Proposed Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and Selection Criteria-Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools Program (CSP)-Grants to State Entities (SE Grants); Grants to Charter Management Organizations for the Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools (CMO Grants); and Grants to Charter School Developers for the Opening of New Charter Schools and for the Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools (Developer Grants), 14197-14210 [2022-05463]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 49 / Monday, March 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
on May 14, 2022, and from 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. on May 15, 2022.
Dated: March 8, 2022.
David E. O’Connell,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Maryland-National Capital Region.
[FR Doc. 2022–05258 Filed 3–11–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Chapter II
[Docket ID ED–2022–OESE–0006]
Proposed Priorities, Requirements,
Definitions, and Selection Criteria—
Expanding Opportunity Through
Quality Charter Schools Program
(CSP)—Grants to State Entities (SE
Grants); Grants to Charter
Management Organizations for the
Replication and Expansion of HighQuality Charter Schools (CMO Grants);
and Grants to Charter School
Developers for the Opening of New
Charter Schools and for the
Replication and Expansion of HighQuality Charter Schools (Developer
Grants)
Office of Elementary and
Secondary Education, Department of
Education.
ACTION: Proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria.
AGENCY:
The Department of Education
proposes priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria for
CSP SE Grants, CMO Grants, and
Developer Grants, Assistance Listing
Numbers (ALNs) 84.282A, 84.282B,
84.282E, and 84.282M. We may use one
or more of these priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria for grant competitions under
these programs in fiscal year (FY) 2022
and later years. We take this action to
create results-driven policies to help
promote positive student outcomes,
student and staff diversity, educator and
community empowerment, promising
practices, and accountability, including
fiscal transparency and responsibility,
in charter schools supported with CSP
funds, which can serve as models for
other charter schools.
DATES: We must receive your comments
on or before April 13, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
or via postal mail, commercial delivery,
or hand delivery. We will not accept
comments submitted by fax or by email
or those submitted after the comment
period. To ensure that we do not receive
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duplicate copies, please submit your
comments only once. In addition, please
include the Docket ID at the top of your
comments.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
www.regulations.gov to submit your
comments electronically. Information
on using Regulations.gov, including
instructions for accessing agency
documents, submitting comments, and
viewing the docket, is available on the
site under ‘‘Help.’’
• Postal Mail, Commercial Delivery,
or Hand Delivery: If you mail or deliver
your comments about these proposed
priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria, address them to
Porscheoy Brice, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW,
Room 3E209, Washington, DC 20202–
5970.
Privacy Note: The Department’s
policy is to make all comments received
from members of the public available for
public viewing in their entirety on the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. Therefore,
commenters should be careful to
include in their comments only
information that they wish to make
publicly available.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Porscheoy Brice, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW,
Room 3E209, Washington, DC 20202–
5970. Telephone: (202) 260–0968.
Email: charterschools@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD) or a text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS), toll free, at 1–800–877–
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Invitation to Comment: We invite you
to submit comments regarding the
proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria. To
ensure that your comments have
maximum effect in developing the
notice of final priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria, we
urge you to clearly identify the specific
section of the proposed priority,
requirement, definition, or selection
criteria that each comment addresses.
We invite you to assist us in
complying with the specific
requirements of Executive Orders 12866
and 13563 and their overall requirement
of reducing regulatory burden that
might result from these proposed
priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria. Please let us know of
any further ways we could reduce
potential costs or increase potential
benefits while preserving the effective
and efficient administration of the
program.
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During and after the comment period,
you may inspect all public comments
about the proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria by accessing Regulations.gov.
You may also inspect the comments in
person. Please contact the person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT to make arrangements to
inspect the comments in person.
Assistance to Individuals With
Disabilities in Reviewing the
Rulemaking Record: On request, we will
provide an appropriate accommodation
or auxiliary aid to an individual with a
disability who needs assistance to
review the comments or other
documents in the public rulemaking
record for the proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria. If you want to schedule an
appointment for this type of
accommodation or auxiliary aid, please
contact the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Purpose of Programs: SE Grants, CMO
Grants, and Developer Grants are three
of six CSP grant programs that support
various activities critical to the
successful creation and implementation
of charter schools. The major purposes
of the CSP are to expand opportunities
for all students, particularly
traditionally underserved students, to
attend charter schools and meet
challenging State academic standards;
provide financial assistance for the
planning, program design, and initial
implementation of charter schools;
increase the number of high-quality
charter schools available to students
across the United States; evaluate the
impact of charter schools on student
achievement, families, and
communities; share best practices
between charter schools and other
public schools; aid States in providing
facilities support to charter schools; and
support efforts to strengthen the charter
school authorizing process.
SE Grants (ALN 84.282A) comprise
the largest portion of CSP funds. These
competitive grants are awarded to State
entities (SEs) that, in turn, award
competitive subgrants to eligible
applicants for the purpose of opening
new charter schools and replicating and
expanding high-quality charter schools.
Eligible applicants are charter school
developers that have applied to an
authorized public chartering agency to
operate a charter school and have
provided adequate and timely notice to
that authority. A developer is an
individual or group of individuals
(including a public or private nonprofit
organization), which may include
teachers, administrators and other
school staff, parents, or other members
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of the local community in which a
charter school project will be carried
out.1 For-profit organizations are
ineligible to apply for grants or
subgrants under the CSP.
In addition to making subgrants to
eligible applicants to open new charter
schools and to replicate or expand highquality charter schools, SE grantees may
use grant funds to provide technical
assistance to eligible applicants and
authorized public chartering agencies in
opening new charter schools and
replicating and expanding high-quality
charter schools; and work with
authorized public chartering agencies in
the State to improve authorizing quality,
including developing capacity for, and
conducting, fiscal oversight and
auditing of charter schools. SE Grant
funds may also be used for grant
administration, which may include
technical assistance and monitoring of
subgrants for performance and fiscal
and regulatory compliance, as required
under 2 CFR 200.332(d).
If a State does not have an active CSP
SE Grant, the Department may award
Developer Grants (ALNs 84.282B and
84.282E) to eligible applicants in the
State on a competitive basis to enable
them to open new charter schools or to
replicate or expand high-quality charter
schools. Through CMO Grants (ALN
84.282M), the Department provides
funds to non-profit charter management
organizations (CMOs) on a competitive
basis to enable them to replicate or
expand one or more high-quality charter
schools.
CSP SE Grants, CMO Grants, and
Developer Grants are intended to
support charter schools that serve
elementary or secondary school
students. Funds also may be used to
serve students in early childhood
education programs or postsecondary
students. Section 4310 of the
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA),
defines ‘‘replicate’’ as opening a new
charter school, or a new campus of a
high-quality charter school, based on
the educational model of an existing
high-quality charter school; and
‘‘expand’’ as significantly increasing
enrollment or adding one or more
grades to a high-quality charter school
(20 U.S.C. 7221i(9) and (7)). Section
4310 defines ‘‘high-quality charter
school,’’ in pertinent part, as a charter
school that shows evidence of strong
academic results, which may include
strong student academic growth, as
1 Section
4310(5) and (6) of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended (20
U.S.C. 7221i(5) and (6)) (www.congress.gov/114/
plaws/publ95/PLAW–114publ95.pdf).
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determined by a State; has no significant
issues in the areas of student safety,
financial and operational management,
or statutory or regulatory compliance;
and has demonstrated success in
significantly increasing student
academic achievement, including
graduation rates where applicable, for
all students served by the charter school
and for each of the subgroups of
students defined in section 1111(c)(2) of
the ESEA (20 U.S.C. 7221i(8)).
For CMO Grants and Developer
Grants, these proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria are intended to supplement the
regulatory priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria in:
Final Priorities, Requirements,
Definitions, and Selection Criteria—
Expanding Opportunity Through
Quality Charter Schools Program; Grants
to Charter Management Organizations
for the Replication and Expansion of
High-Quality Charter Schools (CMO
NFP), published in the Federal Register
on November 30, 2018 (83 FR 61532),
and Final Priorities, Requirements,
Definitions, and Selection Criteria—
Expanding Opportunity Through
Quality Charter Schools Program; Grants
to Charter School Developers for the
Opening of New Charter Schools and for
the Replication and Expansion of HighQuality Charter Schools (Developer
NFP), published in the Federal Register
on July 3, 2019 (84 FR 31726).
Program Authority: Title IV, part C of
the ESEA (20 U.S.C. 7221–7221j).
Proposed Priorities
Proposed Priorities Applicable to
CMO Grants and Developer Grants: We
propose two priorities for CMO Grants
and Developer Grants.
Proposed Priority 1—Promoting HighQuality Educator- and CommunityCentered Charter Schools to Support
Underserved Students.
Background: Charter schools were
envisioned to drive the creation of
innovative approaches to teaching and
learning for all students while being
held accountable for academic
performance.2 The original proponents
of charter schools anticipated that
charter schools would be shaped by
educators and offer opportunities for
developing and sharing new
instructional methods and resources
that address the needs of students and
families in the community. While that is
the case in some charter schools, in
2 Kahlenberg, Richard D. & Potter, Halley (2014).
Restoring Shanker’s Vision for Charter Schools |
American Federation of Teachers (aft.org)
www.aft.org/ae/winter2014–2015/kahlenberg_
potter.
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others, teachers, parents, and
community leaders have expressed
concerns about not being included as
active participants in charter school
decision-making.3 Such concerns may
be due, in part, to limited requirements
for community engagement. According
to the National Resource Center on
Charter School Finance and
Governance, ‘‘most laws require only
peripheral participation, such as
garnering parent support for the school
during the application process or
keeping parents informed of student
performance. These participation
requirements do not take full advantage
of charter schools’ potential to draw on
the knowledge and expertise of their
parent community.’’ 4 Similarly, some
charter schools may not fully engage
other community members and
organizations that are also wellpositioned to help assess the
educational aspirations and needs of
students living in their neighborhoods
and can offer important contributions to
help improve the academic, financial,
and organizational or operational
performance of the school.5 Charter
schools and CMOs may have needs that
community members and organizations
can help meet, including, for example,
specific teacher areas of expertise;
facilities for activities such as arts,
sports, or enrichment; or serving their
students’ well-being and readiness to
learn. Similarly, community
partnerships can expand options for
courses that may not be available in a
school, enhance independent study or
skill development opportunities (e.g.,
career and technical education or workbased learning), and build sustainability
of program offerings. Community
partnerships can also assess the
receptiveness of a community to a new
charter school.
Educator- and community-centered
charter schools can provide
opportunities to meet the needs of all
students, particularly underserved
students. Studies show that when
teachers are engaged in educational
decision-making and are given an
3 Baker, Timberly L., Wise, Jillian, Kelley,
Gwendolyn, and Skiba, Russell J. (2016). Identifying
Barriers: Creating Solutions https://files.eric.ed.gov/
fulltext/EJ1124003.pdf.
4 National Resource Center on Charter School
Finance & Governance. Enhancing_Charter_Schools
Through Parent Involvement https://
charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/sites/default/files/files/
field_publication_attachment/Enhancing_Charter_
Schools-AmyBiehlHS.pdf.
5 National Charter School Resource Center (2021).
How Charter Schools Can Leverage Community
Assets through Partnerships https://
charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/sites/default/files/files/
field_publication_attachment/How Charter Schools
Can LeverageCommunity Assets through
Partnerships.pdf.
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opportunity to collaborate with
administrators, it promotes a better
learning environment for students that
leads to increased student achievement
and college and career readiness.6 For
example, charter schools can ensure
meaningful input of educators by
appointing multiple educators to their
governing boards or purposefully
developing instructional and
operational models that proactively
solicit and respond to educators’
feedback. Additionally, communitycentered charter schools are built on
relationships that may enable them to be
more transparent and collaborative in
their design and practices, including
proactively recruiting, enrolling, and
retaining students of diverse
backgrounds and abilities.7 Communitycentered charter schools may have
established partnerships with local
organizations and informal and formal
processes to engage with and solicit
input from local stakeholders on a
regular basis.
Proposed Priority:
(a) Under this priority, an applicant
must propose to open a new charter
school, or replicate or expand a highquality charter school, that is developed
and implemented—
(1) With meaningful and ongoing
engagement with current and former
educators, including current and former
teachers, including in founding the
school, board governance, school-level
decision-making related to curriculum
and instruction, and day-to-day
operations of the school; and
(2) Using a community-centered
approach that includes an assessment of
community assets, informs the
development of the charter school, and
includes the implementation of
protocols and practices designed to
ensure that the charter school will use
and interact with community assets on
an ongoing basis to create and maintain
strong community ties.
(b) In its application, an applicant
must provide a high-quality plan that
demonstrates how its proposed project
would meet the requirements in
paragraph (a) of this priority,
accompanied by a timetable with
milestones.
6 Rimm-Kaufman, Sara and Sandilos, Lia (2010).
Improving students’ relationships with teachers
(apa.org) www.apa.org/education-career/k12/
relationships.
7 Safal Partners: Kern, Nora (2016). Intentionally
Diverse Charter Schools: A Toolkit for Charter
School Leaders https://charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/
sites/default/files/files/field_publication_
attachment/NCSRC%20Intentionally%20Diverse
%20Charter%20School%20Toolkit.pdf.
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Proposed Priority 2—Charter School
and Traditional Public School or
District Collaborations That Benefit
Students and Families
Background: Research has shown that
collaborations among charter schools
and traditional public schools or
traditional school districts (chartertraditional collaborations) have the
potential to improve the quality of
charter schools and traditional public
schools.8 In order to benefit the public
school system as a whole, and students
and families in the community, chartertraditional collaborations require
significant investments of time and
resources to address commonly shared
barriers and challenges in both charter
schools and traditional public schools.
Successful charter-traditional
collaborations can lead to informationsharing about best practices for
developing systems and processes that
benefit all families and students served
by the members of the collaboration.9
Some examples of charter-traditional
collaborations that benefit students and
families include: Sharing curriculum
resources and instructional materials,
including opportunities for students to
have increased access to a more
comprehensive set of course offerings;
creating systems and structures for the
delivery of shared, effective teacher and
leader professional development and
instructional practices, including
through professional learning
communities; developing strong
principal pipeline programs; and shared
transportation systems that increase
student access to and diversity within
schools while lessening the financial
burden all schools encounter when
providing transportation.10
Under the proposed priority, an
applicant must propose to collaborate
with at least one traditional public
school or traditional school district in
an activity that would be beneficial to
all partners in the collaboration and
lead to increased educational
opportunities and improved student
outcomes.
Proposed Priority:
(a) Under this priority, an applicant
must propose to collaborate with at least
one traditional public school or
8 Chait, Robin (2019). Bridging the Divide:
Collaboration Between Traditional Public Schools
and Charter Schools. www.ested.org/westedinsights/collaboration-between-traditional-publicschools-and-charter-schools/.
9 DeArmond, Michael, Cooley Nelson, Elizabeth,
and Bruns, Angela (2015). The Best of Both Worlds:
Can District-Charter Co-Location Be a Win-Win?
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED559807.pdf.
10 Yatsko, Sarah, Cooley Nelson, Elizabeth, and
Lake, Robin (2013). District-Charter Collaboration
Compact: Interim Report. https://crpe.org/districtcharter-collaboration-compact-interim-report/.
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traditional school district in an activity
that is designed to benefit students and
families served by each member of the
collaboration, designed to lead to
increased educational opportunities and
improved student outcomes, and
includes implementation of—
(1) One or more of the following
services and resources:
(i) Curricular and instructional
resources or academic course offerings.
(ii) Professional development
opportunities for teachers and leaders,
which may include professional
learning communities, opportunities for
teachers to earn additional
certifications, such as in a high need
area or National Board Certification, and
partnerships with educator preparation
programs to support teaching
residencies.
(iii) Evidence-based (as defined in
section 8101(21) of the ESEA) practices
to improve academic performance for
underserved students.
(iv) Policies and practices to create
safe, supportive, and inclusive learning
environments, including systems of
positive behavioral intervention and
support; and
(2) One or more of the following
initiatives:
(i) Transparent enrollment and
retention practices and processes that
include clear and consistent disclosure
of policies or requirements (e.g.,
discipline policies, purchasing and
wearing specific uniforms and other
fees, or caregiver participation), and any
services that are or are not provided,
that could impact a family’s ability to
enroll or remain enrolled (e.g.,
transportation services or participation
in the National School Lunch Program).
(ii) A shared transportation plan and
system that reduces transportation costs
for partners in the collaboration and
takes into consideration various
transportation options, including public
transportation and district-provided or
shared transportation options, costsharing or free or reduced-cost fare
options, and any distance
considerations for prioritized bus
services.
(iii) Other collaborations designed to
address a significant barrier or challenge
faced by both charter schools and
traditional public schools and improve
student outcomes.
(b) In its application, an applicant
must provide a letter from each
partnering traditional public school or
school district demonstrating a
commitment to participate in the
proposed charter-traditional
collaboration. Within 45 days of
receiving a grant award, the applicant
must submit to the Department a written
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agreement (e.g., Memorandum of
Understanding), signed by officials
authorized to sign on behalf of the
charter school and each partnering
traditional public school or school
district, that—
(1) Identifies and describes each
member of the collaboration;
(2) States the purpose and duration of
the collaboration;
(3) Describes the roles and
responsibilities of each member of the
collaboration, including key staff
responsible for completing specific
tasks;
(4) Describes how the collaboration
will benefit each member, including
how it will benefit students and families
affiliated with each member and lead to
increased educational opportunities and
improved student outcomes, and
specific and measurable, if applicable,
goals;
(5) Describes the resources each
member of the collaboration will
contribute; and
(6) Contains any other relevant
information.
Types of Priorities:
When inviting applications for a
competition using one or more
priorities, we designate the type of each
priority as absolute, competitive
preference, or invitational through a
notice in the Federal Register. The
effect of each type of priority follows:
Absolute priority: Under an absolute
priority, we consider only applications
that meet the priority (34 CFR
75.105(c)(3)).
Competitive preference priority:
Under a competitive preference priority,
we give competitive preference to an
application by (1) awarding additional
points, depending on the extent to
which the application meets the priority
(34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2) selecting
an application that meets the priority
over an application of comparable merit
that does not meet the priority (34 CFR
75.105(c)(2)(ii)).
Invitational priority: Under an
invitational priority, we are particularly
interested in applications that meet the
priority. However, we do not give an
application that meets the priority a
preference over other applications (34
CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
Proposed Application Requirements
Background: The ESEA requires SE
Grant, CMO Grant, and Developer Grant
applications to include specific
information. In particular, SE Grant
applications must address the
application requirements in section
4303(f) of the ESEA, CMO Grant
applications must address the
application requirements in section
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4305(b)(3) of the ESEA, and Developer
Grant applications must address
relevant application requirements in
section 4303(f) of the ESEA. In addition
to these statutory application
requirements, we established additional
application requirements for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants in the
CMO NFP and Developer NFP,
respectively.
As a supplement to the application
requirements in the ESEA, CMO NFP,
and Developer NFP, the Department
proposes new application requirements
and assurances to help ensure the
creation of new charter schools, and the
replication and expansion of highquality charter schools, that are: (1)
Racially and socio-economically
diverse; (2) driven by the needs of
students and families in the community
in which the charter school is or will be
located; and (3) fiscally responsible and
transparent, particularly with respect to
contractual relationships with for-profit
management organizations (also referred
to as education management
organizations (EMOs)). We reiterate that
a charter school is, by definition, ‘‘a
public school that . . . is operated
under public supervision and
direction,’’ and for-profit entities are
ineligible to receive funding as a CSP
project grantee or subgrantee (see
section 4310(2)(B), (3), (4), and (5) of the
ESEA). It is also a violation of CSP
requirements for a grantee or subgrantee
to relinquish full or substantial control
of the charter school (and, thereby, the
CSP project) to a for-profit management
organization or other for-profit entity
because, among other things, a grantee
or subgrantee receiving CSP funds must
establish and maintain proper internal
controls and directly administer or
supervise the administration of the
project. See 2 CFR 200.302–303; and 34
CFR 75.701 and 76.701. A grantee or
subgrantee that enters into a contract for
goods or services must comply with the
Federal procurement standards at 2 CFR
200.317–200.327, and applicable
conflict of interest requirements,
including that no employee, officer, or
agent of the charter school may
participate in the selection, award, or
administration of a contract supported
by Federal funds if he or she has a real
or apparent conflict of interest.
Generally, the Department believes,
based on experience administering the
CSP, that the proposed application
requirements and assurances would
help facilitate the proper review and
evaluation of CSP grant applications,
thereby increasing the likelihood of
successful grant and subgrant
implementation. These proposed
requirements and assurances would also
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help ensure that all students have access
to high-quality, diverse, and equitable
learning opportunities in their
communities, which should be a goal of
all public schools.
High-performing charter school
authorizers generally require applicants
for a charter (i.e., to create a charter
school) to present data on the academic
achievement, demographics, and
enrollment and retention rates of
students in all surrounding public
schools. These data help with assessing
the extent to which the proposed charter
school will meet the needs of, and
enroll students that are representative
of, the students in the community.
Consistent with this part of the charter
application process, we propose to
require applicants for CMO Grants,
Developer Grants, and subgrants under
the SE Grant program to conduct a
community impact analysis to inform
the need, number, and types of charter
schools to be created in a given
community. The community impact
analysis must describe how the plan for
the proposed charter school takes into
account the student demographics of the
schools from which students are, or
would be, drawn to attend the charter
school. The community impact analysis
must also describe the steps the charter
school has taken or will take to ensure
that the proposed charter school would
not hamper, delay, or in any manner
negatively affect any desegregation
efforts in the public school districts
from which students are, or would be,
drawn or in which the charter school is
or would be located, including efforts to
comply with a court order, statutory
obligation, or voluntary efforts to create
and maintain desegregated public
schools, and that it would not otherwise
increase racial or socio-economic
segregation or isolation in the schools
from which the students are, or would
be, drawn to attend the charter school.
The focus of the community impact
analysis on racial and socio-economic
diversity builds on existing statutory
and regulatory provisions that give
priority to applicants that plan to
operate or manage high-quality charter
schools with racially and socioeconomically diverse student bodies
(see section 4305(b)(5)(A) of the ESEA;
CMO NFP at 61542; and Developer NFP
at 31734). Please note that an applicant
that proposes to operate or manage a
charter school in a racially or socioeconomically segregated or isolated
community still would be eligible to
apply for funding, even if the student
body of the charter school would be
racially or socio-economically
segregated or isolated due to community
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demographics. Such an applicant, like
all other applicants, would be required
to provide a community impact analysis
describing how the plan for the
proposed charter school takes into
account the student demographics of the
schools from which students are, or
would be, drawn to attend the charter
school, and the steps the applicant has
taken or will take to ensure that the
proposed charter school would not
increase racial or socio-economic
segregation or isolation in those schools.
Further, as autonomous public
schools that create their operational,
curricular, and policy procedures,
charter schools are well positioned to
draw on the knowledge and expertise of
families and other stakeholders in the
community to help shape school
practices. As with Proposed Priority 1,
the proposed community impact
analysis requirements are designed to
ensure that families play an active role
in informing decision-making regarding
the need for charter schools in a specific
community and to strengthen
requirements regarding how the
community is engaged and integrated in
the charter school planning and
approval process.
Under section 4310(2)(B) of the ESEA,
charter schools receiving CSP funds
must be created by a developer as a
public school or adapted by a developer
from an existing public school and
operated under public supervision and
direction. While for-profit organizations
are ineligible to apply for direct grants
or subgrants under the CSP, some
charter schools enter into contracts with
for-profit EMOs for services. It is the
responsibility of the grantee or
subgrantee to ensure that such an
agreement with an EMO is a contract,
and not a subaward or subgrant, in
accordance with 2 CFR 200.331.
Arrangements under which a for-profit
EMO, including a non-profit CMO
operated by or on behalf of a for-profit
entity, exercises full or substantial
administrative control over the charter
school (and, thereby, the CSP project) or
over programmatic decisions are not
permissible under CSP-funded projects,
pursuant to 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701,
which require grantees and subgrantees,
respectively, to directly administer or
supervise the administration of their
projects. EMOs provide a variety of
services to charter schools—from
limited management and financial
support services to whole-school
package offerings. Some examples of
impermissible delegations of
administrative control include
situations in which the EMO controls all
or a substantial portion of grant or
subgrant funds and expenditures,
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including making programmatic
decisions (also referred to as ‘‘sweeps
contracts’’); the EMO employs the
school principal and a large proportion
of the teachers; or the EMO makes
decisions about curricula and
instructional practices.
We propose application requirements
designed to ensure that any charter
school that receives CSP funds and
enters, or plans to enter, into a contract
with an EMO complies with all
statutory and regulatory requirements,
including applicable Federal
procurement and conflict of interest
standards in 2 CFR 200.317–200.327,
and Federal regulations requiring
grantees and subgrantees to establish
and maintain effective internal and
administrative control over the Federal
award (2 CFR 200.303; and 34 CFR
75.701 and 76.701). The proposed
application requirements also are
designed to ensure fiscal transparency
surrounding these contracts by requiring
applicants to address whether they have
entered or plan to enter into a contract
with a for-profit management
organization and, if so, to provide
detailed information regarding the terms
of the contract. This includes the
amount of any CSP funding that would
be used to pay for services under the
contract and information about the
governing board members, individuals
who have a financial interest in the
management organization, and any
perceived or actual conflicts of interests.
Applicants would also address how the
applicant will ensure that it makes all
programmatic decisions, maintains
control over all program funds, directly
administers or supervises the
administration of the grant or subgrant
in accordance with 34 CFR 75.701 and
76.701, and complies with the conflict
of interest standards in 2 CFR 200.317–
200.327.
Under section 4310(6) of the ESEA, an
eligible applicant is defined as a charter
school developer that has (1) applied to
an authorized public chartering agency
to operate a charter school and (2)
provided adequate and timely notice to
that authority. As noted above, eligible
applicants in States that do not have an
active SE Grant may apply to the
Department for a direct grant under the
Developer Grant program. Non-profit
CMOs are the only eligible entities
under the CMO Grant program and
usually serve as the developer and
apply for the charter on behalf of the
charter schools that they fund through
their grant. Because an applicant need
not have received a charter to be eligible
to apply for a CSP grant, there is
inherent risk of an applicant receiving a
CSP grant but ultimately not having its
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charter application approved. Given this
risk, we propose requirements to better
inform the Department of these
situations, including by providing the
expected timeline from the authorized
public chartering agency to provide a
final decision on the charter application
and identifying any planning costs
expected to be incurred before such
decision. This information can, in turn,
be used by the Department to establish
guardrails, such as through grant
conditions, to minimize risk.
Finally, to reinforce the proposed
application requirements, we also
propose assurances related to charter
schools’ contracts with EMOs; subgrant
awards; reporting requirements; racial
and socio-economic diversity of
students and teachers in the charter
school, and the impact of the charter
school on racial and socio-economic
diversity in the public school district
and schools from which students are, or
will be, drawn to attend the charter
school; and ensuring that CSP funding
for implementation of a charter school
is provided only when a charter has
been approved and a school facility has
been secured.
We propose to apply one or more of
the following application requirements
in any year in which a competition is
held under one or more of the following
CSP grant programs: SE Grants, CMO
Grants, or Developer Grants. We identify
the program applicability for each
proposed application requirement.
Proposed Requirements Applicable to
CMO Grants and Developer Grants.
Proposed Requirement 1 for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants:
Each applicant must provide a
community impact analysis that
demonstrates that there is sufficient
demand for the proposed project and
that the proposed project would serve
the interests and meet the needs of
students and families in the community
or communities from which students
are, or will be, drawn to attend the
charter school, and that includes the
following:
(a) Descriptions of the community
support and unmet demand for the
charter school, including any overenrollment of existing public schools or
other information that demonstrates
demand for the charter school, such as
evidence of demand for specialized
instructional approaches.
(b) Descriptions of the targeted
student and staff demographics and how
the applicant plans to establish and
maintain racially and socioeconomically diverse student and staff
populations, including proposed
strategies (that are consistent with
applicable legal requirements) to recruit,
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enroll, and retain a diverse student body
and to recruit, hire, develop, and retain
a diverse staff and talent pipeline at all
levels (including leadership positions).
(c) Analyses of publicly available
information and data, including
citations and sources, on academic
achievement, demographics, and
enrollment trends of students in the
public schools and school districts from
which students are, or will be, drawn to
attend the charter school, and an
explanation of how the area from which
the proposed charter school would
reasonably expect to draw students was
determined.
(d) An analysis of the proposed
charter school’s demographic
projections and a comparison of such
projections with the demographics of
public schools and school districts from
which students are, or will be, drawn to
attend the charter school.
(e) Evidence that demonstrates that
the number of charter schools proposed
to be opened, replicated, or expanded
under the grant does not exceed the
number of public schools needed to
accommodate the demand in the
community, including projected
enrollment for the charter schools based
on analysis of community needs and
unmet demand and any supporting
documents for the methodology and
calculations used to determine the
number of schools proposed to be
opened, replicated, or expanded.
(f) A robust family and community
engagement plan designed to ensure the
active participation of families and the
community and that includes the
following:
(1) How families and the community
are or were engaged in determining the
vision and design for the charter school,
including specific examples of how
families’ and the community’s input
was, or is expected to be, incorporated
into the vision and design for the
charter school.
(2) How the charter school will
meaningfully engage with both families
and the community to create strong and
ongoing partnerships.
(3) How the charter school will foster
a collaborative culture that involves the
families of all students, including
underserved students, in school
decision-making on an ongoing basis.
(4) How the charter school’s
enrollment and recruitment process will
engage and accommodate families from
various backgrounds, including by
holding enrollment and recruitment
events on weekends or during nonstandard work hours, making translators
available, and providing enrollment and
recruitment information in widely
accessible formats (e.g., hard copy and
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online in multiple languages, large print
or braille for visually-impaired
individuals) through widely available
and transparent means (e.g., online and
at community locations).11
(5) How the charter school has
engaged or will engage families and the
community to develop an instructional
model that will serve the targeted
diverse student population and their
families effectively.
(g) How the plans for the operation of
the charter school will support and
reflect the needs of students and
families in the community, including
considerations for how the school’s
location, or anticipated location if a
facility has not been secured, will
facilitate access for the targeted diverse
student population (e.g., access to
public transportation or other
transportation options, the
demographics of neighborhoods within
walking distance of the school, and
transportation plans and costs for
students who are not able to walk or use
public transportation to access the
school).
(h) A description of the steps the
applicant has taken or will take to
ensure that the proposed charter school
would not hamper, delay, or in any
manner negatively affect any
desegregation efforts in the public
school districts from which students
are, or would be, drawn to attend the
charter school, including efforts to
comply with a court order, statutory
obligation, or voluntary efforts to create
and maintain desegregated public
schools, and that it would not otherwise
increase racial or socio-economic
segregation or isolation in the schools
from which the students are, or would
be, drawn to attend the charter school.
Proposed Requirement 2 for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants:
For any existing or proposed contract
with a for-profit management
organization (including a non-profit
management organization operated by
or on behalf of a for-profit entity),
without regard to whether the
management organization exercises full
or substantial administrative control
over the charter school or the CSP
project, the applicant must include—
(a) The name and contact information
of the management organization;
(b) A detailed description of the terms
of the contract, including the cost (i.e.,
fixed costs and estimates of any ongoing
11 Please note that all public schools are obligated
under Federal civil rights laws to ensure
meaningful communication with limited English
proficient parents and effective communication
with individuals with disabilities. 28 CFR 35.160.
See generally Lau v. Nichols, 414 U.S. 563 (1974);
34 CFR part 100.
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costs or fees) and percentage such cost
represents of the school’s total funding,
amount of CSP funds proposed to be
used towards such cost (with an
explanation of why such cost is
reasonable), duration, roles and
responsibilities of the management
organization, and steps the applicant
will take to ensure that it pays fair
market value for any services or other
items purchased or leased from the
management organization, makes all
programmatic decisions, maintains
control over all CSP funds, and directly
administers or supervises the
administration of the grant in
accordance with 34 CFR 75.701;
(c) A description of any business or
financial relationship between the
charter school developer and the
management organization, including
payments, contract terms, and any
property owned, operated, or controlled
by the management organization or
related individuals or entities that will
be used by the charter school;
(d) The name and contact information
for each member of the governing board
of the proposed charter school;
(e) A list of all individuals who have
a financial interest in the management
organization, including—
(1) Descriptions of any affiliations or
conflicts of interest for charter school
staff, board members, and management
organization staff;
(2) A list of all related individuals or
entities providing contractual services
to the charter school and the nature of
those services; and
(3) Detailed descriptions of any actual
or perceived conflicts of interest, the
steps the applicant took or will take to
avoid any actual or perceived conflicts
of interest, and how the applicant
resolved or will resolve any actual or
perceived conflicts of interest to ensure
compliance with 2 CFR 200.318(c);
(f) An explanation of how the
applicant will ensure that the
management contract is severable,
severing the management contract will
not cause the proposed charter school to
close, the duration of the management
contract will not extend beyond the
expiration date of the school’s charter,
and renewal of the management contract
will not occur without approval and
affirmative action by the governing
board of the charter school; and
(g) A description of the steps the
applicant will take to ensure that it
maintains control over all student
records and has a process in place to
provide those records to another public
school or school district in a timely
manner upon the transfer of a student
from the charter school to another
public school, including due to closure
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of the charter school, in accordance
with section 4308 of the ESEA.
Proposed Requirement 3 for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants:
An applicant that has applied to an
authorized public chartering agency to
operate a new, expanded, or replicated
charter school, and has not yet received
approval, must provide—
(a) A signed and dated copy of its
application to the authorized public
chartering agency;
(b) Documentation that it has
provided notice to the authorized public
chartering agency that it has applied for
a CSP grant;
(c) A timeline from the authorized
public chartering agency for providing a
final decision on the charter
application; and
(d) Any planning costs in its proposed
budget that are expected to be incurred
prior to the date the authorized public
chartering agency expects to issue a
decision on the applicant’s charter
application.
Proposed Requirements Applicable to
SE Grants:
Background: Applicants for subgrants
under the CSP SE Grant program are
required to provide, as part of their
subgrant application, a description of
the roles and responsibilities of eligible
applicants, partner organizations, and
CMOs, including the administrative and
contractual roles and responsibilities of
such partners (section 4303(f)(1)(C)(i)(II)
of the ESEA). Another goal of these
proposed requirements is to ensure that
CSP SE grantees are well positioned to
oversee a high-quality peer review
process as they make subgrant awards in
their respective States to support
opening new charter schools and
replicating and expanding high-quality
charter schools. Also, we want to ensure
that, after making subgrant awards in
their States, SE grantees fulfill their
responsibility to monitor charter school
subgrant award recipients, as required
under 2 CFR 200.332(d). SEs are
required to provide descriptions of how
the SE will review applications from
eligible applicants (section
4303(f)(1)(C)(ii) of the ESEA) as well as
its plan to adequately monitor subgrant
recipients under the SE’s program
(section 4303(g)(1)(D)(i) of the ESEA).
The CSP SE Grant program supports
many charter schools nationally, and
the proposed new requirements for SE
applicants to create subgrant application
review and subgrantee monitoring plans
present an opportunity for peer
reviewers to evaluate the quality of
these plans not only to inform funding
decisions, but also to enhance the
quality of charter schools in the areas of
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transparency, oversight, and
accountability.
The proposed application
requirements, which would supplement
existing statutory requirements for SEs,
would: Require subgrant applicants to
provide a community impact analysis
and submit more detailed information
regarding the nature of any management
contracts with for-profit EMOs,
including non-profit CMOs operated by
or on behalf of for-profit entities, as we
are proposing to require of applicants
for CMO Grants and Developer Grants;
require SEs to give priority in making
subgrants to charter schools that are
educator-led and community-centered
or that participate in collaborations
among charter schools and traditional
public schools or school districts
(charter-traditional-district
collaborations), as with the above
priorities for CMO and Developer;
require SEs to provide justification and
supporting evidence for the planned
number of subgrants and subgrant
award amounts to ensure proposed
projects are reasonable; and, as
discussed in the previous paragraph,
strengthen the requirements related to
SEs’ review of subgrant applications and
monitoring of subgrants in their States.
Proposed Requirement 1 for SE
Grants:
Each subgrant applicant must provide
a community impact analysis that
demonstrates that there is sufficient
demand for the proposed project and
that the proposed project would serve
the interests and meet the needs of
students and families in the community
or communities from which the
students are, or will be, drawn to attend
the charter school, and that includes the
following:
(a) Descriptions of the community
support and unmet demand for the
charter school, including any overenrollment of existing public schools or
other information that demonstrates
demand for the charter school, such as
evidence of demand for specialized
instructional approaches.
(b) Descriptions of the targeted
student and staff demographics and how
the applicant plans to establish and
maintain racially and socioeconomically diverse student and staff
populations, including proposed
strategies (consistent with applicable
legal requirements) to recruit, enroll,
and retain a diverse student body and to
recruit, hire, develop, and retain a
diverse staff and talent pipeline at all
levels (including leadership positions).
(c) Analyses of publicly available
information and data on student
academic achievement, demographics,
and enrollment trends of students in
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schools in the public school district and
schools from which students are, or will
be, drawn or in which the charter school
is or will be located, including citations
and sources and an explanation of how
the area from which the proposed
charter school would reasonably expect
to draw students was determined.
(d) An analysis of the proposed
charter school’s demographic
projections and a comparison of such
projections with the demographics of
public schools and school districts from
which students are, or will be, drawn to
attend the charter school.
(e) Evidence that demonstrates that
the number of charter schools proposed
to be opened, replicated, or expanded
under the grant does not exceed the
number of public schools needed to
accommodate the demand in the
community, including projected
enrollment for the charter schools based
on analysis of community needs and
unmet demand and any supporting
documents for the methodology and
calculations used to determine the
number of schools proposed to be
opened, replicated, or expanded.
(f) A robust family and community
engagement plan designed to ensure the
active participation of families and the
community that includes the following:
(1) How families and the community
are or were engaged in determining the
vision and design for the charter school,
including specific examples of how
families’ and the community’s input
was, or is expected to be, incorporated
into the vision and design for the
charter school.
(2) How the charter school will
meaningfully engage with both families
and the community to create strong and
ongoing partnerships.
(3) How the charter school will foster
a collaborative culture that involves the
families of all students, including
underserved students, in school
decision-making on an ongoing basis.
(4) How the charter school’s
enrollment and recruitment processes
will engage and accommodate families
from various backgrounds, including by
holding enrollment and recruitment
events on weekends or non-standard
work hours, making translators
available, and providing enrollment and
recruitment information in widely
accessible formats (e.g., hard copy and
online in multiple languages, large print
or braille for visually-impaired
individuals) through widely available
and transparent means (e.g., online and
at community locations).12
12 Please note that all public schools are obligated
under Federal civil rights laws to ensure
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(5) How the charter school has
engaged or will engage families and the
community to develop an instructional
model to best serve the targeted diverse
student population and their families.
(g) How the plans for the operation of
the charter school will support and
reflect the needs of students and
families in the community, including
considerations for how the school’s
location, or anticipated location if a
facility has not been secured, will
facilitate access for the targeted diverse
student population (e.g., access to
public transportation or other
transportation options, the
demographics of neighborhoods within
walking distance of the school, and
transportation plans and costs for
students who are not able to walk or use
public transportation to access the
school).
(h) A description of the steps the
applicant has taken or will take to
ensure that the proposed charter school
would not hamper, delay, or in any
manner negatively affect any
desegregation efforts in the public
school districts from which students
are, or would be, drawn to attend the
charter school, including efforts to
comply with a court order, statutory
obligation, or voluntary efforts to create
and maintain desegregated public
schools, and that it would not otherwise
increase racial or socio-economic
segregation or isolation in the schools
from which the students are, or would
be, drawn to attend the charter school.
Proposed Requirement 2 for SE
Grants:
For any existing or proposed contract
with a for-profit management
organization (including a non-profit
management organization operated by
or on behalf of a for-profit entity),
without regard to whether the
management organization exercises full
or substantial administrative control
over the charter school or the CSP
project, the subgrant applicant must
include—
(a) The name and contact information
of the management organization;
(b) A detailed description of the terms
of the contract, including the cost (i.e.,
fixed costs and estimates of any ongoing
costs or fees) and percentage such cost
represents of the school’s total funding,
amount of CSP funds proposed to be
used towards such cost (with an
explanation of why such cost is
reasonable), duration, roles and
responsibilities of the management
meaningful communication with limited English
proficient parents and effective communication
with individuals with disabilities. 28 CFR 35.160.
See generally Lau v. Nichols, 414 U.S. 563 (1974);
34 CFR part 100.
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organization, and steps the applicant
will take to ensure that it pays fair
market value for any services or other
items purchased or leased from the
management organization, makes all
programmatic decisions, maintains
control over all CSP funds, and directly
administers or supervises the
administration of the subgrant in
accordance with 34 CFR 76.701;
(c) A description of any business or
financial relationship between the
charter school developer and the
management organization, including
payments, contract terms, and any
property owned, operated, or controlled
by the management organization or
related individuals or entities to be used
by the charter school;
(d) The name and contact information
for each member of the governing board
of the proposed charter school;
(e) A list of all individuals who have
a financial interest in the management
organization, including—
(1) Descriptions of any affiliations or
conflicts of interest for charter school
staff, board members, and management
organization staff;
(2) A list of all related individuals or
entities providing contractual services
to the charter school and the nature of
those services; and
(3) Detailed descriptions of any actual
or perceived conflicts of interest, the
steps the applicant took or will take to
avoid any actual or perceived conflicts
of interest, and how the applicant
resolved or will resolve any actual or
perceived conflicts of interest to ensure
compliance with 2 CFR 200.318(c);
(f) An explanation of how the
applicant will ensure that the
management contract is severable,
severing the management contract will
not cause the proposed charter school to
close, the duration of the management
contract will not extend beyond the
expiration date of the school’s charter,
and renewal of the management contract
will not occur without approval and
affirmative action by the governing
board of the charter school; and
(g) A description of the steps the
applicant will take to ensure that it
maintains control over all student
records and has a process in place to
provide those records to another public
school or school district in a timely
manner upon the transfer of a student
from the charter school to another
public school in accordance with
section 4308 of the ESEA.
Proposed Requirement 3 for SE
Grants:
Each SE applicant must provide a
detailed description of how it will
review applications from eligible
applicants, including—
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(a) How eligibility will be determined;
(b) How peer reviewers will be
recruited and selected, including efforts
the applicant will make to recruit peer
reviewers from diverse backgrounds and
underrepresented groups;
(c) How subgrant applications will be
reviewed and evaluated;
(d) How cost analyses and budget
reviews will be conducted to ensure that
costs are necessary, reasonable, and
allocable to the subgrant;
(e) How applicants will be assessed
for risk (i.e., fiscal, programmatic,
compliance); and
(f) How funding decisions will be
made.
Proposed Requirement 4 for SE
Grants:
Each SE applicant must provide a
detailed description, including a
timeline, of how the SE will monitor
and report on subgrant performance in
accordance with 2 CFR 200.329, and
address and mitigate subgrantee risk,
including—
(a) How subgrantees will be selected
for in-depth monitoring, including
factors that indicate higher risk (e.g.,
charter schools that have management
contracts with for-profit EMOs, virtual
charter schools, and charter schools
with a history of poor performance);
(b) How identified subgrantee risk
will be addressed;
(c) How subgrantee expenditures will
be monitored;
(d) How monitoring for progress and
compliance will be conducted and who
will conduct the monitoring;
(e) How monitors will be trained;
(f) How monitoring findings will be
shared with subgrantees;
(g) How corrective action plans will
be used to resolve monitoring findings;
and
(h) How the SE will ensure
transparency so that monitoring
findings and corrective action plans are
available to families and the public.
Proposed Requirement 5 for SE
Grants:
Each SE applicant must provide
explanations and supporting documents
for the methodology and calculations
used to determine the number of
proposed subgrant awards and the
average subgrant award amount.
Proposed Requirement 6 for SE
Grants:
Each SE applicant must describe how
the SE will give priority in awarding
subgrants to eligible applicants that
propose projects that include one or
more of the following:
(a) A community-centered approach
that informs the planning, design, and
implementation of the charter school
and includes—
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(1) An assessment of community
assets;
(2) Meaningful and ongoing
engagement with families, educators,
and other members of the community,
including in areas related to board
governance and school-level decisionmaking related to curriculum and
instruction; and
(3) The implementation of protocols
and practices designed to ensure that
the charter school will use and interact
with community assets on an ongoing
basis to create and maintain strong
community ties.
(b) A collaboration with at least one
traditional public school or school
district in an activity that is designed to
benefit students and families served by
each member of the collaboration,
designed to lead to increased
educational opportunities and improved
student outcomes, and includes
implementation of—
(1) One or more of the following
services and resources:
(i) Curricular and instructional
resources or academic course offerings.
(ii) Professional development
opportunities for teachers and leaders,
which may include professional
learning communities, opportunities for
teachers to earn additional
certifications, such as in a high need
area or National Board Certification, and
partnerships with educator preparation
programs to support teaching
residencies.
(iii) Evidence-based (as defined in
section 8101 of the ESEA) practices to
improve academic performance for
underserved students.
(iv) Policies and practices to create
safe, supportive, and inclusive learning
environments, including systems of
positive behavioral intervention and
support; and
(2) One or more of the following
initiatives:
(i) Common enrollment and retention
practices that include, as part of the
enrollment process, disclosure of
policies or requirements (e.g., discipline
policies, purchasing and wearing
specific uniforms and other fees, or
caregiver participation), and any
services that are or are not provided,
that could impact a family’s ability to
enroll or remain enrolled (e.g.,
transportation services or participation
in the National School Lunch Program).
(ii) A shared transportation plan and
system that reduces transportation costs
for partners in the collaboration and
takes into consideration various
transportation options, including public
transportation and district-provided or
shared transportation options, costsharing or free or reduced-cost fare
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options, and any distance
considerations for prioritized bus
services.
(iii) Other collaborations designed to
address a significant barrier or challenge
faced by both charter schools and
traditional public schools and improve
student outcomes.
Proposed Assurances
Background: The ESEA requires CSP
SE Grant, CMO Grant, and Developer
Grant applications to include applicable
assurances from section 4303(f)(2) of the
ESEA. In addition, CMO Grant
applications must include the assurance
required under section 4305(b)(3)(C) of
the ESEA.
As discussed in the background for
the Proposed Application Requirements
section, for-profit EMOs are ineligible to
apply for direct grants or subgrants
under the CSP. The Department is
aware, however, that some charter
schools enter into contracts with EMOs.
Under these circumstances, it is the
responsibility of the grantee or
subgrantee to ensure that an agreement
with an EMO is a contract, and not a
subaward or subgrant as per 2 CFR
200.331. In addition, a contract for
goods or services with a for-profit entity
must comply with the Federal
procurement standards at 2 CFR
200.317–327, and applicable conflict of
interest requirements, including that no
employee, officer, or agent of the charter
school may participate in the selection,
award, or administration of any contract
supported by Federal funds if a real or
apparent conflict of interest exists.
EMOs provide a variety of services to
charter schools—from supplemental
management and financial support
services to whole-school package
offerings. Under these management
contracts between charter schools and
EMOs, the EMO often exercises full
administrative control over the charter
school project, which, as noted above,
violates CSP requirements. Examples of
impermissible delegations of
administrative control include
situations where the EMO controls all or
a substantial portion of subgrant funds
and expenditures, including making
programmatic decisions (also referred to
as ‘‘sweeps contracts’’); the EMO
employs the school principal and a large
proportion of the teachers; or the EMO
makes decisions about curricula and
instructional practices. Such
arrangements under which a for-profit
EMO, including a non-profit
management organization operated by
or on behalf of a for-profit entity,
exercises full administrative control
over the charter school (and, thereby,
the CSP project) are not permissible
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under CSP-funded projects, pursuant to
34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701, which
require that the grantee or subgrantee
directly administer or supervise the
administration of the project; and 2 CFR
200.303, which requires that the grantee
or subgrantee establish and maintain
proper internal control over the Federal
award that provides reasonable
assurance that the non-Federal entity is
managing the Federal award in
compliance with Federal statutes,
regulations, and the terms and
conditions of the grant. See also 2 CFR
200.302 (financial management).
Consistent with the proposed
application requirements for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants, and for
subgrants under the SE Grant program,
we propose assurances to ensure that
any charter school that receives CSP
funds and enters, or plans to enter, into
a contract with an EMO, including a
non-profit CMO operated by or on
behalf of a for-profit entity, complies
with all relevant statutory and
regulatory requirements, including
applicable Federal procurement
standards in 2 CFR 200.317–327,
Federal regulations governing conflicts
of interest, and Department regulations
requiring grantees and subgrantees to
directly administer or supervise the
administration of the project and retain
control over programmatic decisions.
The proposed assurances also are
designed to ensure transparency,
including fiscal transparency,
surrounding these contracts.
In addition, CSP applicants (including
CSP SE subgrant applicants) may
receive CSP funds for planning a charter
school before receiving an approved
charter or securing a facility—factors
that may prevent a charter school from
ever opening. Accordingly, we are also
proposing assurances to provide greater
public transparency with CSP funding
decisions and to address the risk of CSP
implementation funds supporting
grantees and subgrantees that are unable
to open the charter school or secure a
facility for the charter school in a timely
manner.
Also, we are proposing an assurance
relating to transparency in admission
and enrollment policies, such as
requirements for uniforms, volunteer
hours, fees, or other obligations, that
may create barriers that impact a
family’s ability to enroll or remain
enrolled in the charter school. This
assurance is designed to ensure that
families are aware of financial and other
obligations prior to enrolling in the
charter school.
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Proposed Assurances Applicable to
SE Grants, CMO Grants, and Developer
Grants:
(a) Each charter school receiving CSP
funding must provide an assurance that
it has not and will not enter into a
contract with a for-profit management
organization, including a non-profit
management organization operated by
or on behalf of a for-profit entity, under
which the management organization
exercises full or substantial
administrative control over the charter
school and, thereby, the CSP project.
(b) Each charter school receiving CSP
funding must provide an assurance that
any management contract between the
charter school and a for-profit
management organization, including a
non-profit CMO operated by or on
behalf of a for-profit entity, guarantees
or will guarantee that—
(1) The charter school maintains
control over all CSP funds, makes all
programmatic decisions, and directly
administers or supervises the
administration of the grant or subgrant;
(2) The management organization
does not exercise full or substantial
administrative control over the charter
school (and, thereby, the CSP project),
except that this does not limit the ability
of a charter school to enter into a
contract with a management
organization for the provision of
services that do not constitute full or
substantial control of the charter school
project funded under the CSP (e.g., food
services or payroll services) and that
otherwise comply with statutory and
regulatory requirements;
(3) The charter school’s governing
board has access to financial and other
data pertaining to the charter school, the
EMO, and any related entities; and
(4) The charter school is in
compliance with applicable Federal and
State laws and regulations governing
conflicts of interest, and there are no
actual or perceived conflicts of interest
between the charter school and the
management organization.
(c) Each SE or CMO that has provided
CSP funding to a charter school, and
each charter school receiving CSP
funding, must provide an assurance that
it will post on its website, on an annual
basis, a copy of any management
contract between the charter school and
a for-profit management organization,
including a non-profit CMO operated by
or on behalf of a for-profit entity, and
report information on such contract to
the Department (or, in the case of a
charter school that receives CSP funding
through an SE Grant, to the SE),
including—
(1) The name and contact information
of the management organization;
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(2) A detailed description of the terms
of the contract, including the cost and
percentage such cost represents of the
charter school’s total funding, amount of
CSP funds proposed to be used towards
such cost (with an explanation of why
such cost is reasonable), duration, roles
and responsibilities of the management
organization, and the steps the charter
school is taking to ensure that it makes
all programmatic decisions, maintains
control over all CSP funds, and directly
administers or supervises the
administration of the grant or subgrant
in accordance with 34 CFR 75.701 and
76.701;
(3) A description of any business or
financial relationship between the
charter school developer or CMO and
the management organization, including
payments, contract terms, and any
property owned, operated, or controlled
by the management organization or
related individuals or entities to be used
by the charter school;
(4) The names and contact
information of members of the boards of
directors of the charter school;
(5) A list of all individuals who have
a financial interest in the management
organization, including descriptions of
any affiliations or conflicts of interest
for charter school staff, board members,
and management organization staff, and
a list of all related individuals or
entities providing contractual services
to the charter school and the nature of
those services;
(6) A detailed description of any
actual or perceived conflicts of interest,
the steps the charter school took or will
take to avoid any actual or perceived
conflicts of interest, and how the charter
school resolved or will resolve any
actual or perceived conflicts of interest
to ensure compliance with 2 CFR
200.318(c); and
(7) A description of how the charter
school ensured that such contract is
severable and that a change in
management companies will not cause
the proposed charter school to close.
(d) Each charter school receiving CSP
funding must provide an assurance that
it will disclose, as part of the enrollment
process, any policies or requirements
(e.g., purchasing and wearing specific
uniforms and other fees, or
requirements for family participation),
and any services that are or are not
provided, that could impact a family’s
ability to enroll or remain enrolled (e.g.,
transportation services or participation
in the National School Lunch Program).
(e) Each applicant for a CMO Grant,
Developer Grant, or subgrant under the
SE Grant program, without regard to
whether there are any desegregation
efforts in the public school districts in
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the surrounding area, must provide an
assurance that it (or, in the case of an
applicant for a CMO Grant, each charter
school it proposes to fund) will hold or
participate in a public hearing in the
school districts or communities in
which the proposed charter school will
be located to obtain information and
feedback regarding the potential impact
of the charter school, including the
steps the charter school has taken or
will take to ensure that the proposed
charter school would not hamper, delay,
or in any manner negatively affect any
desegregation efforts in the public
school districts from which students
are, or would be, drawn to attend the
charter school, including efforts to
comply with a court order, statutory
obligation, or voluntary efforts to create
and maintain desegregated public
schools, and that it would not otherwise
increase racial or socio-economic
segregation or isolation in the schools
from which the students are, or would
be, drawn to attend the charter school.
Applicants must ensure that the hearing
(and notice thereof) is accessible to
individuals with disabilities and limited
English proficient individuals as
required by law, actively solicit
participation in the hearing (i.e.,
provide widespread and timely notice of
the hearing), make good faith efforts to
accommodate as many people as
possible (e.g., hold the hearing at a
convenient time for families and
provide virtual participation options),
and submit a summary of the comments
received as part of the application.
(f) Each applicant for an SE Grant or
subgrant, CMO Grant, or Developer
Grant must provide an assurance that it
will not use or provide implementation
funds for a charter school until after the
charter school has received a charter
from an authorized public chartering
agency and has a contract, lease,
mortgage, or other documentation
indicating that it has a facility in which
to operate.
Proposed Assurances Applicable to
CSP SE Grants and CMO Grants:
Each applicant must provide an
assurance that, within 30 days of the
date of the grant award notification
(GAN), or the date of the subgrant award
notification for SE Grants, the grantee or
subgrantee will post on its website a list
of the charter schools slated to receive
CSP funds, including the following for
each school:
(a) The name, address, and grades
served.
(b) A description of the educational
model.
(c) If the charter school has contracted
with a for-profit management
organization, the name of the
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management organization, the amount
of CSP funding the management
organization will receive from the
school, and a description of the services
to be provided.
(d) The grant or subgrant award
amount, including any funding that has
been approved for the current year and
any additional years of the CSP grant for
which the school will receive support.
(e) The grant or subgrant application
(redacted as necessary).
(f) The peer review materials,
including reviewer comments and
scores (redacted as necessary) from the
grant or subgrant competition.
Proposed Definitions
In addition to the definitions in
section 4310 of the ESEA, the CMO
NFP, and the Developer NFP, we
propose the following definitions for
CSP SE Grants, CMO Grants, and
Developer Grants. We may apply one or
more of these definitions in any year in
which a competition for new awards is
held under one of these programs.
Background: In order to ensure a
common understanding of the proposed
priorities and requirements, we propose
definitions that are critical to the
policies and statutory purposes of the
CSP SE Grant, Developer Grant, and
CMO Grant programs, including
proposed definitions for ‘‘disconnected
youth,’’ ‘‘educator,’’ and ‘‘underserved
student’’ that are based on definitions of
those terms from the Secretary’s
Supplemental Priorities published in
the Federal Register on December 10,
2021 (86 FR 70612). We propose these
definitions to clarify expectations for
eligible entities applying for SE Grants,
Developer Grants, and CMO Grants, and
to ensure that the review process for
applications for such grants is as
transparent as possible.
Proposed Definitions Applicable to SE
Grants, CMO Grants, and Developer
Grants:
Community assets means resources
that can be identified and mobilized to
improve conditions in the charter
school and community. These assets
may include—
(1) Human assets, including
capacities, skills, knowledge base, and
abilities of individuals within a
community;
(2) Social assets, including networks,
organizations, businesses, and
institutions that exist among and within
groups and communities; and
(3) Political assets, such as a group’s
ability to influence the distribution of
resources, financial and otherwise.
Disconnected youth means an
individual, between the ages 14 and 24,
who may be from a low-income
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background, experiences homelessness,
is in foster care, is involved in the
justice system, or is not working or not
enrolled in (or at risk of dropping out of)
an educational institution.
Educator means an individual who is
an early learning educator, teacher,
principal or other school leader,
specialized instructional support
personnel (e.g., school psychologist,
counselor, school social worker, early
intervention service personnel),
paraprofessional, or faculty.
Underserved student means a student
in one or more of the following
subgroups:
(a) A student who is living in poverty
or is served by schools with high
concentrations of students living in
poverty.
(b) A student of color.
(c) A student who is a member of a
federally recognized Indian Tribe.
(d) An English learner (as defined in
section 8101 of the ESEA).
(e) A child or student with a disability
(as defined in section 8101 of the
ESEA).
(f) A disconnected youth.
(g) A migrant student.
(h) A student experiencing
homelessness or housing insecurity.
(i) A student who is in foster care.
(j) A pregnant, parenting, or
caregiving student.
(k) A student impacted by the justice
system, including a formerly
incarcerated student.
(l) A student performing significantly
below grade level.
Proposed Definition Applicable to SE
Grants:
Background: In addition to the
proposed definitions for SE Grants,
CMO Grants, and Developer Grants, we
propose the following definition for CSP
SE Grants only. We may apply this
definition in any year in which a
competition for new awards is held
under the SE Grant program.
We are proposing to adopt the
definition of ‘‘educationally
disadvantaged student’’ established in
the CMO NFP and Developer NFP for
use in the CSP SE Grants program. The
proposed definition for ‘‘educationally
disadvantaged student’’ is based on
section 1115(c)(2) of the ESEA.
Proposed Definition:
Educationally disadvantaged student
means a student in one or more of the
categories described in section
1115(c)(2) of the ESEA, which include
children who are economically
disadvantaged, children with
disabilities, migrant students, English
learners, neglected or delinquent
students, homeless students, and
students who are in foster care.
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Proposed Selection Criteria
Background: We propose selection
criteria that align with the proposed
requirements and assurances, identify
for peer reviewers the factors considered
to be essential to conducting a highquality peer review, and are designed to
aid in identifying the applicants most
likely to succeed with implementing
high-quality charter schools that are
driven by the needs of families and their
communities. These selection criteria
would be used in addition to selection
criteria in sections 4303(g)(1) and
4305(b)(4) of the ESEA, the CMO NFP,
the Developer NFP, and 34 CFR 75.210,
as appropriate. We may apply one or
more of these proposed selection criteria
to applicable grant competitions in
fiscal year (FY) 2022 and later years. In
the notices inviting applications we will
announce the maximum possible points
assigned to each criterion.
Proposed Selection Criteria for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants:
(a) Quality of the Community Impact
Analysis. The Secretary considers the
quality of the community impact
analysis for the proposed project. In
determining the quality of the
community impact analysis, the
Secretary considers one or more of the
following factors:
(1) The extent to which the
community impact analysis
demonstrates that the proposed charter
school will address the needs of all
students and families in the community,
including underserved students; will
ensure equitable access to diverse
learning opportunities; and will not
otherwise increase racial or socioeconomic segregation or isolation in the
schools from which the students are, or
would be, drawn to attend the charter
school.
(2) The extent to which the
community impact analysis
demonstrates that the proposed charter
school has considered and mitigated,
whenever possible, potential barriers to
application, enrollment, and retention
of students and families from diverse
backgrounds.
(3) The extent to which the proposed
charter school is supported by families
and the community, including the
extent to which parents and other
members of the community were
engaged in determining the need and
vision for the school and will continue
to be engaged on an ongoing basis in
school decision-making, including the
academic, financial, organizational, and
operational performance of the charter
school.
(b) Quality of the Charter School’s
Management Plan. The Secretary
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considers the quality of the management
plan for the proposed project. In
determining the quality of the
management plan, the Secretary
considers one or more of the following
factors:
(1) The adequacy of the applicant’s
plan to maintain control over all CSP
grant funds.
(2) The adequacy of the applicant’s
plan to make all programmatic
decisions.
(3) The adequacy of the applicant’s
plan to administer or supervise the
administration of the grant and maintain
significant management or oversight
responsibilities over the grant.
Proposed Selection Criterion for SE
Grants:
(a) Quality of the Project Design. The
Secretary considers the quality of the
project design for the proposed project.
In determining the quality of the project
design for the proposed project, the
Secretary considers the quality of the
SE’s process for awarding subgrants,
including—
(1) The extent to which the number of
subgrant awards anticipated for each
grant project year is supported by
evidence of demand and need; and
(2) The extent to which the proposed
average subgrant award amount is
supported by evidence of the need of
applicants.
Final Priorities, Requirements,
Definitions, and Selection Criteria:
We will announce the final priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria in a document in the Federal
Register. We will determine the final
priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria after considering
responses to this document and other
information available to the Department.
This document does not preclude us
from proposing additional priorities,
requirements, definitions, or selection
criteria, subject to meeting applicable
rulemaking requirements.
Note: This document does not solicit
applications. In any year in which we choose
to use one or more of these proposed
priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria, we invite applications
through a notice in the Federal Register.
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Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Under Executive Order 12866, it must
be determined whether this regulatory
action is ‘‘significant’’ and, therefore,
subject to the requirements of the
Executive order and subject to review by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action likely to result in
a rule that may—
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(1) Have an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more, or
adversely affect a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local or Tribal governments or
communities in a material way (also
referred to as an ‘‘economically
significant’’ rule);
(2) Create serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken
or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
stated in the Executive order.
This proposed regulatory action is not
a significant regulatory action subject to
review by OMB under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866.
We have also reviewed this proposed
regulatory action under Executive Order
13563, which supplements and
explicitly reaffirms the principles,
structures, and definitions governing
regulatory review established in
Executive Order 12866. To the extent
permitted by law, Executive Order
13563 requires that an agency—
(1) Propose or adopt regulations only
upon a reasoned determination that
their benefits justify their costs
(recognizing that some benefits and
costs are difficult to quantify);
(2) Tailor its regulations to impose the
least burden on society, consistent with
obtaining regulatory objectives and
taking into account—among other things
and to the extent practicable—the costs
of cumulative regulations;
(3) In choosing among alternative
regulatory approaches, select those
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety,
and other advantages; distributive
impacts; and equity);
(4) To the extent feasible, specify
performance objectives, rather than the
behavior or manner of compliance a
regulated entity must adopt; and
(5) Identify and assess available
alternatives to direct regulation,
including economic incentives—such as
user fees or marketable permits—to
encourage the desired behavior, or
provide information that enables the
public to make choices.
Executive Order 13563 also requires
an agency ‘‘to use the best available
techniques to quantify anticipated
present and future benefits and costs as
accurately as possible.’’ The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
OMB has emphasized that these
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techniques may include ‘‘identifying
changing future compliance costs that
might result from technological
innovation or anticipated behavioral
changes.’’
We are issuing these proposed
priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria only on a reasoned
determination that their benefits would
justify their costs. In choosing among
alternative regulatory approaches, we
selected those approaches that would
maximize net benefits. Based on the
analysis that follows, the Department
believes that this regulatory action is
consistent with the principles in
Executive Order 13563.
We also have determined that this
regulatory action would not unduly
interfere with State, local, and Tribal
governments in the exercise of their
governmental functions.
In accordance with both Executive
orders, the Department has assessed the
potential costs and benefits, both
quantitative and qualitative, of this
regulatory action. The potential costs
are those resulting from statutory
requirements and those we have
determined as necessary for
administering the Department’s
programs and activities.
We believe that the benefits of this
regulatory action outweigh any
associated costs, which we believe
would generally be minimal. While this
action would impose cost-bearing
application requirements on
participating SE Grant, Developer Grant,
and CMO Grant applicants and on SE
subgrant applicants, we expect that
applicants would include requests for
funds to cover such costs in their
proposed project budgets. We believe
this regulatory action would strengthen
accountability for the use of Federal
funds by helping to ensure that CSP
grants and subgrants are awarded to the
entities that are most capable of
expanding the number of high-quality
charter schools available to our Nation’s
students.
We estimate costs associated with
information collection requirements in
the Paperwork Reduction Act section of
this document.
Paperwork Reduction Act
As part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department provides the
general public and Federal agencies
with an opportunity to comment on
proposed and continuing collections of
information in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
(44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This helps
ensure that: the public understands the
Department’s collection instructions,
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respondents can provide the requested
data in the desired format, reporting
burden (time and financial resources) is
minimized, collection instruments are
clearly understood, and the Department
can properly assess the impact of
collection requirements on respondents.
The proposed application
requirements and selection criteria
relating to a community impact
analysis, management contracts, and
management plans contain information
collection requirements. The
Department is requesting paperwork
clearance on the OMB 1810–NEW data
collection associated with these
proposed application requirements and
selection criteria. That request will
account for all burden hours and costs
discussed within this section. Under the
PRA, the Department has submitted
these requirements to OMB for its
review.
A Federal agency may not conduct or
sponsor a collection of information
unless OMB approves the collection
under the PRA and the corresponding
information collection instrument
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, no person is required
to comply with, or is subject to penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection
of information if the collection
instrument does not display a currently
valid OMB control number.
In the notice of final priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria we will display the control
numbers assigned by OMB to any
information collection requirements
proposed in this NPP and adopted in
the notice of final priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria.
For the years that the Department
holds SE Grant, CMO Grant, and
Developer Grant competitions and that
SEs hold subgrant competitions, we
estimate that 365 applicants will apply
and submit an application. We estimate
that it will take each applicant 60 hours
to complete and submit the application,
including time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
The total burden hour estimate for this
collection is 21,900 hours. At $97.28 per
hour (using mean wages for Education
and Childcare Administrators 13 and
assuming the total cost of labor,
including benefits and overhead, is
equal to 200 percent of the mean wage
rate), the total estimated cost for 365
applicants to complete a SE grant
application, CMO grant application,
Developer grant application, or SE
subgrant application is approximately
$2,130,432.
Consistent with 5 CFR 1320.8(d), the
Department is soliciting comments on
the information collection through this
document. Between 30 and 60 days after
publication of this document in the
14209
Federal Register, OMB is required to
make a decision concerning the
collections of information contained in
these proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria.
Therefore, to ensure that OMB gives
your comments full consideration, it is
important that OMB receives your
comments on these Information
Collection Requests by April 13, 2022.
Comments related to the information
collection requirements for these
proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria must
be submitted electronically through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov by selecting the
Docket ID number ED–2022–OESE–0006
or via postal mail, commercial delivery,
or hand delivery by referencing the
docket ID number and the title of the
information collection request at the top
of your comment. Comments submitted
by postal mail or delivery should be
addressed to the PRA Coordinator of the
Strategic Collections and Clearance
Governance and Strategy Division, U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Ave. SW, LBJ, Room 6W208D,
Washington, DC 20202–8240.
Note: The Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs in OMB and the
Department review all comments related
to the information collections
requirements posted at
www.regulations.gov.
Collection of Information
Information collection activity
Estimated
number of
responses
Hours per
response
Total
estimated
burden hours
Estimated cost
at an hourly
rate of $97.28
Application .......................................................................................................
365
60
21,900
$2,130,432
We consider your comments on these
proposed collections of information in—
• Deciding whether the proposed
collections are necessary for the proper
performance of our functions, including
whether the information will have
practical use;
• Evaluating the accuracy of our
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collections, including the validity of our
methodology and assumptions;
• Enhancing the quality, usefulness,
and clarity of the information we
collect; and
• Minimizing the burden on those
who must respond. This includes
exploring the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection
techniques.
13 See
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification:
The Secretary certifies that this
proposed regulatory action would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The U.S. Small Business Administration
Size Standards define proprietary
institutions as small businesses if they
are independently owned and operated,
are not dominant in their field of
operation, and have total annual
revenue below $7,000,000. Nonprofit
institutions are defined as small entities
if they are independently owned and
operated and not dominant in their field
of operation. Public institutions are
defined as small organizations if they
are operated by a government
overseeing a population below 50,000.
The small entities that this proposed
regulatory action would affect are
charter schools, including charter
schools that operate as LEAs under State
law; and public or private nonprofit
organizations. We believe that the costs
imposed on an applicant by the
proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria would
be limited to paperwork burden related
to preparing an application and that the
benefits of these proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria would outweigh any costs
incurred by the applicant.
Participation in the CSP is voluntary.
For this reason, the proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria would impose no burden on
small entities unless they applied for
funding under the program. We expect
www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm.
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that in determining whether to apply for
CSP funds, an eligible entity would
evaluate the requirements of preparing
an application and any associated costs
and weigh them against the benefits
likely to be achieved by receiving CSP
grant. An eligible entity will probably
apply only if it determines that the
likely benefits exceed the costs of
preparing an application.
The proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria would impose some additional
burden on a small entity applying for a
grant relative to the burden the entity
would face in the absence of the
proposed action.
This proposed regulatory action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a small entity once it receives
a grant because it would be able to meet
the costs of compliance using the funds
provided under this program. We invite
comments from small entities as to
whether they believe this proposed
regulatory action would have a
significant economic impact on them
and, if so, request evidence to support
that belief.
Intergovernmental Review: This
program is subject to Executive Order
12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR
part 79. One of the objectives of the
Executive order is to foster an
intergovernmental partnership and a
strengthened federalism. The Executive
order relies on processes developed by
State and local governments for
coordination and review of proposed
Federal financial assistance.
This document provides early
notification of our specific plans and
actions for this program.
Accessible Format: On request to the
program contact person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT,
individuals with disabilities can obtain
this document in an accessible format.
The Department will provide the
requestor with an accessible format that
may include Rich Text Format (RTF) or
text format (txt), a thumb drive, an MP3
file, braille, large print, audiotape, or
compact disc, or another accessible
format.
Electronic Access to This Document:
The official version of this document is
the document published in the Federal
Register. You may access the official
edition of the Federal Register and the
Code of Federal Regulations at
www.govinfo.gov. At this site you can
view this document, as well as all other
documents of this Department
published in the Federal Register, in
text or Portable Document Format
(PDF). To use PDF you must have
Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is
available free at the site.
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You may also access documents of the
Department published in the Federal
Register by using the article search
feature at www.federalregister.gov.
Specifically, through the advanced
search feature at this site, you can limit
your search to documents published by
the Department.
Ruth E. Ryder,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and
Programs, Office of Elementary and
Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2022–05463 Filed 3–11–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[EPA–R05–OAR–2020–0730; EPA–R05–
OAR–2020–0731; EPA–R05–OAR–2022–
0004; FRL–9629–01–R5]
Air Plan Approval; Michigan;
Redesignation of the Detroit, MI Area
to Attainment of the 2015 Ozone
Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to find that
the Detroit, Michigan area is attaining
the 2015 primary and secondary ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS), and to act in accordance with
a request from the Michigan Department
of Environment, Great Lakes, and
Energy (EGLE) to redesignate the area to
attainment for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
because the request meets the statutory
requirements for redesignation under
the Clean Air Act (CAA). The Detroit
area includes Livingston, Macomb,
Monroe, Oakland, St. Clair, Washtenaw,
and Wayne Counties. EGLE submitted
this request on January 3, 2022. EPA is
proposing to approve, as a revision to
the Michigan State Implementation Plan
(SIP), the State’s plan for maintaining
the 2015 ozone NAAQS through 2035 in
the Detroit area. EPA is also proposing
to approve Michigan’s 2025 and 2035
volatile organic compound (VOC) and
oxides of nitrogen (NOX) motor vehicle
emissions budgets (budgets) for the
Detroit area and initiating the adequacy
review process for these budgets.
Finally, EPA is proposing to approve
portions of separate December 18, 2020,
submittals as meeting the applicable
requirements for a base year emissions
inventory and emissions statement
program.
SUMMARY:
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Comments must be received on
or before April 13, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R05–
OAR–2020–0730, EPA–R05–OAR–
2020–0731, or EPA–R05–OAR–2022–
0004 at https://www.regulations.gov, or
via email to arra.sarah@epa.gov. For
comments submitted at Regulations.gov,
follow the online instructions for
submitting comments. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed
from Regulations.gov. For either manner
of submission, EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. EPA will generally not consider
comments or comment contents located
outside of the primary submission (i.e.,
on the web, cloud, or other file sharing
system). For additional submission
methods, please contact the person
identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the
full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Eric
Svingen, Environmental Engineer,
Attainment Planning and Maintenance
Section, Air Programs Branch (AR–18J),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 5, 77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 353–4489,
svingen.eric@epa.gov. The EPA Region 5
office is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding
Federal holidays and facility closures
due to COVID–19.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
EPA.
DATES:
I. What is EPA proposing?
EPA is proposing to take several
related actions. EPA is proposing to
determine that the Detroit
nonattainment area is attaining the 2015
ozone NAAQS, based on quality-assured
and certified monitoring data for 2019–
2021, and that the Detroit area has met
the requirements for redesignation
under section 107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA.
EPA is thus proposing to change the
legal designation of the Detroit area
E:\FR\FM\14MRP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 49 (Monday, March 14, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 14197-14210]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-05463]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Chapter II
[Docket ID ED-2022-OESE-0006]
Proposed Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and Selection
Criteria--Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools Program
(CSP)--Grants to State Entities (SE Grants); Grants to Charter
Management Organizations for the Replication and Expansion of High-
Quality Charter Schools (CMO Grants); and Grants to Charter School
Developers for the Opening of New Charter Schools and for the
Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools (Developer
Grants)
AGENCY: Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, Department of
Education.
ACTION: Proposed priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Education proposes priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria for CSP SE Grants, CMO Grants, and
Developer Grants, Assistance Listing Numbers (ALNs) 84.282A, 84.282B,
84.282E, and 84.282M. We may use one or more of these priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection criteria for grant
competitions under these programs in fiscal year (FY) 2022 and later
years. We take this action to create results-driven policies to help
promote positive student outcomes, student and staff diversity,
educator and community empowerment, promising practices, and
accountability, including fiscal transparency and responsibility, in
charter schools supported with CSP funds, which can serve as models for
other charter schools.
DATES: We must receive your comments on or before April 13, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
or via postal mail, commercial delivery, or hand delivery. We will not
accept comments submitted by fax or by email or those submitted after
the comment period. To ensure that we do not receive duplicate copies,
please submit your comments only once. In addition, please include the
Docket ID at the top of your comments.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to www.regulations.gov to
submit your comments electronically. Information on using
Regulations.gov, including instructions for accessing agency documents,
submitting comments, and viewing the docket, is available on the site
under ``Help.''
Postal Mail, Commercial Delivery, or Hand Delivery: If you
mail or deliver your comments about these proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection criteria, address them to
Porscheoy Brice, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW,
Room 3E209, Washington, DC 20202-5970.
Privacy Note: The Department's policy is to make all comments
received from members of the public available for public viewing in
their entirety on the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. Therefore, commenters should be careful to include
in their comments only information that they wish to make publicly
available.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Porscheoy Brice, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW, Room 3E209, Washington, DC 20202-
5970. Telephone: (202) 260-0968. Email: [email protected].
If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) or a text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay Service (FRS), toll free, at 1-
800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Invitation to Comment: We invite you to submit comments regarding
the proposed priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria. To ensure that your comments have maximum effect in
developing the notice of final priorities, requirements, definitions,
and selection criteria, we urge you to clearly identify the specific
section of the proposed priority, requirement, definition, or selection
criteria that each comment addresses.
We invite you to assist us in complying with the specific
requirements of Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 and their overall
requirement of reducing regulatory burden that might result from these
proposed priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection criteria.
Please let us know of any further ways we could reduce potential costs
or increase potential benefits while preserving the effective and
efficient administration of the program.
During and after the comment period, you may inspect all public
comments about the proposed priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria by accessing Regulations.gov. You may also inspect
the comments in person. Please contact the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT to make arrangements to inspect the
comments in person.
Assistance to Individuals With Disabilities in Reviewing the
Rulemaking Record: On request, we will provide an appropriate
accommodation or auxiliary aid to an individual with a disability who
needs assistance to review the comments or other documents in the
public rulemaking record for the proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria. If you want to schedule an
appointment for this type of accommodation or auxiliary aid, please
contact the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Purpose of Programs: SE Grants, CMO Grants, and Developer Grants
are three of six CSP grant programs that support various activities
critical to the successful creation and implementation of charter
schools. The major purposes of the CSP are to expand opportunities for
all students, particularly traditionally underserved students, to
attend charter schools and meet challenging State academic standards;
provide financial assistance for the planning, program design, and
initial implementation of charter schools; increase the number of high-
quality charter schools available to students across the United States;
evaluate the impact of charter schools on student achievement,
families, and communities; share best practices between charter schools
and other public schools; aid States in providing facilities support to
charter schools; and support efforts to strengthen the charter school
authorizing process.
SE Grants (ALN 84.282A) comprise the largest portion of CSP funds.
These competitive grants are awarded to State entities (SEs) that, in
turn, award competitive subgrants to eligible applicants for the
purpose of opening new charter schools and replicating and expanding
high-quality charter schools. Eligible applicants are charter school
developers that have applied to an authorized public chartering agency
to operate a charter school and have provided adequate and timely
notice to that authority. A developer is an individual or group of
individuals (including a public or private nonprofit organization),
which may include teachers, administrators and other school staff,
parents, or other members
[[Page 14198]]
of the local community in which a charter school project will be
carried out.\1\ For-profit organizations are ineligible to apply for
grants or subgrants under the CSP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 4310(5) and (6) of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965, as amended (20 U.S.C. 7221i(5) and (6))
(www.congress.gov/114/plaws/publ95/PLAW-114publ95.pdf).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to making subgrants to eligible applicants to open new
charter schools and to replicate or expand high-quality charter
schools, SE grantees may use grant funds to provide technical
assistance to eligible applicants and authorized public chartering
agencies in opening new charter schools and replicating and expanding
high-quality charter schools; and work with authorized public
chartering agencies in the State to improve authorizing quality,
including developing capacity for, and conducting, fiscal oversight and
auditing of charter schools. SE Grant funds may also be used for grant
administration, which may include technical assistance and monitoring
of subgrants for performance and fiscal and regulatory compliance, as
required under 2 CFR 200.332(d).
If a State does not have an active CSP SE Grant, the Department may
award Developer Grants (ALNs 84.282B and 84.282E) to eligible
applicants in the State on a competitive basis to enable them to open
new charter schools or to replicate or expand high-quality charter
schools. Through CMO Grants (ALN 84.282M), the Department provides
funds to non-profit charter management organizations (CMOs) on a
competitive basis to enable them to replicate or expand one or more
high-quality charter schools.
CSP SE Grants, CMO Grants, and Developer Grants are intended to
support charter schools that serve elementary or secondary school
students. Funds also may be used to serve students in early childhood
education programs or postsecondary students. Section 4310 of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA),
defines ``replicate'' as opening a new charter school, or a new campus
of a high-quality charter school, based on the educational model of an
existing high-quality charter school; and ``expand'' as significantly
increasing enrollment or adding one or more grades to a high-quality
charter school (20 U.S.C. 7221i(9) and (7)). Section 4310 defines
``high-quality charter school,'' in pertinent part, as a charter school
that shows evidence of strong academic results, which may include
strong student academic growth, as determined by a State; has no
significant issues in the areas of student safety, financial and
operational management, or statutory or regulatory compliance; and has
demonstrated success in significantly increasing student academic
achievement, including graduation rates where applicable, for all
students served by the charter school and for each of the subgroups of
students defined in section 1111(c)(2) of the ESEA (20 U.S.C.
7221i(8)).
For CMO Grants and Developer Grants, these proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection criteria are intended to
supplement the regulatory priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria in: Final Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and
Selection Criteria--Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter
Schools Program; Grants to Charter Management Organizations for the
Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools (CMO NFP),
published in the Federal Register on November 30, 2018 (83 FR 61532),
and Final Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and Selection
Criteria--Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools
Program; Grants to Charter School Developers for the Opening of New
Charter Schools and for the Replication and Expansion of High-Quality
Charter Schools (Developer NFP), published in the Federal Register on
July 3, 2019 (84 FR 31726).
Program Authority: Title IV, part C of the ESEA (20 U.S.C. 7221-
7221j).
Proposed Priorities
Proposed Priorities Applicable to CMO Grants and Developer Grants:
We propose two priorities for CMO Grants and Developer Grants.
Proposed Priority 1--Promoting High-Quality Educator- and Community-
Centered Charter Schools to Support Underserved Students.
Background: Charter schools were envisioned to drive the creation
of innovative approaches to teaching and learning for all students
while being held accountable for academic performance.\2\ The original
proponents of charter schools anticipated that charter schools would be
shaped by educators and offer opportunities for developing and sharing
new instructional methods and resources that address the needs of
students and families in the community. While that is the case in some
charter schools, in others, teachers, parents, and community leaders
have expressed concerns about not being included as active participants
in charter school decision-making.\3\ Such concerns may be due, in
part, to limited requirements for community engagement. According to
the National Resource Center on Charter School Finance and Governance,
``most laws require only peripheral participation, such as garnering
parent support for the school during the application process or keeping
parents informed of student performance. These participation
requirements do not take full advantage of charter schools' potential
to draw on the knowledge and expertise of their parent community.'' \4\
Similarly, some charter schools may not fully engage other community
members and organizations that are also well-positioned to help assess
the educational aspirations and needs of students living in their
neighborhoods and can offer important contributions to help improve the
academic, financial, and organizational or operational performance of
the school.\5\ Charter schools and CMOs may have needs that community
members and organizations can help meet, including, for example,
specific teacher areas of expertise; facilities for activities such as
arts, sports, or enrichment; or serving their students' well-being and
readiness to learn. Similarly, community partnerships can expand
options for courses that may not be available in a school, enhance
independent study or skill development opportunities (e.g., career and
technical education or work-based learning), and build sustainability
of program offerings. Community partnerships can also assess the
receptiveness of a community to a new charter school.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Kahlenberg, Richard D. & Potter, Halley (2014). Restoring
Shanker's Vision for Charter Schools [verbar] American Federation of
Teachers (aft.org) www.aft.org/ae/winter2014-2015/kahlenberg_potter.
\3\ Baker, Timberly L., Wise, Jillian, Kelley, Gwendolyn, and
Skiba, Russell J. (2016). Identifying Barriers: Creating Solutions
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1124003.pdf.
\4\ National Resource Center on Charter School Finance &
Governance. Enhancing_Charter_Schools Through Parent Involvement
https://charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/sites/default/files/files/field_publication_attachment/Enhancing_Charter_Schools-AmyBiehlHS.pdf.
\5\ National Charter School Resource Center (2021). How Charter
Schools Can Leverage Community Assets through Partnerships https://charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/sites/default/files/files/field_publication_attachment/How Charter Schools Can
LeverageCommunity Assets through Partnerships.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Educator- and community-centered charter schools can provide
opportunities to meet the needs of all students, particularly
underserved students. Studies show that when teachers are engaged in
educational decision-making and are given an
[[Page 14199]]
opportunity to collaborate with administrators, it promotes a better
learning environment for students that leads to increased student
achievement and college and career readiness.\6\ For example, charter
schools can ensure meaningful input of educators by appointing multiple
educators to their governing boards or purposefully developing
instructional and operational models that proactively solicit and
respond to educators' feedback. Additionally, community-centered
charter schools are built on relationships that may enable them to be
more transparent and collaborative in their design and practices,
including proactively recruiting, enrolling, and retaining students of
diverse backgrounds and abilities.\7\ Community-centered charter
schools may have established partnerships with local organizations and
informal and formal processes to engage with and solicit input from
local stakeholders on a regular basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Rimm-Kaufman, Sara and Sandilos, Lia (2010). Improving
students' relationships with teachers (apa.org) www.apa.org/education-career/k12/relationships.
\7\ Safal Partners: Kern, Nora (2016). Intentionally Diverse
Charter Schools: A Toolkit for Charter School Leaders https://charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/sites/default/files/files/field_publication_attachment/NCSRC%20Intentionally%20Diverse%20Charter%20School%20Toolkit.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Priority:
(a) Under this priority, an applicant must propose to open a new
charter school, or replicate or expand a high-quality charter school,
that is developed and implemented--
(1) With meaningful and ongoing engagement with current and former
educators, including current and former teachers, including in founding
the school, board governance, school-level decision-making related to
curriculum and instruction, and day-to-day operations of the school;
and
(2) Using a community-centered approach that includes an assessment
of community assets, informs the development of the charter school, and
includes the implementation of protocols and practices designed to
ensure that the charter school will use and interact with community
assets on an ongoing basis to create and maintain strong community
ties.
(b) In its application, an applicant must provide a high-quality
plan that demonstrates how its proposed project would meet the
requirements in paragraph (a) of this priority, accompanied by a
timetable with milestones.
Proposed Priority 2--Charter School and Traditional Public School or
District Collaborations That Benefit Students and Families
Background: Research has shown that collaborations among charter
schools and traditional public schools or traditional school districts
(charter-traditional collaborations) have the potential to improve the
quality of charter schools and traditional public schools.\8\ In order
to benefit the public school system as a whole, and students and
families in the community, charter-traditional collaborations require
significant investments of time and resources to address commonly
shared barriers and challenges in both charter schools and traditional
public schools. Successful charter-traditional collaborations can lead
to information-sharing about best practices for developing systems and
processes that benefit all families and students served by the members
of the collaboration.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Chait, Robin (2019). Bridging the Divide: Collaboration
Between Traditional Public Schools and Charter Schools.
www.ested.org/wested-insights/collaboration-between-traditional-public-schools-and-charter-schools/.
\9\ DeArmond, Michael, Cooley Nelson, Elizabeth, and Bruns,
Angela (2015). The Best of Both Worlds: Can District-Charter Co-
Location Be a Win-Win? https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED559807.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some examples of charter-traditional collaborations that benefit
students and families include: Sharing curriculum resources and
instructional materials, including opportunities for students to have
increased access to a more comprehensive set of course offerings;
creating systems and structures for the delivery of shared, effective
teacher and leader professional development and instructional
practices, including through professional learning communities;
developing strong principal pipeline programs; and shared
transportation systems that increase student access to and diversity
within schools while lessening the financial burden all schools
encounter when providing transportation.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Yatsko, Sarah, Cooley Nelson, Elizabeth, and Lake, Robin
(2013). District-Charter Collaboration Compact: Interim Report.
https://crpe.org/district-charter-collaboration-compact-interim-report/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the proposed priority, an applicant must propose to
collaborate with at least one traditional public school or traditional
school district in an activity that would be beneficial to all partners
in the collaboration and lead to increased educational opportunities
and improved student outcomes.
Proposed Priority:
(a) Under this priority, an applicant must propose to collaborate
with at least one traditional public school or traditional school
district in an activity that is designed to benefit students and
families served by each member of the collaboration, designed to lead
to increased educational opportunities and improved student outcomes,
and includes implementation of--
(1) One or more of the following services and resources:
(i) Curricular and instructional resources or academic course
offerings.
(ii) Professional development opportunities for teachers and
leaders, which may include professional learning communities,
opportunities for teachers to earn additional certifications, such as
in a high need area or National Board Certification, and partnerships
with educator preparation programs to support teaching residencies.
(iii) Evidence-based (as defined in section 8101(21) of the ESEA)
practices to improve academic performance for underserved students.
(iv) Policies and practices to create safe, supportive, and
inclusive learning environments, including systems of positive
behavioral intervention and support; and
(2) One or more of the following initiatives:
(i) Transparent enrollment and retention practices and processes
that include clear and consistent disclosure of policies or
requirements (e.g., discipline policies, purchasing and wearing
specific uniforms and other fees, or caregiver participation), and any
services that are or are not provided, that could impact a family's
ability to enroll or remain enrolled (e.g., transportation services or
participation in the National School Lunch Program).
(ii) A shared transportation plan and system that reduces
transportation costs for partners in the collaboration and takes into
consideration various transportation options, including public
transportation and district-provided or shared transportation options,
cost-sharing or free or reduced-cost fare options, and any distance
considerations for prioritized bus services.
(iii) Other collaborations designed to address a significant
barrier or challenge faced by both charter schools and traditional
public schools and improve student outcomes.
(b) In its application, an applicant must provide a letter from
each partnering traditional public school or school district
demonstrating a commitment to participate in the proposed charter-
traditional collaboration. Within 45 days of receiving a grant award,
the applicant must submit to the Department a written
[[Page 14200]]
agreement (e.g., Memorandum of Understanding), signed by officials
authorized to sign on behalf of the charter school and each partnering
traditional public school or school district, that--
(1) Identifies and describes each member of the collaboration;
(2) States the purpose and duration of the collaboration;
(3) Describes the roles and responsibilities of each member of the
collaboration, including key staff responsible for completing specific
tasks;
(4) Describes how the collaboration will benefit each member,
including how it will benefit students and families affiliated with
each member and lead to increased educational opportunities and
improved student outcomes, and specific and measurable, if applicable,
goals;
(5) Describes the resources each member of the collaboration will
contribute; and
(6) Contains any other relevant information.
Types of Priorities:
When inviting applications for a competition using one or more
priorities, we designate the type of each priority as absolute,
competitive preference, or invitational through a notice in the Federal
Register. The effect of each type of priority follows:
Absolute priority: Under an absolute priority, we consider only
applications that meet the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(3)).
Competitive preference priority: Under a competitive preference
priority, we give competitive preference to an application by (1)
awarding additional points, depending on the extent to which the
application meets the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2)
selecting an application that meets the priority over an application of
comparable merit that does not meet the priority (34 CFR
75.105(c)(2)(ii)).
Invitational priority: Under an invitational priority, we are
particularly interested in applications that meet the priority.
However, we do not give an application that meets the priority a
preference over other applications (34 CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
Proposed Application Requirements
Background: The ESEA requires SE Grant, CMO Grant, and Developer
Grant applications to include specific information. In particular, SE
Grant applications must address the application requirements in section
4303(f) of the ESEA, CMO Grant applications must address the
application requirements in section 4305(b)(3) of the ESEA, and
Developer Grant applications must address relevant application
requirements in section 4303(f) of the ESEA. In addition to these
statutory application requirements, we established additional
application requirements for CMO Grants and Developer Grants in the CMO
NFP and Developer NFP, respectively.
As a supplement to the application requirements in the ESEA, CMO
NFP, and Developer NFP, the Department proposes new application
requirements and assurances to help ensure the creation of new charter
schools, and the replication and expansion of high-quality charter
schools, that are: (1) Racially and socio-economically diverse; (2)
driven by the needs of students and families in the community in which
the charter school is or will be located; and (3) fiscally responsible
and transparent, particularly with respect to contractual relationships
with for-profit management organizations (also referred to as education
management organizations (EMOs)). We reiterate that a charter school
is, by definition, ``a public school that . . . is operated under
public supervision and direction,'' and for-profit entities are
ineligible to receive funding as a CSP project grantee or subgrantee
(see section 4310(2)(B), (3), (4), and (5) of the ESEA). It is also a
violation of CSP requirements for a grantee or subgrantee to relinquish
full or substantial control of the charter school (and, thereby, the
CSP project) to a for-profit management organization or other for-
profit entity because, among other things, a grantee or subgrantee
receiving CSP funds must establish and maintain proper internal
controls and directly administer or supervise the administration of the
project. See 2 CFR 200.302-303; and 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701. A grantee
or subgrantee that enters into a contract for goods or services must
comply with the Federal procurement standards at 2 CFR 200.317-200.327,
and applicable conflict of interest requirements, including that no
employee, officer, or agent of the charter school may participate in
the selection, award, or administration of a contract supported by
Federal funds if he or she has a real or apparent conflict of interest.
Generally, the Department believes, based on experience
administering the CSP, that the proposed application requirements and
assurances would help facilitate the proper review and evaluation of
CSP grant applications, thereby increasing the likelihood of successful
grant and subgrant implementation. These proposed requirements and
assurances would also help ensure that all students have access to
high-quality, diverse, and equitable learning opportunities in their
communities, which should be a goal of all public schools.
High-performing charter school authorizers generally require
applicants for a charter (i.e., to create a charter school) to present
data on the academic achievement, demographics, and enrollment and
retention rates of students in all surrounding public schools. These
data help with assessing the extent to which the proposed charter
school will meet the needs of, and enroll students that are
representative of, the students in the community. Consistent with this
part of the charter application process, we propose to require
applicants for CMO Grants, Developer Grants, and subgrants under the SE
Grant program to conduct a community impact analysis to inform the
need, number, and types of charter schools to be created in a given
community. The community impact analysis must describe how the plan for
the proposed charter school takes into account the student demographics
of the schools from which students are, or would be, drawn to attend
the charter school. The community impact analysis must also describe
the steps the charter school has taken or will take to ensure that the
proposed charter school would not hamper, delay, or in any manner
negatively affect any desegregation efforts in the public school
districts from which students are, or would be, drawn or in which the
charter school is or would be located, including efforts to comply with
a court order, statutory obligation, or voluntary efforts to create and
maintain desegregated public schools, and that it would not otherwise
increase racial or socio-economic segregation or isolation in the
schools from which the students are, or would be, drawn to attend the
charter school. The focus of the community impact analysis on racial
and socio-economic diversity builds on existing statutory and
regulatory provisions that give priority to applicants that plan to
operate or manage high-quality charter schools with racially and socio-
economically diverse student bodies (see section 4305(b)(5)(A) of the
ESEA; CMO NFP at 61542; and Developer NFP at 31734). Please note that
an applicant that proposes to operate or manage a charter school in a
racially or socio-economically segregated or isolated community still
would be eligible to apply for funding, even if the student body of the
charter school would be racially or socio-economically segregated or
isolated due to community
[[Page 14201]]
demographics. Such an applicant, like all other applicants, would be
required to provide a community impact analysis describing how the plan
for the proposed charter school takes into account the student
demographics of the schools from which students are, or would be, drawn
to attend the charter school, and the steps the applicant has taken or
will take to ensure that the proposed charter school would not increase
racial or socio-economic segregation or isolation in those schools.
Further, as autonomous public schools that create their
operational, curricular, and policy procedures, charter schools are
well positioned to draw on the knowledge and expertise of families and
other stakeholders in the community to help shape school practices. As
with Proposed Priority 1, the proposed community impact analysis
requirements are designed to ensure that families play an active role
in informing decision-making regarding the need for charter schools in
a specific community and to strengthen requirements regarding how the
community is engaged and integrated in the charter school planning and
approval process.
Under section 4310(2)(B) of the ESEA, charter schools receiving CSP
funds must be created by a developer as a public school or adapted by a
developer from an existing public school and operated under public
supervision and direction. While for-profit organizations are
ineligible to apply for direct grants or subgrants under the CSP, some
charter schools enter into contracts with for-profit EMOs for services.
It is the responsibility of the grantee or subgrantee to ensure that
such an agreement with an EMO is a contract, and not a subaward or
subgrant, in accordance with 2 CFR 200.331. Arrangements under which a
for-profit EMO, including a non-profit CMO operated by or on behalf of
a for-profit entity, exercises full or substantial administrative
control over the charter school (and, thereby, the CSP project) or over
programmatic decisions are not permissible under CSP-funded projects,
pursuant to 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701, which require grantees and
subgrantees, respectively, to directly administer or supervise the
administration of their projects. EMOs provide a variety of services to
charter schools--from limited management and financial support services
to whole-school package offerings. Some examples of impermissible
delegations of administrative control include situations in which the
EMO controls all or a substantial portion of grant or subgrant funds
and expenditures, including making programmatic decisions (also
referred to as ``sweeps contracts''); the EMO employs the school
principal and a large proportion of the teachers; or the EMO makes
decisions about curricula and instructional practices.
We propose application requirements designed to ensure that any
charter school that receives CSP funds and enters, or plans to enter,
into a contract with an EMO complies with all statutory and regulatory
requirements, including applicable Federal procurement and conflict of
interest standards in 2 CFR 200.317-200.327, and Federal regulations
requiring grantees and subgrantees to establish and maintain effective
internal and administrative control over the Federal award (2 CFR
200.303; and 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701). The proposed application
requirements also are designed to ensure fiscal transparency
surrounding these contracts by requiring applicants to address whether
they have entered or plan to enter into a contract with a for-profit
management organization and, if so, to provide detailed information
regarding the terms of the contract. This includes the amount of any
CSP funding that would be used to pay for services under the contract
and information about the governing board members, individuals who have
a financial interest in the management organization, and any perceived
or actual conflicts of interests. Applicants would also address how the
applicant will ensure that it makes all programmatic decisions,
maintains control over all program funds, directly administers or
supervises the administration of the grant or subgrant in accordance
with 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701, and complies with the conflict of
interest standards in 2 CFR 200.317-200.327.
Under section 4310(6) of the ESEA, an eligible applicant is defined
as a charter school developer that has (1) applied to an authorized
public chartering agency to operate a charter school and (2) provided
adequate and timely notice to that authority. As noted above, eligible
applicants in States that do not have an active SE Grant may apply to
the Department for a direct grant under the Developer Grant program.
Non-profit CMOs are the only eligible entities under the CMO Grant
program and usually serve as the developer and apply for the charter on
behalf of the charter schools that they fund through their grant.
Because an applicant need not have received a charter to be eligible to
apply for a CSP grant, there is inherent risk of an applicant receiving
a CSP grant but ultimately not having its charter application approved.
Given this risk, we propose requirements to better inform the
Department of these situations, including by providing the expected
timeline from the authorized public chartering agency to provide a
final decision on the charter application and identifying any planning
costs expected to be incurred before such decision. This information
can, in turn, be used by the Department to establish guardrails, such
as through grant conditions, to minimize risk.
Finally, to reinforce the proposed application requirements, we
also propose assurances related to charter schools' contracts with
EMOs; subgrant awards; reporting requirements; racial and socio-
economic diversity of students and teachers in the charter school, and
the impact of the charter school on racial and socio-economic diversity
in the public school district and schools from which students are, or
will be, drawn to attend the charter school; and ensuring that CSP
funding for implementation of a charter school is provided only when a
charter has been approved and a school facility has been secured.
We propose to apply one or more of the following application
requirements in any year in which a competition is held under one or
more of the following CSP grant programs: SE Grants, CMO Grants, or
Developer Grants. We identify the program applicability for each
proposed application requirement.
Proposed Requirements Applicable to CMO Grants and Developer
Grants.
Proposed Requirement 1 for CMO Grants and Developer Grants:
Each applicant must provide a community impact analysis that
demonstrates that there is sufficient demand for the proposed project
and that the proposed project would serve the interests and meet the
needs of students and families in the community or communities from
which students are, or will be, drawn to attend the charter school, and
that includes the following:
(a) Descriptions of the community support and unmet demand for the
charter school, including any over-enrollment of existing public
schools or other information that demonstrates demand for the charter
school, such as evidence of demand for specialized instructional
approaches.
(b) Descriptions of the targeted student and staff demographics and
how the applicant plans to establish and maintain racially and socio-
economically diverse student and staff populations, including proposed
strategies (that are consistent with applicable legal requirements) to
recruit,
[[Page 14202]]
enroll, and retain a diverse student body and to recruit, hire,
develop, and retain a diverse staff and talent pipeline at all levels
(including leadership positions).
(c) Analyses of publicly available information and data, including
citations and sources, on academic achievement, demographics, and
enrollment trends of students in the public schools and school
districts from which students are, or will be, drawn to attend the
charter school, and an explanation of how the area from which the
proposed charter school would reasonably expect to draw students was
determined.
(d) An analysis of the proposed charter school's demographic
projections and a comparison of such projections with the demographics
of public schools and school districts from which students are, or will
be, drawn to attend the charter school.
(e) Evidence that demonstrates that the number of charter schools
proposed to be opened, replicated, or expanded under the grant does not
exceed the number of public schools needed to accommodate the demand in
the community, including projected enrollment for the charter schools
based on analysis of community needs and unmet demand and any
supporting documents for the methodology and calculations used to
determine the number of schools proposed to be opened, replicated, or
expanded.
(f) A robust family and community engagement plan designed to
ensure the active participation of families and the community and that
includes the following:
(1) How families and the community are or were engaged in
determining the vision and design for the charter school, including
specific examples of how families' and the community's input was, or is
expected to be, incorporated into the vision and design for the charter
school.
(2) How the charter school will meaningfully engage with both
families and the community to create strong and ongoing partnerships.
(3) How the charter school will foster a collaborative culture that
involves the families of all students, including underserved students,
in school decision-making on an ongoing basis.
(4) How the charter school's enrollment and recruitment process
will engage and accommodate families from various backgrounds,
including by holding enrollment and recruitment events on weekends or
during non-standard work hours, making translators available, and
providing enrollment and recruitment information in widely accessible
formats (e.g., hard copy and online in multiple languages, large print
or braille for visually-impaired individuals) through widely available
and transparent means (e.g., online and at community locations).\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Please note that all public schools are obligated under
Federal civil rights laws to ensure meaningful communication with
limited English proficient parents and effective communication with
individuals with disabilities. 28 CFR 35.160. See generally Lau v.
Nichols, 414 U.S. 563 (1974); 34 CFR part 100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) How the charter school has engaged or will engage families and
the community to develop an instructional model that will serve the
targeted diverse student population and their families effectively.
(g) How the plans for the operation of the charter school will
support and reflect the needs of students and families in the
community, including considerations for how the school's location, or
anticipated location if a facility has not been secured, will
facilitate access for the targeted diverse student population (e.g.,
access to public transportation or other transportation options, the
demographics of neighborhoods within walking distance of the school,
and transportation plans and costs for students who are not able to
walk or use public transportation to access the school).
(h) A description of the steps the applicant has taken or will take
to ensure that the proposed charter school would not hamper, delay, or
in any manner negatively affect any desegregation efforts in the public
school districts from which students are, or would be, drawn to attend
the charter school, including efforts to comply with a court order,
statutory obligation, or voluntary efforts to create and maintain
desegregated public schools, and that it would not otherwise increase
racial or socio-economic segregation or isolation in the schools from
which the students are, or would be, drawn to attend the charter
school.
Proposed Requirement 2 for CMO Grants and Developer Grants:
For any existing or proposed contract with a for-profit management
organization (including a non-profit management organization operated
by or on behalf of a for-profit entity), without regard to whether the
management organization exercises full or substantial administrative
control over the charter school or the CSP project, the applicant must
include--
(a) The name and contact information of the management
organization;
(b) A detailed description of the terms of the contract, including
the cost (i.e., fixed costs and estimates of any ongoing costs or fees)
and percentage such cost represents of the school's total funding,
amount of CSP funds proposed to be used towards such cost (with an
explanation of why such cost is reasonable), duration, roles and
responsibilities of the management organization, and steps the
applicant will take to ensure that it pays fair market value for any
services or other items purchased or leased from the management
organization, makes all programmatic decisions, maintains control over
all CSP funds, and directly administers or supervises the
administration of the grant in accordance with 34 CFR 75.701;
(c) A description of any business or financial relationship between
the charter school developer and the management organization, including
payments, contract terms, and any property owned, operated, or
controlled by the management organization or related individuals or
entities that will be used by the charter school;
(d) The name and contact information for each member of the
governing board of the proposed charter school;
(e) A list of all individuals who have a financial interest in the
management organization, including--
(1) Descriptions of any affiliations or conflicts of interest for
charter school staff, board members, and management organization staff;
(2) A list of all related individuals or entities providing
contractual services to the charter school and the nature of those
services; and
(3) Detailed descriptions of any actual or perceived conflicts of
interest, the steps the applicant took or will take to avoid any actual
or perceived conflicts of interest, and how the applicant resolved or
will resolve any actual or perceived conflicts of interest to ensure
compliance with 2 CFR 200.318(c);
(f) An explanation of how the applicant will ensure that the
management contract is severable, severing the management contract will
not cause the proposed charter school to close, the duration of the
management contract will not extend beyond the expiration date of the
school's charter, and renewal of the management contract will not occur
without approval and affirmative action by the governing board of the
charter school; and
(g) A description of the steps the applicant will take to ensure
that it maintains control over all student records and has a process in
place to provide those records to another public school or school
district in a timely manner upon the transfer of a student from the
charter school to another public school, including due to closure
[[Page 14203]]
of the charter school, in accordance with section 4308 of the ESEA.
Proposed Requirement 3 for CMO Grants and Developer Grants:
An applicant that has applied to an authorized public chartering
agency to operate a new, expanded, or replicated charter school, and
has not yet received approval, must provide--
(a) A signed and dated copy of its application to the authorized
public chartering agency;
(b) Documentation that it has provided notice to the authorized
public chartering agency that it has applied for a CSP grant;
(c) A timeline from the authorized public chartering agency for
providing a final decision on the charter application; and
(d) Any planning costs in its proposed budget that are expected to
be incurred prior to the date the authorized public chartering agency
expects to issue a decision on the applicant's charter application.
Proposed Requirements Applicable to SE Grants:
Background: Applicants for subgrants under the CSP SE Grant program
are required to provide, as part of their subgrant application, a
description of the roles and responsibilities of eligible applicants,
partner organizations, and CMOs, including the administrative and
contractual roles and responsibilities of such partners (section
4303(f)(1)(C)(i)(II) of the ESEA). Another goal of these proposed
requirements is to ensure that CSP SE grantees are well positioned to
oversee a high-quality peer review process as they make subgrant awards
in their respective States to support opening new charter schools and
replicating and expanding high-quality charter schools. Also, we want
to ensure that, after making subgrant awards in their States, SE
grantees fulfill their responsibility to monitor charter school
subgrant award recipients, as required under 2 CFR 200.332(d). SEs are
required to provide descriptions of how the SE will review applications
from eligible applicants (section 4303(f)(1)(C)(ii) of the ESEA) as
well as its plan to adequately monitor subgrant recipients under the
SE's program (section 4303(g)(1)(D)(i) of the ESEA). The CSP SE Grant
program supports many charter schools nationally, and the proposed new
requirements for SE applicants to create subgrant application review
and subgrantee monitoring plans present an opportunity for peer
reviewers to evaluate the quality of these plans not only to inform
funding decisions, but also to enhance the quality of charter schools
in the areas of transparency, oversight, and accountability.
The proposed application requirements, which would supplement
existing statutory requirements for SEs, would: Require subgrant
applicants to provide a community impact analysis and submit more
detailed information regarding the nature of any management contracts
with for-profit EMOs, including non-profit CMOs operated by or on
behalf of for-profit entities, as we are proposing to require of
applicants for CMO Grants and Developer Grants; require SEs to give
priority in making subgrants to charter schools that are educator-led
and community-centered or that participate in collaborations among
charter schools and traditional public schools or school districts
(charter-traditional-district collaborations), as with the above
priorities for CMO and Developer; require SEs to provide justification
and supporting evidence for the planned number of subgrants and
subgrant award amounts to ensure proposed projects are reasonable; and,
as discussed in the previous paragraph, strengthen the requirements
related to SEs' review of subgrant applications and monitoring of
subgrants in their States.
Proposed Requirement 1 for SE Grants:
Each subgrant applicant must provide a community impact analysis
that demonstrates that there is sufficient demand for the proposed
project and that the proposed project would serve the interests and
meet the needs of students and families in the community or communities
from which the students are, or will be, drawn to attend the charter
school, and that includes the following:
(a) Descriptions of the community support and unmet demand for the
charter school, including any over-enrollment of existing public
schools or other information that demonstrates demand for the charter
school, such as evidence of demand for specialized instructional
approaches.
(b) Descriptions of the targeted student and staff demographics and
how the applicant plans to establish and maintain racially and socio-
economically diverse student and staff populations, including proposed
strategies (consistent with applicable legal requirements) to recruit,
enroll, and retain a diverse student body and to recruit, hire,
develop, and retain a diverse staff and talent pipeline at all levels
(including leadership positions).
(c) Analyses of publicly available information and data on student
academic achievement, demographics, and enrollment trends of students
in schools in the public school district and schools from which
students are, or will be, drawn or in which the charter school is or
will be located, including citations and sources and an explanation of
how the area from which the proposed charter school would reasonably
expect to draw students was determined.
(d) An analysis of the proposed charter school's demographic
projections and a comparison of such projections with the demographics
of public schools and school districts from which students are, or will
be, drawn to attend the charter school.
(e) Evidence that demonstrates that the number of charter schools
proposed to be opened, replicated, or expanded under the grant does not
exceed the number of public schools needed to accommodate the demand in
the community, including projected enrollment for the charter schools
based on analysis of community needs and unmet demand and any
supporting documents for the methodology and calculations used to
determine the number of schools proposed to be opened, replicated, or
expanded.
(f) A robust family and community engagement plan designed to
ensure the active participation of families and the community that
includes the following:
(1) How families and the community are or were engaged in
determining the vision and design for the charter school, including
specific examples of how families' and the community's input was, or is
expected to be, incorporated into the vision and design for the charter
school.
(2) How the charter school will meaningfully engage with both
families and the community to create strong and ongoing partnerships.
(3) How the charter school will foster a collaborative culture that
involves the families of all students, including underserved students,
in school decision-making on an ongoing basis.
(4) How the charter school's enrollment and recruitment processes
will engage and accommodate families from various backgrounds,
including by holding enrollment and recruitment events on weekends or
non-standard work hours, making translators available, and providing
enrollment and recruitment information in widely accessible formats
(e.g., hard copy and online in multiple languages, large print or
braille for visually-impaired individuals) through widely available and
transparent means (e.g., online and at community locations).\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Please note that all public schools are obligated under
Federal civil rights laws to ensure meaningful communication with
limited English proficient parents and effective communication with
individuals with disabilities. 28 CFR 35.160. See generally Lau v.
Nichols, 414 U.S. 563 (1974); 34 CFR part 100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 14204]]
(5) How the charter school has engaged or will engage families and
the community to develop an instructional model to best serve the
targeted diverse student population and their families.
(g) How the plans for the operation of the charter school will
support and reflect the needs of students and families in the
community, including considerations for how the school's location, or
anticipated location if a facility has not been secured, will
facilitate access for the targeted diverse student population (e.g.,
access to public transportation or other transportation options, the
demographics of neighborhoods within walking distance of the school,
and transportation plans and costs for students who are not able to
walk or use public transportation to access the school).
(h) A description of the steps the applicant has taken or will take
to ensure that the proposed charter school would not hamper, delay, or
in any manner negatively affect any desegregation efforts in the public
school districts from which students are, or would be, drawn to attend
the charter school, including efforts to comply with a court order,
statutory obligation, or voluntary efforts to create and maintain
desegregated public schools, and that it would not otherwise increase
racial or socio-economic segregation or isolation in the schools from
which the students are, or would be, drawn to attend the charter
school.
Proposed Requirement 2 for SE Grants:
For any existing or proposed contract with a for-profit management
organization (including a non-profit management organization operated
by or on behalf of a for-profit entity), without regard to whether the
management organization exercises full or substantial administrative
control over the charter school or the CSP project, the subgrant
applicant must include--
(a) The name and contact information of the management
organization;
(b) A detailed description of the terms of the contract, including
the cost (i.e., fixed costs and estimates of any ongoing costs or fees)
and percentage such cost represents of the school's total funding,
amount of CSP funds proposed to be used towards such cost (with an
explanation of why such cost is reasonable), duration, roles and
responsibilities of the management organization, and steps the
applicant will take to ensure that it pays fair market value for any
services or other items purchased or leased from the management
organization, makes all programmatic decisions, maintains control over
all CSP funds, and directly administers or supervises the
administration of the subgrant in accordance with 34 CFR 76.701;
(c) A description of any business or financial relationship between
the charter school developer and the management organization, including
payments, contract terms, and any property owned, operated, or
controlled by the management organization or related individuals or
entities to be used by the charter school;
(d) The name and contact information for each member of the
governing board of the proposed charter school;
(e) A list of all individuals who have a financial interest in the
management organization, including--
(1) Descriptions of any affiliations or conflicts of interest for
charter school staff, board members, and management organization staff;
(2) A list of all related individuals or entities providing
contractual services to the charter school and the nature of those
services; and
(3) Detailed descriptions of any actual or perceived conflicts of
interest, the steps the applicant took or will take to avoid any actual
or perceived conflicts of interest, and how the applicant resolved or
will resolve any actual or perceived conflicts of interest to ensure
compliance with 2 CFR 200.318(c);
(f) An explanation of how the applicant will ensure that the
management contract is severable, severing the management contract will
not cause the proposed charter school to close, the duration of the
management contract will not extend beyond the expiration date of the
school's charter, and renewal of the management contract will not occur
without approval and affirmative action by the governing board of the
charter school; and
(g) A description of the steps the applicant will take to ensure
that it maintains control over all student records and has a process in
place to provide those records to another public school or school
district in a timely manner upon the transfer of a student from the
charter school to another public school in accordance with section 4308
of the ESEA.
Proposed Requirement 3 for SE Grants:
Each SE applicant must provide a detailed description of how it
will review applications from eligible applicants, including--
(a) How eligibility will be determined;
(b) How peer reviewers will be recruited and selected, including
efforts the applicant will make to recruit peer reviewers from diverse
backgrounds and underrepresented groups;
(c) How subgrant applications will be reviewed and evaluated;
(d) How cost analyses and budget reviews will be conducted to
ensure that costs are necessary, reasonable, and allocable to the
subgrant;
(e) How applicants will be assessed for risk (i.e., fiscal,
programmatic, compliance); and
(f) How funding decisions will be made.
Proposed Requirement 4 for SE Grants:
Each SE applicant must provide a detailed description, including a
timeline, of how the SE will monitor and report on subgrant performance
in accordance with 2 CFR 200.329, and address and mitigate subgrantee
risk, including--
(a) How subgrantees will be selected for in-depth monitoring,
including factors that indicate higher risk (e.g., charter schools that
have management contracts with for-profit EMOs, virtual charter
schools, and charter schools with a history of poor performance);
(b) How identified subgrantee risk will be addressed;
(c) How subgrantee expenditures will be monitored;
(d) How monitoring for progress and compliance will be conducted
and who will conduct the monitoring;
(e) How monitors will be trained;
(f) How monitoring findings will be shared with subgrantees;
(g) How corrective action plans will be used to resolve monitoring
findings; and
(h) How the SE will ensure transparency so that monitoring findings
and corrective action plans are available to families and the public.
Proposed Requirement 5 for SE Grants:
Each SE applicant must provide explanations and supporting
documents for the methodology and calculations used to determine the
number of proposed subgrant awards and the average subgrant award
amount.
Proposed Requirement 6 for SE Grants:
Each SE applicant must describe how the SE will give priority in
awarding subgrants to eligible applicants that propose projects that
include one or more of the following:
(a) A community-centered approach that informs the planning,
design, and implementation of the charter school and includes--
[[Page 14205]]
(1) An assessment of community assets;
(2) Meaningful and ongoing engagement with families, educators, and
other members of the community, including in areas related to board
governance and school-level decision-making related to curriculum and
instruction; and
(3) The implementation of protocols and practices designed to
ensure that the charter school will use and interact with community
assets on an ongoing basis to create and maintain strong community
ties.
(b) A collaboration with at least one traditional public school or
school district in an activity that is designed to benefit students and
families served by each member of the collaboration, designed to lead
to increased educational opportunities and improved student outcomes,
and includes implementation of--
(1) One or more of the following services and resources:
(i) Curricular and instructional resources or academic course
offerings.
(ii) Professional development opportunities for teachers and
leaders, which may include professional learning communities,
opportunities for teachers to earn additional certifications, such as
in a high need area or National Board Certification, and partnerships
with educator preparation programs to support teaching residencies.
(iii) Evidence-based (as defined in section 8101 of the ESEA)
practices to improve academic performance for underserved students.
(iv) Policies and practices to create safe, supportive, and
inclusive learning environments, including systems of positive
behavioral intervention and support; and
(2) One or more of the following initiatives:
(i) Common enrollment and retention practices that include, as part
of the enrollment process, disclosure of policies or requirements
(e.g., discipline policies, purchasing and wearing specific uniforms
and other fees, or caregiver participation), and any services that are
or are not provided, that could impact a family's ability to enroll or
remain enrolled (e.g., transportation services or participation in the
National School Lunch Program).
(ii) A shared transportation plan and system that reduces
transportation costs for partners in the collaboration and takes into
consideration various transportation options, including public
transportation and district-provided or shared transportation options,
cost-sharing or free or reduced-cost fare options, and any distance
considerations for prioritized bus services.
(iii) Other collaborations designed to address a significant
barrier or challenge faced by both charter schools and traditional
public schools and improve student outcomes.
Proposed Assurances
Background: The ESEA requires CSP SE Grant, CMO Grant, and
Developer Grant applications to include applicable assurances from
section 4303(f)(2) of the ESEA. In addition, CMO Grant applications
must include the assurance required under section 4305(b)(3)(C) of the
ESEA.
As discussed in the background for the Proposed Application
Requirements section, for-profit EMOs are ineligible to apply for
direct grants or subgrants under the CSP. The Department is aware,
however, that some charter schools enter into contracts with EMOs.
Under these circumstances, it is the responsibility of the grantee or
subgrantee to ensure that an agreement with an EMO is a contract, and
not a subaward or subgrant as per 2 CFR 200.331. In addition, a
contract for goods or services with a for-profit entity must comply
with the Federal procurement standards at 2 CFR 200.317-327, and
applicable conflict of interest requirements, including that no
employee, officer, or agent of the charter school may participate in
the selection, award, or administration of any contract supported by
Federal funds if a real or apparent conflict of interest exists. EMOs
provide a variety of services to charter schools--from supplemental
management and financial support services to whole-school package
offerings. Under these management contracts between charter schools and
EMOs, the EMO often exercises full administrative control over the
charter school project, which, as noted above, violates CSP
requirements. Examples of impermissible delegations of administrative
control include situations where the EMO controls all or a substantial
portion of subgrant funds and expenditures, including making
programmatic decisions (also referred to as ``sweeps contracts''); the
EMO employs the school principal and a large proportion of the
teachers; or the EMO makes decisions about curricula and instructional
practices. Such arrangements under which a for-profit EMO, including a
non-profit management organization operated by or on behalf of a for-
profit entity, exercises full administrative control over the charter
school (and, thereby, the CSP project) are not permissible under CSP-
funded projects, pursuant to 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701, which require
that the grantee or subgrantee directly administer or supervise the
administration of the project; and 2 CFR 200.303, which requires that
the grantee or subgrantee establish and maintain proper internal
control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that
the non-Federal entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with
Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
grant. See also 2 CFR 200.302 (financial management).
Consistent with the proposed application requirements for CMO
Grants and Developer Grants, and for subgrants under the SE Grant
program, we propose assurances to ensure that any charter school that
receives CSP funds and enters, or plans to enter, into a contract with
an EMO, including a non-profit CMO operated by or on behalf of a for-
profit entity, complies with all relevant statutory and regulatory
requirements, including applicable Federal procurement standards in 2
CFR 200.317-327, Federal regulations governing conflicts of interest,
and Department regulations requiring grantees and subgrantees to
directly administer or supervise the administration of the project and
retain control over programmatic decisions. The proposed assurances
also are designed to ensure transparency, including fiscal
transparency, surrounding these contracts.
In addition, CSP applicants (including CSP SE subgrant applicants)
may receive CSP funds for planning a charter school before receiving an
approved charter or securing a facility--factors that may prevent a
charter school from ever opening. Accordingly, we are also proposing
assurances to provide greater public transparency with CSP funding
decisions and to address the risk of CSP implementation funds
supporting grantees and subgrantees that are unable to open the charter
school or secure a facility for the charter school in a timely manner.
Also, we are proposing an assurance relating to transparency in
admission and enrollment policies, such as requirements for uniforms,
volunteer hours, fees, or other obligations, that may create barriers
that impact a family's ability to enroll or remain enrolled in the
charter school. This assurance is designed to ensure that families are
aware of financial and other obligations prior to enrolling in the
charter school.
[[Page 14206]]
Proposed Assurances Applicable to SE Grants, CMO Grants, and
Developer Grants:
(a) Each charter school receiving CSP funding must provide an
assurance that it has not and will not enter into a contract with a
for-profit management organization, including a non-profit management
organization operated by or on behalf of a for-profit entity, under
which the management organization exercises full or substantial
administrative control over the charter school and, thereby, the CSP
project.
(b) Each charter school receiving CSP funding must provide an
assurance that any management contract between the charter school and a
for-profit management organization, including a non-profit CMO operated
by or on behalf of a for-profit entity, guarantees or will guarantee
that--
(1) The charter school maintains control over all CSP funds, makes
all programmatic decisions, and directly administers or supervises the
administration of the grant or subgrant;
(2) The management organization does not exercise full or
substantial administrative control over the charter school (and,
thereby, the CSP project), except that this does not limit the ability
of a charter school to enter into a contract with a management
organization for the provision of services that do not constitute full
or substantial control of the charter school project funded under the
CSP (e.g., food services or payroll services) and that otherwise comply
with statutory and regulatory requirements;
(3) The charter school's governing board has access to financial
and other data pertaining to the charter school, the EMO, and any
related entities; and
(4) The charter school is in compliance with applicable Federal and
State laws and regulations governing conflicts of interest, and there
are no actual or perceived conflicts of interest between the charter
school and the management organization.
(c) Each SE or CMO that has provided CSP funding to a charter
school, and each charter school receiving CSP funding, must provide an
assurance that it will post on its website, on an annual basis, a copy
of any management contract between the charter school and a for-profit
management organization, including a non-profit CMO operated by or on
behalf of a for-profit entity, and report information on such contract
to the Department (or, in the case of a charter school that receives
CSP funding through an SE Grant, to the SE), including--
(1) The name and contact information of the management
organization;
(2) A detailed description of the terms of the contract, including
the cost and percentage such cost represents of the charter school's
total funding, amount of CSP funds proposed to be used towards such
cost (with an explanation of why such cost is reasonable), duration,
roles and responsibilities of the management organization, and the
steps the charter school is taking to ensure that it makes all
programmatic decisions, maintains control over all CSP funds, and
directly administers or supervises the administration of the grant or
subgrant in accordance with 34 CFR 75.701 and 76.701;
(3) A description of any business or financial relationship between
the charter school developer or CMO and the management organization,
including payments, contract terms, and any property owned, operated,
or controlled by the management organization or related individuals or
entities to be used by the charter school;
(4) The names and contact information of members of the boards of
directors of the charter school;
(5) A list of all individuals who have a financial interest in the
management organization, including descriptions of any affiliations or
conflicts of interest for charter school staff, board members, and
management organization staff, and a list of all related individuals or
entities providing contractual services to the charter school and the
nature of those services;
(6) A detailed description of any actual or perceived conflicts of
interest, the steps the charter school took or will take to avoid any
actual or perceived conflicts of interest, and how the charter school
resolved or will resolve any actual or perceived conflicts of interest
to ensure compliance with 2 CFR 200.318(c); and
(7) A description of how the charter school ensured that such
contract is severable and that a change in management companies will
not cause the proposed charter school to close.
(d) Each charter school receiving CSP funding must provide an
assurance that it will disclose, as part of the enrollment process, any
policies or requirements (e.g., purchasing and wearing specific
uniforms and other fees, or requirements for family participation), and
any services that are or are not provided, that could impact a family's
ability to enroll or remain enrolled (e.g., transportation services or
participation in the National School Lunch Program).
(e) Each applicant for a CMO Grant, Developer Grant, or subgrant
under the SE Grant program, without regard to whether there are any
desegregation efforts in the public school districts in the surrounding
area, must provide an assurance that it (or, in the case of an
applicant for a CMO Grant, each charter school it proposes to fund)
will hold or participate in a public hearing in the school districts or
communities in which the proposed charter school will be located to
obtain information and feedback regarding the potential impact of the
charter school, including the steps the charter school has taken or
will take to ensure that the proposed charter school would not hamper,
delay, or in any manner negatively affect any desegregation efforts in
the public school districts from which students are, or would be, drawn
to attend the charter school, including efforts to comply with a court
order, statutory obligation, or voluntary efforts to create and
maintain desegregated public schools, and that it would not otherwise
increase racial or socio-economic segregation or isolation in the
schools from which the students are, or would be, drawn to attend the
charter school. Applicants must ensure that the hearing (and notice
thereof) is accessible to individuals with disabilities and limited
English proficient individuals as required by law, actively solicit
participation in the hearing (i.e., provide widespread and timely
notice of the hearing), make good faith efforts to accommodate as many
people as possible (e.g., hold the hearing at a convenient time for
families and provide virtual participation options), and submit a
summary of the comments received as part of the application.
(f) Each applicant for an SE Grant or subgrant, CMO Grant, or
Developer Grant must provide an assurance that it will not use or
provide implementation funds for a charter school until after the
charter school has received a charter from an authorized public
chartering agency and has a contract, lease, mortgage, or other
documentation indicating that it has a facility in which to operate.
Proposed Assurances Applicable to CSP SE Grants and CMO Grants:
Each applicant must provide an assurance that, within 30 days of
the date of the grant award notification (GAN), or the date of the
subgrant award notification for SE Grants, the grantee or subgrantee
will post on its website a list of the charter schools slated to
receive CSP funds, including the following for each school:
(a) The name, address, and grades served.
(b) A description of the educational model.
(c) If the charter school has contracted with a for-profit
management organization, the name of the
[[Page 14207]]
management organization, the amount of CSP funding the management
organization will receive from the school, and a description of the
services to be provided.
(d) The grant or subgrant award amount, including any funding that
has been approved for the current year and any additional years of the
CSP grant for which the school will receive support.
(e) The grant or subgrant application (redacted as necessary).
(f) The peer review materials, including reviewer comments and
scores (redacted as necessary) from the grant or subgrant competition.
Proposed Definitions
In addition to the definitions in section 4310 of the ESEA, the CMO
NFP, and the Developer NFP, we propose the following definitions for
CSP SE Grants, CMO Grants, and Developer Grants. We may apply one or
more of these definitions in any year in which a competition for new
awards is held under one of these programs.
Background: In order to ensure a common understanding of the
proposed priorities and requirements, we propose definitions that are
critical to the policies and statutory purposes of the CSP SE Grant,
Developer Grant, and CMO Grant programs, including proposed definitions
for ``disconnected youth,'' ``educator,'' and ``underserved student''
that are based on definitions of those terms from the Secretary's
Supplemental Priorities published in the Federal Register on December
10, 2021 (86 FR 70612). We propose these definitions to clarify
expectations for eligible entities applying for SE Grants, Developer
Grants, and CMO Grants, and to ensure that the review process for
applications for such grants is as transparent as possible.
Proposed Definitions Applicable to SE Grants, CMO Grants, and
Developer Grants:
Community assets means resources that can be identified and
mobilized to improve conditions in the charter school and community.
These assets may include--
(1) Human assets, including capacities, skills, knowledge base, and
abilities of individuals within a community;
(2) Social assets, including networks, organizations, businesses,
and institutions that exist among and within groups and communities;
and
(3) Political assets, such as a group's ability to influence the
distribution of resources, financial and otherwise.
Disconnected youth means an individual, between the ages 14 and 24,
who may be from a low-income background, experiences homelessness, is
in foster care, is involved in the justice system, or is not working or
not enrolled in (or at risk of dropping out of) an educational
institution.
Educator means an individual who is an early learning educator,
teacher, principal or other school leader, specialized instructional
support personnel (e.g., school psychologist, counselor, school social
worker, early intervention service personnel), paraprofessional, or
faculty.
Underserved student means a student in one or more of the following
subgroups:
(a) A student who is living in poverty or is served by schools with
high concentrations of students living in poverty.
(b) A student of color.
(c) A student who is a member of a federally recognized Indian
Tribe.
(d) An English learner (as defined in section 8101 of the ESEA).
(e) A child or student with a disability (as defined in section
8101 of the ESEA).
(f) A disconnected youth.
(g) A migrant student.
(h) A student experiencing homelessness or housing insecurity.
(i) A student who is in foster care.
(j) A pregnant, parenting, or caregiving student.
(k) A student impacted by the justice system, including a formerly
incarcerated student.
(l) A student performing significantly below grade level.
Proposed Definition Applicable to SE Grants:
Background: In addition to the proposed definitions for SE Grants,
CMO Grants, and Developer Grants, we propose the following definition
for CSP SE Grants only. We may apply this definition in any year in
which a competition for new awards is held under the SE Grant program.
We are proposing to adopt the definition of ``educationally
disadvantaged student'' established in the CMO NFP and Developer NFP
for use in the CSP SE Grants program. The proposed definition for
``educationally disadvantaged student'' is based on section 1115(c)(2)
of the ESEA.
Proposed Definition:
Educationally disadvantaged student means a student in one or more
of the categories described in section 1115(c)(2) of the ESEA, which
include children who are economically disadvantaged, children with
disabilities, migrant students, English learners, neglected or
delinquent students, homeless students, and students who are in foster
care.
Proposed Selection Criteria
Background: We propose selection criteria that align with the
proposed requirements and assurances, identify for peer reviewers the
factors considered to be essential to conducting a high-quality peer
review, and are designed to aid in identifying the applicants most
likely to succeed with implementing high-quality charter schools that
are driven by the needs of families and their communities. These
selection criteria would be used in addition to selection criteria in
sections 4303(g)(1) and 4305(b)(4) of the ESEA, the CMO NFP, the
Developer NFP, and 34 CFR 75.210, as appropriate. We may apply one or
more of these proposed selection criteria to applicable grant
competitions in fiscal year (FY) 2022 and later years. In the notices
inviting applications we will announce the maximum possible points
assigned to each criterion.
Proposed Selection Criteria for CMO Grants and Developer Grants:
(a) Quality of the Community Impact Analysis. The Secretary
considers the quality of the community impact analysis for the proposed
project. In determining the quality of the community impact analysis,
the Secretary considers one or more of the following factors:
(1) The extent to which the community impact analysis demonstrates
that the proposed charter school will address the needs of all students
and families in the community, including underserved students; will
ensure equitable access to diverse learning opportunities; and will not
otherwise increase racial or socio-economic segregation or isolation in
the schools from which the students are, or would be, drawn to attend
the charter school.
(2) The extent to which the community impact analysis demonstrates
that the proposed charter school has considered and mitigated, whenever
possible, potential barriers to application, enrollment, and retention
of students and families from diverse backgrounds.
(3) The extent to which the proposed charter school is supported by
families and the community, including the extent to which parents and
other members of the community were engaged in determining the need and
vision for the school and will continue to be engaged on an ongoing
basis in school decision-making, including the academic, financial,
organizational, and operational performance of the charter school.
(b) Quality of the Charter School's Management Plan. The Secretary
[[Page 14208]]
considers the quality of the management plan for the proposed project.
In determining the quality of the management plan, the Secretary
considers one or more of the following factors:
(1) The adequacy of the applicant's plan to maintain control over
all CSP grant funds.
(2) The adequacy of the applicant's plan to make all programmatic
decisions.
(3) The adequacy of the applicant's plan to administer or supervise
the administration of the grant and maintain significant management or
oversight responsibilities over the grant.
Proposed Selection Criterion for SE Grants:
(a) Quality of the Project Design. The Secretary considers the
quality of the project design for the proposed project. In determining
the quality of the project design for the proposed project, the
Secretary considers the quality of the SE's process for awarding
subgrants, including--
(1) The extent to which the number of subgrant awards anticipated
for each grant project year is supported by evidence of demand and
need; and
(2) The extent to which the proposed average subgrant award amount
is supported by evidence of the need of applicants.
Final Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and Selection
Criteria:
We will announce the final priorities, requirements, definitions,
and selection criteria in a document in the Federal Register. We will
determine the final priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria after considering responses to this document and
other information available to the Department. This document does not
preclude us from proposing additional priorities, requirements,
definitions, or selection criteria, subject to meeting applicable
rulemaking requirements.
Note: This document does not solicit applications. In any year
in which we choose to use one or more of these proposed priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection criteria, we invite
applications through a notice in the Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Under Executive Order 12866, it must be determined whether this
regulatory action is ``significant'' and, therefore, subject to the
requirements of the Executive order and subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866
defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an action likely to
result in a rule that may--
(1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more,
or adversely affect a sector of the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State, local or
Tribal governments or communities in a material way (also referred to
as an ``economically significant'' rule);
(2) Create serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an
action taken or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary impacts of entitlement grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles stated in the
Executive order.
This proposed regulatory action is not a significant regulatory
action subject to review by OMB under section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866.
We have also reviewed this proposed regulatory action under
Executive Order 13563, which supplements and explicitly reaffirms the
principles, structures, and definitions governing regulatory review
established in Executive Order 12866. To the extent permitted by law,
Executive Order 13563 requires that an agency--
(1) Propose or adopt regulations only upon a reasoned determination
that their benefits justify their costs (recognizing that some benefits
and costs are difficult to quantify);
(2) Tailor its regulations to impose the least burden on society,
consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives and taking into
account--among other things and to the extent practicable--the costs of
cumulative regulations;
(3) In choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, select
those approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other
advantages; distributive impacts; and equity);
(4) To the extent feasible, specify performance objectives, rather
than the behavior or manner of compliance a regulated entity must
adopt; and
(5) Identify and assess available alternatives to direct
regulation, including economic incentives--such as user fees or
marketable permits--to encourage the desired behavior, or provide
information that enables the public to make choices.
Executive Order 13563 also requires an agency ``to use the best
available techniques to quantify anticipated present and future
benefits and costs as accurately as possible.'' The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB has emphasized that these
techniques may include ``identifying changing future compliance costs
that might result from technological innovation or anticipated
behavioral changes.''
We are issuing these proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria only on a reasoned determination
that their benefits would justify their costs. In choosing among
alternative regulatory approaches, we selected those approaches that
would maximize net benefits. Based on the analysis that follows, the
Department believes that this regulatory action is consistent with the
principles in Executive Order 13563.
We also have determined that this regulatory action would not
unduly interfere with State, local, and Tribal governments in the
exercise of their governmental functions.
In accordance with both Executive orders, the Department has
assessed the potential costs and benefits, both quantitative and
qualitative, of this regulatory action. The potential costs are those
resulting from statutory requirements and those we have determined as
necessary for administering the Department's programs and activities.
We believe that the benefits of this regulatory action outweigh any
associated costs, which we believe would generally be minimal. While
this action would impose cost-bearing application requirements on
participating SE Grant, Developer Grant, and CMO Grant applicants and
on SE subgrant applicants, we expect that applicants would include
requests for funds to cover such costs in their proposed project
budgets. We believe this regulatory action would strengthen
accountability for the use of Federal funds by helping to ensure that
CSP grants and subgrants are awarded to the entities that are most
capable of expanding the number of high-quality charter schools
available to our Nation's students.
We estimate costs associated with information collection
requirements in the Paperwork Reduction Act section of this document.
Paperwork Reduction Act
As part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department provides the general public and Federal agencies
with an opportunity to comment on proposed and continuing collections
of information in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This helps ensure that: the public
understands the Department's collection instructions,
[[Page 14209]]
respondents can provide the requested data in the desired format,
reporting burden (time and financial resources) is minimized,
collection instruments are clearly understood, and the Department can
properly assess the impact of collection requirements on respondents.
The proposed application requirements and selection criteria
relating to a community impact analysis, management contracts, and
management plans contain information collection requirements. The
Department is requesting paperwork clearance on the OMB 1810-NEW data
collection associated with these proposed application requirements and
selection criteria. That request will account for all burden hours and
costs discussed within this section. Under the PRA, the Department has
submitted these requirements to OMB for its review.
A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor a collection of
information unless OMB approves the collection under the PRA and the
corresponding information collection instrument displays a currently
valid OMB control number. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
no person is required to comply with, or is subject to penalty for
failure to comply with, a collection of information if the collection
instrument does not display a currently valid OMB control number.
In the notice of final priorities, requirements, definitions, and
selection criteria we will display the control numbers assigned by OMB
to any information collection requirements proposed in this NPP and
adopted in the notice of final priorities, requirements, definitions,
and selection criteria.
For the years that the Department holds SE Grant, CMO Grant, and
Developer Grant competitions and that SEs hold subgrant competitions,
we estimate that 365 applicants will apply and submit an application.
We estimate that it will take each applicant 60 hours to complete and
submit the application, including time for reviewing instructions,
searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. The
total burden hour estimate for this collection is 21,900 hours. At
$97.28 per hour (using mean wages for Education and Childcare
Administrators \13\ and assuming the total cost of labor, including
benefits and overhead, is equal to 200 percent of the mean wage rate),
the total estimated cost for 365 applicants to complete a SE grant
application, CMO grant application, Developer grant application, or SE
subgrant application is approximately $2,130,432.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with 5 CFR 1320.8(d), the Department is soliciting
comments on the information collection through this document. Between
30 and 60 days after publication of this document in the Federal
Register, OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collections
of information contained in these proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria. Therefore, to ensure that OMB
gives your comments full consideration, it is important that OMB
receives your comments on these Information Collection Requests by
April 13, 2022. Comments related to the information collection
requirements for these proposed priorities, requirements, definitions,
and selection criteria must be submitted electronically through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov by selecting the
Docket ID number ED-2022-OESE-0006 or via postal mail, commercial
delivery, or hand delivery by referencing the docket ID number and the
title of the information collection request at the top of your comment.
Comments submitted by postal mail or delivery should be addressed to
the PRA Coordinator of the Strategic Collections and Clearance
Governance and Strategy Division, U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Ave. SW, LBJ, Room 6W208D, Washington, DC 20202-8240.
Note: The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs in OMB and
the Department review all comments related to the information
collections requirements posted at www.regulations.gov.
Collection of Information
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Total Estimated cost
Information collection activity number of Hours per estimated at an hourly
responses response burden hours rate of $97.28
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application................................. 365 60 21,900 $2,130,432
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We consider your comments on these proposed collections of
information in--
Deciding whether the proposed collections are necessary
for the proper performance of our functions, including whether the
information will have practical use;
Evaluating the accuracy of our estimate of the burden of
the proposed collections, including the validity of our methodology and
assumptions;
Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
information we collect; and
Minimizing the burden on those who must respond. This
includes exploring the use of appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological collection techniques.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification:
The Secretary certifies that this proposed regulatory action would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The U.S. Small Business Administration Size Standards define
proprietary institutions as small businesses if they are independently
owned and operated, are not dominant in their field of operation, and
have total annual revenue below $7,000,000. Nonprofit institutions are
defined as small entities if they are independently owned and operated
and not dominant in their field of operation. Public institutions are
defined as small organizations if they are operated by a government
overseeing a population below 50,000.
The small entities that this proposed regulatory action would
affect are charter schools, including charter schools that operate as
LEAs under State law; and public or private nonprofit organizations. We
believe that the costs imposed on an applicant by the proposed
priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection criteria would be
limited to paperwork burden related to preparing an application and
that the benefits of these proposed priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria would outweigh any costs incurred
by the applicant.
Participation in the CSP is voluntary. For this reason, the
proposed priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection criteria
would impose no burden on small entities unless they applied for
funding under the program. We expect
[[Page 14210]]
that in determining whether to apply for CSP funds, an eligible entity
would evaluate the requirements of preparing an application and any
associated costs and weigh them against the benefits likely to be
achieved by receiving CSP grant. An eligible entity will probably apply
only if it determines that the likely benefits exceed the costs of
preparing an application.
The proposed priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria would impose some additional burden on a small entity applying
for a grant relative to the burden the entity would face in the absence
of the proposed action.
This proposed regulatory action would not have a significant
economic impact on a small entity once it receives a grant because it
would be able to meet the costs of compliance using the funds provided
under this program. We invite comments from small entities as to
whether they believe this proposed regulatory action would have a
significant economic impact on them and, if so, request evidence to
support that belief.
Intergovernmental Review: This program is subject to Executive
Order 12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR part 79. One of the
objectives of the Executive order is to foster an intergovernmental
partnership and a strengthened federalism. The Executive order relies
on processes developed by State and local governments for coordination
and review of proposed Federal financial assistance.
This document provides early notification of our specific plans and
actions for this program.
Accessible Format: On request to the program contact person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT, individuals with disabilities
can obtain this document in an accessible format. The Department will
provide the requestor with an accessible format that may include Rich
Text Format (RTF) or text format (txt), a thumb drive, an MP3 file,
braille, large print, audiotape, or compact disc, or another accessible
format.
Electronic Access to This Document: The official version of this
document is the document published in the Federal Register. You may
access the official edition of the Federal Register and the Code of
Federal Regulations at www.govinfo.gov. At this site you can view this
document, as well as all other documents of this Department published
in the Federal Register, in text or Portable Document Format (PDF). To
use PDF you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free at
the site.
You may also access documents of the Department published in the
Federal Register by using the article search feature at
www.federalregister.gov. Specifically, through the advanced search
feature at this site, you can limit your search to documents published
by the Department.
Ruth E. Ryder,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and Programs, Office of
Elementary and Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2022-05463 Filed 3-11-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000-01-P