Rep. Christian L. Mitchell

Filed: 4/20/2015

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 809

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 809 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
527A-5, 27A-6, 27A-7, 27A-7.10, and 27A-9 as follows:
 
6    (105 ILCS 5/27A-5)
7    Sec. 27A-5. Charter school; legal entity; requirements.
8    (a) A charter school shall be a public, nonsectarian,
9nonreligious, non-home based, and non-profit school. A charter
10school shall be organized and operated as a nonprofit
11corporation or other discrete, legal, nonprofit entity
12authorized under the laws of the State of Illinois.
13    (b) A charter school may be established under this Article
14by creating a new school or by converting an existing public
15school or attendance center to charter school status. Beginning
16on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd

 

 

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1General Assembly, in all new applications to establish a
2charter school in a city having a population exceeding 500,000,
3operation of the charter school shall be limited to one campus.
4The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the
593rd General Assembly do not apply to charter schools existing
6or approved on or before the effective date of this amendatory
7Act.
8    (b-5) In this subsection (b-5), "virtual-schooling" means
9a cyber school where students engage in online curriculum and
10instruction via the Internet and electronic communication with
11their teachers at remote locations and with students
12participating at different times.
13    From April 1, 2013 through December 31, 2016, there is a
14moratorium on the establishment of charter schools with
15virtual-schooling components in school districts other than a
16school district organized under Article 34 of this Code. This
17moratorium does not apply to a charter school with
18virtual-schooling components existing or approved prior to
19April 1, 2013 or to the renewal of the charter of a charter
20school with virtual-schooling components already approved
21prior to April 1, 2013.
22    On or before March 1, 2014, the Commission shall submit to
23the General Assembly a report on the effect of
24virtual-schooling, including without limitation the effect on
25student performance, the costs associated with
26virtual-schooling, and issues with oversight. The report shall

 

 

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1include policy recommendations for virtual-schooling.
2    (c) A charter school shall be administered and governed by
3its board of directors or other governing body in the manner
4provided in its charter. The governing body of a charter school
5shall be subject to the Freedom of Information Act and the Open
6Meetings Act.
7    (d) A charter school shall comply with all applicable
8health and safety requirements applicable to public schools
9under the laws of the State of Illinois.
10    (e) Except as otherwise provided in the School Code, a
11charter school shall not charge tuition; provided that a
12charter school may charge reasonable fees for textbooks,
13instructional materials, and student activities.
14    (f) A charter school shall be responsible for the
15management and operation of its fiscal affairs, including, but
16not limited to, the procurement of goods and services and the
17preparation of its budget. An audit of each charter school's
18finances shall be conducted annually by an outside, independent
19contractor retained by the charter school. To ensure financial
20accountability for the use of public funds, on or before
21December 1 of every year of operation, each charter school
22shall submit to its authorizer and the State Board a copy of
23its audit and a copy of the Form 990 the charter school filed
24that year with the federal Internal Revenue Service. In
25addition, if deemed necessary for proper financial oversight of
26the charter school, an authorizer may require quarterly

 

 

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1financial statements from each charter school.
2    (g) A charter school shall comply with all provisions of
3this Article; the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act; all
4federal and State laws and rules applicable to public schools
5that pertain to special education and the instruction of
6English language learners, referred to in this Code as
7"children of limited English-speaking ability"; and its
8charter. A charter school is exempt from all other State laws
9and regulations in this Code governing public schools and local
10school board policies, except the following:
11        (1) Sections 10-21.9 and 34-18.5 of this Code regarding
12    criminal history records checks and checks of the Statewide
13    Sex Offender Database and Statewide Murderer and Violent
14    Offender Against Youth Database of applicants for
15    employment;
16        (2) Sections 24-24 and 34-84A of this Code regarding
17    discipline of students;
18        (3) the Local Governmental and Governmental Employees
19    Tort Immunity Act;
20        (4) Section 108.75 of the General Not For Profit
21    Corporation Act of 1986 regarding indemnification of
22    officers, directors, employees, and agents;
23        (5) the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act;
24        (6) the Illinois School Student Records Act;
25        (7) Section 10-17a of this Code regarding school report
26    cards;

 

 

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1        (8) the P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System Act;
2    and
3        (9) Section 27-23.7 of this Code regarding bullying
4    prevention; and .
5        (10) (9) Section 2-3.162 2-3.160 of this the School
6    Code regarding student discipline reporting.
7    The change made by Public Act 96-104 to this subsection (g)
8is declaratory of existing law.
9    (h) A charter school may negotiate and contract with a
10school district, the governing body of a State college or
11university or public community college, or any other public or
12for-profit or nonprofit private entity for: (i) the use of a
13school building and grounds or any other real property or
14facilities that the charter school desires to use or convert
15for use as a charter school site, (ii) the operation and
16maintenance thereof, and (iii) the provision of any service,
17activity, or undertaking that the charter school is required to
18perform in order to carry out the terms of its charter.
19However, a charter school that is established on or after the
20effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
21Assembly and that operates in a city having a population
22exceeding 500,000 may not contract with a for-profit entity to
23manage or operate the school during the period that commences
24on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd
25General Assembly and concludes at the end of the 2004-2005
26school year. Except as provided in subsection (i) of this

 

 

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1Section, a school district may charge a charter school
2reasonable rent for the use of the district's buildings,
3grounds, and facilities. Any services for which a charter
4school contracts with a school district shall be provided by
5the district at cost. Any services for which a charter school
6contracts with a local school board or with the governing body
7of a State college or university or public community college
8shall be provided by the public entity at cost.
9    Other goods and services procured by the charter school
10must be executed pursuant to the terms of the procurement
11policy stated in the charter contract. Charter procurement
12policies must be reviewed by the authorizer during the
13authorization process and shall reflect procedures consistent
14with expending public funds in an efficient, transparent, and
15cost-effective manner. Such policies shall include provisions
16that prohibit conflicts of interest, self-dealing, and any
17other practices that call into question the objectivity of the
18charter school's governing body. Each charter school's
19procurement policy must be posted on the charter school's
20Internet website to ensure public transparency.
21    (i) In no event shall a charter school that is established
22by converting an existing school or attendance center to
23charter school status be required to pay rent for space that is
24deemed available, as negotiated and provided in the charter
25agreement, in school district facilities. However, all other
26costs for the operation and maintenance of school district

 

 

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1facilities that are used by the charter school shall be subject
2to negotiation between the charter school and the local school
3board and shall be set forth in the charter.
4    (j) A charter school may limit student enrollment by age or
5grade level.
6    (k) If the charter school is approved by the Commission,
7then the Commission charter school is its own local education
8agency.
9(Source: P.A. 97-152, eff. 7-20-11; 97-154, eff. 1-1-12;
1097-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-16, eff. 5-24-13; 98-639, eff. 6-9-14;
1198-669, eff. 6-26-14; 98-739, eff. 7-16-14; 98-783, eff.
121-1-15; 98-1059, eff. 8-26-14; 98-1102, eff. 8-26-14; revised
1310-14-14.)
 
14    (105 ILCS 5/27A-6)
15    Sec. 27A-6. Contract contents; applicability of laws and
16regulations.
17    (a) A certified charter shall constitute a binding contract
18and agreement between the charter school and a local school
19board under the terms of which the local school board
20authorizes the governing body of the charter school to operate
21the charter school on the terms specified in the contract.
22    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article,
23the certified charter may not waive or release the charter
24school from the State goals, standards, and assessments
25established pursuant to Section 2-3.64a-5 of this Code.

 

 

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1Beginning with the 2003-2004 school year, the certified charter
2for a charter school operating in a city having a population
3exceeding 500,000 shall require the charter school to
4administer any other nationally recognized standardized tests
5to its students that the chartering entity administers to other
6students, and the results on such tests shall be included in
7the chartering entity's assessment reports.
8    (c) Subject to the provisions of subsection (e), a material
9revision to a previously certified contract or a renewal shall
10be made with the approval of both the local school board and
11the governing body of the charter school.
12    (c-5) The proposed contract shall include a provision on
13how both parties will address minor violations of the contract.
14    (d) The proposed contract between the governing body of a
15proposed charter school and the local school board as described
16in Section 27A-7 must be submitted to and certified by the
17State Board before it can take effect. The State Board's review
18of the charter contract shall include a review of incorporated
19performance frameworks. If the State Board determines that the
20performance frameworks are not sufficiently rigorous or that
21they establish unreasonable expectations for the charter
22school, the State Board must send the proposed contract back to
23the governing body and local school board. The governing body
24and local school board must resubmit appropriate performance
25frameworks before the contract may be certified. If the State
26Board recommends that the proposed contract be modified for

 

 

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1consistency with this Article before it can be certified, the
2modifications must be consented to by both the governing body
3of the charter school and the local school board, and
4resubmitted to the State Board for its certification. If the
5proposed contract is resubmitted in a form that is not
6consistent with this Article, the State Board may refuse to
7certify the charter.
8    The State Board shall assign a number to each submission or
9resubmission in chronological order of receipt, and shall
10determine whether the proposed contract is consistent with the
11provisions of this Article. If the proposed contract complies,
12the State Board shall so certify.
13    (e) No renewal of a previously certified contract is
14effective unless and until the State Board certifies that the
15renewal is consistent with the provisions of this Article. A
16material revision to a previously certified contract may go
17into effect immediately upon approval of both the local school
18board and the governing body of the charter school, unless
19either party requests in writing that the State Board certify
20that the material revision is consistent with the provisions of
21this Article. If such a request is made, the proposed material
22revision is not effective unless and until the State Board so
23certifies.
24(Source: P.A. 98-972, eff. 8-15-14; 98-1048, eff. 8-25-14;
25revised 10-1-14.)
 

 

 

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1    (105 ILCS 5/27A-7)
2    Sec. 27A-7. Charter submission.
3    (a) A proposal to establish a charter school shall be
4submitted to the local school board and the State Board for
5certification under Section 27A-6 of this Code in the form of a
6proposed contract entered into between the local school board
7and the governing body of a proposed charter school. The
8charter school proposal shall include:
9        (1) The name of the proposed charter school, which must
10    include the words "Charter School".
11        (2) The age or grade range, areas of focus, minimum and
12    maximum numbers of pupils to be enrolled in the charter
13    school, and any other admission criteria that would be
14    legal if used by a school district.
15        (3) A description of and address for the physical plant
16    in which the charter school will be located; provided that
17    nothing in the Article shall be deemed to justify delaying
18    or withholding favorable action on or approval of a charter
19    school proposal because the building or buildings in which
20    the charter school is to be located have not been acquired
21    or rented at the time a charter school proposal is
22    submitted or approved or a charter school contract is
23    entered into or submitted for certification or certified,
24    so long as the proposal or submission identifies and names
25    at least 2 sites that are potentially available as a
26    charter school facility by the time the charter school is

 

 

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1    to open.
2        (4) The mission statement of the charter school, which
3    must be consistent with the General Assembly's declared
4    purposes; provided that nothing in this Article shall be
5    construed to require that, in order to receive favorable
6    consideration and approval, a charter school proposal
7    demonstrate unequivocally that the charter school will be
8    able to meet each of those declared purposes, it being the
9    intention of the Charter Schools Law that those purposes be
10    recognized as goals that charter schools must aspire to
11    attain.
12        (5) The goals, objectives, and pupil performance
13    standards to be achieved by the charter school.
14        (6) In the case of a proposal to establish a charter
15    school by converting an existing public school or
16    attendance center to charter school status, evidence that
17    the proposed formation of the charter school has received
18    the approval of certified teachers, parents and guardians,
19    and, if applicable, a local school council as provided in
20    subsection (b) of Section 27A-8.
21        (7) A description of the charter school's educational
22    program, pupil performance standards, curriculum, school
23    year, school days, and hours of operation.
24        (8) A description of the charter school's plan for
25    evaluating pupil performance, the types of assessments
26    that will be used to measure pupil progress towards

 

 

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1    achievement of the school's pupil performance standards,
2    the timeline for achievement of those standards, and the
3    procedures for taking corrective action in the event that
4    pupil performance at the charter school falls below those
5    standards.
6        (9) Evidence that the terms of the charter as proposed
7    are economically sound for both the charter school and the
8    school district, a proposed budget for the term of the
9    charter, a description of the manner in which an annual
10    audit of the financial and administrative operations of the
11    charter school, including any services provided by the
12    school district, are to be conducted, and a plan for the
13    displacement of pupils, teachers, and other employees who
14    will not attend or be employed in the charter school.
15        (10) A description of the governance and operation of
16    the charter school, including the nature and extent of
17    parental, professional educator, and community involvement
18    in the governance and operation of the charter school.
19        (10.5) Beginning with charter contracts entered into
20    on or after January 1, 2017, a description of a procurement
21    policy for goods and services.
22        (11) An explanation of the relationship that will exist
23    between the charter school and its employees, including
24    evidence that the terms and conditions of employment have
25    been addressed with affected employees and their
26    recognized representative, if any. However, a bargaining

 

 

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1    unit of charter school employees shall be separate and
2    distinct from any bargaining units formed from employees of
3    a school district in which the charter school is located.
4        (12) An agreement between the parties regarding their
5    respective legal liability and applicable insurance
6    coverage.
7        (13) A description of how the charter school plans to
8    meet the transportation needs of its pupils, and a plan for
9    addressing the transportation needs of low-income and
10    at-risk pupils.
11        (14) The proposed effective date and term of the
12    charter; provided that the first day of the first academic
13    year shall be no earlier than August 15 and no later than
14    September 15 of a calendar year, and the first day of the
15    fiscal year shall be July 1.
16        (15) Any other information reasonably required by the
17    State Board of Education.
18    (b) A proposal to establish a charter school may be
19initiated by individuals or organizations that will have
20majority representation on the board of directors or other
21governing body of the corporation or other discrete legal
22entity that is to be established to operate the proposed
23charter school, by a board of education or an intergovernmental
24agreement between or among boards of education, or by the board
25of directors or other governing body of a discrete legal entity
26already existing or established to operate the proposed charter

 

 

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1school. The individuals or organizations referred to in this
2subsection may be school teachers, school administrators,
3local school councils, colleges or universities or their
4faculty members, public community colleges or their
5instructors or other representatives, corporations, or other
6entities or their representatives. The proposal shall be
7submitted to the local school board for consideration and, if
8appropriate, for development of a proposed contract to be
9submitted to the State Board for certification under Section
1027A-6.
11    (c) The local school board may not without the consent of
12the governing body of the charter school condition its approval
13of a charter school proposal on acceptance of an agreement to
14operate under State laws and regulations and local school board
15policies from which the charter school is otherwise exempted
16under this Article.
17(Source: P.A. 98-739, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1048, eff. 8-25-14;
18revised 10-1-14.)
 
19    (105 ILCS 5/27A-7.10)
20    Sec. 27A-7.10. Authorizer powers and duties; immunity;
21principles and standards.
22    (a) Authorizers are responsible for executing, in
23accordance with this Article, all of the following powers and
24duties:
25        (1) Soliciting and evaluating charter applications.

 

 

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1        (2) Approving quality charter applications that meet
2    identified educational needs and promote a diversity of
3    educational choices.
4        (3) Declining to approve weak or inadequate charter
5    applications.
6        (4) Negotiating and executing sound charter contracts
7    with each approved charter school.
8        (5) Monitoring, in accordance with charter contract
9    terms, the performance and legal compliance of charter
10    schools.
11        (6) Determining whether each charter contract merits
12    renewal, nonrenewal, or revocation.
13    (b) An authorizing entity may delegate its duties to
14officers, employees, and contractors.
15    (c) Regulation by authorizers is limited to the powers and
16duties set forth in subsection (a) of this Section and must be
17consistent with the spirit and intent of this Article.
18    (d) An authorizing entity, members of the local school
19board, or the Commission, in their official capacity, and
20employees of an authorizer are immune from civil and criminal
21liability with respect to all activities related to a charter
22school that they authorize, except for willful or wanton
23misconduct.
24    (e) The Commission and all local school boards that have a
25charter school operating are required to develop and maintain
26chartering policies and practices consistent with recognized

 

 

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1principles and standards for quality charter authorizing in all
2major areas of authorizing responsibility, including all of the
3following:
4        (1) Organizational capacity and infrastructure.
5        (2) Soliciting and evaluating charter applications.
6        (3) Performance contracting.
7        (4) Ongoing charter school oversight and evaluation.
8        (5) Charter renewal decision-making.
9    Authorizers shall carry out all their duties under this
10Article in a manner consistent with nationally recognized
11principles and standards and with the spirit and intent of this
12Article.
13(Source: P.A. 97-152, eff. 7-20-11.)
 
14    (105 ILCS 5/27A-9)
15    Sec. 27A-9. Term of charter; renewal.
16    (a) A charter may be granted for a period of not less than
175 and not more than 10 school years. A charter may be renewed
18in incremental periods not to exceed 5 school years, except
19that charters deemed high-quality shall be renewed for a period
20of not less than 5 and not more than 10 school years. Each
21authorizer shall create criteria for determining which charter
22schools meet the high-quality definition. In the absence of
23such criteria, a high-quality charter school means a charter
24school that has, in the last available ranking, either (i) been
25recognized by the State Board as a reward school, as defined in

 

 

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1this State's approved waiver of the federal Elementary and
2Secondary Education Act of 1965, or received the State Board's
3honor roll designation as a spotlight school, academic
4excellence award recipient, or academic improvement recipient
5or (ii) received a rating in the top 40% of schools in a school
6district under a rating system developed by the charter
7school's home district that is based on multiple indicators of
8success and used by that district to rate schools in the
9district.
10    (a-5) Before January 1, 2016, authorizers shall develop
11performance frameworks that allow authorizers to measure the
12performance of the charter school they authorize and that allow
13authorizers of multiple charter schools to compare performance
14across similarly situated schools using common measures. Such
15performance frameworks shall use comprehensive academic,
16financial, and operational performance data to make
17merit-based renewal decisions. Such performance frameworks may
18vary depending on the type of charter school authorized and the
19mission of such a school. To guide authorizers in ensuring
20their performance frameworks are designed to measure charter
21school quality across similarly situated schools using common
22measures, on or before June 30, 2016, the State Board shall
23develop model performance frameworks that authorizers may
24elect to use instead of developing their own performance
25frameworks. Authorizers shall incorporate into charter
26agreements entered into on or after January 1, 2017 either the

 

 

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1applicable performance frameworks developed by the State Board
2or those they have developed. Authorizers may work with charter
3schools to incorporate such performance frameworks into
4contracts entered into before January 1, 2017, provided that
5the authorizer and charter school mutually agree to the
6contract amendment. All renewal decisions after September 1,
72017 must be based on the charter contract and, to the extent
8applicable, the performance framework. The performance
9framework must be made available for public viewing on the
10authorizer's Internet website.
11    Using the renewal criteria set forth in the performance
12framework, the authorizer shall report annually to the charter
13school on the progress and performance of that charter school.
14    (b) A charter school renewal proposal submitted to the
15local school board or the Commission, as the chartering entity,
16shall contain:
17        (1) A report on the progress of the charter school in
18    achieving the goals, objectives, pupil performance
19    standards, content standards, and other terms of the
20    initial approved charter proposal; and
21        (2) A procurement policy for goods and services and a A
22    financial statement that discloses the costs of
23    administration, instruction, and other spending categories
24    for the charter school that is understandable to the
25    general public and that will allow comparison of those
26    costs to other schools or other comparable organizations,

 

 

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1    in a format required by the State Board.
2    (b-5) In making decisions about charter renewals, an
3authorizer shall oversee the implementation of a transition
4plan for each student attending a charter school that will not
5to be renewed. The plan must include information concerning
6transfer options available to the student, with the goal of
7providing a smooth transition following a non-renewal. To the
8extent practicable, the timing of renewal decisions shall align
9with the enrollment process the authorizer uses for other
10schools within the relevant school district. The authorizer
11shall communicate the plan to each student's parent or
12guardian.
13    (c) A charter may be revoked or not renewed if the local
14school board or the Commission, as the chartering entity,
15clearly demonstrates that the charter school did any of the
16following, or otherwise failed to comply with the requirements
17of this law:
18        (1) Committed a material violation of any of the
19    conditions, standards, or procedures set forth in the
20    charter.
21        (2) Failed to meet or make reasonable progress toward
22    achievement of the content standards or pupil performance
23    standards identified in the charter or instead, if
24    applicable, failed to (i) meet academic performance
25    standards, (ii) meet or make reasonable progress toward
26    organizational standards, or (iii) meet or make reasonable

 

 

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1    progress toward financial standards. For purposes of this
2    subdivision (2), academic, organizational, and financial
3    standards mean those established in the performance
4    framework set forth in the charter under subsection (a-5)
5    of this Section.
6        (3) Failed to meet generally accepted standards of
7    fiscal management.
8        (4) Violated any provision of law from which the
9    charter school was not exempted.
10    In the case of revocation, the local school board or the
11Commission, as the chartering entity, shall notify the charter
12school in writing of the reason why the charter is subject to
13revocation. The charter school shall submit a written plan to
14the local school board or the Commission, whichever is
15applicable, to rectify the problem. The plan shall include a
16timeline for implementation, which shall not exceed 2 years or
17the date of the charter's expiration, whichever is earlier. If
18the local school board or the Commission, as the chartering
19entity, finds that the charter school has failed to implement
20the plan of remediation and adhere to the timeline, then the
21chartering entity shall revoke the charter. Except in
22situations of an emergency where the health, safety, or
23education of the charter school's students is at risk, the
24revocation shall take place at the end of a school year.
25Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly
26shall be construed to prohibit an implementation timetable that

 

 

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1is less than 2 years in duration.
2    (d) (Blank).
3    (e) Notice of a local school board's decision to deny,
4revoke or not to renew a charter shall be provided to the
5Commission and the State Board. The Commission may reverse a
6local board's decision if the Commission finds that the charter
7school or charter school proposal (i) is in compliance with
8this Article, and (ii) is in the best interests of the students
9it is designed to serve. The Commission may condition the
10granting of an appeal on the acceptance by the charter school
11of funding in an amount less than that requested in the
12proposal submitted to the local school board. Final decisions
13of the Commission shall be subject to judicial review under the
14Administrative Review Law.
15    (f) Notwithstanding other provisions of this Article, if
16the Commission on appeal reverses a local board's decision or
17if a charter school is approved by referendum, the Commission
18shall act as the authorized chartering entity for the charter
19school. The Commission shall approve the charter and shall
20perform all functions under this Article otherwise performed by
21the local school board. The State Board shall determine whether
22the charter proposal approved by the Commission is consistent
23with the provisions of this Article and, if the approved
24proposal complies, certify the proposal pursuant to this
25Article. The State Board shall report the aggregate number of
26charter school pupils resident in a school district to that

 

 

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1district and shall notify the district of the amount of funding
2to be paid by the State Board to the charter school enrolling
3such students. The Commission shall require the charter school
4to maintain accurate records of daily attendance that shall be
5deemed sufficient to file claims under Section 18-8.05
6notwithstanding any other requirements of that Section
7regarding hours of instruction and teacher certification. The
8State Board shall withhold from funds otherwise due the
9district the funds authorized by this Article to be paid to the
10charter school and shall pay such amounts to the charter
11school.
12    (g) For charter schools authorized by the Commission, the
13Commission shall quarterly certify to the State Board the
14student enrollment for each of its charter schools.
15    (h) For charter schools authorized by the Commission, the
16State Board shall pay directly to a charter school any federal
17or State aid attributable to a student with a disability
18attending the school.
19(Source: P.A. 97-152, eff. 7-20-11; 98-739, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
20    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
21becoming law.".