This website will be unavailable from Friday, April 26, 2024 at 6:00 p.m. through Monday, April 29, 2024 at 7:00 a.m. due to data center maintenance.

  88R2763 AMF-D
 
  By: Allen H.B. No. 772
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to corporal punishment in public schools.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Chapter 37, Education Code, is amended by adding
  Subchapter Z to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER Z. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
  RELATING TO DISCIPLINE
         Sec. 37.901.  CORPORAL PUNISHMENT. (a) In this section,
  "corporal punishment" includes hitting, spanking, paddling, or
  deliberately inflicting physical pain by any means on the whole or
  any part of a student's body as a penalty or punishment for the
  student's behavior on or off campus.
         (b)  A school district employee or a volunteer or independent
  contractor of a district may not administer corporal punishment or
  cause corporal punishment to be administered to a student. This
  subsection does not apply to corporal punishment administered off
  campus by a parent to the parent's child.
         (c)  A school district employee or a volunteer or independent
  contractor of a district may use reasonable and necessary
  restraint, as defined by Section 37.0021.
         (d)  Section 9.62, Penal Code, and Section 22.0511(a) of this
  code do not apply to an action of a school district employee or a
  volunteer or independent contractor of a district that violates
  Subsection (b).
         SECTION 2.  Section 37.0023, Education Code, is transferred
  to Subchapter Z, Chapter 37, Education Code, as added by this Act,
  redesignated as Section 37.902, Education Code, and amended to read
  as follows:
         Sec. 37.902  [37.0023]. PROHIBITED AVERSIVE TECHNIQUES. (a)
  In this section, "aversive technique" means a technique or
  intervention that is intended to reduce the likelihood of a
  behavior reoccurring by intentionally inflicting on a student
  significant physical or emotional discomfort or pain. The term
  includes a technique or intervention that:
               (1)  is designed to or likely to cause physical pain[,
  other than an intervention or technique permitted under Section
  37.0011];
               (2)  [notwithstanding Section 37.0011,] is designed to
  or likely to cause physical pain through the use of electric shock
  or any procedure that involves the use of pressure points or joint
  locks;
               (3)  involves the directed release of a noxious, toxic,
  or otherwise unpleasant spray, mist, or substance near the
  student's face;
               (4)  denies adequate sleep, air, food, water, shelter,
  bedding, physical comfort, supervision, or access to a restroom
  facility;
               (5)  ridicules or demeans the student in a manner that
  adversely affects or endangers the learning or mental health of the
  student or constitutes verbal abuse;
               (6)  employs a device, material, or object that
  simultaneously immobilizes all four extremities, including any
  procedure that results in such immobilization known as prone or
  supine floor restraint;
               (7)  impairs the student's breathing, including any
  procedure that involves:
                     (A)  applying pressure to the student's torso or
  neck; or
                     (B)  obstructing the student's airway, including
  placing an object in, on, or over the student's mouth or nose or
  placing a bag, cover, or mask over the student's face;
               (8)  restricts the student's circulation;
               (9)  secures the student to a stationary object while
  the student is in a sitting or standing position;
               (10)  inhibits, reduces, or hinders the student's
  ability to communicate;
               (11)  involves the use of a chemical restraint;
               (12)  constitutes a use of timeout that precludes the
  student from being able to be involved in and progress
  appropriately in the required curriculum and, if applicable, toward
  the annual goals included in the student's individualized education
  program, including isolating the student by the use of physical
  barriers; or
               (13)  except as provided by Subsection (c), deprives
  the student of the use of one or more of the student's senses.
         (b)  A school district or school district employee or
  volunteer or an independent contractor of a school district may not
  apply an aversive technique, or by authorization, order, or
  consent, cause an aversive technique to be applied, to a student.
         (c)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a)(13), an aversive
  technique described by Subsection (a)(13) may be used if the
  technique is executed in a manner that:
               (1)  does not cause the student discomfort or pain; or
               (2)  complies with the student's individualized
  education program or behavior intervention plan.
         (d)  Nothing in this section may be construed to prohibit a
  teacher from removing a student from class under Section 37.002.
         (e)  In adopting procedures under this section, the
  commissioner shall provide guidance to school district employees,
  volunteers, and independent contractors of school districts in
  avoiding a violation of Subsection (b).
         SECTION 3.  Section 22.0512(c), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (c)  This section does not prohibit a school district from[:
               [(1)  enforcing a policy relating to corporal
  punishment; or
               [(2)  notwithstanding Subsection (a),] bringing a
  disciplinary proceeding against a professional employee of the
  district who violates the prohibition on [district policy relating
  to] corporal punishment under Section 37.901.
         SECTION 4.  Section 25.007(b), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (b)  In recognition of the challenges faced by students who
  are homeless or in substitute care, the agency shall assist the
  transition of students who are homeless or in substitute care from
  one school to another by:
               (1)  ensuring that school records for a student who is
  homeless or in substitute care are transferred to the student's new
  school not later than the 10th working day after the date the
  student begins enrollment at the school;
               (2)  developing systems to ease transition of a student
  who is homeless or in substitute care during the first two weeks of
  enrollment at a new school;
               (3)  developing procedures for awarding credit,
  including partial credit if appropriate, for course work, including
  electives, completed by a student who is homeless or in substitute
  care while enrolled at another school;
               (4)  developing procedures to ensure that a new school
  relies on decisions made by the previous school regarding placement
  in courses or educational programs of a student who is homeless or
  in substitute care and places the student in comparable courses or
  educational programs at the new school, if those courses or
  programs are available;
               (5)  promoting practices that facilitate access by a
  student who is homeless or in substitute care to extracurricular
  programs, summer programs, credit transfer services, electronic
  courses provided under Chapter 30A, and after-school tutoring
  programs at nominal or no cost;
               (6)  establishing procedures to lessen the adverse
  impact of the movement of a student who is homeless or in substitute
  care to a new school;
               (7)  entering into a memorandum of understanding with
  the Department of Family and Protective Services regarding the
  exchange of information as appropriate to facilitate the transition
  of students in substitute care from one school to another;
               (8)  encouraging school districts and open-enrollment
  charter schools to provide services for a student who is homeless or
  in substitute care in transition when applying for admission to
  postsecondary study and when seeking sources of funding for
  postsecondary study;
               (9)  requiring school districts, campuses, and
  open-enrollment charter schools to accept a referral for special
  education services made for a student who is homeless or in
  substitute care by a school previously attended by the student, and
  to provide comparable services to the student during the referral
  process or until the new school develops an individualized
  education program for the student;
               (10)  requiring school districts, campuses, and
  open-enrollment charter schools to provide notice to the child's
  educational decision-maker and caseworker regarding events that
  may significantly impact the education of a child, including:
                     (A)  requests or referrals for an evaluation under
  Section 504, Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794), or
  special education under Section 29.003;
                     (B)  admission, review, and dismissal committee
  meetings;
                     (C)  manifestation determination reviews required
  by Section 37.004(b);
                     (D)  any disciplinary actions under Chapter 37 for
  which parental notice is required;
                     (E)  citations issued for Class C misdemeanor
  offenses on school property or at school-sponsored activities;
                     (F)  reports of restraint and seclusion required
  by Section 37.0021; and
                     (G)  [use of corporal punishment as provided by
  Section 37.0011; and
                     [(H)]  appointment of a surrogate parent for the
  child under Section 29.0151;
               (11)  developing procedures for allowing a student who
  is homeless or in substitute care who was previously enrolled in a
  course required for graduation the opportunity, to the extent
  practicable, to complete the course, at no cost to the student,
  before the beginning of the next school year;
               (12)  ensuring that a student who is homeless or in
  substitute care who is not likely to receive a high school diploma
  before the fifth school year following the student's enrollment in
  grade nine, as determined by the district, has the student's course
  credit accrual and personal graduation plan reviewed;
               (13)  ensuring that a student in substitute care who is
  in grade 11 or 12 be provided information regarding tuition and fee
  exemptions under Section 54.366 for dual-credit or other courses
  provided by a public institution of higher education for which a
  high school student may earn joint high school and college credit;
               (14)  designating at least one agency employee to act
  as a liaison officer regarding educational issues related to
  students in the conservatorship of the Department of Family and
  Protective Services; and
               (15)  providing other assistance as identified by the
  agency.
         SECTION 5.  Section 37.0011, Education Code, is repealed.
         SECTION 6.  This Act applies beginning with the 2023-2024
  school year.
         SECTION 7.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
  a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
  provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
  Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2023.