Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(1) Definitions for
the purpose of this rule:
(a) "Elementary
School Student" means, notwithstanding any other OAR or statute, pupils
attending a school offering only an elementary curriculum, any combination of
grades K through 8;
(b) "Secondary
School Student" means, notwithstanding any other OAR or statute, pupils
attending a school offering any secondary curriculum for grades 9, 10, 11, or
12. Additionally, all students attending a school designated by the local
school board through board action as a junior high school or middle school may
be considered secondary students;
(c) "Local School Board" means,
notwithstanding any other OAR or statute, the local school board for the
district in which the student's legal residence is physically located. Local
school boards are not required to provide transportation for students who have
requested and received approval to attend a school other than that designated
by the local school board for students living in their specified attendance
area;
(d) "Manufacturer's Rated
Capacity" means the number of students to be used in the calculations specified
in paragraph (5)(n)(B) of this rule and described below:
(A) Buses transporting only elementary
students will have a passenger capacity as stated on the manufacturer's
identification plate;
(B) Buses
transporting only high school students, grades 9 through 12 will have a
passenger capacity based on two students for each 39 inch bus seat;
(C) Buses transporting mixed groups from
grades K-12 (in any combination) or groups of only junior high or middle school
students will have a passenger capacity based on 2.5 students for each 39-inch
bus seat.
"EXAMPLE: A bus with a manufacturer's passenger capacity stated
on the identification plate of 72 would have the following ratings: elementary
- 72, high school only - 48, mixed groups - 60, middle school and junior high
school - 60."
(e) "Mile(s) from School" means the distance
a student lives from school, measured from the closest, reasonable, and prudent
point between the school property identified by the local board for that
pupil's attendance and the property where the pupil lives. The distance will be
measured over the shortest practicable route on maintained public roadways or
over existing pedestrian facilities or pedestrian facilities capable of meeting
the requirements listed in ORS
332.405(4);
(f) "Patron" means any individual,
organization, or entity that is able to use student transportation services
except for charter schools (as defined in ORS 338) or a public agency
(described in ORS 339.133(4), ORS
327.527, ORS
327.540 or ORS
327.390) if the school or agency
reimburses school districts up to one hundred percent (100%) of incurred
transportation costs pursuant to ORS
338.145,
339.133(4), ORS
327.527, ORS
327.540 or
327.390.
(g) "Supplemental Plan" means a plan adopted
by local school board resolution identifying groups or categories of students
who live within the 1 and 1.5 mile limitations and require transportation based
on health or safety reasons, including special education. Supplemental plan
approvals may be ordered by the State Board of Education or its designated
representatives. The State Board shall have the right of final review of any
actions regarding supplemental plans. Appeals will be directed to the State
Board for final consideration. The Plan must include the following:
(A) The approximate number of students to be
transported based on the plan;
(B)
The health or safety reasons cited for providing transportation;
(C) The local board resolution specifying the
supplemental plan as submitted; and
(D) Any additional information or
documentation supporting the supplemental plan deemed appropriate
locally.
(h)
"Alternative Transportation," and "Active Transportation costs" have the
definitions given in ORS
327.033.
(i) "Suitable and sufficient" means
transportation that is appropriate for a particular student or group of
students based on:
(A) The age of the
student;
(B) The physical or mental
capabilities of the student;
(C)
The distance the student is to be transported; and
(D) The safety of the student to be
transported.
(2) Approved transportation costs shall
include those costs incurred in transporting pupils to and from instructional
programs during the regularly scheduled school term within the limitations
specified by ORS 327.006 and
327.033. Approved transportation
costs may include costs incurred in transporting students participating in
extended school year programs eligible for funding from the State School
Fund.
(3) Approved transportation
costs shall include those district expenditures associated with:
(a) Home-to-school transportation of
elementary school pupils who live at least one mile from school;
(b) Home-to-school transportation of
secondary school pupils who live at least one and one-half miles from
school;
(c) Transportation of
pupils between educational facilities either within or across district
boundaries, if the facilities are used as part of the regularly-scheduled
instructional program approved by the Board;
(d) Transportation of pupils for in-state
field trips when such represents an extension of classroom activities for
instructional purposes, and shall include out-of-state destinations within 100
miles of the Oregon border;
(e)
Transportation of pupils home to school for whom a supplemental plan has been
approved by the State Board of Education in addressing safety, health, and
special education needs;
(f)
Transportation of preschool children in Early Childhood Special Education
Services having an Individual Family Service Plan requiring transportation and
preschool children receiving Early Intervention Services under the authority of
ORS 343.533.
(g) School to home transportation following
extended school day instructional programs for:
(A) Elementary school pupils who live at
least one mile from school;
(B)
Secondary school pupils who live at least one and one-half miles from
school.
(h) For the
2020-21 school year, maintaining an adequate level of pupil transportation
services while school districts are administering Comprehensive Distance
Learning in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
(4) Approved Alternative Transportation
costs:
(a) Include those district expenditures
associated with:
(A) The facilitation of
Active Transportation for human-powered forms of travel, including walking or
bicycling, between home and school for students who live less than three miles
from school. These costs may include:
(i) A
pedestrian or bicycle group;
(ii) A
crossing guard; or
(iii) Staff time
required for coordinating active transportation options.
(B) The facilitation of Public Transportation
between home and school for secondary school students. This may include staff
time required for coordinating public transportation options.
(b) Require that new positions or
extra duty opportunities created as a result of the implementation of
Alternative Transportation will be direct employees of the school
district.
(c) Do not include costs
for transportation that is subcontracted by a school district to a private
transportation provider.
(5) Approved transportation costs shall
exclude those district expenditures associated with transportation for the
following unless the school program is required under provisions of the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, ORS
343.533 or
339.010 through
339.090 and
339.250:
(a) Pupils living within the limits
prescribed in ORS 327.006(2) for
whom no supplemental plan has been approved by the State Board;
(b) Activity trips other than for
instructional purposes;
(c)
Athletic trips;
(d) School lunch
purposes;
(e) Summer
school;
(f) Adult
education;
(g) Evening
school;
(h) Preschool and/or
nursery school;
(i) Board and room
in lieu of transportation associated with field trips;
(j) Transportation facility and staff costs
other than those directly related to approved pupil transportation
activities.
(6) The
computation shall be made as follows:
(a)
Pupil Transportation Salaries;
(b)
Pupil Transportation Supplies, Equipment, Repairs, and Maintenance;
(c) All contracted Transportation;
(d) Travel of Pupil Transportation
Personnel;
(e) Employee Benefits on
Pupil Transportation Salaries;
(f)
Pupil Transportation Insurance;
(g)
Payments in Lieu of Transportation;
(h) Other Expenses of Pupil
Transportation;
(i) Payments to
Other Districts for Pupil Transportation;
(j) Leases and Rentals;
(k) Depreciation:
(A) Depreciation of Garage, but this shall
not include land;
(B) Depreciation
of Buses that are used at least 50% for reimbursable mileage.
(C) Shall include the costs to the district
to retrofit, repower, or to replace as defined in ORS
468A.795, school buses for the
purpose of reducing or eliminating diesel engine emissions. These costs:
(i) Shall not include the costs paid with
moneys received from the state by a school district from the Clean Diesel
Engine Fund that are described in 468A.801 (2)(a); and
(ii) Shall include costs to paid with moneys
received from the state as allowed by the Environmental Mitigation Trust
Agreement as defined in ORS
468A.801
(2)(c).
(l) Total of subsections (5)(a) through (k)
of this rule;
(m) Deduct (if cost
is included in detail above):
(A) Payments
Received from Other Districts and from Patrons for reimbursable
transportation;
(B)
Non-reimbursable Transportation Costs:
(i) For
2021 - 22:
(I) Number of miles at $2.86 Per
mile for all school buses and school activity vehicles having a manufacturers
designed passenger capacity of greater than 20 persons including the driver,
or
(II) Number of miles at $1.43
per mile for all school buses and school activity vehicles having a
manufacturers' designed passenger capacity of 20 or less including the
driver.
(ii) For 2022 -
23:
(I) Number of miles at $2.96 Per mile for
all school buses and school activity vehicles having a manufacturers designed
passenger capacity of greater than 20 persons including the driver,
or
(II) Number of miles at $1.49
per mile for all school buses and school activity vehicles having a
manufacturers' designed passenger capacity of 20 or less including the
driver.
(iii) For 2023 -
24:
(I) Number of miles at $3.18 per mile for
all school buses and school activity vehicles having a manufacturers' designed
passenger capacity of greater than 20 persons including the driver,
or
(II) Number of miles at $1.60
per mile for all school buses and school activity vehicles having a
manufacturers' designed passenger capacity of 20 or less including the
driver.
(iv) For 2024 -
25:
(I) Number of miles at $3.29 per mile for
all school buses and school activity vehicles having a manufacturers' designed
passenger capacity of greater than 20 persons including the driver,
or
(II) Number of miles at $1.65
per mile for all school buses and school activity vehicles having a
manufacturers' designed passenger capacity of 20 or less including the
driver.
(v)
(I) Those local school board certified
marginal costs attributable to services provided to students who are not
eligible for home-to-school transportation under section 3, calculated and
documented as follows: Documentation maintained by local district shall
include: bus and route identification, school(s) being served, number of
eligible students on board, number of ineligible students on board;
(II) Calculation of marginal costs shall be
as follows: District Cost Per Mile of bus operation divided by the total number
of students transported on each bus to derive an average cost per student. The
cost per student multiplied by the number of ineligible students and the number
of miles transported provides the amount for deduction. Example: Cost per
student = district cost per bus mile - number of students on bus; Total
Deduction = cost per student x ineligible students x number of miles
transported.
(III) No deduction
will be made for transportation inside prescribed limits if the local board
certifies student demographics would require student bus rides to or from
school of more than one hour if the bus is routed in a manner making it
accessible to the number of eligible students living outside the prescribed
mileage limit equal to 130 percent of the bus manufacturer's rated capacity;
or
(IV) The local school board
certifies that buses are routed in a manner to serve at least the number of
eligible students living outside the prescribed mileage limits equal to 130
percent of the bus manufacturer's rated passenger capacity; and
(V) In either of the aforementioned
situations, no additional costs have been incurred by the district for the
identified service.
(C) State and Federal Receipts for
Transportation, except those apportioned under ORS
327.006 or third party Medicaid
payments for transportation, if used to support expenditures in subsections
(5)(a) through (l) of this rule;
(D) Rental or Lease Payments from Private
Contractors;
(E) The percentage of
transportation facility depreciation commensurate with the percentage of the
total district fleet value based upon purchase price (see subsection (6)(k) of
this rule) represented by non-pupil transportation equipment. Examples of
nonpupil transportation equipment would include the following: lawnmowers,
tractors, backhoes, trucks, pickups, cars, trailers, snow blowers,
etc.
(n) Total
Deductions ((5)(m)(A)+(m)(B)+(m)(C)+(m)(D)+ (m)(E));
(o) Approved Cost ((5)(l) minus
(5)(n)).
(7) In the
above computation, the following definitions apply:
(a) Pupil Transportation Salaries. Salaries
and wages paid school bus drivers, assistants to driver, and that portion of
salaries paid mechanics and other bus maintenance employees, supervisors of
transportation, secretarial and clerical assistants, and persons assigned
transportation oversight and coordination responsibilities attributable to the
transportation program and documented through position descriptions and payroll
records. No school district General Administration salaries may be included in
this area;
(b) Pupil Transportation
Supplies, Equipment, Repairs, and Maintenance. Costs of fuel, oil, lubricants,
tires, tire repair, batteries, vehicle diagnosis and repair equipment
identified as capital expenditures in the "Program Budget Manual," vehicle
repair parts and supplies, repair of vehicles by other than the school
district, garage maintenance and operation, and garage equipment repair and
maintenance;
(c) All Contracted
Transportation. Payments to parents and independent public or private
contractors for transporting pupils from home to school, between educational
facilities and for non-reimbursable activities enumerated in paragraph
(6)(l)(B) of this rule; and fares to public carriers for transporting pupils
from home to school and between educational facilities:
(A) If a district retains ownership of buses
and garages and contracts for the operation of the transportation system with
provision in the contract for lease or rental of the buses and garages, the
contracted transportation cost shown should reflect the gross bid including the
lease or rental payment. The lease or rental payment shall be deducted in the
computation as reported in paragraph (5)(n)(D) of this rule;
(B) If the district retains ownership of
buses and garages and participates in a transportation cooperative or
consortium through an intergovernmental agreement, depreciation apportionment
provided under ORS 327.033 will be disbursed
directly to the district. No depreciation component is approved for
cooperative-owned buses or garages.
(d) Travel of Pupil Transportation Personnel.
Meals, lodging, mileage, per diem and other travel expenses of pupil
transportation personnel, and private car mileage if paid to bus drivers for
travel to and from the point where school bus is parked if other than the
central garage. The same travel expenses plus tuition or registration are
included for attendance at Department of Education sponsored or presented pupil
transportation training programs and seminars;
(e) Employee Benefits on Pupil Transportation
Salaries. The district's contributions for employee benefits including social
security and retirement, employee health insurance, workers' compensation, and
unemployment insurance;
(f) Pupil
Transportation Insurance. Payments for public liability and property damage,
medical care, collision, fire and theft, and insurance on garages and
shops;
(g) Payments in Lieu of
Transportation. Payments for pupils' board and room in lieu of transportation,
consistent with ORS 332.405(2);
(h) Other Expenses of Pupil Transportation.
District-paid fees for school bus drivers' physical examinations; interest on
bus or garage contracts payable including lease-purchase agreements if
capitalized (see subsection (6)(k) of this rule);
(i) Payments to Other In-State or
Out-of-State Districts for Transportation. Payments to other districts for
approved pupil transportation costs;
(j) Leases and Rentals. Rental or lease
payments for the use of land or buildings used for approved pupil
transportation. Rental or lease payments for buses operated by district
personnel for approved pupil transportation.
"NOTE: Only those leases which do not contain an option to
purchase or application of rentals to purchase should be included in subsection
(5)(j) of this rule. See subsection (6)(k) of this rule as to the proper
treatment of other lease-purchase agreements."
(k) Depreciation. For purposes of computing
depreciation, capitalized cost is defined to include the unit cost of the
asset, exclusive of interest, for such assets purchased outright, by
conventional contract, or by lease-purchase agreement if such agreement
contains any provision to acquire ownership at the end of the agreement by
application of a portion of the rentals paid or a terminal payment. The
computation of the capitalized cost and the depreciation shall be according to
the following:
(A) Portions of Garages and
Other Buildings Used for Approved Pupil Transportation:
(i) Outright purchase (including purchase by
conventional contract). For each outright purchase or purchase by conventional
contract, each district shall report to the Oregon Department of Education, on
the forms provided, the unit cost of the garage or other building purchased and
the dollar amount of interest payments associated with such purchase. The
purchase of land shall not be included in the Garage Depreciation. The
capitalized value shall represent the unit cost, exclusive of interest.
Depreciation shall be computed at an annual rate of four percent;
(ii) Lease-purchase agreements. For each
lease-purchase agreement, the district shall report to the Oregon Department of
Education, on the forms provided, the dollar amount of the agreement, the
interest payments contained in the agreement, and the schedule of such interest
payments contained in the agreement. Land shall not be included in the lease
purchase agreement for the purpose of reimbursement. Subsequent to July 1,
1975, the capitalized value shall represent the lease-purchase price less any
interest payments contained in the agreement. Depreciation shall be computed at
an annual rate of four percent.
(B) Buses and Other Vehicles Used for
Approved Pupil Transportation:
(i) Outright
purchase (including purchase by conventional contract). For each outright
purchase or purchase by conventional contract, each district shall report to
the Oregon Department of Education, on the forms provided, the unit cost of the
vehicle(s) purchased and the dollar amount of interest payments associated with
such purchase. The capitalized value shall represent the unit cost, exclusive
of interest. Depreciation shall be computed at an annual rate of ten
percent;
(ii) Lease-purchase
agreements. For each lease-purchase agreement, the district shall report to the
Oregon Department of Education, on the forms provided, the dollar amount of the
agreement, any applicable trade-in value, the dollar amounts of interest
payments contained in the agreement, and the schedule of such interest payments
contained in the agreement. The capitalized value of the vehicles shall
represent the lease-purchase price including the trade-in allowance less
interest payments contained in the agreement. Depreciation shall be computed at
an annual rate of ten percent;
(iii) Lease agreements. If the district is
leasing its buses under a lease agreement, the district shall report the annual
lease cost. A lease agreement as used in this paragraph means an agreement
whereby the lessor retains title to the buses being leased to the lessee school
district and the title to the buses is never received by the lessee. Under such
a lease agreement, the use of the buses by the lessee is limited by the term of
the lease. If there is an auxiliary agreement either written or oral whereby at
the end of the lease term, the title of the buses shall pass to the lessee
school district, the agreement is not a lease agreement as described in this
paragraph but is a lease-purchase agreement as outlined in subparagraph (ii) of
this paragraph. The lease payment made by a school district obtaining the use
of buses pursuant to a lease as defined in this paragraph shall be used in the
computation of the reimbursement in place of the depreciation set forth in
subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of this paragraph.
(C) Deductions:
(i) Payments Received from Other Districts
and from Patrons. Money received from other school districts, parents,
guardians, or students for transportation if paid in support of expenditures
listed in subsections (5)(a) through (l) of this rule;
(ii) Nonreimbursable Transportation Costs.
Actual bus mileage of excludable trips shall include the actual mileage in
district owned or contracted buses for transportation for activity trips,
athletic trips, school lunch purposes, summer school, adult education, evening
school, nursery school, and any other nonreimbursable purposes. Such mileage
shall be deducted at the rate indicated in subsection (5)(m)(B) of this rule.
The rate of deduction may be reviewed periodically by the State Board of
Education and adjusted accordingly;
(iii) State and Federal Receipts for
Transportation. All state and federal receipts for transportation expenditures,
exclusive of funds apportioned under ORS
327.006 and
327.033, that have been included
in subsection (5)(a) through (l) of this rule;
(iv) Rental or Lease Payments from Private
Contractors. Payments received from private contractors for the use of district
owned buses and garages in the operation of the pupil transportation system by
the private contractor. This item must be shown as Revenue Code 1930 in the
school district audit and the gross payments to the contractor must be included
in subsection (5)(c) of this rule.
(8) Each district shall maintain a record, by
purpose, of total pupil transportation miles and shall submit a report of such
to the Oregon Department of Education on the form provided. The accuracy of
such records shall be certified by the district clerk.
(9) If an education service district offers a
special service under the provisions of section (4) of ORS
334.175, including
home-to-school transportation that would qualify for reimbursement under the
provisions of ORS 327.006 if provided by a local
school district, the following procedure in crediting the transportation
expenditure to the local district may be employed:
(a) The education service district shall
compute approved home-to-school transportation costs as provided in section (4)
of this rule;
(b) The approved
costs so determined shall be billed to and paid by each of the local school
districts. The expenditure shall be accounted for by the local district as a
transportation expenditure paid to another education agency;
(c) The audited district expenditure shall be
recognized by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction in computing the
local district's entitlement under ORS
327.006;
(d) If the education service district
reimburses the local district the difference between that portion billed and
that paid under ORS 327.006, such reimbursement - if
derived from property tax sources by education service district resolution -
shall not be deducted by the state in determining the local district's approved
costs. The local district shall account for the education service district
reimbursement as other general receipts are accounted for from the education
service district.
(10)
For purposes of computing board and room entitlement for a district operating a
dormitory under provisions of ORS
327.006, the state assumes
responsibility for its proportionate share of costs associated with the
provision of food, facilities, staff, operation, and maintenance necessary to
provide students with safe and healthy living conditions. The state does not
assume responsibility for costs associated with recreation or entertainment of
students. The approved cost against which the computation is made for state
liability shall not exceed the limit stated in ORS
332.405. In addition, the state
will assume its proportionate share of the cost of field trips as defined in
subsection (3)(c) of this rule.
(11) The computation of approved expenditures
for board and room entitlement shall be made as follows:
(a) Salaries;
(b) Operation:
(A) Utilities;
(B) Supplies;
(C) Other Operational Costs.
(c) Maintenance:
(A) Upkeep;
(B) Replacement.
(d) Fixed Charges:
(A) Employee Benefits;
(B) Other Fixed Charges.
(e) Food;
(f) Operation of Buses and Other Vehicles -
Supplies, Repairs and Maintenance;
(g) Depreciation:
(A) Dormitory;
(B) Buses and Other Vehicles.
(h) Total Expenditures (Sum of
subsections (10)(a) through (g) of this rule));
(i) Deductions (subtract if cost is included
in cost above):
(A) Payments Received from
Other Districts and from Patrons;
(B) Nonreimbursable Transportation Costs as
indicated in subsection (5)(m)(B) of this rule;
(C) State and Federal Receipts for
Transportation, except those apportioned under ORS
327.006,
327.033, or third party Medicaid
payments, if used to support expenditures in subsections (10)(a) through (g) of
this rule;
(D) Federal School
Lunch, Breakfast, and Milk Reimbursements;
(E) Sales of Food.
(j) Total Deductions (sum (10)(i)(A) + (i)(B)
+ (i)(C) + (i)(D) + (i)(E));
(k)
Approved Cost ((10)(h) minus (10)(j) of this rule).
(12) The items included in the board and room
entitlement computation are defined as follows:
(a) Salaries. Salaries and wages paid
dormitory personnel, including the dormitory manager, cooks, custodians, and
other personnel directly concerned with operation of the dormitory, and that
portion of salaries paid secretarial and clerical assistants and other
personnel attributable to the dormitory program;
(b) Operation:
(A) Utilities. Heat for buildings, water and
sewage, electricity, telephone, and other utilities necessary for the operation
of the dormitory;
(B) Supplies.
Custodial supplies, supplies for care of grounds, linens, and other supplies
necessary for the operation of the dormitory including food services. Purchase
of food is included in subsection (11)(e) of this rule;
(C) Other Operational Costs. Contracted
custodial services, window washing, laundry or linen services, etc., necessary
for the operation of the dormitory.
(c) Maintenance:
(A) Upkeep. Expenditures associated with
maintaining the existing dormitory facilities in a safe, healthy, and efficient
condition, including supplies and materials for upkeep of dormitory grounds and
the dormitory building. Costs associated with maintenance of recreational or
entertainment facilities are excluded;
(B) Replacement of Equipment. Expenditures
associated with replacing equipment necessary to the safe, healthy, and
efficient operation of the dormitory. Replacement of equipment used for
recreational or entertainment purposes are excluded.
(d) Fixed Charges:
(A) Employee Benefits. Expenditures for
dormitory employees' benefits including social security and retirement,
employee health insurance, workers' compensation, and unemployment
insurance;
(B) Other Fixed Charges.
Expenditures for property insurance, liability insurance, rental of land and
buildings for purposes associated with operation of the dormitory, and other
fixed charges directly attributable to operation of the dormitory.
(e) Food. Expenditures for food
necessary for the operation of the dormitory;
(f) Operation of Buses and Other Vehicles -
Supplies, Repairs, and Maintenance. Expenditures for fuel, oil, lubricants,
tires, tire repair, batteries, vehicle repair parts and supplies, repair of
vehicles by other than the school district, garage maintenance and operation,
and garage equipment repair and maintenance necessary for the operation of
buses utilized for purposes stated in section (3) of this rule and of other
vehicles necessary for the operation of the dormitory;
(g) Depreciation:
(A) Dormitory. For purposes of computing
dormitory depreciation, capitalized cost is defined as the unit cost of the
asset (including the cost of original equipment), exclusive of interest, plus
the cost of substantial improvements or remodeling. The purchase of land shall
not be included. Costs associated with providing recreational or entertainment
facilities are not included. Depreciation shall be computed at an annual rate
of four percent;
(B) Buses and
Other Vehicles. Depreciation for buses used for approved pupil transportation
and that portion of other vehicles necessary for operation of the dormitory
shall be computed in accordance with the formula and definition stated in
paragraph (6)(k)(B) of this rule.
(h) Total. Sum of subsections (10)(a) through
(g) of this rule;
(i) Deductions:
(A) Payments Received from Other Districts
and from Patrons. Money received from other school districts, parents,
guardians, or students for transportation or room and board if paid in support
of expenditures listed in subsections (10)(a) through (f) of this
rule;
(B) Nonreimbursable
Transportation Costs. Costs for nonreimbursable transportation according to the
formula and definition stated in paragraph (6)(l)(B) of this rule;
(C) State and Federal Receipts for
Transportation. All state and federal receipts for transportation or room and
board expenditures exclusive of funds apportioned under ORS
327.006 that have been included
in subsections (10)(a) through (f) of this rule;
(D) Federal School Lunch, Breakfast, and Milk
Reimbursements. All federal receipts for school lunch, breakfast, and milk
expenditures that have been included in subsections (10)(a) through (f) of this
rule;
(E) Sales of Food. Money
received from teachers, students, or other individuals from food sales for
which the expenditures are included in subsections (10)(a) through (f) of this
rule.
(13)
Beginning with the 2024-25 school year, school districts may request a waiver
and/or supplemental plan to include Alternative Transportation as a
reimbursable expense under their Transportation Grant. In order to include
Alternative Transportation costs as a reimbursable expense, school districts
must:
(a) Submit a proposed or revised
supplemental plan and/or waiver for their district that includes explanations
of the alternative transportation methods to be used.
(b) Demonstrate that the inclusion of
Alternative Transportation will result in Transportation Grant expenses that
are equal to or less than planned expenses without Alternative Transportation,
or demonstrate that costs exceeding this amount will be paid from a source
other than the transportation grant from the State School Fund.
(c) Document the local community engagement
that was conducted to develop the plan for Alternative
Transportation.
(d) For Alternative
Transportation plans that include Public Transportation, districts must
demonstrate that:
(A) No other transportation
options, including Active Transportation options, are suitable and
sufficient;
(B) They have made a
good faith effort to recruit, hire, train, retain and pay transportation
positions at competitive wages consistent with collective bargaining agreements
and were unable to hire a sufficient workforce to ensure reliable service by a
school bus and timely transport of students to and from school.
(e) School districts shall
resubmit their supplemental plans and/or waivers for the inclusion of
Alternative Transportation to be reauthorized by the State Board of Education
every two years.
(f)
Notwithstanding subsections (13)(a-e) of this section, a school district that,
prior to the effective date of July 1, 2024, had been receiving reimbursement
for costs incurred in providing transit passes under a supplemental plan or a
waiver shall continue to receive reimbursement under the terms and conditions
the school district was receiving reimbursement prior to the effective date of
July 1, 2024 unless the State Board of Education and the school district agree
otherwise.
(14) Approved
Alternative Transportation costs shall include costs identified in or aligned
with the plan presented in their request for a waiver and/or supplemental plan
that has been approved by the State Board of Education.
(a) The Department may reimburse estimated
Alternative Transportation costs during the school year the costs are incurred
based on estimates provided by the school district, and then reconcile to
actual costs the following school year.
(b) The Department shall not reimburse
Alternative Transportation costs that exceed 5% of the school district's total
Transportation Grant for the concurrent school year.
(15) Such items of expenditure as may be
questionable in applying the policy stated in this administrative rule shall be
resolved by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction and such
determination shall be final.
(16)
Apportionment of the State School Fund for 2001-02 and subsequent
years.
Publications: Publications referenced are available from the
agency.
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS
327.013 & ORS
820.100 -
820.120
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS
327.013 & ORS
820.100 -
820.120