The bill:
Increases the statewide base per pupil funding for the 2024-25 budget year by $419.97 to account for inflation;
Sets a new statewide base per funding amount of $8,496.38 for the 2024-25 budget year; and
Sets the total program funding for the 2024-25 budget year for all school districts and institute charter schools to not less than $9,735,767,429. The bill repeals the total program reserve fund on July 1, 2025. The bill adds rural funding to the district's total program formula
to provide additional funding to small rural districts or large rural districts.
The bill requires the state treasurer to transfer $15,715,539 from
the state education fund to the mill levy override match fund.
Current law requires a new at-risk measure in the public school
funding formula to be implemented in the 2024-25 budget year. The bill extends the implementation of this requirement to the 2025-26 budget year.
For the 2024-25 budget year, a school district's at-risk funding is
the greater of the school district's at-risk funding amount for the 2023-24 budget year or the 2024-25 budget year.
Current law requires a qualified third-party evaluator (evaluator)
who facilitates a facility school work group (work group) to submit a report to the work group and the office of facility schools by September 1, 2025. The department of education (department) is required to submit the evaluator's report to the joint budget committee by October 1, 2025. The bill extends the report deadlines to September 1, 2026, and October 1, 2026, respectively.
The bill requires school districts, a district charter school, an
institute charter school, or a board of cooperative services to offer the writing portion of a college entrance exam to students digitally.
Current law requires a school district to receive the daily rate for
education services provided by approved facility schools for a juvenile who is held in a jail or facility and receives at least 4 hours of educational services per week from the school district. The bill changes the daily rate to the rate for educational services provided by the Colorado school for the deaf and the blind or the education program operated by the Colorado mental health institute at Pueblo or Fort Logan.
The bill increases the cap on how much can be spent on
administration for the ninth-grade success grant program from 5% to 8%.
The bill clarifies that a student with disabilities (student) who
receives transition services and has postsecondary goals outlined in the student's individualized education program is eligible for concurrent enrollment courses.