2026 -- H 8511 | |
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LC006399 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX | |
RELIEF ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Morales, DeSimone, Biah, Ajello, J. Lombardi, Sanchez, | |
Date Introduced: May 01, 2026 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 16-7.2-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-7.2 entitled "The |
2 | Education Equity and Property Tax Relief Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 16-7.2-3. Permanent foundation education aid established. |
4 | (a) Beginning in the 2012 fiscal year, the following foundation education-aid formula shall |
5 | take effect. The foundation education aid for each district shall be the sum of the core instruction |
6 | amount in subsection (a)(1) of this section and the amount to support high-need students in |
7 | subsection (a)(2) of this section, which shall be multiplied by the district state-share ratio calculated |
8 | pursuant to § 16-7.2-4 to determine the foundation aid. |
9 | (1) The core instruction amount shall be an amount equal to a statewide, per-pupil core |
10 | instruction amount as established by the department of elementary and secondary education, |
11 | derived from the average of northeast regional expenditure data for the states of Rhode Island, |
12 | Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire from the National Center for Education Statistics |
13 | (NCES) that will adequately fund the student instructional needs as described in the basic education |
14 | program and multiplied by the district average daily membership as defined in § 16-7-22. |
15 | Expenditure data in the following categories: instruction and support services for students, |
16 | instruction, general administration, school administration, and other support services from the |
17 | National Public Education Financial Survey, as published by NCES, and enrollment data from the |
18 | Common Core of Data, also published by NCES, will be used when determining the core |
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1 | instruction amount. The core instruction amount will be updated annually. For the purpose of |
2 | calculating this formula, school districts’ resident average daily membership shall exclude charter |
3 | school and state-operated school students. |
4 | (2) The amount to support high-need students beyond the core instruction amount shall be |
5 | determined by: |
6 | (i) Multiplying a student success factor of forty percent (40%) forty-three percent (43%) |
7 | by the core instruction per-pupil amount described in subsection (a)(1) of this section and applying |
8 | that amount for each resident child whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five |
9 | percent (185%) of federal poverty guidelines, hereinafter referred to as “poverty status.” By |
10 | October 1, 2022, as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to state fiscal year |
11 | 2024 and thereafter, the department of elementary and secondary education shall develop and |
12 | utilize a poverty measure that in the department’s assessment most accurately serves as a proxy for |
13 | the poverty status referenced in this subsection and does not rely on the administration of school |
14 | nutrition programs. The department shall utilize this measure in calculations pursuant to this |
15 | subsection related to the application of the student success factor, in calculations pursuant to § 16- |
16 | 7.2-4 related to the calculation of the state share ratio, and in the formulation of estimates pursuant |
17 | to subsection (b) below. The department may also include any recommendations which seek to |
18 | mitigate any disruptions associated with the implementation of this new poverty measure or |
19 | improve the accuracy of its calculation. Beginning with the FY 2024 calculation, students whose |
20 | family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of federal poverty guidelines |
21 | will be determined by participation in the supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP). The |
22 | number of students directly certified through the department of human services shall be multiplied |
23 | by a factor of 1.6. In FY 2027, due to disruptions in the supplemental nutrition assistance program, |
24 | the number of students whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) |
25 | of federal poverty guidelines shall not be decreased below the number determined for FY 2026; |
26 | and |
27 | (ii) Multiplying a multilingual learner (MLL) factor of twenty percent (20%) by the core |
28 | instruction per-pupil amount described in subsection (a)(1) of this section, applying that amount |
29 | for each resident child identified in the three lowest proficiency categories using widely adopted, |
30 | independent standards and assessments in accordance with subsection (f)(1) of this section and as |
31 | identified by the commissioner and defined by regulations of the council on elementary and |
32 | secondary education. Local education agencies shall report annually to the department of |
33 | elementary and secondary education by September 1, outlining the planned and prior year use of |
34 | all funding pursuant to this subsection to provide services to MLL students in accordance with |
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1 | requirements set forth by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education. The |
2 | department shall review the use of funds to ensure consistency with established best practices. |
3 | (b) The department of elementary and secondary education shall provide an estimate of the |
4 | foundation education aid cost as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4. The estimate |
5 | shall include the most recent data available as well as an adjustment for average daily membership |
6 | growth or decline based on the prior year experience. |
7 | (c) In addition, the department shall report updated figures based on the average daily |
8 | membership as of October 1 by December 1. |
9 | (d) Local education agencies may set aside a portion of funds received under subsection |
10 | (a) to expand learning opportunities such as after school and summer programs, full-day |
11 | kindergarten and/or multiple pathway programs, provided that the basic education program and all |
12 | other approved programs required in law are funded. |
13 | (e) The department of elementary and secondary education shall promulgate such |
14 | regulations as are necessary to implement fully the purposes of this chapter. |
15 | (f)(1) By October 1, 2023, as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to |
16 | state fiscal year 2025, the department of elementary and secondary education shall evaluate the |
17 | number of students by district who qualify as multilingual learner (MLL) students and MLL |
18 | students whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of federal |
19 | poverty guidelines. The submission shall also include segmentation of these populations by levels |
20 | as dictated by the WIDA multilingual learner assessment tool used as an objective benchmark for |
21 | English proficiency. The department shall also prepare and produce expense data sourced from the |
22 | uniform chart of accounts to recommend funding levels required to support students at the various |
23 | levels of proficiency as determined by the WIDA assessment tool. Utilizing this information, the |
24 | department shall recommend a funding solution to meet the needs of multilingual learners; this may |
25 | include but not be limited to inclusion of MLL needs within the core foundation formula amount |
26 | through one or multiple weights to distinguish different students of need or through categorical |
27 | means. |
28 | (2) By October 1, 2024, as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to |
29 | state fiscal year 2026, the department of elementary and secondary education shall develop |
30 | alternatives to identify students whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five percent |
31 | (185%) of federal poverty guidelines through participation in state-administered programs, |
32 | including, but not limited to, the supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP), and RIteCare |
33 | and other programs that include the collection of required supporting documentation. The |
34 | department may also include any recommendations that seek to mitigate any disruptions associated |
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1 | with implementation of this new poverty measure or improve the accuracy of its calculation. |
2 | (3) The department shall also report with its annual budget request information regarding |
3 | local contributions to education aid and compliance with §§ 16-7-23 and 16-7-24. The report shall |
4 | also compare these local contributions to state foundation education aid by community. The |
5 | department shall also report compliance to each city or town school committee and city or town |
6 | council. |
7 | (4) By October 1, 2025, as part of its budget submission pursuant to § 35-3-4 relative to |
8 | state fiscal year 2027, the department of elementary and secondary education shall submit a report |
9 | developed in coordination with the department of administration and the Rhode Island longitudinal |
10 | data system within the office of the postsecondary commissioner. The report shall provide an |
11 | overview of the process for matching the department of human services program participation data |
12 | to the department of elementary and secondary education student enrollment records for use in the |
13 | education funding formula and recommend methods to ensure consistency and accuracy in future |
14 | matching processes. |
15 | (5) As part of its FY 2027 budget submission, the department shall also submit an estimate |
16 | of foundation education aid that uses expanded direct certification with Medicaid matching in |
17 | consultation with the Rhode Island longitudinal data system and the executive office of health and |
18 | human services to identify students whose family income is at or below one hundred eighty-five |
19 | percent (185%) of federal poverty guidelines, in addition to an estimate under the current law |
20 | poverty determination. |
21 | (6) By December 31, 2025, the department of elementary and secondary education shall |
22 | also develop and submit a report to the governor, speaker of the house, and senate president on |
23 | current and recommended processes to ensure the consistency and validity of submitted high-cost |
24 | special education data from local education agencies. |
25 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC006399 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX | |
RELIEF ACT | |
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1 | This act would amend the school funding formula to ensure that local education authorities |
2 | do not lose funding due to disruptions in the supplemental nutrition assistance program. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC006399 | |
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