73R5597 CAS-F
          By Hernandez, Bailey, et al.                           H.B. No. 633
          Substitute the following for H.B. No. 633:
          By Bailey                                          C.S.H.B. No. 633
                                 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
    1-1                                AN ACT
    1-2  relating to the commission and duties of school district peace
    1-3  officers.
    1-4        BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
    1-5        SECTION 1.  Section 21.483, Education Code, is amended to
    1-6  read as follows:
    1-7        Sec. 21.483.  SCHOOL DISTRICT PEACE OFFICERS <CAMPUS SECURITY
    1-8  PERSONNEL>.  (a)  The board of trustees of any school district may
    1-9  employ and commission peace officers <campus security personnel>
   1-10  for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this subchapter.
   1-11  The jurisdiction of a peace officer commissioned under this section
   1-12  shall be determined by the board of trustees and may include all
   1-13  territory in the boundaries of the school district and all
   1-14  property, real and personal, outside the boundaries of the district
   1-15  that is owned, leased, or rented by or otherwise under the control
   1-16  of the school district and the board of trustees that employ the
   1-17  peace officer.
   1-18        (b)  In a peace officer's jurisdiction, a peace officer
   1-19  commissioned under this section:
   1-20              (1)  has the powers, privileges, and immunities of
   1-21  peace officers;
   1-22              (2)  may enforce all laws, including municipal
   1-23  ordinances, county ordinances, and state laws; and
   1-24              (3)  may, in accordance with Chapter 52, Family Code,
    2-1  take a juvenile into custody.
    2-2        (c)  A school district peace officer may provide assistance
    2-3  to another law enforcement agency.  A school district may contract
    2-4  with a political subdivision for the jurisdiction of a school
    2-5  district peace officer to include all territory in the jurisdiction
    2-6  of the political subdivision.
    2-7        (d)  A school district peace officer shall perform
    2-8  administrative and law enforcement duties for the school district
    2-9  as determined by the board of trustees of the school district.
   2-10  These duties must include protecting:
   2-11              (1)  the safety and welfare of any person in the
   2-12  jurisdiction of the peace officer; and
   2-13              (2)  the property, real and personal, of the school
   2-14  district.
   2-15        (e)  <and if the board of trustees authorizes any officer to
   2-16  bear arms then they must commission them as peace officers.  Any
   2-17  officer commissioned under this section is vested with all the
   2-18  powers, privileges, and immunities of peace officers while on the
   2-19  property under the control and jurisdiction of the district or
   2-20  otherwise in the performance of his duties.>  Any officer assigned
   2-21  to duty and commissioned shall take and file the oath required of
   2-22  peace officers, and shall execute and file a good and sufficient
   2-23  bond in the sum of $1,000, payable to the board of trustees, with
   2-24  two or more good and sufficient sureties, conditioned that he will
   2-25  fairly, impartially, and faithfully perform all the duties that may
   2-26  be required of him by law.  The bond may be sued on from time to
   2-27  time in the name of any person injured until the whole amount of
    3-1  the bond is recovered.  Any peace officer commissioned under this
    3-2  section must meet all minimum standards for peace officers
    3-3  established by the Commission on Law Enforcement Officer Standards
    3-4  and Education <within one year of his commission, or his commission
    3-5  shall automatically expire>.
    3-6        (f)  In this section, "political subdivision" means a county,
    3-7  municipality, special district, school district, junior college
    3-8  district, or other legally constituted political subdivision of the
    3-9  state.
   3-10        SECTION 2.  Section 52.01(a), Family Code, is amended to read
   3-11  as follows:
   3-12        (a)  A child may be taken into custody:
   3-13              (1)  pursuant to an order of the juvenile court under
   3-14  the provisions of this subtitle;
   3-15              (2)  pursuant to the laws of arrest;
   3-16              (3)  by a law-enforcement officer, including a school
   3-17  district peace officer commissioned under Section 21.483, Education
   3-18  Code, if there are reasonable grounds to believe that the child has
   3-19  engaged in delinquent conduct or conduct indicating a need for
   3-20  supervision; or
   3-21              (4)  by a probation officer if there are reasonable
   3-22  grounds to believe that the child has violated a condition of
   3-23  probation imposed by the juvenile court.
   3-24        SECTION 3.  The importance of this legislation and the
   3-25  crowded condition of the calendars in both houses create an
   3-26  emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
   3-27  constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several
    4-1  days in each house be suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended,
    4-2  and that this Act take effect and be in force from and after its
    4-3  passage, and it is so enacted.