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CALIFORNIA STATUTES AND CODES

SECTIONS 52053-52055.55

EDUCATION CODE
SECTION 52053-52055.55
52053. (a) The Immediate Intervention/Underperforming Schools Program is hereby established. By August 15, 1999, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, with the approval of the State Board of Education, shall invite schools that scored below the 50th percentile on the achievement tests administered pursuant to Section 60640 both in the spring of 1998 and in the spring of 1999 to participate in the Immediate Intervention/Underperforming Schools Program. A school invited to participate may take any action not otherwise prohibited under state or federal law and that would not require reimbursement by the Commission on State Mandates to improve pupil performance. (b) The total number of schools participating in the program in 1999 shall be 430. Unless subdivision (d) applies, schools that apply will be selected based on the order in which they apply within ranks of deciles, not to exceed 86 per decile, within the following grade level categories: (1) No more than 301 elementary schools. (2) No more than 78 middle schools. (3) No more than 52 high schools. (c) The 86 schools selected within each decile range pursuant to subdivision (b) shall proportionately represent elementary, middle, and high schools and shall provide statewide proportionate geographic representation of urban and rural schools. (d) If fewer than the number of schools in any grade level category apply, schools that scored below the 50th percentile in those grade level categories that did not apply for the program shall randomly be selected by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, with the approval of the State Board of Education, to participate based on their proportional representation in the state until the number of schools in each grade level category set forth in subdivision (b) is achieved. (e) If more than the requisite number of schools apply for any grade level category, the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall select an array of schools that reflect a broad range of academic performance of schools that scored below the 50th percentile, until the number of schools in each grade level category set forth in subdivision (b) is achieved. (f) A school selected to participate on or before September 1, 1999, shall be awarded a planning grant from funds appropriated pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 2 of Chapter 3 of the Statutes of 1999, First Extraordinary Session, in the amount of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). A school selected to receive federal funds pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2 of Chapter 3 of the Statutes of 1999, First Extraordinary Session, shall be awarded an implementation grant in an amount of at least fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) pursuant to Public Law 105-78. (g) Schools receiving funding under paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2 of Chapter 3 of the Statutes of 1999, First Extraordinary Session, shall comply with Public Law 105-78. (h) By September 15, 2000, and each year thereafter, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, with the approval of the State Board of Education, shall identify schools that failed to meet their Academic Performance Index (API) growth targets and that have an API score below the 50th percentile in the previous school year relative to all other public elementary, middle, or high schools. The Superintendent of Public Instruction shall invite these schools to participate in the Immediate Intervention/Underperforming Schools Program. A school invited to participate may take any action to improve pupil performance not otherwise prohibited under state or federal law and that would not require reimbursement by the Commission on State Mandates. (i) The total number of schools selected for participation in the program shall be no more than the number that can be funded through the total appropriation for the planning grants referenced in subdivision (l) below. (j) If fewer schools apply for participation than can be funded, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, with the approval of the State Board of Education, shall randomly select the balance of schools from schools eligible to participate that did not apply. Insofar as possible, the schools randomly selected should reflect a representative proportion of elementary, middle, and high schools, as well as a broad range of academic achievement. (k) If more schools apply for participation than can be funded, the schools shall be selected in the order in which they apply. Insofar as possible, the schools selected should reflect a representative proportion of elementary, middle, and high schools, as well as a broad range of academic achievement. (l) A school selected to participate on or before October 15, 2000, and each year thereafter, shall be awarded a planning grant from funds appropriated pursuant to Section 2 of Chapter 3 of the Statutes of 1999, First Extraordinary Session, of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). (m) Schools selected for participation in the program shall be notified by the Superintendent of Public Instruction no later than October 15 of each year. 52053.5. (a) The Superintendent of Public Instruction shall develop, and the State Board of Education shall approve, the minimum qualifications for external evaluators that shall include, but may not be limited to, recent successful professional, managerial or governing board experience in improving school achievement, and the ability to assist the school to systematically align curriculum, instruction, and assessment. The external evaluators shall also have demonstrated experience in working with diverse populations. With the approval of the State Board of Education, the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall develop and disseminate an application process by which to establish a list of external evaluators that meet the minimum qualifications. The list of approved external evaluators may include private sector experts, institutions of higher education, county offices of education, and educational consortia. (b) The Superintendent of Public Instruction shall develop, and the State Board of Education shall approve, the standards and criteria to be applied by external evaluators in carrying out their duties. The standards and criteria shall include, but are not limited to, the following areas: (1) Governing board policies. (2) Curriculum management. (3) Fiscal management. (4) Parental and community involvement. (5) Personnel management. (6) Facilities management. 52054. (a) Commencing in the 2001-02 fiscal year, by November 15 of the year that the school is selected to participate, the governing board of a school district having jurisdiction over a school selected for participation in the program shall do one of the following: (1) Contract with an external evaluator from the list of external evaluators and shall appoint a broad-based schoolsite and community team, consisting of a majority of nonschoolsite personnel. In a school that has a limited-English-proficient pupil population that constitutes at least 40 percent of the total pupil population, an external evaluator shall have demonstrated experience in working with a limited-English-proficient pupil population. Not less than 20 percent of the members of the team shall be parents or legal guardians of pupils in the school. (2) Contract with an entity that has proven, successful expertise specific to the challenges inherent in high-priority schools. These entities may include, but are not limited to, the following: (A) Institutions of higher education. (B) County offices of education. (C) School district personnel. (b) The selected external evaluator or entity shall solicit input from the parents and legal guardians of the pupils of the school. At a minimum, the evaluator or entity shall do all of the following: (1) Inform the parents and legal guardians, in writing, that the school has been selected to participate in the Immediate Intervention/Underperforming Schools Program due to its below average performance. (2) Hold a public meeting at the school, in cooperation with the principal, to which all parents and legal guardians of pupils in the school receive a written invitation. The invitation to the meeting may be combined with the written notice required by paragraph (1). (3) Solicit, at the public meeting, the recommendations and opinions of the participating parents and legal guardians of pupils in the school regarding actions that should be taken to improve the performance of the school. These opinions and recommendations shall be considered by the external evaluator or entity and the community team in the development or modification of the action plan pursuant to this section or Section 52054.3. (4) Provide technical assistance to the schoolsite. (5) Notify all parents and legal guardians of pupils in the school of their opportunity to provide written recommendations of actions that should be taken to improve the performance of the school which shall be considered by the external evaluator or entity and the community team in the development or modification of the action plan pursuant to this section or Section 52054.3. Notice required by this subdivision may be combined with the written notice required by paragraph (1). (c) By February 15 of the school year in which the school is selected to participate, the selected external evaluator or entity, in collaboration with the broad-based schoolsite and community team selected pursuant to subdivision (a), shall complete a review of the school that identifies weaknesses that contribute to the school's below average performance, make recommendations for improvement, and begin to develop an action plan to improve the academic performance of the pupils enrolled at the school. The action plan shall include percentage growth targets at least as high as the annual growth targets adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 52052. The action plan shall include an expenditure plan and shall be of a scope that does not require expenditure of funds in excess of those provided pursuant to this article or otherwise available to the school. The action plan may not be of a scope that requires reimbursement by the Commission on State Mandates for its implementation. (d) At a minimum, the action plan shall do all of the following: (1) Review and include the school and district conditions identified in the school accountability report card pursuant to Section 33126. (2) Identify the current barriers at the school and district toward improvements in pupil achievement. (3) Identify schoolwide and districtwide strategies to remove these barriers. (4) Review and include school and school district crime statistics, in accordance with Section 628.5 of the Penal Code. (5) Examine and consider disaggregated data regarding pupil achievement and other indicators to consider whether all groups and types of pupils make adequate progress toward short-term growth targets and long-term performance goals. The disaggregated data to be included and considered by the plan shall, at a minimum, provide information regarding the achievement of English language learners, pupils with exceptional needs, pupils who qualify for free and reduced price meals, and pupils in numerically significant subgroups. (6) Set short-term academic objectives pursuant to Section 52052 for a two-year period that will allow the school to make adequate progress toward the growth targets established for each participating school for pupil achievement as measured by all of the following to the extent that the data is available for the school: (A) The achievement test administered pursuant to Section 60640. (B) Graduation rates for grades 7 to 12, inclusive. (C) Attendance rates for pupils and school personnel for elementary, middle, and secondary schools. (D) Any other indicators approved by the State Board of Education. (e) The school action plan shall focus on improving pupil academic performance, improving the involvement of parents and guardians, improving the effective and efficient allocation of resources and management of the school, and identifying and developing solutions that take into account the underlying causes for low performance by pupils. (f) The team, in the development of the action plan, shall consult with the exclusive representatives of employee organizations, where they exist. (g) The school action plan may propose to increase the number of instructional days offered at the schoolsite and also may propose to increase up to a full 12 months the amount of time for which certificated employees are contracted, if all of the following conditions are met: (1) Provisions of the plan proposed pursuant to this subdivision shall not violate current applicable collective bargaining agreements. (2) An agreement is reached with the exclusive representative concerning staffing specifically to accommodate the extended school year or 12-month contract. (h) The team, in the development of the action plan, shall consult with the exclusive representatives of employee organizations, where they exist. (i) Upon its completion, the action plan shall be submitted to the governing board of the school district for its approval at a regularly scheduled public meeting. After the plan is approved, but no later than May 15 of the year that follows the year the school is selected to participate, the plan shall be submitted to the Superintendent of Public Instruction with a request for funding in the form prescribed by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, who shall review the school action plan and recommend approval or disapproval of the school's request for funding to the State Board of Education. (j) Not later than July 15 of the year next following the year in which a school is selected for participation, the State Board of Education shall review and approve or disapprove the school's request for funding, based on the recommendation of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. Within 30 days of the State Board of Education's review, the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall notify the affected school districts of the state of the board's action regarding the request for funding. In conjunction with its approval of a request for funding to implement a school's action plan, the State Board of Education may, at the request of the governing board of the school district or the county board of education for a school under its jurisdiction, waive all or any part of any provision of this code, or any regulation adopted by the State Board of Education, controlling any of the programs listed in clause (i) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 54761 and Section 64000 if the waiver does not result in a decrease in the instructional time otherwise required by law or regulation or an increase in state costs and is determined to be consistent with subdivision (a) of Section 46300. 52054.3. A school selected on or after September 2001 may elect to use an existing plan instead of the action plan required pursuant to Section 52054 if that plan meets the requirements specified pursuant to subdivisions (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), and (i) of Section 52054. If an existing plan needs modification, the external evaluator or entity with which the school district contracts pursuant to Section 52054 shall provide technical assistance in making those modifications. 52054.5. Subject to the appropriation of funds for this purpose in the Budget Act, a school whose application is approved shall receive a grant for implementing the program, in each subsequent fiscal year that it participates in the program, in an amount up to two hundred dollars ($200) per pupil enrolled in the school, with a minimum allocation of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) per schoolsite. As a condition of receiving this funding, a participating school or the school district having jurisdiction over that school shall match the amount of state funding from any new or existing sources of funding. To help meet this matching requirement, a participating school and the governing board of the school district having jurisdiction over that school shall receive maximum flexibility in the expenditure of any new or existing categorical funds not otherwise prohibited by state or federal law and shall redirect for the purposes of their academic improvement plan new or existing categorical or general purpose funds. 52055. The governing board of a school that fails to meet its annual short-term growth target within 12 months following receipt of funding pursuant to Section 52054.5 shall hold a public hearing at a regularly scheduled meeting to ensure that members of the school community are aware of the lack of progress. The governing board of the school district shall, upon consultation with the external evaluator and the schoolsite and community team selected pursuant to Section 52054, choose from a range of interventions for the school, including reassignment of school personnel to the extent authorized by law, negotiation of site-specific amendments to collective bargaining agreements, or other changes deemed appropriate, in order to continue implementing the action plan approved pursuant to Section 51054, and to make progress toward meeting the school's growth target. 52055.5. (a) Twenty-four months after receipt of funding pursuant to Section 52054.5, a school that has not met its growth targets each year, but demonstrates significant growth, as determined by the state board, shall continue to participate in the program for an additional year and to receive funding in the amount specified in Section 52054.5. Thirty-six months after receipt of funds pursuant to Section 52054.5, a school is no longer eligible to receive funding pursuant to that section. (b) Twenty-four months after receipt of funding pursuant to Section 52054.5, a school that has not met its growth targets each year and has failed to show significant growth, as determined by the state board, shall be deemed a state-monitored school. (1) The state board shall make its final determination regarding whether or not a school shows significant growth no later than 30 days after the public release of a school's growth in API results or the next regularly scheduled meeting of the state board following the expiration of the 30 days if meeting the 30-day time limit would not provide the state board with sufficient time to comply with the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, within 90 days after the public release of a state-monitored school's growth in API results, the Superintendent, in consultation with the state board, shall do the following: (A) Assume all the legal rights, duties, and powers of the governing board with respect to that school, subject to the provisions of paragraphs (1) and (7) of subdivision (e) and except as provided by Section 52055.51. (B) Reassign the principal of that school, subject to the findings in subdivision (g). (3) In addition to the actions specified in paragraph (2), the Superintendent, after consultation with the state board, shall do one or more of the following with respect to a state-monitored school: (A) Revise attendance options for pupils to allow them to attend any public school in which space is available. If additional attendance options are made available, nothing in this option shall be construed to require either the sending or receiving school district to incur additional transportation costs. (B) Allow parents to apply directly to the state board for the establishment of a charter school and allow parents to establish the charter school at the existing schoolsite. (C) Under the supervision of the Superintendent, assign the management of the school to a college, university, county office of education, or other appropriate educational institution, excluding for-profit organizations. The entity chosen to assume management of the school shall possess the qualifications specified in subdivision (b) of Section 52055.51. Consistent with paragraph (6) of subdivision (e), the involvement of the school district during the sanctions process shall be established by contract. The costs of the entity to manage the school shall be established by contract and shall be paid by the school district. However, the Superintendent may not assume the management of the school. (D) Reassign other certificated employees of the school. (E) Renegotiate a new collective bargaining agreement at the expiration of the existing collective bargaining agreement, pursuant to Section 3543.2 of the Government Code. (F) Reorganize the school. (G) Close the school. (H) (i) Place a trustee at the school, for a period not to exceed three years, who shall monitor and review the operation of the school. The trustee shall possess the qualifications specified in subdivision (b) of Section 52055.51, shall compile an initial report in accordance with the requirements of subdivision (d) of Section 52055.51, and shall receive reports from the school district and schoolsite no less than three times during the year on the progress towards meeting the goals established in the initial report. During the period of his or her service, the trustee may stay or rescind those actions of the governing board of the school district or schoolsite principal that, in the judgment of the trustee, may detrimentally affect the conditions of the state-monitored school to which the trustee is assigned. The salary and benefits of the trustee shall be established by the Superintendent, in consultation with the state board, and shall be paid by the school district. (ii) For the purposes of this section, in order to facilitate the appointment of the trustee and the employment of any necessary staff, the Superintendent is exempt from the requirements of Article 6 (commencing with Section 999) of Chapter 6 of Division 4 of the Military and Veterans Code and Part 2 (commencing with Section 10100) of the Public Contract Code. (iii) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if the Superintendent appoints an employee of the department to act as trustee pursuant to this section, the salary and benefits of that employee shall be established by the Superintendent and paid by the school district. During the time of appointment, the employee is an employee of the school district, but shall remain in the same retirement system and under the same plan as if the employee had remained in the department. Upon the expiration or termination of the appointment, the employee shall have the right to return to his or her former position, or to a position at substantially the same level as that position, with the department. The time served in the appointment shall be counted for all purposes as if the employee had served that time in his or her former position with the department. (c) When a school is deemed to be a state-monitored school, the governing board of the school district shall, at a regularly scheduled public meeting, inform the parents and guardians of pupils enrolled at the schoolsite that the school is a state-monitored school and that as a result of this determination the corrective actions set forth in subdivision (b) may occur. (d) In addition to the actions taken pursuant to subdivision (b), the governing board of the school district and the district superintendent shall be included in discussions regarding the governance of the state-monitored schoolsite and the actions that shall be taken in order for the schoolsite to succeed. During the discussions, the participants shall clearly delineate the role that the governing board of the school district and the district superintendent will play during the sanctions period and shall report this delineation to the Superintendent. The role to be played by the governing board of the school district and the district superintendent as delineated during the discussions regarding the governance of the state-monitored schoolsite shall be in addition to those actions set forth in subdivision (e). (e) After a school is deemed to be a state-monitored school pursuant to subdivision (b), the governing board of the school district shall do all of the following: (1) (A) Make the same fiscal, human, and educational resources, at a minimum, available to the schoolsite as were available before the action taken pursuant to subdivision (b) excluding state or federal funding provided pursuant to Sections 52054.5 and 52055.600. If the total amount of resources available to the school district differs from one year to another, it shall make the same proportion of resources available to the schoolsite as was available before the action taken pursuant to subdivision (b). (B) The entity selected to manage a school pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) shall review the resources allocated to the schoolsite and determine if additional resources should be made available from district funds to reasonably support the schoolsite without detriment to the other schools and pupils of the district. (C) If the school does not have a management team pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), the Superintendent, in consultation with the state board, shall designate an entity to review the resources allocated to the schoolsite and determine if additional resources should be made available from district funds to reasonably support the schoolsite without detriment to the other schools and pupils of the district. (D) If the entity selected to manage a school pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) or the entity chosen by the Superintendent pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) is unable to obtain the information necessary to make this determination, the entity may request that the Superintendent and state board intervene to obtain the necessary documents. (E) Any dispute between the entity selected to manage a school pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) or the entity chosen by the Superintendent pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) and the school district over resource allocations shall be resolved by the Superintendent, in consultation with the state board. (2) Continue its current ownership status with respect to the schoolsite. (3) Continue to provide the same insurance coverage as before the action taken pursuant to subdivision (b) with respect to property, liability, error and omissions, and other regularly provided policies. (4) Name the Superintendent and the department as additional insureds upon transfer of legal rights, duties, and responsibilities to the Superintendent. (5) Continue to provide facilities support, including maintenance if appropriate to the management arrangement, and full schoolsite participation in bond financing. (6) Remain involved with the school throughout the sanction period. (7) If the state board approves, the governing board of the school district may retain its legal rights, duties, and responsibilities with respect to that school. (f) In addition to the actions listed in subdivision (b), the Superintendent, in consultation with the state board, may take any other action considered necessary or desirable against the school district or the school district governing board, including appointment of a new superintendent or suspension of the authority of the governing board with respect to the school or schools identified pursuant to subdivision (b). (g) (1) Before the Superintendent may take any action against a principal pursuant to subdivision (b), the Superintendent or a designee of the superintendent, which may be a panel consisting of the county superintendent of schools of the county in which the school is located or an adjoining county, one principal with experience in a similar type of school, and the superintendent of the school district in which the state-monitored school is located, shall do the following: (A) Hold an informal hearing to determine whether there are sufficient issues to proceed to a formal hearing. The informal hearing shall be held in a closed session. The principal, and his or her representative, and a school district representative may be present at the informal hearing. The decision on whether to proceed to a formal hearing shall be posted and presented at a regularly scheduled public meeting of the governing board of the school district. If the decision is not to proceed to a formal hearing, the posting and presentation shall explain the rationale for this decision. This item may not be a consent item on the agenda. (B) Hold a formal hearing on the matter in the school district and make both of the following findings: (i) A finding that the principal had the authority to take specific enumerated actions that would have helped the school meet its performance goals. (ii) A finding that the principal failed to take specific enumerated actions pursuant to paragraph (1). (2) Evidence to support the findings made at a formal hearing held pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) shall be presented and discussed in a closed session. The principal, or his or her representative, and a school district representative may be present in the closed session. The findings shall be posted and presented at a regularly scheduled public meeting of the governing board of the school district. This item may not be a consent item on the agenda. The governing board shall give adequate time for public input and response to findings. (3) The Superintendent may not take any action against a principal pursuant to subdivision (b) if the principal is assigned to the school for one academic year or less. (h) A school that has not met its growth targets within 36 months of receiving funding pursuant to Section 52054.5, but has shown significant growth, as determined by the state board, shall continue to be monitored by the Superintendent until it meets its annual growth target or the statewide performance target. If, in any year between the third year of implementation funding and the first year the school meets its growth target, the school fails to make significant growth, as determined by the state board, that school shall be deemed a state-monitored school and subject to the provisions of paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (b). (i) An action taken pursuant to subdivision (b), (c), (d), (e), or (f) shall be conducted from funds provided for that purpose in the annual Budget Act and shall not require reimbursement by the Commission on State Mandates. (j) An action taken pursuant to subdivision (b), (e), or (f) shall be accompanied by specific findings by the Superintendent and the state board that the action is directly related to the identified causes for continued failure by a school to meet its performance goals. These findings shall be made public and discussed at a regularly scheduled meeting of the governing board of the school district before the enactment of any action taken pursuant to subdivision (b), (c), or (d). 52055.51. (a) Instead of the actions specified in subdivision (b) of Section 52055.5, and notwithstanding any other law, the Superintendent, with the approval of the state board, may require the school district to enter into a contract with a school assistance and intervention team no later than 30 days after the public release of the school's growth in API results or the next regularly scheduled meeting of the State Board of Education following the expiration of the 30 days if meeting the 30-day time limit would not provide the State Board of Education with sufficient time to comply with the requirements of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). If the State Board of Education approves, the governing board of the school district may retain its legal rights, duties, and responsibilities with respect to that school. (b) School assistance and intervention team members should possess a high degree of knowledge and skills in the areas of school leadership, curriculum, and instruction aligned to state academic content and performance standards, classroom management and discipline, academic assessment, parent-school relations, and evaluation and research based reform strategies and have proven successful expertise specific to the challenges inherent in state-monitored schools. (c) The Superintendent shall, once every two years, establish a list of approved school assistance and intervention teams with which a school district may contract. The list shall be based on criteria recommended by the Superintendent and adopted by the state board. After the two-year approval period expires, a team may reapply for approval by demonstrating the effectiveness of the work of the team in state-monitored schools. (d) A school assistance and intervention team shall provide intensive support and expertise to implement the school reform initiatives in the plan. Decisions about interventions shall be data driven. A school assistance and intervention team shall work with school staff, site planning teams, administrators, and school district staff to improve pupil literacy and achievement by assessing the degree of implementation of the current action plan, refining and revising the action plan, and making recommendations to maximize the use of fiscal resources and personnel in achieving the goals of the plan. The school district shall provide support and assistance to enhance the work of the team at the targeted schoolsites. (e) Not later than 60 days after the assignment of a school assistance and intervention team, the team shall complete a report. The report shall include recommendations for corrective actions chosen from a range of interventions, including the reallocation of school district fiscal resources to ensure that appropriate resources are targeted to those specific interventions identified in the recommendations of the team for the targeted schools and other changes deemed appropriate to make progress toward meeting the growth target of the school. (f) Not later than 90 days after assignment of the school assistance and intervention team, the governing board of the school district shall adopt the initial recommendations of the team at a regularly scheduled meeting of the governing board. A subsequent recommendation proposed by the school assistance and intervention team shall be submitted to the governing board and shall be adopted by the governing board within 30 days of the submission. The governing board may not place the adoption on the consent calendar. A recommendation adopted by the governing board shall be submitted to the Superintendent and the state board. (g) Following the adoption of the recommendation by the governing board, the governing board may submit an appeal to the Superintendent for relief from one or more of the recommendations. The Superintendent, with approval of the state board, may grant relief from compliance with a recommendation of the school assistance and intervention team. (h) If a school assistance and intervention team does not fulfill its legal obligations under this section, the governing board of the school district may seek permission from the Superintendent, with the approval of the state board, to contract with a different school assistance and intervention team. Upon a finding that the school assistance and intervention team has not fulfilled its legal obligations under this section, the Superintendent, with the approval of the state board, may remove the school assistance and intervention team from the state list of eligible providers. (i) No less than three times during the year, the school district and schoolsite shall present the team with data regarding progress toward the goals established by the initial assessment of the team. The data shall be presented to the governing board of the school district at a regularly scheduled meeting. The team shall, to the extent possible, utilize existing site data. The data shall also be provided to the Superintendent and the state board. Every effort shall be made to report this data in a manner that minimizes the length and complexity of the reporting requirement in order to maximize the focus on improving pupil literacy and achievement. (j) An action taken pursuant to this section may not increase local costs or require reimbursement as determined by the Commission on State Mandates. 52055.52. Thirty-six months after the Superintendent of Public Instruction undertakes any of the actions in paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 52055.5, as amended by Senate Bill 1310 of the 2001-02 Regular Session, and subsequently, or requires a school to contract with a school assistance and intervention team pursuant to Section 52055.51, the school shall no longer be eligible to receive funding for purposes of this article. 52055.53. In order to ensure that management teams and trustees are implementing a sound educational program in state-monitored schools, the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall annually withhold 20 percent of its contractual obligation to a management team or trustee until the Superintendent of Public Instruction is satisfied that the management team or trustee has met the contractual obligation to improve pupil learning. 52055.54. From funds appropriated each year in the annual Budget Act to the department pursuant to Section 1003 of Title 1 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. Sec. 6301) or from state funds appropriated for this purpose, the following amounts shall be allocated by the department to school districts and county offices of education: (a) The amount of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) per pupil for each pupil in a school that is required to enter into a contract with a school assistance and intervention team pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 52055.51, for purposes of implementing any recommendations made by the school assistance and intervention team in the report prepared by the team pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 52055.51. School districts that receive funds under this subdivision shall provide an in-kind match of services, or a match of school district funds in an amount equal to the amount received pursuant to this subdivision. (b) The amount of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) per pupil for each pupil in a school that is managed in accordance with subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 52055.5, for purposes of improving the academic performance of that school. School districts that receive funds under this subdivision shall provide an in-kind match of services, or a match of school district funds in an amount equal to the amount received pursuant to this paragraph. (c) Funding for the support of each school assistance and intervention team that enters into a contract with a school district pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 52055.51 shall be allocated as follows: (1) Seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000) for each school assistance and intervention team assigned to an elementary or middle school. (2) One hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for each school assistance and intervention team assigned to a high school. (3) If a school district determines that it needs more than the amounts specified in paragraphs (1) and (2), the school district may apply to the department for additional funding. The application shall include justification for the requested increase. The department and the Department of Finance shall review any applications and may provide funding up to a total funding level of one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000), including the amount provided pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2). (4) As a condition of receipt of funds pursuant to this subdivision, a school district shall provide an in-kind match of services, or a match of school district funds, in an amount equal to one dollar ($1) for every two dollars ($2) provided pursuant to paragraphs (1), (2), or (3). 52055.55. (a) Thirty-six months after the Superintendent assigns a management team, trustee, or a school assistance and intervention team to a schoolsite, if the school makes significant growth on the Academic Performance Index (API), as determined by the state board, in two consecutive years, the school shall exit the Immediate Intervention/Underperforming Schools Program and is no longer subject to the requirements of the program. (b) Thirty-six months after the Superintendent assigns a management team, trustee, or a school assistance and intervention team to a schoolsite, if the management team, trustee, or school assistance and intervention team fails to assist the school in making significant growth on the API, as determined by the state board, the Superintendent shall remove the management team, trustee, or school assistance and intervention team from providing services at the schoolsite. Additionally, the Superintendent shall do at least one of the following: (1) Require the school district to ensure, using available federal funds, that 100 percent of the teachers at the schoolsite are highly qualified, as defined by the state for the purposes of the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (20 U.S.C. Sec. 6301 et seq.). (2) Require the school to contract, using available federal, state, and local funds, with an outside entity to provide supplemental instruction to high-priority pupils and assign a management team, trustee, or school assistance and intervention team that has demonstrated success with other state-monitored schools. During the period of his or her service, the trustee may stay or rescind those actions of the governing board of the school district or principal that, in the judgment of the trustee, may detrimentally affect the conditions of the state-monitored school to which the trustee is assigned. (A) For the purposes of this section, in order to facilitate the appointment of the trustee and the employment of any necessary staff, the Superintendent is exempt from the requirements of Article 6 (commencing with Section 999) of Chapter 6 of Division 4 of the Military and Veterans Code and Part 2 (commencing with Section 10100) of the Public Contract Code. (B) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if the Superintendent appoints an employee of the department to act as trustee pursuant to this section, the salary and benefits of that employee shall be established by the Superintendent and paid by the school district. During the time of appointment, the employee is an employee of the school district, but shall remain in the same retirement system and under the same plan as if the employee had remained in the department. Upon the expiration or termination of the appointment, the employee shall have the right to return to his or her former position, or to a position at substantially the same level as that position, with the department. The time served in the appointment shall be counted for all purposes as if the employee had served that time in his or her former position with the department. (C) Following the assignment of a management team, trustee, or school assistance and intervention team pursuant to subdivision (b), if the school makes significant growth on the API, as determined by the state board, in two consecutive years, the school shall exit the Immediate Intervention/Underperforming Schools Program and is no longer subject to the requirements of the program. (3) Allow parents of pupils enrolled at the school to apply directly to the state board to establish a charter school at the existing schoolsite. (4) Close the school.

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