Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a)
Definitions. The following words and terms, when used in this section, have the
following meaning, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Average daily attendance--The definition
of this term is assigned in the Texas Education Code (TEC),
§48.005.
(2) Construction
project--A project consisting of the construction of a new free-standing
building or the construction of a new addition to an existing
building.
(3) Renovation project--A
project consisting of the renovation of space that is not currently used as a
science laboratory within an existing building that does not include the
addition of any new space.
(4) High
school campus--A campus that houses Grades 9-12. For purposes of this grant
program, a school district that has a separate Grade 9 campus and a separate
Grades 10-12 campus, or some similar division, must combine the campuses on the
application and submit as one campus. For purposes of this grant program, a
school district that has a campus that serves Grades 6-12, Kindergarten-Grade
12, or some similar range, must identify only the number of students enrolled
in Grades 9-12 on the application.
(5) Science laboratories--Rooms identified as
combination science laboratories/classrooms or identified as laboratories under
the applicable school facilities standards adopted under this subchapter. To
provide clarity in the exercise of the grant program governed by this section,
rooms identified as laboratories under the applicable school facilities
standards adopted under this subchapter are referred to as "stand-alone
laboratories" within this section and within the grant application.
(6) Enrollment--The actual high school campus
enrollment for the school year before the year in which a school district
submits an application for the science laboratory grant program.
(7) Support areas--For a construction
project, support areas are limited to prep rooms, storage areas, and corridor
access space. For a renovation project, support areas are limited to prep rooms
and storage areas.
(8) School
district--For the purposes of this section, the definition of a school district
includes an open-enrollment charter school.
(b) Application process. A school district
must complete an application to request funding under the science laboratory
grant program. The application must contain at a minimum the following:
(1) a description of each individual high
school campus for which funds are being requested;
(2) the enrollment on each high school
campus;
(3) the number of existing
science laboratories on each high school campus;
(4) a certification that the existing school
district science laboratories are insufficient in number to comply with the
curriculum requirements imposed for the recommended and advanced high school
programs under the TEC, §
28.025(b-1)(1);
(5) the number of science laboratories to be
constructed or renovated; and
(6) a
timeline for each construction or renovation project proposed by the high
school campus.
(c)
Prioritization and notice of award. Upon close of the application cycle, all
eligible applications will be ranked in order of the school district's property
wealth per student in average daily attendance. For purposes of ranking within
this grant program, a charter school's property wealth is defined as being
equal to the property wealth of the school district from which the highest
percentage of the charter school's students are drawn. Grants will be awarded
beginning with the school district with the lowest property wealth and continue
until all available funds have been used. The commissioner of education will
award the full amount of the grant to which a school district is entitled under
this section, except that the commissioner may award less than the full amount
to the last school district for which any funds are available. By posting on
the Texas Education Agency (TEA) website, the commissioner will notify each
school district of the amount of grant awarded and its position in the rank
order for the application cycle.
(d) Data sources.
(1) For purposes of determining
prioritization, the projected average daily attendance as adopted by the
legislature for appropriations purposes will be used.
(2) For purposes of prioritization, the final
property values certified by the comptroller of public accounts for the tax
year preceding the year in which assistance is to begin will be used. If final
property values are unavailable, the most recent projection of property values
will be used.
(3) For purposes of
prioritization, the commissioner may consider, before the deadline for receipt
of applications for that fiscal year, adjustments to data values determined to
be erroneous.
(e)
Payments, determination of need, and eligible projects.
(1) Payment of the grant will be made as soon
as practicable after June 1 of each year. No payments will be made until all
initial submissions required by the application have been received and approved
by the TEA division responsible for state funding.
(2) For a construction project, the grant
amount is limited to not more than $200 per square foot of the science
laboratory to be constructed.
(A) For science
laboratories identified as combination science laboratories/classrooms, the
grant amount will be paid on the actual square footage plus reasonable support
areas identified on the application not to exceed 2,050 square feet for each
science laboratory/classroom.
(B)
For science laboratories identified as stand-alone laboratories, the grant
amount will be paid on the actual square footage plus reasonable support areas
identified on the application not to exceed 1,550 square feet for each
stand-alone science laboratory.
(3) For a renovation project, the grant
amount is limited to not more than $100 per square foot of the science
laboratory to be renovated.
(A) For science
laboratories identified as combination science laboratories/classrooms, the
grant amount will be paid on the actual square footage plus reasonable support
areas identified on the application not to exceed 1,640 square feet for each
science laboratory/classroom.
(B)
For science laboratories identified as stand-alone laboratories, the grant
amount will be paid on the actual square footage plus reasonable support areas
identified on the application not to exceed 1,240 square feet for each
stand-alone science laboratory.
(4) The maximum number of science
laboratories/classrooms eligible for funding for each campus under this grant
program is determined by subtracting the number of existing
laboratories/classrooms on the campus from the number of
laboratories/classrooms needed. The number of laboratories/classrooms needed on
a campus is calculated using the formula "E x LC" where:
(A) "E" is the campus enrollment;
(B) "LC" is the laboratories/classrooms
calculation factor, which is equal to 0.007353; and
(C) any resulting fractional number of
laboratories/classrooms needed is rounded up to the next whole
number.
(5) The maximum
number of science stand-alone laboratories eligible for funding for each campus
under this grant program is determined by subtracting the number of existing
stand-alone laboratories on the campus from the number of stand-alone
laboratories needed. The number of stand-alone laboratories needed on a campus
is calculated using the formula "E x SAL" where:
(A) "E" is the campus enrollment;
(B) "SAL" is the stand-alone laboratories
calculation factor, which is equal to 0.003676; and
(C) any resulting fractional number of
stand-alone laboratories needed is rounded up to the next whole
number.
(6) The following
additional limitations and requirements apply to the science laboratory grant
program.
(A) For a project to be eligible for
the grant program, a contract for construction or renovation cannot have been
entered into by a school district at the time of the application
deadline.
(B) Renovations to
existing science laboratories/classrooms or to existing science stand-alone
laboratories are not eligible for this grant program.
(C) Eligibility is limited to construction or
renovation projects at high school campuses.
(D) A school district that received funds
under this grant program for a campus in a prior application cycle is not
eligible to apply for additional funds under this grant program for that same
campus until three subsequent cycles have passed.
(E) All projects must comply with the
applicable school facilities standards adopted under this
subchapter.
(f)
Deadlines and accountability.
(1) The
commissioner will conduct an annual application cycle with a deadline of April
15 or the next business day after April 15 every year. A school district may
file an amendment to its initial application before the deadline; any amendment
received after the deadline will not be considered.
(2) When all funds within an application
cycle have been awarded, the remaining unfunded applications will carry forward
and be considered valid applications for the two application cycles immediately
following the initial application except for those applications withdrawn by
the submitting school districts before the end of the two following cycles. A
school district that subsequently proceeds with its construction or renovations
projects in the absence of grant funds will not have its application
invalidated. An application that remains unfunded after three application
cycles will expire and will not be eligible for consideration in future
cycles.
(3) If no excess funds are
available, the commissioner will not make awards, and all applications received
on or before the April 15 deadline will be considered valid applications for
the following cycle except for those applications withdrawn by the submitting
school districts before the end of the following application cycle. A school
district that subsequently proceeds with its construction or renovation
projects in the absence of grant funds will not have its application
invalidated.
(4) An application
received after the deadline will be considered a valid application for the
following cycle unless withdrawn by the submitting school district before the
end of the following application cycle.
(5) Within one year of award of grant, the
school district must submit evidence in a form acceptable to the commissioner
that a contract has been awarded for the construction or renovation projects
identified in the application. Within two years of award of grant, the school
district must submit evidence in a form acceptable to the commissioner that all
work has been completed for the construction or renovation projects identified
in the application, with a final accounting of the costs incurred by the school
district for the projects. Failure to provide satisfactory evidence by any of
the deadlines specified in this paragraph could be cause for the commissioner
to cancel the school district's grant and to recover the grant amount from
other scheduled Foundation School Program payments due to the school
district.
(g) Reports
required. The commissioner will require such information and reports as are
necessary to assure compliance with applicable laws.