| Chapter 206 |
| 2025 -- H 5292 Enacted 06/26/2025 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO EDUCATION -- REGIONAL VOCATIONAL SCHOOLS |
Introduced By: Representatives Fellela, Serpa, Read, and Phillips |
| Date Introduced: February 05, 2025 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Section 16-45-6.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-45 entitled "Regional |
| Vocational Schools [See Title 16 Chapter 97 — The Rhode Island Board of Education Act]" is |
| hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 16-45-6.1. Career and technical education. |
| (a) The general assembly finds that career and technical education (“CTE”) programs that |
| meet the CTE board of trustees’ industry developed standards prepare Rhode Island’s students to |
| succeed in a wide variety of employment settings are a critical component of the state’s public |
| education system and a necessary element of the state’s economic development. CTE programs |
| that meet the CTE board of trustees’ standards are located in the regional career and technical |
| education centers and comprehensive high schools and are helping students graduate high school |
| with the skills to secure a job with a family-sustaining wage. |
| (b) The general assembly further finds that the proportion of students now enrolled in such |
| programs is inadequate to meet the needs of Rhode Island’s growing economy. Rhode Island’s |
| employers are best positioned to assist in establishing a high-quality system of secondary and |
| postsecondary career and technical education. To assist in the development of a high-quality system |
| of CTE, the CTE board of trustees shall review and annually provide recommendations to the board |
| of education regarding issues impacting secondary and postsecondary career and technical |
| education, including, but not limited to, program quality, industry alignment, the effective use of |
| state and federal CTE funding, the allocation of CTE funding, and expenditures of CTE funding, |
| program outcomes, work-based learning, transportation, and graduation requirements. The report |
| and recommendations shall be provided to the board of education no later than October 15 of each |
| year. |
| (c) [Deleted by P.L. 2021, ch. 278, § 1 and P.L. 2021, ch. 279, § 1.] |
| (d)(1) To sustain and advance the economic development of our communities, all students |
| retain the right to enroll in a state approved career and technical education program approved by |
| the CTE board of trustees in communities outside their community of residence. This right does |
| not apply to locally developed CTE programs, locally approved CTE programs, pathway programs, |
| or other programs that are not approved by the CTE board of trustees. Students shall have a right |
| to request enrollment and to enroll in a CTE board of trustees’ approved program outside of their |
| community of residence when a substantially similar or same (“substantially similar”) CTE board |
| of trustees approved program is not offered within their community of residence. |
| (2) In determining whether two programs are substantially similar, the CTE board of |
| trustees shall consider the following factors: |
| (i) Program type; |
| (ii) Information on the occupation that the student will be prepared for; |
| (iii) The credentials the student will earn; |
| (iv) The type of work-based learning that the student will be provided access to; |
| (v) The ability to access advanced course experiences; and |
| (vi) Such additional factors as the CTE board of trustees deem to be relevant, including |
| postsecondary attainment, industry partnerships and advisory boards, and program quality. |
| (3) Effective January 15, 2022, and every year thereafter, the CTE board of trustees and |
| the department of elementary and secondary education shall publish a detailed list of substantially |
| similar CTE programs for the upcoming school year. The list will be used to support students and |
| their families in accessing CTE board of trustees approved career and technical education |
| programs. There will be a thirty-day (30) period for schools and districts to appeal the substantially |
| similar designation to the board of education. |
| (4) Students enrolled in, accepted to, or attending a state CTE board-approved program |
| (the “program of choice”) prior to January 1, 2022, which program is outside of their home district |
| but is considered to be substantially similar to a program in their home district, shall be allowed to |
| remain enrolled in that program of choice as set forth in subsection (j) of this section. |
| (e) Students may request access to state CTE board-approved career preparation programs |
| outside their school district if their home district does not provide a substantially similar state- |
| approved CTE program. If a discrepancy exists as to whether two (2) state-approved programs are |
| substantially similar, the state CTE board shall use state CTE board program quality criteria set |
| forth in subsection (d) of this section to determine if the two (2) state CTE board-approved |
| programs are substantially similar programs. The decision of the CTE board shall be final. |
| (f)(1) A student’s request to enroll in an out of district state CTE board-approved career |
| and technical program shall not be denied, provided that: |
| (i) A substantially similar program is not available in the student’s home district; |
| (ii) The student meets any other criteria required of all students for admission to the out of |
| district program and the center; and |
| (iii) When there is more than one recognized CTE program in a transportation region, the |
| student is applying to the center that is geographically the closest program to the student’s |
| residence. |
| (g)(1) Students requesting access to state CTE board-approved career preparation programs |
| outside their established school transportation region may enroll in such programs that are not |
| substantially similar to a program in their home district. In such event, with respect to transportation |
| costs, the resident’s local education agency shall only be responsible for paying the resident |
| district’s average per pupil expenditure for student transportation for all students in the district. The |
| receiving district shall pay any remaining balance due for transportation costs associated with the |
| particular student. |
| (2) The sending district shall pay the average of the per-pupil expenditure of the receiving |
| district and sending district when paying out-of-district tuitions for students in CTE programs. |
| (3) When two or more substantially similar programs are available within a student’s |
| transportation district, that student may enroll in the program that is not geographically closest only |
| if the receiving district agrees to pay all the transportation costs to and from the receiving district. |
| (h) All eligible CTE programs shall align to CTE board of trustees’ program standards. |
| Programs that do not meet this standard shall not be eligible to enroll out-of-district students and |
| receive state or federal CTE funding. |
| (i) All state CTE board-approved programs shall align to industry standards or be |
| associated with a nationally recognized CTE board-approved program. |
| (j) Students enrolled in, accepted to, or attending a state CTE board-approved program of |
| choice outside of the students’ home district as of January 1, 2022, shall be exempt from the |
| substantially similar provisions of this section and may continue to matriculate in grades nine (9) |
| through twelve (12) in their program of choice so that students and parents who made educational |
| decisions prior to January 1, 2022, shall retain the rights that were in place when they made those |
| decisions. If a substantially similar state-approved program is established in a student’s home |
| district after the student has enrolled in a program of choice, the student may continue to matriculate |
| in grades nine (9) through twelve (12) in the student’s program of choice provided the student |
| remains enrolled in the program. The sending district may request, and shall be provided by the |
| district with the chosen CTE program, information on the students’ progress in programs, including |
| attendance and grades. The provisions of this subsection shall also apply and extend to other |
| siblings in the family who apply to attend the same program of choice. |
| (k) Career and technical funds allocated under § 16-7.2-6 shall be used solely for the |
| purpose of funding improvements to state CTE board-approved career and technical education |
| programs and facilities or for funding related to the establishment of new career and technical |
| programs in our state. |
| (l) The limitations related to enrollment in CTE programs contained within this chapter |
| shall not apply to the Metropolitan Regional Career and Technical Center or the William M. Davies, |
| Jr. Career and Technical High School. All eligible students, from any and all Rhode Island cities |
| and towns, have the right to pursue enrollment and enroll in, subject to applicable enrollment |
| procedures, the Metropolitan Regional Career and Technical Center or the William M. Davies, Jr. |
| Career and Technical High School’s programs. |
| (m) Provided, effective July 1, 2025, any data collection and reporting for individual |
| students, that is required as part of the basic education program regulations data collection |
| including, but not limited to, data required pursuant to the provisions of chapterchapters 7 and 7.2 |
| of this title16, shall be the responsibility of the school district, wherein the student is attending and |
| enrolled in a career and technical education program, sometimes colloquially referred to as the |
| "receiving district," and not the responsibility of what is sometimes known as the student's "sending |
| district." |
| SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC001073 |
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