(1)The general assembly hereby finds
that:
(a)A significant number of children in Colorado are placed in day treatment
centers, residential child care facilities, other out-of-home placement facilities, or
hospitals and receive their education through programs provided by these facilities;
(b)Although these facilities strive to provide the best educational programs
possible within limited resources and under difficult circumstances, studies
indicate that students who receive educational services through facility programs
are more likely to repeat a grade level, more likely to perform below grade level,
more likely to drop out of school, less likely to be employed, less likely to continue
into higher education, and more likely to be eventually arrested and incarcerated;
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(1) The general assembly hereby finds
that:
(a) A significant number of children in Colorado are placed in day treatment
centers, residential child care facilities, other out-of-home placement facilities, or
hospitals and receive their education through programs provided by these facilities;
(b) Although these facilities strive to provide the best educational programs
possible within limited resources and under difficult circumstances, studies
indicate that students who receive educational services through facility programs
are more likely to repeat a grade level, more likely to perform below grade level,
more likely to drop out of school, less likely to be employed, less likely to continue
into higher education, and more likely to be eventually arrested and incarcerated;
(c) Each facility independently provides an educational program that, in most
instances, is not consistent in the areas of course work, academic credits,
graduation standards, or curriculum with any other educational program provided
by a facility or with any educational program provided by a school district or an
institute charter school. This lack of consistency makes it extremely difficult for a
student to move from one facility to another or to move from a facility to a school
district or institute charter school and puts the student almost hopelessly behind in
meeting standards for completing a grade level or for graduation.
(d) Each student who receives an educational program through a facility
participates in the Colorado student assessment program. However, the student's
scores are usually not included in calculating a school's levels of attainment of the
performance indicators, and the transitory nature of the student's educational
career makes it difficult, if not impossible, for an education provider to
longitudinally track the student's academic growth.
(e) Because of the uniqueness of the population served by each facility, it is
important for each facility to maintain a significant degree of control over the
educational program provided by the facility. However, by partnering with the
department of education to provide an educational program that, as much as
practicable, is consistent among the facilities, each facility can vastly improve the
quality of each student's overall academic experience while the student receives
educational services from the facility and when the student transfers to another
facility or to a school district or an institute charter school.
(2) Therefore, the general assembly finds that creating a unit within the
department of education to work with facilities to create consistency with regard to
curriculum, standards, and tracking of student performance within facility
education programs will raise the overall quality of the education provided to these
students, thereby helping these students meet their full potential both
academically and as fully contributing adults within the community.
(3) The general assembly further finds that, for purposes of section 17 of
article IX of the state constitution, creating the facility schools unit within the
department of education and the facility schools board to work with approved
facility schools to standardize the educational services provided to students in
approved facility schools and implementing a data system to maintain the records
of students who receive educational services from approved facility schools will
enable approved facility schools to provide each student a more consistent and
coherent education, thereby improving each student's likelihood of achieving state
academic standards. The facility schools unit, the facility schools board, and the
data system are therefore important elements of accountable programs to meet
state academic standards and may receive funding from the state education fund
created in section 17 (4) of article IX of the state constitution.
(4) (a) The general assembly further finds that the number of approved
facility schools and placements of students in facility schools in Colorado has
substantially declined due in part to county departments of human or social
services and other state and local agencies reducing the use of congregate care
placements. However, a small percentage of students with exceptionally severe or
specialized needs, who may have been served in approved facility schools in the
past, still require specialized services beyond the level available from their school
district of residence.
(b) Therefore, the general assembly further finds that it is in the best
interests of students with exceptionally severe or specialized needs to stabilize and
enhance the number of approved facility school placements and to improve student
services by:
(I) Providing adequate and predictable funding for approved facility schools;
(II) Establishing an interagency resource guide for facilities seeking
licensure or authorization to operate as approved facility schools;
(III) Requiring state agencies to establish consistent administrative practices
to license, authorize, approve, and fund approved facility schools that may result
from the development of the interagency resource guide described in subsection
(4)(b)(II) of this section;
(IV) Allowing state agencies to recommend changes to law, rule, policy, and
practice based on the establishment of consistent administrative practices
described in subsection (4)(a)(III) of this section;
(V) Requiring the department of health care policy and financing, in
consultation with the work group, to recommend a plan to provide guidance to
approved facility schools on the eligibility standards required to request and
receive medicaid reimbursement funding for therapeutic services to the maximum
extent possible to reduce reliance on school district revenue for therapeutic
services;
(VI) Authorizing the facility schools board to authorize a facility to operate as
a specialized day school;
(VII) Authorizing the facility schools board to adopt accreditation measures
for approved facility schools; and
(VIII) Expanding technical assistance for school districts and administrative
units, with a priority to serve rural school districts, remote school districts, or school
districts that face significant obstacles to providing intensive supports to serve
students with exceptionally severe or specialized needs.