SRC-JBJ H.B. 2609 76(R)   BILL ANALYSIS


Senate Research Center   H.B. 2609
76R11536 KKA-DBy: Greenberg (Zaffirini)
Human Services
5/14/1999
Engrossed


DIGEST 

Currently, many children attend child care facilities with untrained child
care workers.  A statewide survey by the Texas Workforce Commission
(commission) indicated that from 1993 to 1995, 31 percent of child care
workers left their jobs in one year.  A trained worker who has made the
investment of time and energy to pursue training in the child care
profession may be less likely to take another job simply for higher pay.
H.B. 2609 would provide scholarships for individuals working on their Child
Development Associate credentials, and allow the commission to supplement
the wages of qualified scholarship recipients for up to 18 months after
receiving the scholarship.  The recipient must provide care for children
under six years old and continue to work in the same child care facility. 

PURPOSE

As proposed, H.B. 2609 provides scholarships, bonuses, and wage
supplementation for certain professional child-care workers. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

Rulemaking authority is granted to the Texas Workforce Commission in
SECTION 1 (Section 302.006(g), Labor Code) of this bill. 

SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS

SECTION 1.  Amends Subchapter A, Chapter 302, Labor Code, by adding Section
302.006, as follows: 

Sec. 302.006. New heading:  PROFESSIONAL CHILD-CARE TRAINING SCHOLARSHIPS,
BONUSES, AND WAGE SUPPLEMENTATION.  Requires the Texas Workforce Commission
(commission) to develop and administer a program under which it awards
scholarships in the amount of $1,000 each for professional child-care
training to eligible recipients.  Authorizes a recipient awarded a
scholarship to pay expenses associated with obtaining Child Development
Associate (CDA) national credentials, Certified Child-Care Professional
(CCP) credentials, or a level one certificate or associate's degree in the
area of child development or early childhood education from a public or
private institution of higher education.  Sets forth requirements for a
person to be eligible for a scholarship  Prohibits a person from receiving
more than one scholarship.  Authorizes the commission to provide for
payment of a bonus or wage supplementation for 18 months to a  recipient
who provides care for children younger than six years old. Requires any
bonus or wage supplementation provided under this section to be paid in
equal shares by the scholarship recipient's employer and the commission.
Requires the commission to determine the amount and duration of any wage
supplementation.  Requires the commission to fund the scholarship and any
wage supplementation through federal Child Care Development funds or other
funding sources available to the commission.  Prohibits state funding from
exceeding $2,000,000 per state biennium.  Requires the commission to adopt
rules as necessary to implement this section. Requires the rules to include
provisions that address the computation of the  18-month service
requirement prescribed by this section, and ensure that the commission
recovers scholarship money from recipients who fail to comply with the
service or other requirements imposed by the commission.   

SECTION 2.  Effective date: September 1, 1999.

SECTION 3.  Emergency clause.