Survival of the Fittest Status of Federal Education Legislation Julia Martin, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC Spring Forum 2015
ESEA Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC2
ESEA Progress For House/Senate Committees, ESEA is reauthorization priority #1 Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Discussion draft released, hearings began mid-January Alexander-Murray bill released in early April, markup in mid- April House Committee on Education and the Workforce Student Success Act (H.R. 5) introduced early February, approved by Committee February 11 th No hearings – building on debate in 113 th Congress Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC3
Problems on House Floor Set for vote last week of February, but bill was pulled from schedule before final vote Vote scheduled for same day as Homeland Security funding bill Objections from conservative Republican groups: Not enough of a departure from NCLB Too tolerant of Common Core Not enough flexibility for States/districts too prescriptive Did not allow Title I portability funds to be used at private schools Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC 4
Remaining Hurdles Busy House/Senate schedule Other legislative priorities Democratic opposition From within Congress and from President/administration Concerns about “walking back” accountability/ civil rights Concerns about funding/portability Republican opposition Opposition from conservative Reps., action groups Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC 5
Where to go from here? Two choices (assuming Senate Passes bill): House passes Senate bill (or vice versa) Then Senate passes revised version with any House amendments, sends to President for signature House and Senate meet in “conference” to work out differences between bills Final compromise legislation must be passed by House and Senate, then sent to President for signature Both options complicated by House problems in passing bill Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC6
Likely Contents of ESEA Reauthorization What’s Definitely Out AYP Instead: States design and implement plans for intervention and improvement Requirement to adopt specific college- and career- ready standards Instead: leaves standards and assessments up to States Race to the Top (and i3) Instead: focus on formula funding (and budget-cutting) Teacher evaluations, HQT Instead: focus on State licensure/training/PD Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC 7
Likely Contents of ESEA Reauthorization What’s Definitely In Title I structure, formula Charter school grants Focus on States with laws more open to charters Limitation on Secretarial waiver, decision- making authority Funding flexibility between Titles II and IV Consolidation of some programs/titles Supplement, not supplant (but some changes) Maintenance of effort (may change?) Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC 8
ESEA Flashpoints Appropriations House bill, Senate discussion draft would limit total appropriations to FY 2015 levels Senate bill as introduced allows “such sums” as necessary White House veto threat mentioned limitation on funding as negative Assessments Senate draft included potential for allowing grade-span assessments Pressure from parent and other advocacy groups to lessen testing White House pushback, support from Democratic and Republican leadership for current requirement accountability 9
ESEA Flashpoints Title I Portability House bill would allow States to set up systems where Title I funding follows low- income student to school of their choice White House, left-leaning advocacy groups highly critical In House floor debate, conservatives ask for even more on portability (funding for private schools) Senate bill as introduced has no portability Introduced as amendment Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC 10