19 Tex. Admin. Code § 100.1017

Current through Reg. 49, No. 43; October 25, 2024
Section 100.1017 - Applicant Eligibility and Form Contents
(a) Except as expressly provided in the rules in this subchapter, provisions in this section apply to all applications affiliated and published under the following Texas Education Code (TEC) subchapters:
(1) TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter D;
(2) TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter E; and
(3) TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter G.
(b) Any existing entity applying for the charter must be in good standing with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Texas Secretary of State, and the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. An existing entity must also be in good standing with all regulatory agencies in its home state. An existing entity must attest that any failure to maintain ongoing compliance with these requirements, if awarded a charter, will be considered a material violation of the charter contract and may be grounds for revocation.
(c) Notwithstanding any other provisions in this chapter, the following provisions apply to charter applicants and successful charter awardees authorized by the commissioner under requests for applications adopted after November 1, 2012.
(1) Financial standards. An applicant for a TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter D, E, or G charter school, as applicable, shall meet each of the following financial standards to demonstrate the financial viability of the charter, as determined by the commissioner of education or the commissioner's designee, prior to being considered for award of a charter and must attest that any failure to maintain ongoing compliance with these requirements, if awarded a charter, will be considered a material violation of the charter contract and may be grounds for revocation.
(A) Each entity must provide evidence of financial competency and sustainability by providing evidence of an appropriate financial plan that includes each of the following:
(i) a brief analysis of the educational opportunities in the area(s) for the same students and the methods that the proposed school will use to recruit and retain students;
(ii) a brief narrative of the growth plan for the first five years of operation of the proposed school that matches all projections included in the budget;
(iii) an unqualified opinion as provided in the most recent audited financial statements of the applicant if the entity has been in existence at least a year;
(iv) a five-year budget projection of revenue and expenditures for the proposed charter using the template that will be provided in the application;
(v) a response, based on the revenue and expenditures provided in the template that will be provided in the application, detailing the ways in which the budget projections were derived, including any assumptions used; and
(vi) support documentation for budget projections as detailed in the budget template that will be provided with the application.
(B) Loans and lines of credit are liabilities that must be repaid and will be considered as available funding. Loans or lines of credit may be characterized as assets and as cash on hand.
(C) The applicant must identify in the template provided in the application available funding for start-up costs, as documented by current assets listed in the balance sheet and/or pledges for donation that do not require repayment.
(D) The applicant must identify revenue and expenses on a per-student amount and may not reflect a net operating loss for any projection year.
(E) To ensure financial viability, the entity must commit to serving a minimum of 100 students at all times.
(F) The entity applying for the charter must have liabilities that are less than 80% of its assets.
(G) The aggregate of projected budgeted expenses must be less than the aggregate of projected total revenues by the end of the first year of operation provided that:
(i) projected revenues are documented and use the amount per student designated in the application when calculating Foundation School Program funding that will begin during the first year of operation; and
(ii) all reasonable start-up and first-year expenditures are included in the budgets or an explanation for not needing to include them is included in the budget narratives.
(2) Governing standards. An applicant for a TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter D, E, or G charter school, as applicable, shall meet each of the following governing standards to demonstrate sound establishment and oversight of the charter's educational mission, as determined by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee, prior to being considered for award of a charter and must attest that any failure to maintain ongoing compliance with these requirements, if awarded a charter, will be considered a material violation of the charter contract and may be grounds for revocation, except as provided by TEC, §12.1054(a)(2).
(A) To qualify as an eligible entity in accordance with TEC, §12.101(a)(3), as an organization that is exempt under 26 United States Code (U.S.C.), §501(c)(3), the applicant must have its own 501(c)(3) exemption in its own name, as evidenced by a 501(c)(3) letter of determination issued by the IRS.
(i) An applicant cannot attain status as an eligible entity that is exempt under 26 U.S.C., § 501(c)(3), as a disregarded entity, a supporting organization, or a member of a group exemption of a currently recognized 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.
(ii) Entities that have applied for 501(c)(3) status but have yet to receive the exemption from the IRS must provide the letter of determination of the 501(c)(3) status issued by the IRS prior to a recommendation by the commissioner. Failure to secure 501(c)(3) status deems an entity ineligible.
(iii) A religious organization, sectarian school, or religious institution that applies must have an established separate non-sectarian entity that is exempt under 26 U.S.C., § 501(c)(3), to be considered an eligible entity.
(B) The articles of incorporation or certificate of formation as applicable, and the bylaws of the applicant must vest the management of the corporate affairs in the board of directors.
(i) The charter holder may not vest the management of corporate affairs in any member or members.
(ii) Articles of incorporation, certificate of formation, bylaws, or any policy or other agreement may not confer on or reserve to any other entity or person the ability to overrule, remove, replace, or name the members of the governing body or board of the charter holder or charter school at any time.
(C) Any other change in the aforementioned governance documents pursuant to the management of the corporate affairs of the nonprofit entity may only occur with the approval of the commissioner in accordance with § 100.1035(b) of this title (relating to Charter Amendment) or in accordance with any other power granted to the commissioner in state law or rule.
(D) If the sponsoring entity is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, its bylaws must clearly state that the charter holder and charter school will comply with the Texas Open Meetings Act and will appropriately respond to Texas Public Information Act requests.
(E) No family members within the third degree of consanguinity or second degree of affinity shall simultaneously serve on the charter holder or charter school board.
(F) No family member within the third degree of consanguinity or second degree of affinity of any charter holder board member, charter school board member, or superintendent shall receive compensation in any form from the charter school, the charter holder, or any management company that operates or provides services to the charter school.
(G) The applicant shall specify that the governing body accepts and will not delegate ultimate responsibility for the school, including academic performance and financial and operational viability, and is responsible for overseeing any management company providing management services for the school.
(3) Educational and operational standards for applications published under TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapters D and E. An applicant shall successfully meet each of the following educational and operational standards to ensure alignment of curricula to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills, as determined by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee, prior to being considered for award of a charter and must attest that any failure to maintain ongoing compliance with these requirements, if awarded a charter, will be considered a material violation of the charter contract and may be grounds for revocation.
(A) The charter applicant must provide a succinct long-term vision for the proposed school and clearly explain the overall educational philosophy to be promoted at the school, if authorized.
(B) The charter applicant must provide a succinct explanation of the reasons for choosing the target location.
(C) The charter applicant must clearly explain in succinct terms the specific curricular programs that the school, if authorized, will provide to students and the ways in which the charter staff, board members, and others will use these programs to maintain high expectations for and the continuous improvement of student performance.
(D) The charter applicant must clearly explain in succinct terms the ways in which the school, if authorized, will improve student learning, increase the choice of high-quality educational opportunities in the proposed area, create professional environments that will attract new teachers to the public school system, set a high standard for school accountability and student achievement, and encourage different and innovative learning methods.
(E) The charter applicant must clearly explain how classroom practices will reflect the connections among curriculum, instruction, and assessment.
(F) The charter applicant must describe in succinct terms the specific ways in which the school, if authorized, will:
(i) address the instructional needs of students performing both below and above grade levels in major content areas;
(ii) differentiate instruction to meet the needs of diverse learners;
(iii) provide a continuum of services in the least restrictive environment for students with special needs as required by state and federal law;
(iv) provide bilingual and/or English as a second language instruction to English language learners as required by state law; and
(v) implement an educational program that supports compliance with all course requirements pursuant to state law.
(G) As evidenced in required documentation, the charter applicant must commit to hiring personnel with appropriate qualifications as follows.
(i) Except as provided in clause (iv) of this subparagraph, all teachers, regardless of subject matter taught, must have a baccalaureate degree.
(ii) Special education teachers, bilingual teachers, and teachers of English as a second language must be certified in the fields in which they are assigned to teach as required in state and/or federal law.
(iii) Paraprofessionals must be certified as required to meet state and/or federal law.
(iv) In an open-enrollment charter school that serves youth referred to or placed in a residential trade center by a local or state agency, a person may be employed as a teacher for a noncore vocational course without holding a baccalaureate degree, subject to the requirements described in § 100.1212 of this title (relating to Personnel).
(H) With the exception of an early education (prekindergarten for age three through Grade 2) or prekindergarten-only model, the charter applicant must commit to serving, by its fourth year of operation, students in grades assessed for state accountability purposes.
(I) The charter applicant must provide a final copy of any management contract, if applicable, that will be entered into by the charter holder that will provide any management services, including the monetary amount that will be paid to the management company for providing school services.
(J) This paragraph does not apply to an application published under TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter G.
(4) Educational and operational standards for applications published under TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter G. An applicant for an adult high school charter shall successfully meet each of the following educational and operational standards to ensure careful alignment of curricula to the industry-based certifications, and workforce preparation and training as determined by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee, prior to being considered for award of a charter and must attest that any failure to maintain ongoing compliance with these requirements, if awarded a charter, will be considered a material violation of the charter contract and may be grounds for revocation.
(A) The charter applicant must provide a succinct long-term vision for the proposed school and clearly explain the overall educational philosophy to be promoted at the school, if authorized.
(B) The charter applicant must clearly explain in succinct terms the specific curricular programs that the school, if authorized, will provide to program participants in order to earn a high school diploma and the ways in which the charter staff, board members, and others will use these programs to maintain high expectations for and the continuous improvement of student performance.
(C) The charter applicant must clearly explain in succinct terms the ways in which the school, if authorized, will offer interactive, teacher-led instruction to program participants.
(D) The charter applicant must clearly explain how career and technology programs for industry-based certifications will be implemented at the school.
(E) The charter applicant must submit a letter of intent if contracting with a public junior college, provider, organization approved by the Texas Workforce Commission to provide career and technology courses that lead to an industry certification.
(F) The charter applicant must provide evidence that the entity or a member of its executive leadership has a successful history of providing education services, including industry certifications and job placement services, to adults 18 years of age and older whose educational and training opportunities have been limited by educational disadvantages, disabilities, homelessness, criminal history, or similar marginalizing circumstances.
(G) The charter applicant must describe in succinct terms the specific ways in which the school, if authorized, will:
(i) address how participants can receive a diploma through successful completion of the Foundation High School program curriculum requirements or other appropriate curriculum requirements applicable to the program participant;
(ii) provide career readiness training, post-secondary counseling, and job placement services;
(iii) offer support services, including childcare at no cost, life coaching services, mental health counseling, and transportation assistance;
(iv) provide a continuum of services in the least restrictive environment for program participants with special needs as required by state and federal law;
(v) provide bilingual and/or English as a second language instruction to emergent bilingual students as required by state law; and
(vi) implement an educational program that supports compliance with all course requirements pursuant to state law.
(H) As evidenced in required documentation, the charter applicant must commit to hiring personnel with appropriate qualifications as follows.
(i) Except as provided in § 100.1212(b) of this title, all teachers, regardless of subject matter taught, must have a baccalaureate degree.
(ii) Special education teachers, bilingual teachers, and teachers of English as a second language must be certified in the fields in which they are assigned to teach as required in state and/or federal law.
(iii) Paraprofessionals must be certified as required to meet state and/or federal law.
(I) The charter applicant may not propose to serve more than 2,000 students.
(J) The charter applicant must provide a final copy of any management contract, if applicable, that will be entered into by the charter holder that will provide any management services, including the monetary amount that will be paid to the management company for providing school services.
(K) The charter applicant must provide a final memorandum of understanding if partnering with a public junior college, provider, organization approved by the Texas Workforce Commission to provide career and technology courses that lead to an industry certification.

19 Tex. Admin. Code § 100.1017

The provisions of this §100.1017 adopted to be effective April 1, 2003, 28 TexReg 2743; amended to be effective August 26, 2010, 35 TexReg 7213; amended to be effective September 12, 2012, 37 TexReg 7097; amended to be effective September 18, 2014, 39 TexReg 7295; Adopted by Texas Register, Volume 49, Number 39, September 27, 2024, TexReg 7872, eff. 10/2/2024