Virginia's public broadcasting stations consistent with the intent of such appropriations;
3. Apply for, accept, and receive grants of federal funds and funds from other public and private sources;
4. Adopt, administer, and apply standards and criteria by
which the Board may permit television and radio stations to qualify as public
broadcasting stations if those stations did not qualify for or receive Virginia
community service grants or other instructional television service funds as of
January 1, 1997, but otherwise qualify as such under the definition of a public
broadcasting station in § 2.2-1122.
To avoid unnecessary duplication of public broadcasting services, the Board
shall consider: (i) the adequacy of existing programming, coverage, and other
public broadcasting services in the geographic area to be served and the extent
to which those services would be duplicated by an additional public
broadcasting station and (ii) the sufficiency of funds administered by the
Board to support existing or proposed public broadcasting stations;
5. Coordinate such strategic planning by the public broadcasting stations as the Board deems appropriate and identify and communicate to the Governor and the General Assembly the funding and other requirements of Virginia's public broadcasting stations; and
6. Enter into contracts with public broadcasting stations, state agencies and institutions, public schools, and private entities for goods and services.
C. The Director of the Department of Planning and Budget shall oversee and approve the disbursement of all funds appropriated to the Board for the purposes enumerated in this section. Upon approval, the funds of the Board shall be disbursed for the following general purposes:
1. Annual operating-grant-funding to public broadcasting stations for developing, acquiring, producing, and distributing programs and related services that support local needs of preschool and adult education; disseminating information to the citizenry regarding the government and its affairs; promoting tourism and enhancing the Commonwealth's economic development; and supporting other programs that inform, educate, and entertain the citizenry with noncommercial programming.
2. Annual contract-funding to public broadcasting stations to regionally manage and provide programming and related services that directly support the instructional activities of local schools and home educators.
3. Matching-capital-funding to public broadcasting stations for construction and equipment modernization to keep Virginia stations consistent with industry standards.
4. Funding for specific programs and projects to be provided by a public broadcasting station that may not be included in another funding category.
§ 22.1-23.1. Model exit questionnaire for teachers.
The Department of Education (the
Department) shall develop and oversee a pilot program to
administer across five geographically and demographically diverse school
divisions the model exit questionnaire for teachers developed by the
Superintendent of Public Instruction (the Superintendent)
pursuant to § 22.1-23, analyze the results of each such questionnaire, and
include such results and analysis in the Superintendent's annual report beginning in 2018. The
Department shall (i) administer such questionnaire to each teacher who ceases
to be employed by the relevant school board for any reason and (ii) collect,
maintain, and report on the results of each such questionnaire in a manner that
ensures the confidentiality of each teacher's name and other personally
identifying information.
§ 22.1-47.2. Petitions for a referendum on direct election of school board members.
Petitions circulated pursuant to § 22.1-57.2 or § 22.1-57.4 may be circulated
for a period not to exceed one calendar year. If the period from the date of
the earliest signature to the latest signature exceeds one calendar year, all
signatures shall be invalid.
At the time the petitions are filed, the petitions shall contain the required number of signatures of voters who are currently registered to vote in the county.
Persons signing petitions for a referendum to be held at the November 1994
general election and on subsequent November
general election dates shall date their signatures on the
petitions.
Any petition circulated
pursuant to § 22.1-57.2 or this article which calls for a November 1993 referendum
(i) shall not be subject to the requirements of this section that the
signatures be dated and that the petition be circulated no longer than one
calendar year and (ii) may be circulated for signatures in both 1992 and 1993.
§ 22.1-50. Appointment and term generally; vacancies.
The school board of a school division composed of the city or
town to which the provisions of this article are applicable shall be appointed
by the governing body of such city or town and shall consist of three members
for each district in such city or town. However, the school board of a school
division composed of any city or town having only one district shall consist of
five members. Members shall be appointed for three-year terms except that
initial appointments shall be for such terms that the term of one member from
each district expires each year. However, the additional two members of the
school board of a school division composed of any city or town having only one
district, who are appointed after July 1, 1992,
shall be appointed for such terms that the terms of one or two members expire
each year. The governing body may, by duly adopted ordinance, limit the number
of consecutive terms served by school board members. Terms shall commence on
July 1. A vacancy occurring on the school board at any time other than by
expiration of term shall be filled by the governing body for the unexpired
term. Within thirty 30 days preceding July 1 of
each year, the governing body shall appoint a successor to each member whose
term expires on June 30 of that year, provided the office of that member has
not been abolished in redistricting the city or town.
§ 22.1-57.3:1. Staggered terms of elected school boards in certain counties.
A. The provisions of this subsection apply only to Loudoun,
Pulaski and Rockbridge Counties.
Following a referendum in
which the qualified voters approve a change to an elected school board, the
school board boards of Bath, Pulaski, and
Rockbridge Counties shall be elected as provided in §
22.1-57.3 except that the terms of school board
members shall be staggered as provided in this section.
The initial election of the
school board shall be held at the first November general election in an
odd-numbered year following the referendum, and the entire school board shall
be elected at the initial election.
At the initial election, (i)
if the school board has an even number of members, half of the successful
candidates shall be elected for four-year terms and half of the successful
candidates shall be elected for two-year terms and (ii) if the school board has
an odd number of members, the smallest number of successful candidates which
creates a majority of the board shall be elected for four-year terms and the
remaining successful candidates shall be elected for two-year terms. Assignment
of the individual terms of members shall be determined by lot by the electoral
board of the county at its meeting to ascertain the results of the election and
immediately upon certification of the results of the election.
Thereafter, all
members shall be elected for four-year terms and the school board elections
shall be conducted biennially for staggered
terms.
B. The provisions
of this subsection apply only to Bath County.
Pursuant to the referendum
in which the qualified voters approved a change to an elected school board, the
school board shall be elected as provided in §
22.1-57.3 except that the terms of school board
members shall be staggered as provided in this subsection.
At the November 2003 general
election, three members of the school board shall be elected for four-year
terms and two members of the school board shall be elected for two-year terms.
Assignment of the individual
terms of members shall be determined by lot by the electoral board of the County
at its meeting to ascertain the results of the election and immediately upon
certification of the results of the election.
Thereafter, all
members shall be elected for four-year terms and the school board elections
shall be conducted alternate biennially for between the
election of three members and the election of the
remaining two members to ensure staggered
terms.
§ 22.1-57.3:1.1. Loudoun County school board; staggered terms.
Notwithstanding §
22.1-57.3:1 and the second enactment of Chapter 744 of the Acts of Assembly of
1994, the The school
board of Loudoun County shall be elected as provided in § 22.1-57.3, except
that upon a majority vote of its members the terms of school board members may
be staggered as provided in this section. At the November election immediately
preceding the end of the board's term, and upon the board's prior vote for
staggered terms, the members from four of the nine districts, inclusive of the
at-large district, to be determined by lot by the electoral board of the county
prior to its meeting immediately preceding the deadline for candidate filing,
shall be elected for four-year terms, and the remaining districts' successful
candidates shall be elected for two-year terms.
Thereafter, all members shall be elected for four-year terms, and the school board elections shall be conducted biennially for staggered terms.
§ 22.1-57.3:1.2. Pittsylvania County school board; staggered terms.
The school board of Pittsylvania County shall be elected as
provided in § 22.1-57.3, except that upon a majority vote of its
members the terms of school board members may be staggered as provided in this
section. At the November 2011 general election, the members from four
districts, to be determined by lot by the electoral board of the county as soon
as practicable before the election, shall be elected for four-year terms and
the remaining districts' successful candidates shall be elected for two-year
terms.
Thereafter, all
members shall be elected for four-year terms and the school board elections
shall be conducted alternate biennially for between
the election of the members from four districts and the
election of the members from the remaining three districts to ensure staggered terms.
§ 22.1-57.3:2.1. Appointment and terms of school board members for City of Williamsburg.
Notwithstanding any provisions of this article to the
contrary, the terms of school board members representing the City of
Williamsburg appointed in 1995 and 1996 shall expire on
December 31 in 1998 and 1999, respectively, and subsequent appointments for all
Williamsburg school board members shall be for terms of
four years, with terms commencing on January 1.
§ 22.1-57.3:3. Election of school board and chairman in certain counties.
A. The provisions of this section shall be applicable in any
county (i) which that
has the county executive form of government and which that is contiguous to a county
having the urban county executive form of government and (ii) in which the
chairman of the board of supervisors is elected at large.
B. Following a referendum held in
1994 or thereafter in which the qualified voters of the
county approve a change to an elected school board, the school board shall be
elected as provided in § 22.1-57.3 except as otherwise provided in this
section. One member of the school board shall be elected at large. All other
members shall be elected from the same districts from which the members of the
board of supervisors other than the chairman are elected. The member of the
school board who is elected at large at the initial or any subsequent election
shall be the chairman of the school board during his term of office
notwithstanding the provisions of § 22.1-76.
§ 22.1-81. Annual report.
Unless for good cause shown an extension of time not to exceed
fifteen days is granted by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, each
school board, with the assistance of the division superintendent, shall, on or before September 15 of each year,
make a report covering the work of the schools for the year ending the
preceding June 30 to the Board of Education according
to a timeline and on forms supplied by the Superintendent
of Public Instruction.
§ 22.1-98.2. Certain agreements; adjustment of state share for basic aid.
A. Any school board of a school division in which fewer than
1,100 students were included in average daily membership for the preceding
school year, in a locality that has a local composite index of .6000 or
greater, and has 65 percent or more of its local taxes coming from real estate
taxes, as calculated by the Auditor of Public Accounts and reported annually to
the Department of Education, upon entering
into certain cost-savings agreements with a contiguous school division for the
consolidation or sharing of educational, administrative, or support services,
shall receive the state share for basic aid computed on the basis of the
composite index of local ability-to-pay of the contiguous school division,
calculated annually.
The Board of Education
shall develop eligibility criteria for such cost-savings and service-sharing
agreements and for the adjustment of the state share for basic aid, consistent
with the appropriation act.
The Governor shall approve the adjustment to the state share
prior to the disbursement of funds. The Department of
Education shall annually report to the Chairmen of the
House Committee on Appropriations and Senate Committee on Finance and
Appropriations the cost-savings agreements made and the adjusted state shares
so approved.
B. The local school board receiving the adjusted state share
shall not use the additional funds received to supplant local funds
appropriated for education. The adjusted state share shall be used solely for
educational purposes and shall not be used to reduce local operating
expenditures for public education from the prior fiscal year. However, no
school division shall be required to maintain a per pupil expenditure for
operations that exceeds the per pupil expenditure in the prior fiscal year. The
superintendent of the school division shall inform the Superintendent of Public Instruction of the
public education purpose for which these local funds shall be used.
C. Nothing in this section shall prohibit the Commonwealth from terminating or modifying any program or function under which distribution to a local school board has been made, and if so terminated or modified all obligations hereunder shall cease or be reduced in proportion with such modifications, as the case may be.
D. Except as provided in subsection C, such contractual agreements shall remain in effect until terminated by the relevant school divisions. If any such contractual agreements between the relevant school divisions terminate, the Commonwealth's obligation under this section shall cease.
E. This agreement and adjusted state payment shall be in lieu of any existing funds a locality receives from a Small School Division Assistance grant.
F. Any standard of quality
set forth in this act that is not required as of June 30, 2004, and for which
additional state funding is required, shall not take effect unless the state's
share of funding that standard is included in the general appropriation act for
the period July 1, 2004, through June 30, 2006, passed during the 2004 Session
of the General Assembly and signed into law by the Governor.
§ 22.1-129. Surplus property; sale, exchange or lease of real and personal property.
A. Whenever a school board determines that it has no use for some of its real property, the school board may sell such property and may retain all or a portion of the proceeds of such sale upon approval of the local governing body and after the school board has held a public hearing on such sale and retention of proceeds, or may convey the title to such real property to the county or city or town comprising the school division or, if the school division is composed of more than one county or city, to the county or city in which the property is located. To convey the title, the school board shall adopt a resolution that such real property is surplus and shall record such resolution along with the deed to the property with the clerk of the circuit court for the county or city where such property is located. Upon the recording of the resolution and the deed, the title shall vest in the appropriate county, city or town.
B. A school board shall have the power to exchange real and personal property, to lease real and personal property either as lessor or lessee, to grant easements on real property, to convey real property in trust to secure loans, to convey real property to adjust the boundaries of the property and to sell personal property in such manner and upon such terms as it deems proper. As lessee of real property, a school board shall have the power to expend funds for capital repairs and improvements on such property, if the lease is for a term equal to or longer than the useful life of such repairs or improvements.
C. Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections A and B, a school board shall have the power to sell career and technical education projects and associated land pursuant to § 22.1-234.
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections A and B, a
school board of the City of Virginia Beach shall have the power to sell
property to the Virginia Department of Transportation or the Commissioner of
Highways when the Commissioner has determined that (i) such conveyance is
necessary and (ii) when eminent domain has been authorized for the
construction, reconstruction, alteration, maintenance, and repair of the public
highways of the Commonwealth, and for all other purposes incidental thereto,
including, but not limited to, the
relocation of public utilities as may be required.
D. School boards may donate obsolete educational technology
hardware and software that is being replaced pursuant to
subdivision subsection
B 4 of § 22.1-199.1. Any such donations
shall be offered to other school divisions, to students, as provided in Board of Education guidelines, and
to preschool programs in the Commonwealth. In addition, elected school boards
may donate such obsolete educational technology hardware and software and other
obsolete personal property to a Virginia nonprofit organization which is exempt
from taxation under § 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
§ 22.1-175.4. Application for grants.
A. All funds appropriated
for financial assistance for the purposes of this chapter during fiscal years
1998-1999 and 1999-2000 pursuant to Item 554 of the 1998-2000 Appropriation Act
shall be apportioned and distributed among the school divisions of the
Commonwealth as follows: (i) there shall be apportioned and distributed equally
to every school division grants in the sum of $200,000 each and (ii) the
balance of all available funds shall be apportioned and distributed to each
school division on a pro rata basis according to the school division's average
daily membership adjusted by the locality's composite index of ability to pay
as set forth in the general appropriation act.
Local governing bodies may
establish a separate escrow fund for the deposit of such funds as provided in §
22.1-175.5.
B. All
funds appropriated for financial assistance for the purposes of this chapter for subsequent fiscal years
shall be apportioned and distributed among the school divisions of the
Commonwealth in accordance with eligibility and needs criteria to be established by the 2000
Session of the General Assembly. In developing such
eligibility and needs criteria, the 2000 Session of the General Assembly shall
consider the recommendations of the Commission on State Funding of Public
School Construction.
§ 22.1-178. Requirements for persons employed to drive school buses.
A. No school board shall hire, employ, or enter into any agreement with any person for the purposes of operating a school bus transporting pupils unless the person proposed to so operate such school bus shall:
1. Have a physical examination of a scope prescribed by the
Board of Education with the advice
of the Medical Society of Virginia and furnish a form prescribed by the Board of Education showing the
results of such examination.
2. Furnish a statement or copy of records from the Department of Motor Vehicles showing that the records of such Department do not disclose that the person, within the preceding five years, has been convicted upon a charge of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, convicted of a felony or assigned to any alcohol safety action program or driver alcohol rehabilitation program pursuant to § 18.2-271.1 or, within the preceding 12 months, has been convicted of two or more moving traffic violations or required to attend a driver improvement clinic by the Commissioner of the Department of Motor Vehicles pursuant to § 46.2-498.
3. Furnish a statement signed by two reputable persons who reside in the school division or in the applicant's community that the person is of good moral character.
4. Exhibit a license showing the person has successfully undertaken the examination prescribed by § 46.2-339.
5. Have reached the age of 18 on by the first day of the school
year.
B. Any school board may require proof of current certification or training in emergency first aid, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and the use of an automated external defibrillator as a condition to employment to operate a school bus transporting pupils.
C. School boards may require persons accepting employment after July 1, 1994, as a
driver of a school bus transporting pupils to agree, as a condition of
employment, to submit to alcohol and controlled substance testing. Any such
tests shall be conducted in compliance with Board of
Education regulations.
D. The documents required pursuant to subdivisions A 1 and A 2 shall be furnished annually prior to the anniversary
date of the employment agreement as a condition to continuing employment to
operate a school bus.
E. The documents required pursuant to this section shall be filed with, and made a part of, the records of the school board employing such person as a school bus operator.
F. The State
Department of Education shall furnish to
the several division superintendents the necessary forms to be used by
applicants in furnishing the information required by this section. Insofar as
practicable, such forms shall be designed to limit paperwork, avoid the
possibility of mistake, and furnish all parties involved with a complete and
accurate record of the information required.
G. The physical examination required by subsection A may be performed and the report of the results signed by a licensed nurse practitioner or physician assistant.
§ 22.1-199.1. Programs designed to promote educational opportunities.
A. The General Assembly finds that Virginia educational research supports the conclusion that poor children are more at risk of educational failure than children from more affluent homes and that reduced pupil/teacher ratios and class sizes result in improved academic performance among young children; to this end, the General Assembly establishes a long-term goal of reducing pupil/teacher ratios and class sizes for grades K through three in those schools in the Commonwealth with high or moderate concentrations of at-risk students.
With such funds as are provided in the appropriation act for this purpose, there is hereby established the statewide voluntary pupil/teacher ratio and class size reduction program for the purpose of reaching the long-term goal of statewide voluntary pupil/teacher ratio and class size reductions for grades K through three in schools with high or moderate concentrations of at-risk students, consistent with the provisions provided in the appropriation act.
In order to facilitate these primary grade ratio and class
size reductions, the Department of Education
shall calculate the state funding of these voluntary ratio and class size
reductions based on the incremental cost of providing the lower class sizes
according to the greater of the division average per-pupil cost of all
divisions or the actual division per-pupil cost. Localities shall provide
matching funds for these voluntary ratio and class size reductions based on the
composite index of local ability to pay. School divisions shall notify the
Department of Education of their
intention to implement the reduced ratios and class sizes in one or more of
their qualifying schools by August 1 of each year. By March 31 of each year,
school divisions shall forward data substantiating that each participating
school has a complying pupil/teacher ratio.
In developing each proposed biennium budget for public
education, the Board of Education
shall include funding for these ratios and class sizes. These ratios and class
sizes shall be included in the annual budget for public education.
B. The General Assembly finds that educational technology is
one of the most important components, along with highly skilled teachers, in
ensuring the delivery of quality public school education throughout the Commonwealth.
Therefore, the Board of Education
shall strive to incorporate technological studies within the teaching of all
disciplines. Further, the General Assembly notes that educational technology
can only be successful if teachers and administrators are provided adequate
training and assistance. To this end, the following program is established.
With such funds as are appropriated for this purpose, the
Board of Education shall award to
the several school divisions grants for expanded access to educational
technology. Funding for educational technology training for instructional
personnel shall be provided as set forth in the appropriation act.
Funds for improving the quality and capacity of educational
technology shall also be provided as set forth in the appropriation act,
including, but not limited to, (i) funds
for providing a technology resource assistant to serve every elementary school
in this Commonwealth beginning on July 1, 1998,
and (ii) funds to maintain the currency of career and technical education
programs. Any local school board accepting funds to hire technology resource
assistants or maintain currency of career and technical education programs
shall commit to providing the required matching funds, based on the composite
index of local ability to pay.
Each qualifying school board shall establish an individualized
technology plan, which shall be approved by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, for
integrating technology into the classroom and into schoolwide instructional
programs, including career and technical education programs. The grants shall be prioritized as follows:
1. In the 1994 biennium, the
first priority for these funds shall be to automate the library media centers
and provide network capabilities in Virginia's elementary, middle and high
schools, or combination thereof, in order to ensure access to the statewide
library and other information networks. If any elementary, middle or high
school has already met this priority, the 1994 biennium grant shall be used to
provide other educational technologies identified in the relevant division's
approved technology plan, such as multimedia and telecomputing packages,
integrated learning systems, laptop computer loan programs, career and
technical education laboratories or other electronic techniques designed to
enhance public education and to facilitate teacher training in and
implementation of effective instructional technology. The Board shall also
distribute, as provided in the appropriation act, funds to support the purchase
of electronic reference materials for use in the statewide automated reference
system.
2. In the 1996 biennium and
thereafter, the first priority
for funding shall be consistent with those components of the Board of Education's Board's revised six-year
technology plan which that focus on (i) retrofitting
and upgrading existing school buildings to efficiently use educational
technology; (ii) providing (a) one network-ready multimedia microcomputer for
each classroom, (b) a five-to-one ratio of pupils to network-ready
microcomputers, (c) graphing calculators and relevant scientific probes/sensors
as required by the Standards of Learning, and (d) training and professional
development on available technologies and software to all levels and positions,
including professional development for personnel delivering career and
technical education at all levels and positions; and (iii) assisting school
divisions in developing integrated voice-, video-, and data-connectivity to
local, national, and international resources.
This funding may be used to implement a local school
division's long-range technology plan, at the discretion of the relevant school
board, if the local plan meets or exceeds the goals and standards of the
Board's revised six-year technology plan and has been approved by the
Superintendent of Public Instruction.
3. The Departments Department of Education, Information Technology, and the Department
of General Services, and
the Virginia Information Technologies Agency shall
coordinate master contracts for the purchase by local school boards of the
aforementioned educational technologies and reference materials.
4. Beginning
on July 1, 1998, a A
technology replacement program shall be, with such funds as may be appropriated
for this purpose, implemented to replace obsolete educational hardware and
software. As provided in subsection D of § 22.1-129, school boards may donate
obsolete educational technology hardware and software which that are being replaced. Any
such donations shall be offered to other school divisions and to preschool
programs in the Commonwealth, or
to public school students as provided in guidelines to be promulgated by the
Board of Education. Such guidelines
shall include criteria for determining student eligibility and need;,
a reporting system for the compilation of information concerning the number and
socioeconomic characteristics of recipient students;, and notification of parents
of the availability of such donations of obsolete educational hardware and
software.
5. In fiscal year 2000, the
Board of Education shall, with such funds as are appropriated for this purpose,
contract for the development or purchase of interactive educational software
and other instructional materials designed as tutorials to improve achievement
on the Standards of Learning assessments. Such interactive educational software
and other instructional materials may be used in media centers, computer
laboratories, libraries, after-school or before-school programs or remedial
programs by teachers and other instructional personnel or provided to parents
and students to be used in the home. This interactive educational software and
other instructional materials shall only be used as supplemental tools for
instruction, remediation, and acceleration of the learning required by the K
through 12 Standards of Learning objectives.
Consistent with school board
policies designed to improve school-community communications and guidelines for
providing instructional assistance in the home, each school division shall
strive to establish a voice mail communication system after regular school
hours for parents, families, and teachers by the year 2000.
C. The General Assembly finds that local autonomy in making
decisions on local educational needs and priorities results in effective grass-roots grassroots efforts to improve
education in the Commonwealth's public schools only when coupled with
sufficient state funding; to this end, the following block grant program is
hereby established. With such funds as are provided in the appropriation act,
the Department of Education shall distribute
block grants to localities to enable compliance with the Commonwealth's
requirements for school divisions in effect on January 1, 1995. Therefore, for
the purpose of such compliance, the block grant herein established shall
consist of a sum equal to the amount appropriated in the appropriation act for
the covered programs, including the at-risk add-on program; dropout prevention,
specifically Project YES; Project Discovery; English as a second language
programs, including programs for overage, nonschooled students; Advancement Via
Individual Determination (AVID); the Homework Assistance Program; programs
initiated under the Virginia Guaranteed Assistance Program, except that such
funds shall not be used to pay any expenses of participating students at
institutions of higher education; Reading Recovery; and school/community health
centers. Each school board may use any funds received through the block grant
to implement the covered programs and other programs designed to save the
Commonwealth's children from educational failure.
D. In order to reduce pupil/teacher ratios and class sizes in elementary schools, from such funds as may be appropriated for this purpose, each school board may employ additional classroom teachers, remedial teachers, and reading specialists for each of its elementary schools over the requirements of the Standards of Quality. State and local funding for such additional classroom teachers, remedial teachers, and reading specialists shall be apportioned as provided in the appropriation act.
E. Pursuant to a turnaround specialist program administered by
the Department of Education, local school
boards may enter into agreements with individuals to be employed as turnaround
specialists to address those conditions at the school that may impede
educational progress and effectiveness and academic success. Local school
boards may offer such turnaround specialists or other administrative personnel
incentives such as increased compensation, improved retirement benefits in
accordance with Chapter 6.2 (§ 51.1-617 et seq.) of Title 51.1, increased
deferred compensation in accordance with § 51.1-603, relocation expenses,
bonuses, and other incentives as may be determined by the board.
F. The General Assembly finds that certain schools have
particular difficulty hiring teachers for certain subject areas and that the
need for such teachers in these schools is particularly strong. Accordingly in
an effort to attract and retain high quality teachers, local school boards may
offer instructional personnel serving in such schools as a member of a middle
school teacher corps administered by the Department of
Education incentives such as increased compensation,
improved retirement benefits in accordance with Chapter 6.2 (§ 51.1-617 et
seq.) of Title 51.1, increased deferred compensation in accordance with §
51.1-603, relocation expenses, bonuses, and other incentives as may be
determined by the board.
For purposes of this subsection, "middle school teacher
corps" means licensed instructional personnel who are assigned to a local
school division to teach in a subject matter in grades six, seven, or eight
where there is a critical need, as determined by the Department of Education. The contract
between such persons and the relevant local school board shall specify that the
contract is for service in the middle school teacher corps.
§ 22.1-207.3. School breakfast programs.
A. By July 1, 1994, upon Upon the appropriation and
authorization of federal funds for the reimbursement of school breakfast
programs, each school board shall establish a school breakfast program in any
public school in which twenty-five 25 percent or more of enrolled
school-age children were approved eligible to receive free or reduced price
meals in the federally funded lunch program during the previous school year.
B. The Board of Education
shall promulgate regulations for the implementation of the program. Such
regulations shall include, but not be limited to, criteria for eligibility and
exemptions; a reporting system for the compilation and analysis of information
concerning the number and socioeconomic characteristics of participating
school-age children; standards for food services; program evaluation; the
investigation of complaints; an appeals process; notification of parents and
guardians of the availability of the school breakfast program; and provision to
teachers, children, and their parents or guardians of nutrition information
describing the relationship between good nutrition, learning, and health.
C. Each school board subject to the provisions of this section
shall develop and implement a plan to ensure compliance with the provisions of
subsection A and submit the plan to the Department of
Education no later than
thirty 30
days prior to the commencement of the program. Beginning
by June 30, 1995, and thereafter annually, each Each school board shall annually report such
information as required in subsection B to the Department of
Education on such forms and in the manner to be prescribed
by the Board. In the event that federal funding for school breakfast programs
is reduced or eliminated, a school board may support the program with such
state or local funds as may be appropriated for such purposes.
§ 22.1-209.2. Programs and teachers in regional detention homes, certain local detention homes and state agencies and institutions.
The Board of Education
shall prepare and supervise the implementation in the
regional detention homes and those
local detention homes having teachers whose
salaries were being funded by the Commonwealth on January 1, 1984,
a program designed to educate and train the children detained in the homes. In
addition, the Board shall supervise those programs of evaluation, education, and training provided to
school-age children by the Department of Health, the Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Services, the children's teaching hospital associated with
the Eastern Virginia Medical School, the Virginia Commonwealth University
Health System Authority, the children's teaching hospital associated with the
Virginia Commonwealth University Health System Authority, and the University of
Virginia Hospitals pursuant to the Board's standards and regulations as
required by § 22.1-7.
The Board shall promulgate such rules and regulations as may
be necessary to conform these programs with the applicable federal and state
laws and regulations including, but not limited to,
teacher/student ratios and special education requirements for children with
disabilities. The education programs in the relevant detention homes and state
agencies and institutions shall be approved by the Board,
and the Board shall prepare a budget for these educational programs which that
shall be solely supported by such general funds as are appropriated by the
General Assembly for this purpose. Teacher staffing ratios for regional or
local detention homes shall be based on a ratio of one teacher for every twelve 12
beds based on the capacity of the facility; however, if the previous year's
average daily attendance exceeds this bed capacity, the ratio shall be based on
the average daily attendance at the facility as calculated by the Department of Education from the previous
school year.
The Board of Education
shall enter into contracts with the relevant state agency or institution or
detention facility or the local school divisions in which the state agencies or
institutions or the regional detention homes and the relevant local detention
homes are located for the hiring and supervision of teachers.
In any case in which the Board enters into a contract with the
relevant state agency or institution, the Department of Human Resource
Management shall establish salary schedules for the teachers which that
are competitive with those in effect for the school divisions in which the
agency or institution is located.
§ 22.1-212.24. Approval of multidivision online providers; contracts with local school boards.
A. The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall develop, and the Board of Education
shall approve, (i) the criteria and application process for approving
multidivision online providers; (ii) a process for monitoring approved
multidivision online providers; (iii) a process for revocation of the approval
of a previously approved multidivision online provider; and (iv) an appeals
process for a multidivision online provider whose approval was revoked or whose
application was denied. The process developed under this subsection shall
require approvals and revocations to be determined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, and
either the denial of an application or revocation of approval may be appealed
to the Board of Education for review. The
approval of a multidivision online provider under this section shall be
effective until the approval is revoked, for cause, pursuant to the terms of
this section. Any notice of revocation of approval of a multidivision online
provider or rejection of an application by a multidivision online provider
shall state the grounds for such action with reasonable specificity and give
reasonable notice to the multidivision online provider to appeal. These criteria and processes shall be
adopted by January 31, 2011.
B. In developing the criteria for approval pursuant to
subsection A, the Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall (i) require multidivision online providers to be accredited by a national,
regional, or state accreditation program approved by the Board; (ii) require
such courses or programs, pupil performance standards, and curriculum to meet
or exceed any applicable Standards of Learning and Standards of Accreditation;
(iii) require any educational objectives and assessments used to measure pupil
progress toward achievement of the school's pupil performance standards to be
in accordance with the Board's Standards of Accreditation and all applicable
state and federal laws; (iv) require such courses or programs to maintain
minimum staffing requirements appropriate for virtual school programs; and (v)
publish the criteria for approval of multidivision online providers on its
website, including any applicable deadlines, fees, and guidelines.
C. The Department of Education
may charge a multidivision online provider applicant or a local school board
requesting to offer a course through Virtual Virginia a fee not to exceed the
costs required to ensure proper evaluation and approval of such requests. The
Department shall establish and publish a fee schedule for purposes of this
subsection.
D. Local school boards may enter into contracts, consistent with the criteria approved by the Board pursuant to this section, with approved private or nonprofit organizations to provide multidivision online courses and virtual school programs. Such contracts shall be exempt from the Virginia Public Procurement Act (§ 2.2-4300 et seq.).
§ 22.1-212.25. Information regarding online courses and virtual programs; report.
A. The Department of Education
shall develop and maintain a website that provides objective information for
students, parents, and educators regarding online courses and virtual programs
offered through local school boards by multidivision online providers that have
been approved in accordance with § 22.1-212.24 and courses offered through the
Virtual Virginia Program. The website shall include information regarding the
overall instructional programs, the specific content of individual online
courses and online programs, a direct link to each multidivision online
provider's website, how to register for online learning programs and courses,
teacher qualifications, course completion rates, and other evaluative and
comparative information. The website shall also provide information regarding
the process and criteria for approving multidivision online providers.
Multidivision online providers shall provide the Department of
Education the required information for the website as a
condition of maintaining Board approval.
B. The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall develop model policies and procedures regarding student access to online
courses and online learning programs that may be used by local school
divisions.
Nothing in this article shall be deemed to require a local school division to adopt model policies or procedures developed pursuant to this section.
C. Beginning November 1, 2011,
and annually thereafter, the The
Board of Education shall include in
its annual report to the Governor and the General Assembly information
regarding multidivision online learning during the previous school year. The
information shall include but not be limited to student demographics, course
enrollment data, parental satisfaction, aggregated student course completion and
passing rates, and activities and outcomes of course and provider approval
reviews. The November 1, 2011, report shall be an interim
progress report and include information on the criteria and processes adopted
by the Board and outcomes of provider applications.
D. By July 1, 2011, local Local school boards shall post
on their websites information regarding online courses and programs that are
available through the school division and Virtual Virginia. Such information
shall include but not be limited to the types of online courses and programs
available to students through the school division, when the school division
will pay course fees and other costs for nonresident students, and the granting
of high school credit.
§ 22.1-215.1. Information regarding procedures and rights relating to special education placement and withdrawal.
Effective July 1, 2001, the The Board of
Education shall publicize and disseminate to parents of
students who are enrolled in special education programs or for whom a special
education placement has been recommended information regarding current federal
law and regulation addressing procedures and rights related to the placement
and withdrawal of children in special education.
§ 22.1-253.13:3. Standard 3. Accreditation, other standards, assessments, and releases from state regulations.
A. The Board shall promulgate regulations establishing standards for accreditation pursuant to the Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq.), which shall include (i) student outcome and growth measures, (ii) requirements and guidelines for instructional programs and for the integration of educational technology into such instructional programs, (iii) administrative and instructional staffing levels and positions, including staff positions for supporting educational technology, (iv) student services, (v) auxiliary education programs such as library and media services, (vi) requirements for graduation from high school, (vii) community relations, and (viii) the philosophy, goals, and objectives of public education in the Commonwealth.
The Board shall promulgate regulations establishing standards for accreditation of public virtual schools under the authority of the local school board that enroll students full time.
The Board's regulations establishing standards for accreditation shall ensure that the accreditation process is transparent and based on objective measurements and that any appeal of the accreditation status of a school is heard and decided by the Board.
The Board shall review annually the accreditation status of all schools in the Commonwealth. The Board shall review the accreditation status of a school once every three years if the school has been fully accredited for three consecutive years. Upon such triennial review, the Board shall review the accreditation status of the school for each individual year within that triennial review period. If the Board finds that the school would have been accredited every year of that triennial review period the Board shall accredit the school for another three years. The Board may review the accreditation status of any other school once every two years or once every three years, provided that any school that receives a multiyear accreditation status other than full accreditation shall be covered by a Board-approved multiyear corrective action plan for the duration of the period of accreditation. Such multiyear corrective action plan shall include annual written progress updates to the Board. A multiyear accreditation status shall not relieve any school or division of annual reporting requirements.
Each local school board shall maintain schools that are fully accredited pursuant to the standards for accreditation as prescribed by the Board. Each local school board shall report the accreditation status of all schools in the local school division annually in public session.
The Board shall establish a review process to assist any school that does not meet the standards established by the Board. The relevant school board shall report the results of such review and any annual progress reports in public session and shall implement any actions identified through such review and utilize them for improvement planning.
The Board shall establish a corrective action plan process for any school that does not meet the standards established by the Board. Such process shall require (a) each school board to submit a corrective action plan for any school in the local school division that does not meet the standards established by the Board and (b) any school board that fails to demonstrate progress in developing or implementing any such corrective action plan to enter into a memorandum of understanding with the Board.
When the Board determines through its review process that the failure of schools within a division to meet the standards established by the Board is related to division-level failure to implement the Standards of Quality or other division-level action or inaction, the Board may require a division-level academic review. After the conduct of such review and within the time specified by the Board, each school board shall enter into a memorandum of understanding with the Board and shall subsequently submit to the Board for approval a corrective action plan, consistent with criteria established by the Board setting forth specific actions and a schedule designed to ensure that schools within its school division meet the standards established by the Board. If the Board determines that the proposed corrective action plan is not sufficient to enable all schools within the division to meet the standards established by the Board, the Board may return the plan to the local school board with directions to submit an amended plan pursuant to Board guidance. Such corrective action plans shall be part of the relevant school division's comprehensive plan pursuant to § 22.1-253.13:6.
B. The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall develop, subject to revision by the Board, criteria for determining and
recognizing educational performance in the Commonwealth's local school
divisions and public schools. The portion of such criteria that measures
individual student growth shall become an integral part of the accreditation
process for schools in which any grade level in the grade three through eight
range is taught. The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall annually report to the Board on the accreditation status of all school
divisions and schools. Such report shall include an analysis of the strengths
and weaknesses of public education programs in the various school divisions in
Virginia and recommendations to the General Assembly for further enhancing
student learning uniformly across the Commonwealth. In recognizing educational
performance and individual student growth in the school divisions, the Board shall
include consideration of special school division accomplishments, such as
numbers of dual enrollments and students in Advanced Placement and
International Baccalaureate courses, and participation in academic year
Governor's Schools.
The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall assist local school boards in the implementation of action plans for
increasing educational performance and individual student growth in those
school divisions and schools that are identified as not meeting the approved
criteria. The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall monitor the implementation of and report to the Board on the
effectiveness of the corrective actions taken to improve the educational
performance in such school divisions and schools.
C. With such funds as are available for this purpose, the Board shall prescribe assessment methods to determine the level of achievement of the Standards of Learning objectives by all students. Such assessments shall evaluate knowledge, application of knowledge, critical thinking, and skills related to the Standards of Learning being assessed. The Board shall, with the assistance of independent testing experts, conduct a regular analysis and validation process for these assessments. In lieu of a one-time end-of-year assessment, the Board shall establish, for the purpose of providing measures of individual student growth over the course of the school year, a through-year growth assessment system, aligned with the Standards of Learning, for the administration of reading and mathematics assessments in grades three through eight. Such through-year growth assessment system shall include at least one beginning-of-year, one mid-year, and one end-of-year assessment in order to provide individual student growth scores over the course of the school year, but the total time scheduled for taking all such assessments shall not exceed 150 percent of the time scheduled for taking a single end-of-year proficiency assessment. The Department shall ensure adequate training for teachers and principals on how to interpret and use student growth data from such assessments to improve reading and mathematics instruction in grades three through eight throughout the school year. With such funds and content as are available for such purpose, such through-year growth assessment system shall provide accurate measurement of a student's performance, through computer adaptive technology, using test items at, below, and above the student's grade level as necessary.
The Board shall also provide the option of industry certification and state licensure examinations as a student-selected credit.
The Department shall make available to school divisions Standards of Learning assessments typically administered by high schools by December 1 of the school year in which such assessments are to be administered or when newly developed assessments are available, whichever is later.
The Board shall make publicly available such assessments in a timely manner and as soon as practicable following the administration of such tests, so long as the release of such assessments does not compromise test security or deplete the bank of assessment questions necessary to construct subsequent tests, or limit the ability to test students on demand and provide immediate results in the web-based assessment system.
The Board shall prescribe alternative methods of Standards of Learning assessment administration for children with disabilities, as that term is defined in § 22.1-213, who meet criteria established by the Board to demonstrate achievement of the Standards of Learning. An eligible student's Individual Education Program team shall make the final determination as to whether an alternative method of administration is appropriate for the student.
The Board shall include in the student outcome and growth measures that are required by the standards of accreditation the required assessments for various grade levels and classes, including the completion of the alternative assessments implemented by each local school board, in accordance with the Standards of Learning. These assessments shall include end-of-course or end-of-grade tests for English, mathematics, science, and history and social science and may be integrated to include multiple subject areas.
The Standards of Learning assessments administered to students in grades three through eight shall not exceed (i) reading and mathematics in grades three and four; (ii) reading, mathematics, and science in grade five; (iii) reading and mathematics in grades six and seven; (iv) reading, writing, and mathematics in grade eight; (v) science after the student receives instruction in the grade six science, life science, and physical science Standards of Learning and before the student completes grade eight; and (vi) Virginia Studies and Civics and Economics once each at the grade levels deemed appropriate by each local school board. The reading and mathematics assessments administered to students in grades three through eight shall be through-year growth assessments.
Each school board shall annually certify that it has provided instruction and administered an alternative assessment, consistent with Board guidelines, to students in grades three through eight in each Standards of Learning subject area in which a Standards of Learning assessment was not administered during the school year. Such guidelines shall (a) incorporate options for age-appropriate, authentic performance assessments and portfolios with rubrics and other methodologies designed to ensure that students are making adequate academic progress in the subject area and that the Standards of Learning content is being taught; (b) permit and encourage integrated assessments that include multiple subject areas; and (c) emphasize collaboration between teachers to administer and substantiate the assessments and the professional development of teachers to enable them to make the best use of alternative assessments.
Local school divisions shall provide targeted mathematics remediation and intervention to students in grades six through eight who show computational deficiencies as demonstrated by their individual performance on any diagnostic test or grade-level Standards of Learning mathematics test that measures non-calculator computational skills.
The Department shall award recovery credit to any student in grades three through eight who performs below grade level on a Standards of Learning assessment in English reading or mathematics, receives remediation, and subsequently retakes and performs at or above grade level on such an assessment, including any such student who subsequently retakes such an assessment on an expedited basis.
In addition, to assess the educational progress of students,
the Board shall (1) develop appropriate assessments, which may include
criterion-referenced tests and other assessment instruments that may be used by
classroom teachers; (2) select appropriate industry certification and state
licensure examinations; and (3) prescribe and provide measures, which may
include nationally normed tests to be used to identify students who score in the
bottom quartile at selected grade levels. An annual
justification that includes evidence that the student meets the participation
criteria defined by the Department shall be provided for each student
considered for the Virginia Grade Level Alternative. Each Individual Education
Program team shall review such justification and make the final determination
as to whether or not the Virginia Grade Level Alternative is appropriate for
the student. The superintendent and the school board chairman shall certify to
the Board, as a part of certifying compliance with the Standards of Quality,
that there is a justification in the Individual Education Program for every
student who takes the Virginia Grade Level Alternative. Compliance with this
requirement shall be monitored as a part of the special education monitoring
process conducted by the Department. The Board shall report to the Governor and
General Assembly in its annual reports pursuant to § 22.1-18 any school
division that is not in compliance with this requirement.
The Standards of Learning requirements, including all related assessments, shall be waived for any student awarded a scholarship under the Brown v. Board of Education Scholarship Program, pursuant to § 30-231.2, who is enrolled in a preparation program for a high school equivalency examination approved by the Board or in an adult basic education program or an adult secondary education program to obtain the high school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate.
The Department shall develop processes for informing school divisions of changes in the Standards of Learning.
The Board may adopt special provisions related to the administration and use of any Standards of Learning test or tests in a content area as applied to accreditation ratings for any period during which the Standards of Learning content or assessments in that area are being revised and phased in. Prior to statewide administration of such tests, the Board shall provide notice to local school boards regarding such special provisions.
The Board shall not include in its calculation of the passage rate for a Standards of Learning assessment or the level of achievement of the Standards of Learning objectives for an individual student growth assessment for the purposes of state accountability any student whose parent has decided to not have his child take such Standards of Learning assessment, unless such exclusions would result in the school's not meeting any required state or federal participation rate.
D. The Board may pursue all available civil remedies pursuant to § 22.1-19.1 or administrative action pursuant to § 22.1-292.1 for breaches in test security and unauthorized alteration of test materials or test results.
The Board may initiate or cause to be initiated a review or investigation of any alleged breach in security, unauthorized alteration, or improper administration of tests, including the exclusion of students from testing who are required to be assessed, by local school board employees responsible for the distribution or administration of the tests.
Records and other information furnished to or prepared by the Board during the conduct of a review or investigation may be withheld pursuant to subdivision 10 of § 2.2-3705.3. However, this section shall not prohibit the disclosure of records to (i) a local school board or division superintendent for the purpose of permitting such board or superintendent to consider or to take personnel action with regard to an employee or (ii) any requester, after the conclusion of a review or investigation, in a form that (a) does not reveal the identity of any person making a complaint or supplying information to the Board on a confidential basis and (b) does not compromise the security of any test mandated by the Board. Any local school board or division superintendent receiving such records or other information shall, upon taking personnel action against a relevant employee, place copies of such records or information relating to the specific employee in such person's personnel file.
Notwithstanding any other provision of state law, no test or examination authorized by this section, including the Standards of Learning assessments, shall be released or required to be released as minimum competency tests, if, in the judgment of the Board, such release would breach the security of such test or examination or deplete the bank of questions necessary to construct future secure tests.
E. With such funds as may be appropriated, the Board may provide, through an agreement with vendors having the technical capacity and expertise to provide computerized tests and assessments, and test construction, analysis, and security, for (i) web-based computerized tests and assessments, including computer-adaptive Standards of Learning assessments, for the evaluation of student progress during and after remediation and (ii) the development of a remediation item bank directly related to the Standards of Learning.
F. To assess the educational progress of students as
individuals and as groups, each local school board shall require the use of
Standards of Learning assessments, alternative assessments, and other relevant
data, such as industry certification and state licensure examinations, to
evaluate student progress and to determine educational performance. Each local
school shall require the administration of appropriate assessments to students,
which may include criterion-referenced tests and teacher-made tests and shall
include the Standards of Learning assessments, the local school board's alternative
assessments, and the National Assessment of Educational Progress state-by-state
assessment. Each school board shall analyze and report annually, in compliance
with any criteria that may be established by the Board, the results from the Stanford Achievement Test Series, Ninth
Edition (Stanford Nine) assessment, if
administered, industry certification
examinations, and the Standards of Learning
Assessments to the public.
The Board shall not require
administration of the Stanford Achievement Test Series, Ninth Edition (Stanford
Nine) assessment, except as may be selected to facilitate compliance with the
requirements for home instruction pursuant to § 22.1-254.1.
The Board shall include requirements for the reporting of the Standards of Learning assessment data, regardless of accreditation frequency, as part of the Board's requirements relating to the School Performance Report Card. Such scores shall be disaggregated for each school by student subgroups on the Virginia assessment program as appropriate and shall be reported to the public within three months of their receipt. These reports (i) shall be posted on the portion of the Department's website relating to the School Performance Report Card, in a format and in a manner that allows year-to-year comparisons, and (ii) may include the National Assessment of Educational Progress state-by-state assessment.
G. Each local school division superintendent shall regularly
review the division's submission of data and reports required by state and
federal law and regulations to ensure that all information is accurate and
submitted in a timely fashion. The Superintendent of Public
Instruction shall provide a list of the required reports
and data to division superintendents annually. The status of compliance with
this requirement shall be included in the Board's annual report to the Governor
and the General Assembly as required by § 22.1-18.
H. Any school board may request the Board for release from state regulations or, on behalf of one or more of its schools, for approval of an Individual School Accreditation Plan for the evaluation of the performance of one or more of its schools as authorized for certain other schools by the Standards for Accreditation pursuant to 8VAC20-131-280 C of the Virginia Administrative Code. Waivers of regulatory requirements may be granted by the Board based on submission of a request from the division superintendent and chairman of the local school board. The Board may grant, for a period up to five years, a waiver of regulatory requirements that are not (i) mandated by state or federal law or (ii) designed to promote health or safety. The school board shall provide in its waiver request a description of how the releases from state regulations are designed to increase the quality of instruction and improve the achievement of students in the affected school or schools. The Department shall provide (a) guidance to any local school division that requests releases from state regulations and (b) information about opportunities to form partnerships with other agencies or entities to any local school division in which the school or schools granted releases from state regulations have demonstrated improvement in the quality of instruction and the achievement of students.
The Board may also grant local school boards waivers of specific requirements in § 22.1-253.13:2, based on submission of a request from the division superintendent and chairman of the local school board, permitting the local school board to assign instructional personnel to the schools with the greatest needs, so long as the school division employs a sufficient number of personnel divisionwide to meet the total number required by § 22.1-253.13:2 and all pupil/teacher ratios and class size maximums set forth in subsection C of § 22.1-253.13:2 are met. The school board shall provide in its request a description of how the waivers from specific Standards of Quality staffing standards are designed to increase the quality of instruction and improve the achievement of students in the affected school or schools. The waivers may be renewed in up to five-year increments, or revoked, based on student achievement results in the affected school or schools.
§ 22.1-253.13:4. Standard 4. Student achievement and graduation requirements.
A. Each local school board shall award diplomas to all
secondary school students, including students who transfer from nonpublic
schools or from home instruction, who meet the requirements prescribed by the
Board of Education and meet such
other requirements as may be prescribed by the local school board and approved
by the Board of Education. Provisions shall
be made to facilitate the transfer and appropriate grade placement of students
from other public secondary schools, from nonpublic schools, or from home
instruction as outlined in the standards for accreditation. The standards for
accreditation shall include provisions relating to the completion of graduation
requirements through Virtual Virginia. Further, reasonable accommodation to
meet the requirements for diplomas shall be provided for otherwise qualified
students with disabilities as needed.
In addition, each local school board may devise, vis-a-vis the award of diplomas to secondary school students, a mechanism for calculating class rankings that takes into consideration whether the student has taken a required class more than one time and has had any prior earned grade for such required class expunged.
Each local school board shall notify the parents of rising eleventh and twelfth grade students of (i) the requirements for graduation pursuant to the standards for accreditation and (ii) the requirements that have yet to be completed by the individual student.
B. Students identified as disabled who complete the requirements of their individualized education programs and meet certain requirements prescribed by the Board pursuant to regulations but do not meet the requirements for any named diploma shall be awarded Applied Studies diplomas by local school boards. The Board shall develop and implement statewide requirements for earning an Applied Studies diploma for implementation at the beginning of the 2022-2023 school year.
Each local school board shall notify the parent of such students with disabilities who have an individualized education program and who fail to meet the graduation requirements of the student's right to a free and appropriate education to age 21, inclusive, pursuant to Article 2 (§ 22.1-213 et seq.) of Chapter 13.
The Department shall develop guidance, in multiple languages, for students and parents conveying (i) the limitations of the applied studies diploma, (ii) key curriculum and testing decisions that reduce the likelihood that a student will be able to obtain a standard diploma, and (iii) a statement that the pursuit of an applied studies diploma may preclude a student's ability to pursue a standard diploma.
Each local school board shall provide guidance from the Department to parents of students with disabilities regarding the Applied Studies diploma and its limitations at a student's annual individualized education program meeting corresponding to grades three through 12 when curriculum or statewide assessment decisions are being made that impact the type of diploma for which the student can qualify.
C. Students who have completed a prescribed course of study as
defined by the local school board shall be awarded certificates of program
completion by local school boards if they are not eligible to receive a Board of Education-approved-approved diploma.
Each local school board shall provide notification of the right to a free public education for students who have not reached 20 years of age on or before August 1 of the school year, pursuant to Chapter 1 (§ 22.1-1 et seq.), to the parent of students who fail to graduate or who have failed to achieve graduation requirements as provided in the standards for accreditation. If such student who does not graduate or complete such requirements is a student for whom English is a second language, the local school board shall notify the parent of the student's opportunity for a free public education in accordance with § 22.1-5.
D. In establishing graduation requirements, the Board shall:
1. Develop and implement, in consultation with stakeholders representing elementary and secondary education, higher education, and business and industry in the Commonwealth and including parents, policymakers, and community leaders in the Commonwealth, a Profile of a Virginia Graduate that identifies the knowledge and skills that students should attain during high school in order to be successful contributors to the economy of the Commonwealth, giving due consideration to critical thinking, creative thinking, collaboration, communication, and citizenship.
2. Emphasize the development of core skill sets in the early years of high school.
3. Establish multiple paths toward college and career readiness for students to follow in the later years of high school. Each such pathway shall include opportunities for internships, externships, and credentialing.
4. Provide for the selection of integrated learning courses meeting the Standards of Learning and approved by the Board to satisfy graduation requirements, which shall include Standards of Learning testing, as necessary.
5. Require students to complete at least one course in fine or performing arts or career and technical education, one course in United States and Virginia history, and two sequential elective courses chosen from a concentration of courses selected from a variety of options that may be planned to ensure the completion of a focused sequence of elective courses that provides a foundation for further education or training or preparation for employment.
6. Require that students (i) complete an Advanced Placement,
honors, International Baccalaureate, or dual enrollment course; (ii) complete a
high-quality work-based learning experience, as defined by the Board; or (iii)
earn a career and technical education credential that has been approved by the
Board, except when a career and technical education credential in a particular
subject area is not readily available or appropriate or does not adequately
measure student competency, in which case the student shall receive
satisfactory competency-based instruction in the subject area to earn credit.
The career and technical education credential, when required, could include the
successful completion of an industry certification, a state licensure
examination, a national occupational competency assessment, the Armed Services
Vocational Aptitude Battery, or the Virginia workplace readiness skills
assessment. The Department of Education
shall develop, maintain, and make available to each local school board a
catalogue of the testing accommodations available to English language learners
for each such certification, examination, assessment, and battery. Each local
school board shall develop and implement policies to require each high school
principal or his designee to notify each English language learner of the
availability of such testing accommodations prior to the student's participation
in any such certification, examination, assessment, or battery.
7. Beginning with first-time
ninth grade students in the 2016-2017 school year, require Require students to be trained
in emergency first aid, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and the use of automated
external defibrillators, including hands-on practice of the skills necessary to
perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
8. Make provision in its regulations for students with disabilities to earn a diploma.
9. Require students to complete one virtual course, which may be a noncredit-bearing course.
10. Provide that students who complete elective classes into which the Standards of Learning for any required course have been integrated and achieve a passing score on the relevant Standards of Learning test for the relevant required course receive credit for such elective class.
11. Establish a procedure to facilitate the acceleration of students that allows qualified students, with the recommendation of the division superintendent, without completing the 140-hour class, to obtain credit for such class upon demonstrating mastery of the course content and objectives and receiving a passing score on the relevant Standards of Learning assessment. Nothing in this section shall preclude relevant school division personnel from enforcing compulsory attendance in public schools.
12. Provide for the award of credit for passing scores on
industry certifications, state licensure examinations, and national
occupational competency assessments approved by the Board of
Education.
School boards shall report annually to the Board of Education the number of
Board-approved industry certifications obtained, state licensure examinations
passed, national occupational competency assessments passed, Armed Services
Vocational Aptitude Battery assessments passed, and Virginia workplace
readiness skills assessments passed, and the number of career and technical
education completers who graduated. These numbers shall be reported as separate
categories on the School Performance Report Card.
For the purposes of this subdivision, "career and technical education completer" means a student who has met the requirements for a career and technical concentration or specialization and all requirements for high school graduation or an approved alternative education program.
In addition, the Board may:
a. For the purpose of awarding credit, approve the use of additional or substitute tests for the correlated Standards of Learning assessment, such as academic achievement tests, industry certifications, or state licensure examinations; and
b. Permit students completing career and technical education programs designed to enable such students to pass such industry certification examinations or state licensure examinations to be awarded, upon obtaining satisfactory scores on such industry certification or licensure examinations, appropriate credit for one or more career and technical education classes into which relevant Standards of Learning for various classes taught at the same level have been integrated. Such industry certification and state licensure examinations may cover relevant Standards of Learning for various required classes and may, at the discretion of the Board, address some Standards of Learning for several required classes.
13. Provide for the waiver of certain graduation requirements (i) upon the Board's initiative or (ii) at the request of a local school board. Such waivers shall be granted only for good cause and shall be considered on a case-by-case basis.
14. Consider all computer science course credits earned by
students to be science course credits, mathematics course credits, or career
and technical education credits. The Board of
Education shall develop guidelines addressing how computer
science courses can satisfy graduation requirements.
15. Permit local school divisions to waive the requirement for students to receive 140 clock hours of instruction upon providing the Board with satisfactory proof, based on Board guidelines, that the students for whom such requirements are waived have learned the content and skills included in the relevant Standards of Learning.
16. Provide for the award of verified units of credit for a satisfactory score, as determined by the Board, on the Preliminary ACT (PreACT) or Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT) examination.
17. Permit students to exceed a full course load in order to participate in courses offered by an institution of higher education that lead to a degree, certificate, or credential at such institution.
18. Permit local school divisions to waive the requirement for students to receive 140 clock hours of instruction after the student has completed the course curriculum and relevant Standards of Learning end-of-course assessment, or Board-approved substitute, provided that such student subsequently receives instruction, coursework, or study toward an industry certification approved by the local school board.
19. Permit any English language learner who previously earned a sufficient score on an Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate foreign language examination or an SAT II Subject Test in a foreign language to substitute computer coding course credit for any foreign language course credit required to graduate, except in cases in which such foreign language course credit is required to earn an advanced diploma offered by a nationally recognized provider of college-level courses.
20. Permit a student who is pursuing an advanced diploma and whose individualized education program specifies a credit accommodation for world language to substitute two standard units of credit in computer science for two standard units of credit in a world language. For any student that elects to substitute a credit in computer science for credit in world language, his or her school counselor must provide notice to the student and parent or guardian of possible impacts related to college entrance requirements.
E. In the exercise of its authority to recognize exemplary performance by providing for diploma seals:
1. The Board shall develop criteria for recognizing exemplary performance in career and technical education programs by students who have completed the requirements for a Board of Education-approved diploma and shall award seals on the diplomas of students meeting such criteria.
2. The Board shall establish criteria for awarding a diploma
seal for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) for the Board of Education-approved-approved diplomas. The Board shall
consider including criteria for (i) relevant coursework; (ii) technical
writing, reading, and oral communication skills; (iii) relevant training; and
(iv) industry, professional, and trade association national certifications.
3. The Board shall establish criteria for awarding a diploma
seal for excellence in civics education and understanding of our state and
federal constitutions and the democratic model of government for the Board of Education-approved-approved diplomas. The Board
shall consider including criteria for (i) successful completion of history,
government, and civics courses, including courses that incorporate character
education; (ii) voluntary participation in community service or extracurricular
activities that includes the types of activities that shall qualify as
community service and the number of hours required; and (iii) related
requirements as it deems appropriate.
4. The Board shall establish criteria for awarding a diploma
seal of biliteracy to any student who demonstrates proficiency in English and
at least one other language for the Board of
Education-approved-approved
diplomas. The Board shall consider criteria including the student's (i) score
on a College Board Advanced Placement foreign language examination, (ii) score
on an SAT II Subject Test in a foreign language, (iii) proficiency level on an
ACTFL Assessment of Performance toward Proficiency in Languages (AAPPL) measure
or another nationally or internationally recognized language proficiency test,
or (iv) cumulative grade point average in a sequence of foreign language
courses approved by the Board.
F. The Board shall establish, by regulation, requirements for
the award of a general achievement adult high school diploma for those persons
who are not subject to the compulsory school attendance requirements of §
22.1-254 and have (i) achieved a passing score on a high school equivalency
examination approved by the Board of Education;
(ii) successfully completed an education and training program designated by the
Board of Education; (iii) earned a
Board of Education-approved-approved career and technical
education credential such as the successful completion of an industry
certification, a state licensure examination, a national occupational
competency assessment, the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery, or the
Virginia workplace readiness skills assessment; and (iv) satisfied other
requirements as may be established by the Board for the award of such diploma.
G. To ensure the uniform assessment of high school graduation rates, the Board shall collect, analyze, report, and make available to the public high school graduation and dropout data using a formula prescribed by the Board.
H. The Board shall also collect, analyze, report, and make available to the public high school graduation and dropout data using a formula that excludes any student who fails to graduate because such student is in the custody of the Department of Corrections, the Department of Juvenile Justice, or local law enforcement. For the purposes of the Standards of Accreditation, the Board shall use the graduation rate required by this subsection.
I. The Board may promulgate such regulations as may be necessary and appropriate for the collection, analysis, and reporting of such data required by subsections G and H.
§ 22.1-254.1. Declaration of policy; requirements for home instruction of children.
A. When the requirements of this section have been satisfied,
instruction of children by their parents is an acceptable alternative form of
education under the policy of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Any parent of any
child who will have reached the fifth birthday on or before September 30 of any
school year and who has not passed the eighteenth birthday may elect to provide
home instruction in lieu of school attendance if he (i) holds a high school
diploma; (ii) is a teacher of qualifications prescribed by the Board of Education; (iii) provides
the child with a program of study or curriculum,
which may be delivered through a correspondence course or distance learning
program or in any other manner; or (iv) provides evidence that he is able to
provide an adequate education for the child.
B. Any parent who elects to provide home instruction in lieu of
school attendance shall annually notify the division superintendent in August
of his intention to so instruct the child and provide a description of the
curriculum, limited to a list of subjects to be studied during the coming year,
and evidence of having met one of the criteria for providing home instruction
as required by subsection A. Effective July 1, 2000,
parents Parents
electing to provide home instruction shall provide such annual notice no later
than August 15. Any parent who moves into a school division or begins home
instruction after the school year has begun shall notify the division
superintendent of his intention to provide home instruction as soon as
practicable and shall thereafter comply with the requirements of this section
within 30 days of such notice. The division superintendent shall notify the
Superintendent of Public Instruction of the
number of students in the school division receiving home instruction.
C. The parent who elects to provide home instruction shall
provide the division superintendent by August 1 following the school year in
which the child has received home instruction with either (i) evidence that the
child has attained a composite score in or above the fourth stanine on any
nationally normed standardized achievement test, or an equivalent score on the
ACT, SAT, or PSAT test or (ii) an evaluation or assessment which that the division
superintendent determines to indicate that the child is achieving an adequate
level of educational growth and progress, including but not
limited to (a) an evaluation letter from a person licensed
to teach in any state, or a person with a master's degree or higher in an
academic discipline, having knowledge of the child's academic progress, stating
that the child is achieving an adequate level of educational growth and
progress or (b) a report card or transcript from an institution of higher
education, college distance learning program, or home-education correspondence
school.
In the event that evidence of progress as required in this
subsection is not provided by the parent, the home instruction program for that
child may be placed on probation for one year. Parents shall file with the
division superintendent evidence of their ability to provide an adequate
education for their child in compliance with subsection A and a remediation
plan for the probationary year which that indicates their program
is designed to address any educational deficiency. Upon acceptance of such
evidence and plan by the division superintendent, the home instruction may
continue for one probationary year. If the remediation plan and evidence are
not accepted or the required evidence of progress is not provided by August 1
following the probationary year, home instruction shall cease and the parent
shall make other arrangements for the education of the child which that
comply with § 22.1-254. The requirements of this
subsection C shall not apply to children
who are under the age of six as of September 30 of the school year.
D. Nothing in this section shall prohibit a pupil and his parents from obtaining an excuse from school attendance by reason of bona fide religious training or belief pursuant to subdivision B 1 of § 22.1-254.
E. Any party aggrieved by a decision of the division superintendent may appeal his decision within 30 days to an independent hearing officer. The independent hearing officer shall be chosen from the list maintained by the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court for hearing appeals of the placements of children with disabilities. The costs of the hearing shall be apportioned among the parties by the hearing officer in a manner consistent with his findings.
F. School boards shall make Advanced Placement (AP), Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT), and PreACT examinations available to students receiving home instruction pursuant to this section. School boards shall adopt written policies that specify the date by which such students shall register to participate in such examinations. School boards shall notify such students and their parents of such registration deadline and the availability of financial assistance to low-income and needy students to take such examinations.
G. No division superintendent or local school board shall
disclose to the Department of Education
or any other person or entity outside of the local school division information
that is provided by a parent or student to satisfy the requirements of this
section or subdivision B 1 of § 22.1-254. However, a division superintendent or
local school board may disclose, with the written consent of a student's
parent, such information to the extent provided by the parent's consent.
Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit a division superintendent from
notifying the Superintendent of Public Instruction
of the number of students in the school division receiving home instruction as
required by subsection B.
§ 22.1-271.3. Guidelines for school attendance for children infected with human immunodeficiency virus; school personnel training required; notification of school personnel in certain cases.
A. The Board of Education,
in cooperation with the Board of Health, shall develop, and revise as
necessary, model guidelines for school attendance for children infected with
human immunodeficiency virus. The first such guidelines
shall be completed by December 1, 1989. The Board shall
distribute copies of these guidelines to each division superintendent and every
school board member in the Commonwealth immediately following completion
development or revision.
B. Each school board shall, by July
1, 1990, adopt guidelines for school attendance for
children with human immunodeficiency virus. Such guidelines shall be consistent
with the model guidelines for such school attendance developed by the Board of Education.
C. Every school board shall ensure that all school personnel having direct contact with students receive appropriate training in the etiology, prevention, transmission modes, and effects of blood-borne pathogens, specifically, hepatitis B and human immunodeficiency viruses or any other infections that are the subject of regulations promulgated by the Safety and Health Codes Board of the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program within the Department of Labor and Industry.
D. Upon notification by a school employee who believes he has
been involved in a possible exposure-prone incident which that may have exposed the
employee to the blood or body fluids of a student, the division superintendent
shall contact the local health director who, upon immediate investigation of
the incident, shall determine if a potentially harmful exposure has occurred
and make recommendations, based upon all information available to him,
regarding how the employee can reduce any risks from such exposure. The
division superintendent shall share these recommendations with the school
employee. Except as permitted by § 32.1-45.1, the division superintendent and
the school employee shall not divulge any information provided by the local
health director regarding such student. The information provided by the local
health director shall be subject to any applicable confidentiality requirements
set forth in Chapter 2 (§ 32.1-35 et seq.) of Title 32.1.
§ 22.1-274. School health services.
A. A school board shall provide pupil personnel and support
services in compliance with § 22.1-253.13:2. A school board may employ school
nurses, physicians, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech
therapists. No such personnel shall be employed unless they meet such standards
as may be determined by the Board of Education.
Subject to the approval of the appropriate local governing body, a local health
department may provide personnel for health services for the school division.
B. In implementing subsection P of § 22.1-253.13:2, relating
to providing support services that are necessary for the efficient and
cost-effective operation and maintenance of its public schools, each school
board may strive to employ, or contract with local health departments for,
nursing services consistent with a ratio of at least one nurse (i) per 2,500 students by July 1, 1996; (ii) per
2,000 students by July 1, 1997; (iii) per 1,500 students by July 1, 1998; and
(iv) per 1,000 students by July
1, 1999. In those school divisions in which there are more
than 1,000 students in average daily membership in school buildings, this
section shall not be construed to encourage the employment of more than one
nurse per school building. Further, this section shall not be construed to
mandate the aspired-to ratios.
C. The Board of Education
shall monitor the progress in achieving the ratios ratio set forth in subsection
B and any subsequent increase in prevailing statewide costs, and the mechanism
for funding health services, pursuant to subsection P of § 22.1-253.13:2 and
the appropriation act. The Board shall also determine how school health funds
are used and school health services are delivered in each locality and shall provide, by December 1, 1994, a detailed
analysis of school health expenditures to the House Committee on Education, the
House Committee on Appropriations, the Senate Committee on Education and
Health, and the Senate Committee on Finance and Appropriations.
D. With the exception of school administrative personnel and persons employed by school boards who have the specific duty to deliver health-related services, no licensed instructional employee, instructional aide, or clerical employee shall be disciplined, placed on probation, or dismissed on the basis of such employee's refusal to (i) perform nonemergency health-related services for students or (ii) obtain training in the administration of insulin and glucagon. However, instructional aides and clerical employees may not refuse to dispense oral medications.
For the purposes of this subsection, "health-related services" means those activities that, when performed in a health care facility, must be delivered by or under the supervision of a licensed or certified professional.
E. Each school board shall ensure that in school buildings
with an instructional and administrative staff of 10 or more (i) at least three
employees have current certification or training in emergency first aid,
cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and the use of an automated external
defibrillator and (ii) if one or more students diagnosed as having diabetes
attend such school, at least two employees have been trained in the
administration of insulin and glucagon. In school buildings with an
instructional and administrative staff of fewer than 10, school boards shall
ensure that (a) at least two employees have current certification or training
in emergency first aid, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and the use of an
automated external defibrillator and (b) if one or more students diagnosed as
having diabetes attend such school, at least one employee has been trained in
the administration of insulin and glucagon.
"Employee" For purposes of this
subsection, "employee" includes
any person employed by a local health department who is assigned to the public
school pursuant to an agreement between the local health department and the
school board. When a registered nurse, nurse practitioner, physician, or
physician assistant is present, no employee who is not a registered nurse,
nurse practitioner, physician, or physician assistant shall assist with the
administration of insulin or administer glucagon. Prescriber authorization and
parental consent shall be obtained for any employee who is not a registered
nurse, nurse practitioner, physician, or physician assistant to assist with the
administration of insulin and administer glucagon.
§ 22.1-280.2. School crime line defined; development of school crime lines authorized; local school boards' authority; Board to promulgate regulations.
A. As used in this section:"School, "school crime line"
means a confidential, anonymous system providing inducements for students to
report any unlawful act occurring in school buildings or on school grounds or
during school-sponsored activities to local law-enforcement authorities which that
is established as a cooperative alliance between the local school board, news
media, the community, and law-enforcement officials or through a separate,
nonprofit corporation governed by a board of directors or as part of a local
"Crime Stoppers" program.
B. In order to reduce crime and violence within the school divisions in the Commonwealth, any local school board may develop a school crime line program as a joint, self-sustaining, cooperative alliance with news media, the community, and law-enforcement authorities to receive, screen, and reward student reports of unlawful acts committed in school buildings or on school grounds or at school functions, when such reports lead to arrests or recovery of contraband or stolen property. Police or other law-enforcement personnel shall staff every school crime line program, receive reported information from anonymous student callers, screen such information, and direct information for further investigation, as may be appropriate.
C. Such programs may be established (i) by a local school board as a joint, self-sustaining, cooperative alliance with news media, the community, and law-enforcement authorities; (ii) through a separate nonprofit corporation initiated jointly by the local school board, news media, the community, and law-enforcement authorities and governed by a board of directors; or (iii) as part of a local "Crime Stoppers" program.
The governing board of any separate nonprofit school crime
line corporation shall include broad-based community representation and shall,
through its bylaws, set the policy, coordinate fund raising, and formulate a
system of rewards. Prior to implementation of any school crime line program and
annually thereafter, the local school board shall review and approve, as
complying with the Board of Education's Board's regulations for
implementation of school crime lines, its regulations or the bylaws of any
nonprofit school crime line corporation or the bylaws of any nonprofit
"Crime Stoppers" corporation operating a school crime line. No school
crime line program shall be implemented or revised without first obtaining the
local school board's approval. Every local school board developing a school
crime line program shall also notify all students and their parents or other
custodian of the procedures and policies governing the program prior to
implementation and annually thereafter.
D. By July 1, 1994, the The Board of
Education shall promulgate regulations for the
implementation of school crime lines, including, but not
limited to, appropriate fund raising, and the
appropriateness of and limitations on rewards. In developing the regulations,
the Board shall, in consultation with the Office of the Attorney General,
address issues relating to civil rights, privacy, and any other question of law,
including the civic duty to report crime without compensation.
E. Local school boards may establish, as a separate account, a school crime line fund, consisting of private contributions, local appropriations specifically designated for such purposes, and such funds as may be appropriated for this purpose by the Commonwealth pursuant to the appropriation act. No state or local funds appropriated for educational purposes shall be used to implement a school crime line.
§ 22.1-280.2:2. Public School Security Equipment Grant Act of 2013.
A. This section shall be known and may be cited as the "Public School Security Equipment Grant Act of 2013."
B. For purposes of this section:
"Authority" means the Virginia Public School Authority.
"Department" means
the Department of Education.
"Eligible school division" means a (i) local school
division or (ii) regional vocational center, special education center,
alternative education center, or academic year Governor's School serving public
school students in grades K through 12. The term shall also
include"Eligible school
division" includes the Virginia School for the Deaf
and the Blind.
"Local school division" means a school division with schools subject to state accreditation and whose students are required to be reported in fall membership for grades K through 12.
"Security equipment" includes building modifications and fixtures, including security vestibules, vaping detectors, security-related devices located outside of the school building on school property, and security-related devices located on school buses.
C. The Authority shall issue bonds for the purpose of grant
payments to eligible school divisions of the Commonwealth to be used
exclusively for purchasing security equipment for schools, including any related
installation, which that is designed to improve
and help ensure the safety of students attending public schools in Virginia the
Commonwealth. Such grants shall not be used to pay for
security equipment that is not included or described in a grant application
approved by the Department pursuant to subsection D. The amount of grants
provided to each eligible school division pursuant to this section shall not
exceed $100,000 for each fiscal year of the Commonwealth. Funds for the payment
of such grants shall be provided from the issuance of bonds by the Authority,
provided that the Authority shall not issue more than an aggregate of $6
million in bonds, after all costs, for such grants during each fiscal year of
the Commonwealth. In addition, the Authority shall ensure that no more than an
aggregate principal amount of $30 million in bonds issued under this section
shall be outstanding at any time. Eligible school divisions seeking a grant
shall apply to the Department, which shall be responsible for administering the
grant program.
The Authority shall work with the Department to determine the schedule for the issuance of the bonds, which shall be based in part upon eligible school divisions having sufficient funds to purchase such security equipment. The payment of debt service on such bonds shall be as provided in the general appropriation act.
Such grants shall be in addition to all other grants made to
local governments, school boards, or school divisions according to law. In
addition, such grants shall not replace or be in lieu of loans to local school
boards or interest rate subsidy payments to local school boards pursuant to
Chapter 11.1 (§ 22.1-175.1 et seq.) of Title 22.1,
and the issuance of such bonds and the payment of such grants shall not, except
as herein provided, affect or otherwise amend the provisions of such chapter as
they relate to the powers and duties of the Authority, local school boards,
local governments, or any other entity.
D. Based on the criteria developed by the Department in collaboration
with the Department of Criminal Justice Services, eligible school divisions
shall apply for a grant by August 1 of each year. As a condition of receiving a
grant, a local match of 25 percent of the grant amount shall be required. The
Superintendent of Public Instruction is
authorized to reduce the local match for local school divisions with a
composite index of local ability-to-pay less than 0.2000, including any such
school division participating in a regional vocational center, special education
center, alternative education center, or academic year Governor's School. The
Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind shall be exempt from the match
requirement.
Grants shall be awarded by the Department on a competitive basis. As part of the application for a grant, each eligible school division shall (i) identify with specificity the security equipment for which grants are being sought, as well as the estimated costs to purchase and install the security equipment, and (ii) certify that it is the intent of the eligible school division to purchase the security equipment within six months of approval of any grant by the Department.
If the Department determines that a grant shall be paid to an eligible school division under this section, it shall provide a written certification to the chairman of the Authority directing him to make a grant payment in a specific amount to the eligible school division. The Department, however, shall not make such written certification until it has established that the Authority has sufficient funds to make such grant payment. The Authority shall only make grant payments to an eligible school division for the grants provided under this section upon receipt of such written certification. The Authority shall make such grant payments, and in the amounts as directed by the Department, within 30 days of receipt of the certification.
E. The Department shall develop guidelines concerning the requirements for applying for a grant and the administration of such grants. Such guidelines shall not be subject to the Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq.).
F. In the event that two or more local school divisions became one local school division, whether by consolidation of only the local school divisions or by consolidation of the local governments, such resulting local school division shall be eligible for grants on the basis of the same number of local school divisions as existed prior to September 30, 2012.
G. The Authority shall take all necessary and proper steps as it is authorized to take under law to carry out the provisions of this section.
H. Beginning in 2014, the The Department shall make an
annual report to the General Assembly by September 1 of each year reporting (i)
the total grants paid during the immediately prior fiscal year to each eligible
school division and (ii) a general description of the security equipment
purchased by eligible school divisions.
§ 22.1-296.2. Fingerprinting required; reciprocity permitted.
A. As a condition of employment, the school boards of the
Commonwealth shall require any applicant who is offered or accepts employment after July 1, 1989,
whether full-time full
time or part-time, part time or permanent, or temporary, to submit to fingerprinting
and to provide personal descriptive information to be forwarded along with the
applicant's fingerprints through the Central Criminal Records Exchange to the
Federal Bureau of Investigation for the purpose of obtaining criminal history
record information regarding such applicant. The school board may (i) pay for
all or a portion of the cost of the fingerprinting or criminal records check or
(ii) in its discretion, require the applicant to pay for all or a portion of
the cost of such fingerprinting or criminal records check.
The Central Criminal Records Exchange, upon receipt of an applicant's record or notification that no record exists, shall report to the school board whether or not the applicant has ever been convicted of a felony or a Class 1 misdemeanor or an equivalent offense in another state.
To conserve the costs of conducting criminal history record
checks to applicants and school boards, upon the written request and permission
of the applicant, a school board shall inform another school board with which
reciprocity has been established, and to which the applicant also has applied
for employment, of the results of the criminal history record information
conducted within the previous ninety 90 days that it obtained
concerning the applicant. Criminal history record information pertaining to an
applicant for employment by a school board shall be exchanged only between
school boards in the Commonwealth in which a current agreement of reciprocity
for the exchange of such information has been established and is in effect.
Reciprocity agreements between school boards shall provide for the
apportionment of the costs of the fingerprinting or criminal records check
between the applicant and the school board, as prescribed in this section.
However, school boards that enter into reciprocity agreements shall not each
levy the costs of the fingerprinting or criminal records check on the
applicant.
B. The division superintendent shall inform the relevant
school board of any notification of arrest of a school board employee received
pursuant to § 19.2-83.1. The school board shall require such employee, whether full-time full
time or part-time, part time or permanent, or temporary, to submit to
fingerprinting and to provide personal descriptive information to be forwarded
along with the employee's fingerprints through the Central Criminal Records
Exchange to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the purpose of obtaining
criminal history record information regarding such employee. The school board
may (i) pay for all or a portion of the cost of the fingerprinting or criminal
records check or (ii) in its discretion, require the applicant to pay for all
or a portion of the cost of such fingerprinting or criminal records check.
The Central Criminal Records Exchange, upon receipt of an
employee's record or notification that no record exists, shall report to the
school board whether or not the employee has been convicted of any of the
offenses listed in subsection A of this section.
The contents of the employee's record shall be used by the school board solely
to implement the provisions of §§ 22.1-307 and 22.1-315.
C. The Central Criminal Records Exchange shall not disclose information to the school board regarding charges or convictions of any crimes not specified in this section. If an applicant is denied employment or a current employee is suspended or dismissed because of information appearing on his criminal history record, the school board shall provide a copy of the information obtained from the Central Criminal Records Exchange to the applicant or employee. The information provided to the school board shall not be disseminated except as provided in this section.
§ 22.1-296.3. Certain private school employees subject to fingerprinting and criminal records checks.
A. As a condition of employment, the governing boards or
administrators of private elementary or secondary schools that are accredited
pursuant to § 22.1-19 shall require any applicant who accepts employment,
whether full-time full
time or part-time, part time or permanent, or temporary, to submit to
fingerprinting and to provide personal descriptive information to be forwarded
along with the applicant's fingerprints through the Central Criminal Records
Exchange to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the purpose of obtaining
criminal history record information regarding such applicant.
The Central Criminal Records Exchange, upon receipt of an applicant's record or notification that no record exists, shall report to the governing board or administrator, or to a private organization coordinating such records on behalf of such governing board or administrator pursuant to a written agreement with the Department of State Police, that the applicant meets the criteria or does not meet the criteria for employment based on whether or not the applicant has ever been convicted of any barrier crime as defined in § 19.2-392.02.
B. The Central Criminal Records Exchange shall not disclose information to such governing board, administrator, or private organization coordinating such records regarding charges or convictions of any crimes. If any applicant is denied employment because of information appearing on the criminal history record and the applicant disputes the information upon which the denial was based, the Central Criminal Records Exchange shall, upon request, furnish the applicant the procedures for obtaining a copy of the criminal history record from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The information provided to the governing board, administrator, or private organization coordinating such records shall not be disseminated except as provided in this section. A governing board or administrator employing or previously employing a temporary teacher or a private organization coordinating such records on behalf of such governing board or administrator pursuant to a written agreement with the Department of State Police may disseminate, at the written request of such temporary teacher, whether such teacher meets the criteria or does not meet the criteria for employment pursuant to subsection A to the governing board or administrator of another accredited private elementary or secondary school in which such teacher has accepted employment. Such governing board, administrator, or private organization transferring criminal records information pursuant to this section shall be immune from civil liability for any official act, decision, or omission done or made in the performance of such transfer, when such acts or omissions are taken in good faith and are not the result of gross negligence or willful misconduct.
Fees charged for the processing and administration of background checks pursuant to this section shall not exceed the actual cost to the state of such processing and administration.
C. Effective July 1, 2017, the The governing board or
administrator of a private elementary or secondary school that is accredited
pursuant to § 22.1-19 that operates a child day program or family day system
regulated by the Department pursuant to Chapter 14.1 (§ 22.1-289.02 et seq.)
shall accept evidence of a background check in accordance with § 22.1-289.035
for individuals who are required to undergo a background check in accordance
with that section as a condition of employment in lieu of the background check
required by subsection A.
D. The governing boards or administrators of private elementary and secondary schools that are accredited pursuant to § 22.1-19 shall adopt and implement policies prohibiting any individual who is a governing board member, administrator, employee, contractor, or agent of a private elementary or secondary school to assist a governing board member, administrator, employee, contractor, or agent of such private elementary or secondary school in obtaining a new job if such individual knows or has probable cause to believe that the individual seeking new employment engaged in sexual misconduct regarding a minor or student in violation of law.
E. For purposes of this section, "governing board" or "administrator" means the unit or board or person designated to supervise operations of a system of private schools or a private school accredited pursuant to § 22.1-19.
Nothing in this section or § 19.2-389 shall be construed to
require any private or religious school which that is not so accredited to
comply with this section.
§ 22.1-303. Probationary terms of service for teachers.
A. A probationary term of service of three years in the same school division shall be required before a teacher is issued a continuing contract. School boards shall provide each probationary teacher except probationary teachers who have prior successful teaching experience, as determined by the local school board in a school division, a mentor teacher, as described by Board guidelines developed pursuant to § 22.1-305.1, during the first year of the probationary period, to assist such probationary teacher in achieving excellence in instruction. During the probationary period, such probationary teacher shall be evaluated annually based upon the evaluation procedures developed by the employing school board for use by the division superintendent and principals in evaluating teachers as required by subsection C of § 22.1-295. A teacher in his first year of the probationary period shall be evaluated informally at least once during the first semester of the school year. The division superintendent shall consider such evaluations, among other things, in making any recommendations to the school board regarding the nonrenewal of such probationary teacher's contract as provided in § 22.1-305.
Any teacher hired on or after July 1, 2001, shall be required, as a condition of achieving continuing contract status, to have successfully completed training in instructional strategies and techniques for intervention for or remediation of students who fail or are at risk of failing the Standards of Learning assessments. Local school divisions shall be required to provide said training at no cost to teachers employed in their division. In the event a local school division fails to offer said training in a timely manner, no teacher will be denied continuing contract status for failure to obtain such training.
B. Once a continuing contract status has been attained in a school division in the Commonwealth, another probationary period need not be served in any other school division unless such probationary period, not to exceed two years, is made a part of the contract of employment. Further, when a teacher has attained continuing contract status in a school division in the Commonwealth and separates from and returns to teaching service in a school division in Virginia by the beginning of the third year, such teacher shall be required to serve a probationary period not to exceed two years, if made a part of the contract for employment.
C. For the purpose of calculating the years of service required to attain continuing contract status, at least 160 contractual teaching days during the school year shall be deemed the equivalent of one year in the first year of service by a teacher.
D. Teachers holding
three-year local eligibility licenses issued prior to July 1, 2013, shall not
be eligible for continuing contract status while teaching under the authority
of such license. Upon attainment of a collegiate professional or postgraduate
professional license issued by the Department of Education, such teachers shall
serve a probationary term of service of three years prior to being eligible for
continuing contract status pursuant to this section.
§ 22.1-321.1. Possession and administration of epinephrine.
By the beginning of the 2016
- 2017 school year, the The Board
shall promulgate regulations for the possession and administration of
epinephrine in every school for students with disabilities, to be administered
by any employee of the school who is authorized by a prescriber and trained in
the administration of epinephrine to any student believed to be having an
anaphylactic reaction.
§ 22.1-346.2. Board of Visitors of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind established.
A. There is hereby established the Board of Visitors of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind (Board of Visitors), as a policy agency in the executive branch of state government under the name of the "Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind," for the purpose of governing the educational programs and services to deaf, blind, and multi-disabled students enrolled at the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind.
B. The Board of Visitors shall have a total membership of 11 members that shall consist of four legislative members and seven nonlegislative citizen members. Members shall be appointed as follows: two members of the House of Delegates, to be appointed by the Speaker of the House of Delegates in accordance with the principles of proportional representation contained in the Rules of the House of Delegates; two members of the Senate, to be appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules; and seven nonlegislative citizen members, of whom one shall be a parent of a child who is deaf or blind representing the Eastern region of the Commonwealth, one shall be a parent of a child who is deaf or blind representing the Western region of the Commonwealth, and one shall be a representative of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind Alumni Association, to be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the General Assembly. Nonlegislative citizen members of the Board of Visitors shall be citizens of the Commonwealth. Legislative members of the Board of Visitors shall serve terms coincident with their terms of office. After the initial staggering of terms, nonlegislative members appointed shall serve for four-year terms. Appointments to fill vacancies, other than by expiration of a term, shall be for the unexpired terms. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointments. All members may be reappointed. However, no House member shall serve more than four consecutive two-year terms, no Senate member shall serve more than two consecutive four-year terms, and no nonlegislative member appointed by the Governor shall serve more than two consecutive four-year terms. The remainder of any term to which a member is appointed to fill a vacancy shall not constitute a term in determining the member's eligibility for reappointment.
The Board of Visitors shall elect a chairman and vice-chairman from among its membership. The Board of Visitors shall elect a secretary, who shall keep an accurate record of the proceedings of the Board of Visitors and of the executive committee if one is created by the Board of Visitors, and such other officers as the Board deems appropriate. A majority of the members shall constitute a quorum. The Board of Visitors shall meet no more than four times each year. The meetings of the Board of Visitors shall be held at the call of the chairman or whenever the majority of the members so request.
C. Legislative members of the Board of
Visitors shall receive such compensation as provided in §
30-19.12, and nonlegislative citizen members shall receive such compensation
for the performance of their duties as provided in § 2.2-2813. All members
shall be reimbursed for all reasonable and necessary expenses incurred in the
performance of their duties as provided in §§ 2.2-2813 and 2.2-2825. Funding
for the costs of expenses of the members shall be provided from such funds as
may be appropriated to the Board of Visitors of the
Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind, in accordance
with the appropriations act.
D. The Superintendent of Public Instruction
shall designate a member of the staff of the Department of
Education to serve as a consultant to the Board of Visitors of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind
on matters pertaining to instruction, federal and state special education
requirements, and school accreditation, and to provide technical assistance to
assist the Board of Visitors
in meeting specific instructional and school accreditation needs.
E. The Board of Visitors shall have the following powers and duties:
1. Establish such rules, policies, and regulations for the governance of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind.
2. Prescribe the criteria and procedures governing admissions to the school, and the review of student placement, to ensure the appropriateness of the placement and instructional program of each student admitted to the school, pursuant to § 22.1-348 and in accordance with federal and state special education laws and regulations.
3. Establish a policy governing the transportation of students at the school to permit frequent home visits by students, and to provide to each student transportation to and from the school and the place of residence of such student's parent or guardian whenever the school is officially closed.
4. Prescribe and approve the education programs of the
Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind, in consultation with the Department of Education, the Virginia Department for the
Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing, and the Virginia
Department for the Blind and Visually Vision Impaired.
5. Appoint the superintendent, other officers, and the faculty of the school. The superintendent shall be appointed every two years and the other officers and faculty annually. However, the superintendent, with the approval of the chairman of the Board of Visitors, shall be authorized to fill vacancies in positions appointed by the Board of Visitors occurring between meetings of the Board of Visitors. The Board of Visitors may remove at any time the superintendent, other officers, faculty, and employees for cause, subject to the provisions of Chapter 29 (§ 2.2-2900 et seq.) of Title 2.2.
6. Establish the qualifications, duties, and compensation of the superintendent, other officers, faculty, and employees of the school.
7. Prepare and submit to the Governor and the
General Assembly, beginning July 1, 2010,
an annual report detailing the curricula and other educational programs and
services of the school, including receipts and disbursements pertaining to the
operation of the school for each fiscal year ending on June 30.
§ 42.1-36.1. Power and duty of library boards and certain governing bodies regarding acceptable Internet use policies.
A. Every (i) library board established pursuant to § 42.1-35
or (ii) governing body of any county, city, or town that, pursuant to §
42.1-36, has not established a library board pursuant to § 42.1-35 shall establish an
acceptable use policy for the Internet designed to (a) prohibit use by library
employees and patrons of the library's computer equipment and communications
services for sending, receiving, viewing, or downloading illegal material via
the Internet, (b) prevent access by library patrons under the age of 18 to
material that is harmful to juveniles, and (c) establish appropriate measures
to be taken against persons who violate the policy. For libraries established
under § 42.1-33, the policy shall also require the selection, installation, and activation of, on
those computers that are accessible to the public and have Internet access, a
technology protection measure to filter or block Internet access through such
computers to child pornography as defined in §,
18.2-374.1:1 18.2-374.1,
obscenity as defined in § 18.2-372, and, with respect to minors, materials
deemed harmful to juveniles as defined in § 18.2-390. Such policy shall provide
that a person authorized by the library board shall disable or otherwise bypass
the technology protection measure required by this section at the request of a
patron to enable access for bona fide research or other lawful purposes. The
policy required by this section shall be posted online; however, if the library
does not have a website, the policy shall be available to the public upon
request.
The library board or the governing body may include such other terms, conditions, and requirements in the library's policy as it deems appropriate, such as requiring written parental authorization for Internet use by juveniles or differentiating acceptable uses between elementary, middle, and high school students.
B. The library board or the governing body shall take such
steps as it deems appropriate to implement and enforce the library's policy, which may include, but
are not limited to, (i) the use of software programs designed to block access
by (a) library employees and patrons to illegal material, (b) library patrons under
the age of 18 to material that is harmful to juveniles,
or (c) both; (ii) charging library employees to casually monitor patrons'
Internet use; or (iii) installing privacy screens on computers that access the
Internet. For libraries established under § 42.1-33, the library board or
governing body shall direct such libraries to select and install on those
computers that are accessible to the public and have Internet access a
technology protection measure as required by the policy established pursuant to
subsection A. No state funding shall be withheld and no other adverse action
taken against a library by the Librarian of Virginia or any other official of
state government when the technology protection measure fails, provided that
such library promptly has taken reasonable steps to rectify and prevent such
failures in the future. or
§ 42.1-43. Appropriation for free library or library service conducted by company, society, or organization.
The governing body of any county, city,
or town in which no free public library system as provided in this chapter has been established shall have may,, in
its discretion, appropriate such sums of money as it to determines is
appropriate for the support and maintenance of any free
library or library service operated and conducted in such county, city, or town by a company,
society, or association organized
under the provisions of seems
proper
Chapter 10 (§ 13.1-801 et seq.) of
Title 13.1. §§ 13.1-801
through 13.1-980
§ 42.1-60. State Law Library managed by Supreme Court.
There shall be a State Law Library at Richmond maintained as at present, which shall be
managed by the Supreme Court. The Court shall appoint the librarian and other
employees to hold office, with a branch thereof at
Staunton, at the pleasure of the
Court during.; provided, however, that the clerk at Staunton shall
act as law librarian there without additional compensation therefor
§ 42.1-61. Books, etc., constituting State Law Library.
The State Law Library shall consist of the books, periodicals, audiovisual materials, and other
media now in the law library
at Richmond
libraries,
with such additions as may be made thereto. and Staunton
§ 42.1-63. Regulation of State Law Library.
The Supreme Court shall have the power to make and enforce
such rules and orders for the regulation of the State Law Library, and the use
thereof, as
it may to determines is appropriate. seem proper Such rules and orders may provide for the
assessment and collection of fees for the use of computer research services
other than for valid state uses, which shall include official use by attorneys
for the Commonwealth and public defenders, and their assistants.
Such fees shall be assessed in the amount necessary to cover the expenses of
such services and those collected and hereby appropriated to the Court to be
paid as part of the cost of maintaining such computer research capabilities.
§ 42.1-65. Local law libraries in charge of circuit court clerks; computer research services; expenses.
A. If the members of the bar practicing in any county or city
of the Commonwealth shall procure by voluntary contribution a law library with
a value of at least
$500 of the for the use
of the courts held in such county or city, and of the bar practicing therein,
it shall be the duty of the circuit court of such county or city to require its
clerk to take charge of the law
library so contributed and to keep, at the least, the law
library in the courthouse or clerk's office building
according to the rules prescribed by the bar and approved by the court. In
addition, all or a portion of such law library may be housed in the local
public library with the approval of and subject to the management and control
of the local public library. the same
B. If the members of the bars practicing in two or more
adjoining counties or cities of the Commonwealth shall jointly procure by
voluntary contribution a law library with a value of at least $500 of the for the
joint use of the courts held in such counties and cities, and of the bars
practicing therein, it shall be the joint duty of the circuit courts of such
counties and cities to require one of its clerks to take charge of the law library so contributed
and to keep the, at the least, law library in the most
convenient courthouse or clerk's office building according to the rules jointly
prescribed by the bars and jointly approved by the courts. same
C. Such local and regional law libraries may purchase or lease
computer terminals for the purpose of retrieving available legal reference
data, and if so, the library rules shall provide for the assessment and
collection of fees, which may include use of a flat rate or fee structure, for
the use of computer research services other than for official use of the
courts, attorneys for the Commonwealth and public defenders
and their assistants, and counties and cities serviced by such libraries, which
fees shall be sufficient to cover the expenses of such services., Such libraries, pursuant to rules of the Supreme
Court and at costs to such libraries, may have access to computer research
services of the State Law Library.
§ 42.1-70. Assessment for law library as part of costs in civil actions; contributions from bar associations.
Any county, city,
or town may, through its governing body, assess
as part of the costs incident to each civil action filed in the courts located
within its boundaries,
a sum not in excess of, $4. four dollars
The imposition of such assessment shall be by ordinance of the
governing body, which ordinance may provide for different sums in circuit courts
and district courts, and the assessment shall be collected by the clerk of the
court in which the action is filed
and remitted to the treasurer of such county, city,
or town and held by such treasurer subject to disbursements by the governing
body for the acquisition of (i) law books, law periodicals and computer legal
research services, and
computer terminals for offsite placement to maximize access to the law library
by the public,
and (ii) equipment for the establishment, use,
and maintenance of a law library, that shall be open for the
use of the public at hours convenient to the public. In addition to the
acquisition of law books, law periodicals and computer legal research services, and equipment, the
disbursements may include compensation to be paid to librarians and other
necessary staff for the maintenance of such library and acquisition of suitable
quarters for such library. The compensation of such librarians and the
necessary staff and the cost of suitable quarters for such library shall be
fixed by the governing body and paid out of the fund created by the imposition
of such assessment of cost. which
Disbursements may be made to purchase or lease computer terminals for the
purpose of retaining such research services. The assessment provided for Such libraries,
pursuant to rules of the Supreme Court and at costs to such libraries, may have
access to computer research services of the State Law Library. in
this section shall be in addition to all other costs
prescribed by law, but shall not apply to any action in which the Commonwealth
or any political subdivision thereof or the federal government is a party and
in which the costs are assessed against the Commonwealth herein or any political
subdivision thereof,
or the federal government.
The governing body is authorized to accept contributions to the fund from any
bar association.,
Any such library established in the County of Wythe shall be
located only in a town that is the seat of the
county government. which
§ 42.1-77. Definitions.
As used in this chapter, unless the context requires a different meaning:
"Agency" means all boards, commissions, departments,
divisions, institutions, and
authorities, and parts thereof, of the Commonwealth
or its political subdivisions and includes the offices of constitutional
officers. or
"Archival
quality" means a quality of reproduction consistent with established
standards specified by state and national agencies and organizations
responsible for establishing such standards, such as the Association for
Information and Image Management, the American National Standards Institute,
and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
"Archival record" means a public record of continuing and enduring value useful to the citizens of the Commonwealth and necessary to the administrative functions of public agencies in the conduct of services and activities mandated by law that is identified on a Library of Virginia approved records retention and disposition schedule as having sufficient informational value to be permanently maintained by the Commonwealth.
"Archives" means the program administered by The Library of Virginia for the preservation of archival records.
"Board" means the State Library Board.
"Conversion" means the act of moving electronic records to a different format, especially data from an obsolete format to a current format.
"Custodian" means the public official in charge of an office having public records.
"Disaster plan" means the information maintained by an agency that outlines recovery techniques and methods to be followed in case of an emergency that impacts the agency's records.
"Electronic record" means a public record whose creation, storage, and access require the use of an automated system or device. Ownership of the hardware, software, or media used to create, store, or access the electronic record has no bearing on a determination of whether such record is a public record.
"Essential public record" means records that are required for recovery and reconstruction of any agency to enable it to resume its core operations and functions and to protect the rights and interests of persons.
"Librarian of Virginia" means the State Librarian of Virginia or his designated representative.
"Lifecycle" means the creation, use, maintenance, and disposition of a public record.
"Metadata"
means data describing the context, content, and structure of records and their
management through time.
"Migration" means the act of moving electronic records from one information system or medium to another to ensure continued access to the records while maintaining the records' authenticity, integrity, reliability, and usability.
"Original record" means the first generation of the information and is the preferred version of a record. Archival records should to the maximum extent possible be original records.
"Preservation" means the processes and operations involved in ensuring the technical and intellectual survival of authentic records through time.
"Private
record" means a record that does not relate to or affect the carrying out
of the constitutional, statutory, or other official ceremonial duties of a
public official, including the correspondence, diaries, journals, or notes that
are not prepared for, utilized for, circulated, or communicated in the course
of transacting public business.
"Public official" means all persons holding any office created by the Constitution of Virginia or by any act of the General Assembly, the Governor and all other officers of the executive branch of the state government, and all other officers, heads, presidents, or chairmen of boards, commissions, departments, and agencies of the state government or its political subdivisions.
"Public record" or "record" means recorded information that documents a transaction or activity by or with any public officer, agency, or employee of an agency. Regardless of physical form or characteristic, the recorded information is a "public record" if it is produced, collected, received, or retained in pursuance of law or in connection with the transaction of public business. The medium upon which such information is recorded has no bearing on the determination of whether the recording is a "public record."
For purposes of this chapter, "public record" does
not include (i)
nonrecord materials, meaning materials made or acquired and preserved solely
for reference use or exhibition purposes, extra copies of documents preserved
only for convenience or reference, shall or stocks of publications or (ii) records that are not
related to or affect the carrying out of the constitutional, statutory, or
other official ceremonial duties of a public official, including the
correspondence, diaries, journals, or notes that are not prepared for, utilized
for, circulated, or communicated in the course of the
transaction of public business. and
"Records retention and disposition schedule" means a Library of Virginia-approved timetable stating the required retention period and disposition action of a records series. The administrative, fiscal, historical, and legal value of a public record shall be considered in appraising its appropriate retention schedule. The terms "administrative," "fiscal," "historical," and "legal" value shall be defined as:
1. "Administrative value": Records shall be deemed of administrative value if they have continuing utility in the operation of an agency.
2. "Fiscal value": Records shall be deemed of fiscal value if they are needed to document and verify financial authorizations, obligations, and transactions.
3. "Historical value": Records shall be deemed of historical value if they contain unique information, regardless of age, that provides understanding of some aspect of the government and promotes the development of an informed and enlightened citizenry.
4. "Legal value": Records shall be deemed of legal value if they document actions taken in the protection and proving of legal or civil rights and obligations of individuals and agencies.
2. That §§ 22.1-16.2, 22.1-57.3:2, 22.1-89.3, and 22.1-212 and Articles 4 (§§ 42.1-30, 42.1-31, and 42.1-32) and 5 (§§ 42.1-32.1 through 42.1-32.6) of Chapter 1 of Title 42.1 of the Code of Virginia are repealed.
3. That the provisions of this act that amend § 22.1-178 of the Code of Virginia shall not be construed to require any individual who accepted employment on or before July 1, 1994, as a driver of a school bus transporting pupils to agree, as a condition of employment, to submit to alcohol and controlled substance testing.
4. That the provisions of this act that amend § 22.1-296.2 of the Code of Virginia shall not be construed to require, as a condition of employment by a school board, any applicant who was offered or accepted employment on or before July 1, 1989, whether full time or part time or permanent or temporary, to submit to fingerprinting and to provide personal descriptive information to be forwarded along with the applicant's fingerprints through the Central Criminal Records Exchange to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the purpose of obtaining criminal history record information regarding such applicant.