2026 -- H 8351 | |
======== | |
LC006182 | |
======== | |
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE RHODE ISLAND EDUCATION FUNDING AND | |
ACCOUNTABILITY ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Representatives McNamara, Cortvriend, Ackerman, Tanzi, Kislak, | |
Date Introduced: March 25, 2026 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings. |
2 | The general assembly finds that: |
3 | (1) A high-quality public education system is essential to the prosperity and civic health of |
4 | the State of Rhode Island; |
5 | (2) Access to sufficient, equitable, and predictable education funding is a legal and moral |
6 | obligation of the state; |
7 | (3) The state's economic vitality depends upon an educated workforce equipped with |
8 | twenty-first century skills including critical thinking, collaboration, and communication; |
9 | (4) Inequities in local fiscal capacity and outdated funding mechanisms have produced |
10 | inconsistent educational opportunities among municipalities and undermined public confidence; |
11 | (5) All Rhode Island residents have a stake in the success of our state's public schools and |
12 | students, and there is widespread support among stakeholders for modernizing the state's education |
13 | funding system to emphasize sufficiency, student-centered equity, and shared fiscal responsibility; |
14 | and |
15 | (6) Implementing this framework in statute is necessary to ensure transparency, |
16 | accountability, and long-term stability in education finance. |
17 | SECTION 2. Title 16 of the General Laws entitled "EDUCATION" is hereby amended by |
18 | adding thereto the following chapter: |
| |
1 | CHAPTER 7.3 |
2 | THE RHODE ISLAND EDUCATION FUNDING AND ACCOUNTABILITY ACT |
3 | 16-7.3-1. Short title. |
4 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as "The Rhode Island Education Funding |
5 | and Accountability Act." |
6 | 16-7.3-2. Purpose. |
7 | (a) The purposes of this chapter are to: |
8 | (1) Establish a comprehensive transparent, and student-centered funding formula for all |
9 | Rhode Island public schools; |
10 | (2) Distribute state and local resources equitably according to instructional need; |
11 | (3) Ensure that municipalities contribute in proportion to their fiscal capacity; and |
12 | (4) Require fiscal responsibility and strategic management of education funds to improve |
13 | student outcomes statewide. |
14 | (b) Design a system for funding public schools established under this chapter to be: |
15 | (1) Sufficient. Ensuring adequate funding for effective public education for all students; |
16 | (2) Student-centered. Allocating funds based on the needs of each student; |
17 | (3) Comprehensive. Encompassing all significant educational costs borne by state and local |
18 | governments; |
19 | (4) Predictable yet flexible. Providing stability while allowing response to unforeseen |
20 | changes in enrollment or costs; |
21 | (5) Transparent. Requiring public disclosure of all calculations and data used; |
22 | (6) Equitable. Calculating municipal contributions based on capacity to pay; and |
23 | (7) Accountable. Linking expenditures to student outcomes. |
24 | 16-7.3-3. Definitions. |
25 | (a) As used in this chapter: |
26 | (1) "Average daily membership" or "ADM" means the number of resident students enrolled |
27 | in public education programs, including resident students receiving preschool special education |
28 | services in a community setting, a Rhode Island pre-k classroom, or an out-of-district placement; |
29 | and resident students enrolled in LEAs, as defined in § 16-7-22 and calculated by the department |
30 | of elementary and secondary education. |
31 | (2) "Core education amount" or "CEA" means the regional average of current per pupil |
32 | educational expenditures among Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire, |
33 | adjusted annually for inflation using the Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers (CPI-U). The |
34 | CEA is calculated using expenditure data in the following categories, as such categories are defined |
| LC006182 - Page 2 of 13 |
1 | by the National Center for Education Statistics ("NCES") in/for its annual National Public |
2 | Education Financial Survey: instruction and instruction-related expenditures, support services, |
3 | food services and other educational expenditures. Data from the National Public Education |
4 | Financial Survey, as published annually by NCES, and enrollment data from the Common Core of |
5 | Data, also published annually by NCES, shall be used when determining the CEA. The CEA shall |
6 | be updated annually. |
7 | (i) "Instruction and instruction-related expenditures" consist of expenditures for activities |
8 | directly related to the interaction between teachers and students, and for activities that assist with |
9 | classroom instruction including, but not limited to, salaries and benefits for teachers, teaching |
10 | assistants, librarians and library aides, in-service teacher trainers, curriculum development, student |
11 | assessment, technology for students outside the classroom, and supplies (such as textbooks) and |
12 | purchased instructional services. These expenditures also include expenditures relating to career |
13 | and technical education, extracurricular, cocurricular activities and other programs providing |
14 | instruction, or assisting in providing instruction, for students in prekindergarten, kindergarten, |
15 | grades one through twelve (grades 1 through 12), and ungraded programs. |
16 | (ii) "Support services expenditures" consist of expenditures for student support services, |
17 | instructional staff support, general administration, school administration, operations and |
18 | maintenance, in-district student transportation, school safety and other support services. |
19 | (iii) "Food services" consist of activities that provide food to students and staff in a LEA. |
20 | These services include preparing and serving regular and incidental meals or snacks in connection |
21 | with school activities as well as delivery of food to schools. |
22 | (3) "Department" means the Rhode Island department of elementary and secondary |
23 | education ("RIDE"). |
24 | (4) "Economically disadvantaged student" means a student from a household with income |
25 | at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of the federal poverty level or otherwise |
26 | identified through state administrative data. |
27 | (i) In identifying economically disadvantaged students for purposes of this chapter, the |
28 | department shall, to the maximum extent practicable, utilize linked administrative data systems to |
29 | ensure accurate, timely, and comprehensive identification. The department shall use direct |
30 | certification through participation in state or federal public benefit programs, income data obtained |
31 | from the state's income tax system through lawful interagency data-sharing agreements, or other |
32 | administrative data sources, consistent with state and federal privacy laws. If/when a student does |
33 | not match to state income tax records, such students shall be considered economically |
34 | disadvantaged students. The department shall also permit districts to submit supplemental |
| LC006182 - Page 3 of 13 |
1 | documentation to identify additional eligible students not captured through administrative data |
2 | systems. |
3 | (5) "Instructional program factors" means additive cost adjustments that reflect additional |
4 | per-pupil expenses associated with multilingual learners, students with disabilities, and students |
5 | enrolled in high-cost career and technical education programs. |
6 | (6) "Local education agency" or "LEA" means and includes all of the following within the |
7 | State of Rhode Island: |
8 | (i) Public school districts; |
9 | (ii) Regional school districts; |
10 | (iii) State-operated schools; |
11 | (iv) Regional collaborative schools; and |
12 | (v) Charter schools and mayoral academies. |
13 | (7) "Municipal ability to pay" means each municipality's capacity to fund its resident |
14 | students enrolled in public education programs. Each municipality's ability to pay shall be |
15 | determined by the application of a uniform local share determination rate to the aggregate equalized |
16 | assessed valuation of taxable real and commercial property within each municipality as certified |
17 | annually by the Rhode Island division of municipal finance. |
18 | (8) "Normal costs" means the actuarially determined annual employer contribution |
19 | necessary to fund pension and retirement benefits earned by active teachers during the current fiscal |
20 | year. |
21 | (9) "Reference year" means the year prior to the school year in which the aid is to be paid. |
22 | For the purposes of calculating state and municipal educational funding pursuant to this chapter, |
23 | the reference date shall be one year prior to the year in which aid is paid. |
24 | (10) "Unfunded actuarially accrued liability for teacher pension benefits" means the |
25 | unfunded actuarially accrued liability that accrued prior to July 1, 2025, for all teachers, as defined |
26 | by § 16-16-1, who retired on or before July 1, 2025. |
27 | 16-7.3-4. Determination of the core education amount. |
28 | (a) The CEA shall represent the baseline annual cost per student of a regular public |
29 | education. |
30 | (b) RIDE shall calculate the CEA annually using the most recent available federal school |
31 | finance data for current educational expenditures from NCES, excluding capital outlay and debt |
32 | service, to arrive at an average regional per pupil cost in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New |
33 | Hampshire, and Rhode Island. This average regional per pupil cost shall be the CEA. |
34 | (c) The CEA shall be adjusted annually for inflation using the CPI-U. |
| LC006182 - Page 4 of 13 |
1 | 16-7.3-5. Student weights and instructional program factors. |
2 | (a) The cost of educating an individual student (the "individual foundation cost") shall be |
3 | determined as: |
4 | CEA x (1 + student success factor + instructional program factors) x adjustment factor. |
5 | (b) The following weights shall apply: |
6 | (1) Student success factor (SSF). Fifty percent (50%) for each economically disadvantaged |
7 | student; |
8 | (2) Instructional program factors: |
9 | (i) Multilingual learner. Tiered weights based on WIDA ACCESS proficiency: |
10 | Level 1–2 = sixty percent (60%); Level 3 = forty percent (40%); Level 4+ (while still |
11 | identified) = twenty percent (20%); Former MLL (two (2) years post-exit) = ten percent (10%); |
12 | (ii) Students with disabilities: Tiered weights established by RIDE based on level of |
13 | service(s) identified in students' individualized education programs (IEP); |
14 | (iii) Career and technical education (CTE): Additional weight equal to the amount by which |
15 | a CTE program's verified average per-pupil cost exceeds the CEA as determined annually by the |
16 | Rhode Island board of trustees on career and technical education; and |
17 | (3) Adjustment factor. A normalization coefficient ensuring that actual total statewide per- |
18 | pupil spending reflects the CEA per-pupil amount each year. The adjustment factor shall be |
19 | determined each year as follows: the statewide total foundation cost shall be divided by the |
20 | statewide ADM to yield an unadjusted statewide average per-pupil funding amount; the actual CEA |
21 | per-pupil amount shall then be divided by the unadjusted statewide average per-pupil funding |
22 | amount. The resulting percentage shall be the adjustment factor for the year (see equation below): |
23 | (i) (Total statewide foundation cost) divided by (statewide ADM) = unadjusted statewide |
24 | per pupil amount. |
25 | (ii) (CEA per pupil amount) divided by (unadjusted statewide per pupil amount) = |
26 | adjustment factor. |
27 | (c) All weights are additive. |
28 | (d) The department shall annually publish, not later than March 1, the methodology and |
29 | calculation used to determine the adjustment factor described in subsection (b)(3) of this section, |
30 | including the data sources, assumptions, and normalization procedure used to ensure statewide per- |
31 | pupil spending reflects the CEA. The publication shall be made available on the department's |
32 | website and transmitted to the chairpersons of the house and senate finance committees. |
33 | 16-7.3-6. Shared fiscal responsibility. |
34 | (a) The total cost of public education in Rhode Island shall be jointly borne by the state and |
| LC006182 - Page 5 of 13 |
1 | municipalities. The total statewide foundation cost is determined by multiplying the individual |
2 | foundation cost by the total state ADM. |
3 | (b) Expenditures shall be categorized as follows: |
4 | (1) State-funded costs: |
5 | (i) High-cost special education exceeding four (4) times the statewide average per-pupil |
6 | expenditure which the state shall pay directly to the service provider or reimburse to the LEA on a |
7 | current-year basis, without delay, in the following fiscal year; |
8 | (ii) Out-of-district transportation, including for homeless students, wards of the state, |
9 | students with disabilities and CTE placements; |
10 | (iii) Early childhood screening mandated under federal law; and |
11 | (iv) Unfunded actuarially accrued liability for teacher pension benefits that accrued prior |
12 | to July 1, 2025, for all teachers, as defined by § 16-16-1, who retired on or before July 1, 2025. |
13 | (2) Shared costs. All current educational expenditures comprising the CEA. |
14 | (3) Municipal costs. Any expenditures authorized by a municipality that exceed that |
15 | municipality's minimum local contributions, as defined in § 16-7.3-8. |
16 | (c) The costs associated with retirement benefits for current teachers ("normal costs") shall |
17 | be included within the core educational amount under § 16-7.3-4 as a component of the baseline |
18 | annual cost per student of a regular public education. The costs associated with unfunded actuarially |
19 | accrued liability for teacher pension benefits shall be borne fully by the state. |
20 | 16-7.3-7. Determination of state share. |
21 | (a) The general assembly shall determine annually the total state share, expressed as a |
22 | percentage of the total statewide foundation cost. |
23 | (b) The total state share is applied exclusively to the total statewide foundation cost and |
24 | does not apply to the state-funded costs enumerated in § 16-7.3-6(b)(1). |
25 | (c) The department shall calculate each LEA's state aid by subtracting the required |
26 | minimum local contribution under § 16-7.3-8 from the LEA's total foundation cost. |
27 | (d) The department shall annually publish, not later than September 1, a report |
28 | summarizing the total state and municipal shares of educational expenditures for the preceding |
29 | fiscal year, including each municipality's required minimum local contribution and actual |
30 | contribution. The report shall be submitted to the governor and the chairpersons of the house and |
31 | senate finance committees and posted publicly on the department's website. |
32 | 16-7.3-8. Municipal contribution based on ability to pay. |
33 | (a) Each municipality shall contribute at least its minimum local contribution toward the |
34 | education of all resident students. |
| LC006182 - Page 6 of 13 |
1 | (b) The department shall calculate a local share determination rate annually. The aggregate |
2 | local contribution necessary to meet the total statewide foundation cost shall be determined by |
3 | subtracting the total state share from the total statewide foundation cost. The local share |
4 | determination rate shall be calculated by dividing the aggregate local contribution by the aggregate |
5 | equalized assessed valuation of taxable real and commercial property in the state, and shall be |
6 | expressed as a percentage. The department shall utilize the equalized assessed valuation of taxable |
7 | real and commercial property within each municipality as certified annually by the Rhode Island |
8 | division of municipal finance in its calculation of the local share determination rate. |
9 | (c) The minimum local contribution for each municipality shall be determined by applying |
10 | the local share determination rate to each municipality's respective equalized assessed valuation of |
11 | taxable real and commercial property. |
12 | (d) Municipalities may exceed their respective minimum local contributions. A |
13 | municipality shall have full discretion over the allocation of any local funding it may appropriate |
14 | beyond its minimum local contribution. |
15 | (e) Municipalities that fail to meet their minimum local contribution shall have their state |
16 | aid reduced by double the shortfall, subject to hardship appeal under § 16-7.3-9. |
17 | (f) A municipality's annual per-pupil minimum local contribution shall be determined by |
18 | dividing its minimum local contribution by the municipality's ADM (the number of resident |
19 | students enrolled in public education programs as defined in § 16-7.3-3(a)(1)). |
20 | (g) The department shall ensure that municipalities make quarterly payments in July, |
21 | October, January and April, directly and in a timely manner to all LEAs serving their respective |
22 | resident students. |
23 | (h) No municipality, department or municipal or regional school district shall impose, |
24 | retain, or apply a holdback, deduction, or offset against state or local aid allocated for students |
25 | enrolled in public charter schools and state schools. Funds shall follow each student in full to each |
26 | receiving public charter school or state school consistent with each student's calculated individual |
27 | foundation cost. |
28 | 16-7.3-9. Hardship appeals and strategic reserve. |
29 | (a) A strategic education reserve fund is hereby established. The general assembly shall |
30 | appropriate and direct funding in an amount equivalent to one percent (1%) of the total statewide |
31 | foundation cost to the strategic education reserve fund annually. The fiscal responsibility advisory |
32 | board established under § 16-7.3-12 shall oversee and administer the strategic education reserve |
33 | fund. The fiscal responsibility advisory board shall, among other powers and responsibilities |
34 | described in § 16-7.3-12, hear and decide hardship appeals for: |
| LC006182 - Page 7 of 13 |
1 | (1) Municipal hardship adjustments resulting from unforeseen revenue shortfalls; and |
2 | (2) LEA relief for unanticipated mid-year enrollment or cost increases. |
3 | (b) Appeals shall be granted only for unforeseeable and extraordinary circumstances, as |
4 | determined by the fiscal responsibility advisory board. |
5 | (c) Approved relief shall not extend beyond one fiscal year without reapplication. |
6 | 16-7.3-10. Timing and predictability of payments. |
7 | (a) The department shall issue preliminary state aid estimates by March 1 of each year and |
8 | final allocations by July 1 following the effective date of the state budget. |
9 | (b) Payments of annual state aid shall be made quarterly, in July, October, January and |
10 | April. |
11 | (c) The general assembly may authorize multi-year state aid commitments to promote fiscal |
12 | stability. |
13 | 16-7.3-11. Fiscal responsibility and reporting. |
14 | (a) Each LEA shall annually: |
15 | (1) Adopt a public plan linking spending to student outcome goals; |
16 | (2) Present that plan to the LEA's governing body and appropriating authority, if |
17 | applicable; |
18 | (3) Report revenues and expenditures through the universal chart of accounts (UCOA) |
19 | system; and |
20 | (4) Undergo an independent fiscal audit. |
21 | (b) The department shall maintain a public online dashboard reporting LEA expenditures, |
22 | weights applied, and student outcome data. The dashboard shall permit LEA-by-LEA and school- |
23 | by-school comparisons of spending patterns, student demographics, and academic outcomes, and |
24 | shall display trend data linking expenditures to student performance indicators. |
25 | (c) There is hereby established a universal chart of accounts (UCOA) transition fund to |
26 | provide LEAs with technical assistance and financial support necessary to achieve full compliance |
27 | with subsection (a)(3) of this section. The fund shall be administered by the department from state |
28 | appropriations or grants, and may be used for software alignment, staff training, or other |
29 | implementation costs. |
30 | 16-7.3-12. Fiscal responsibility advisory board. |
31 | (a) The general assembly finds and declares that there is a need to establish a fiscal |
32 | responsibility advisory board within the office of the auditor general. The fiscal responsibility |
33 | advisory board shall consist of eleven (11) members. |
34 | (b) Membership shall include one representative of: |
| LC006182 - Page 8 of 13 |
1 | (1) The Rhode Island School Superintendents Association; |
2 | (2) The Rhode Island Association of School Committees; |
3 | (3) The Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns; |
4 | (4) The Rhode Island federation of Teachers and Health Professionals; |
5 | (5) The National Education Association Rhode Island; |
6 | (6) The Rhode Island Association of School Principals; |
7 | (7) The Rhode Island League of Charter Public Schools; and |
8 | (8) Four (4) public members with expertise in education finance, law, and public |
9 | management, appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the senate. |
10 | (c) Members shall serve staggered three (3) year terms and may be reappointed for no more |
11 | than two (2) consecutive terms. |
12 | (d) The fiscal responsibility advisory board shall: |
13 | (1) Monitor fiscal responsibility, transparency, and compliance; |
14 | (2) Adjudicate hardship appeals under § 16-7.3-9; |
15 | (3) Provide technical assistance and oversight to LEAs; and |
16 | (4) Submit an annual report to the governor and general assembly summarizing fiscal and |
17 | performance outcomes statewide. |
18 | 16-7.3-13. Tiered system of support and intervention. |
19 | (a) The fiscal responsibility advisory board shall classify LEAs based on fiscal |
20 | management and student outcomes by the following tiers: |
21 | (1) Tier 1. LEAs receive technical assistance and planning support. |
22 | (2) Tier 2. LEAs shall submit corrective action plans jointly approved by RIDE and the |
23 | fiscal responsibility advisory board. |
24 | (3) Tier 3. LEAs may be subject to directed fiscal management or conditional spending |
25 | authority. |
26 | (b) Persistent noncompliance may trigger state intervention and support pursuant to § 16- |
27 | 7.1-5. |
28 | (c) For each LEA placed in Tier 1, 2, or 3, the fiscal responsibility advisory board shall: |
29 | (1) Publish on the department's website any corrective-action or improvement plan |
30 | developed under this section; |
31 | (2) Convene quarterly meetings with the LEA and the department to review progress; and |
32 | (3) Require co-planning between LEA officials and the department for Tier 2 and Tier 3 |
33 | interventions. |
34 | 16-7.3-14. Early childhood education integration. |
| LC006182 - Page 9 of 13 |
1 | (a) The state shall fund early childhood screening and special education services for |
2 | children ages three (3) to five (5) years as part of the CEA. |
3 | (1) The department shall design, implement, and administer a statewide early childhood |
4 | screening system to ensure universal developmental screening for all children ages three (3) |
5 | through five (5) years. |
6 | (2) The department shall select or approve a uniform screening tool, coordinate data |
7 | reporting with early-intervention programs, and fund all associated costs directly from state |
8 | appropriations. |
9 | (b) The general assembly shall appropriate funds annually to support the Rhode Island pre- |
10 | k program. LEAs may apply for Rhode Island pre-k funds through a competitive grant application |
11 | process administered by the department. |
12 | (c) The governor shall establish a separate commission to design a unified early childhood |
13 | education and care system for children from birth through age five (5) years. |
14 | 16-7.3-15. School housing and facilities alignment. |
15 | (a) The department shall ensure equitable access to housing aid for all LEAs. School |
16 | housing aid shall be available to charter schools, mayoral academies and state-operated schools at |
17 | a rate that is proportionally equivalent to the housing aid rate(s) available to the municipalities in |
18 | which their students reside. A charter school, mayoral academy or state-operated school that enrolls |
19 | students from a single municipality shall be eligible to access school housing aid at the same rate |
20 | as that particular municipality. A charter school, mayoral academy or state-operated school that |
21 | enrolls students from more than one municipality shall be eligible to access school housing aid at |
22 | a proportionally blended rate that reflects each "sending" municipality's respective reimbursement |
23 | rate and the percentage of students enrolled in the charter school, mayoral academy or state- |
24 | operated school from each sending municipality in the year in which an application for housing aid |
25 | is submitted. |
26 | (b) The state shall not reallocate existing housing aid funds in a manner that reduces the |
27 | current level of support for any LEA. |
28 | 16-7.3-16. Rulemaking and regulation authority. |
29 | (a) The department, in consultation with the fiscal responsibility advisory board, shall |
30 | promulgate rules and regulations necessary to implement this chapter and achieve a unified, |
31 | transparent, and student-centered funding formula and ensure transparency, accountability, and |
32 | long-term stability in education finance for all Rhode Island public schools. |
33 | (b) Among other considerations, the department's rulemaking and regulatory process shall |
34 | include: |
| LC006182 - Page 10 of 13 |
1 | (1) A comprehensive review of Rhode Island's basic education program (200-RICR-20- |
2 | 10-1, the "BEP") to inform any revisions necessary to ensure alignment with the provisions of this |
3 | chapter. |
4 | (2) Establishing clear, efficient and reliable methods to facilitate the accurate identification |
5 | and certification of economically disadvantaged students consistent with § 16-7.3-3(a)(4). |
6 | (3) Defining methodologies for determining the weights, adjustment factors and reporting |
7 | standards introduced in this chapter. |
8 | 16-7.3-17. Transition and phase-in. |
9 | (a) The provisions of this chapter shall be phased in over a period not to exceed three (3) |
10 | fiscal years from the effective date of this chapter; provided, however, the department may |
11 | implement any component earlier if adequate administrative readiness and appropriations exist. |
12 | (b) The department shall develop a transition plan specifying annual adjustments to state |
13 | and municipal shares to achieve full implementation. |
14 | (c) During the transition period, existing aid programs shall continue to the extent |
15 | necessary to prevent funding shortfalls. |
16 | 16-7.3-18. Severability. |
17 | If any provision of this chapter or its application to any person or circumstance is held |
18 | invalid, the remainder of the chapter and its application shall not be affected. |
19 | 16-7.3-19. Cost analysis for new education mandates. |
20 | (a) Any law, regulation, or rule enacted or promulgated after the effective date of this |
21 | chapter that imposes a new requirement on LEAs or municipalities relating to education shall |
22 | include a fiscal impact statement estimating the cost of compliance. |
23 | (b) The fiscal impact statement shall be prepared by the department of elementary and |
24 | secondary education in consultation with the department of administration prior to legislative or |
25 | regulatory adoption. |
26 | (c) No law, regulation, or rule enacted or promulgated after the effective date of this chapter |
27 | that imposes a new requirement on LEAs or municipalities relating to education shall take effect |
28 | or remain in effect without a specific state appropriation sufficient to cover the estimated cost of |
29 | implementation. |
30 | 16-7.3-20. Inconsistent provisions in other laws superseded. |
31 | Insofar as the provisions of this chapter are inconsistent with the provisions of any other |
32 | law, general, special or local including, but not limited to, §§ 16-7.2-2 through 16-7.2-10 and |
33 | associated provisions of §§ 16-7-15 through 16-7-47 the provisions of this chapter shall be |
34 | controlling. |
| LC006182 - Page 11 of 13 |
1 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage, with full implementation no later than |
2 | fiscal year 2030. |
======== | |
LC006182 | |
======== | |
| LC006182 - Page 12 of 13 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE RHODE ISLAND EDUCATION FUNDING AND | |
ACCOUNTABILITY ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish the Rhode Island education funding and accountability act, which |
2 | would include a totally revised and revamped formula for funding all levels of public education in |
3 | Rhode Island. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage, with full implementation no later than fiscal year |
5 | 2030. |
======== | |
LC006182 | |
======== | |
| LC006182 - Page 13 of 13 |