HBA-LJP H.B. 1998 77(R)    BILL ANALYSIS


Office of House Bill AnalysisH.B. 1998
By: Delisi
Higher Education
3/5/2001
Introduced



BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

Under current law, to be eligible for a Teach for Texas grant, a student
must be receiving a Toward Excellence, Access, and Success (TEXAS) grant.
Because TEXAS grants are based on financial need, the Teach for Texas grant
may not be as effective as it could be in alleviating Texas' teacher
shortage. House Bill 1998 restructures the Teach for Texas grant program
and separates it from the TEXAS grant program. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that rulemaking
authority is expressly delegated to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating
Board in SECTION 6 of this bill. 

ANALYSIS

House Bill 1998 amends the Education Code to require the Texas Higher
Education Coordinating Board (THECB) to implement modifications to the
Teach for Texas tuition grant program (program) as soon as practicable
after the effective date of this bill, but not later than the 2002-2003
academic year (SECTION 6). 

The bill repeals certain provisions relating to the requirements of a
person to be eligible for a Teach for Texas grant (grant), including the
requirement that the person be a recipient of a Toward Excellence, Access,
and Success (TEXAS) grant.  The bill provides that to be eligible for a
grant a person must: 

_be seeking an educator certification;

_be enrolled as a junior or senior in a baccalaureate degree program or be
enrolled in the first semester of the educator certification program after
receiving a baccalaureate degree; and 

_agree to teach full time for one year for each semester or summer term for
which the person receives the grant. 

The bill requires THECB, when awarding grants, to give priority to a person
seeking certification in a teaching field or agreeing to teach in a
community that is certified by the commissioner of education as
experiencing a shortage of teachers.  After awarding the grants based on
teacher shortages, the bill provides that THECB give priority in awarding
grants to persons demonstrating financial need to the extent that money for
grants is available.  The bill provides that if the money available for
grants is insufficient to provide grants to all teacher shortage priority
applicants, the bill requires THECB to award grants to those applicants
according to financial need.  The bill also sets forth provisions to
calculate the amount of a grant for a semester or term and provides that a
person is prohibited from receiving a grant for more than three academic
years or the equivalent (Secs. 56.353 and 56.354). 

The bill provides that a person who receives one or more grants must begin
to fulfill the teaching obligation  not later than the 18th month after the
completion of the educator certification program for which the person
received the grants.  The bill also provides that if a person who receives
a grant fails to remain enrolled in or to make steady progress in the
educator certification program without good cause or fails to become
certified as a teacher not later than the 18th month after the completion
of the educator certification program, then the grant automatically becomes
a loan (Secs. 56.356 and 56.357). 

The bill requires THECB to establish and implement the Teach for Texas
alternative educator certification program (alternative program) to award
stipends to assist persons seeking an educator certification and to adopt
initial rules for awarding the stipends as soon as practicable (Sec. 56.357
and SECTION 6).  The bill sets forth provisions relating to the eligibility
requirements and considerations in selecting applicants for the alternative
program.  The bill provides that the amount of a stipend under the
alternative program is an amount set by THECB that is not to exceed $5,000
or a different amount set by legislative appropriation. The bill sets forth
provisions relating to a promissory note for a stipend, the repayment of a
stipend of a person who fails to fulfill the teaching obligation, and under
what conditions a stipend automatically becomes a loan.  The bill also sets
forth provisions relating to the alternative program's time period of the
teaching obligation and the cancellation of the teaching obligation (Sec.
56.357). 

If THECB allocates grants or money available for those grants to a
particular eligible institution in a fiscal or academic year, then the bill
requires THECB to make grants or money not awarded to such eligible
institution available in the same fiscal or academic period to eligible
applicants at other eligible institutions (Sec. 56.358). 

EFFECTIVE DATE

On passage, or if the Act does not receive the necessary vote, the Act
takes effect September 1, 2001.