SB 505, 
            					 as amended, Jackson. begin deleteThe California Technology Assistance Project.  end deletebegin insertEducation technology: K-12 High-Speed Network: California Technology Assistance Project.end insert
Existing law establishes the K-12 High-Speed Network for the purpose of enriching pupil educational experiences and improving pupil academic performance by providing high-speed, high-bandwidth Internet connectivity to the public schools. Existing law requires the Superintendent of Public Instruction to use a competitive grant process to select a local educational agency to serve as the Lead Education Agency to administer the network on behalf of the Superintendent. Existing law requires the Superintendent to establish a K-12 HSN advisory board. Existing law requires the advisory board, by March 1, 2007, to report to specified entities recommendations for measuring the success of the network, improving network oversight and monitoring, strengthening accountability, and optimizing the use of the network and its ability to improve education. Existing law specifies the duties of the Lead Education Agency with regard to the administration of the network.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would additionally provide for the achievement of the above-stated purpose of the network by providing statewide support services, as specified, to schools and school districts in the implementation of digital learning resources and technology tools as set forth in the policies of the State Board of Education. The bill would eliminate the use of the competitive grant process in selecting the Lead Education Agency. The bill would require the advisory board to report annually to specified entities its recommendations regarding the network. The bill would specify additional duties of the Lead Education Agency to include entering into contracts to provide identified needs that are more efficiently and effectively provided on a statewide basis and entering into contracts for regional consortia to meet the locally defined educational needs of school districts related to the use of technology. To the extent that this bill would impose additional duties on local educational agencies, the bill would create a state-mandated local program.
end insertExisting law creates the California Technology Assistance Project administered by the State Department of Education to provide a regionalized network of technical assistance to schools and school districts on the implementation of education technology. The California Technology Assistance Project is composed of regional consortia that work collaboratively with school districts and county offices of education to meet locally defined educational needs that can be effectively addressed with the use of technology. Existing law requires the State Board of Education to award grants to fund a school district or county office of education in each region of the California Technology Assistance Project to act as the lead agency to administer the services of that region, specifies duties of the department for this program, and authorizes school districts, county offices of education, and state special schools to participate in grant programs related to education technology. Under existing law, these provisions remain in effect only until January 1, 2014.
This bill would extend that date to January 1, 2017.
begin insertThe California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to these statutory provisions.
end insertVote: majority. 
					 Appropriation: no.
					 Fiscal committee: yes.
					 State-mandated local program: begin deleteno end deletebegin insertyesend insert.
					
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insertSection 11800 of the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert is amended 
2to read:end insert
(a) (1) The K-12 High-Speed Network (K-12 HSN) 
4is hereby established for the purpose of enriching pupil educational 
5experiences and improving pupil academic performance by 
6providing high-speed, high-bandwidth Internet connectivity to the 
7public school system, as defined by Section 6 of Article IX of the 
8California Constitutionbegin insert, and by providing statewide support 
9services to schools and school districts in the implementation of 
10digital learning resources and technology tools as set forth in the 
11policies of the state boardend insert.
12(2) The California Education Network is hereby established, 
13consisting of the California Research and Education
						Network 
14(CalREN) and the K-12 HSN.
15(b) The Superintendent shall measure the success of the K-12 
16HSN and ensure that the benefits of the K-12 HSN are maximized 
17to the extent possible. The K-12 HSN shall provide critical services 
18and functions for public primary and secondary local educational 
19agencies, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
20(1) Reliable and cost-effective Internet service.
21(2) Reliable and secure interconnectivity among public school 
22entities offering kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, 
23in California, connection to higher education institutions of 
24California, and connection to state and local agencies to facilitate 
25efficient interaction, including transmission of data.
26(3) Videoconferencing and related distance learning capabilities.
27(4) Statewide coordination ofbegin delete network uses toend deletebegin insert
						support services 
28thatend insert benefit teaching and learningbegin insert with the common core standards 
29and in support of the computer-adaptive assessment system adopted 
30by the state boardend insert.
31(c) The Superintendent shall use a competitive grant process to 
32select a local educational agency to serve as the Lead Education 
33Agency to administer the K-12 HSN on behalf of the 
34Superintendent.
35(c) Funding shall be provided in the annual Budget Act to the 
36K-12 HSN to provide centralized statewide educational technology 
37services that address
						regional and statewide needs and are more 
38efficiently and effectively provided or coordinated on a statewide 
P4    1basis to support the common core standards and computer-adaptive 
2assessments implemented by the state board. The statewide 
3educational technology services to be supported include, but are 
4not limited to, all of the following:
5(1) Review of electronic learning resources, including, but not 
6limited to, software, online resources, online courses, and video, 
7for alignment with the common core standards adopted by the 
8state board.
9(2) Professional development focused on digital school 
10leadership for educational administrators in the areas of 
11data-driven decisionmaking, computer-adaptive testing, digital 
12teaching and learning with the
						common core standards curriculum, 
13technology planning, professional development needs of staff, 
14financial planning for technology, and operations and 
15maintenance.
16(3) Access for schools for training, support, and other resources 
17for technical professionals in California.
18(4) Statewide coordination of a regional assistance program to 
19provide technical assistance to schools and school districts in the 
20implementation of digital learning resources and tools.
21(d) The Superintendent shallbegin delete establishend deletebegin insert
						maintainend insert a K-12 HSN 
22advisory board to be composed of all of the following members:
23(1) The Superintendent, or his or her designee.
24(2) The county superintendent of schools of the Lead Education 
25Agency.
26(3) A county superintendent of schools of a county with an 
27average daily attendance of more than 60,000 pupils, appointed 
28by the Superintendent. The member appointed pursuant to this 
29paragraph shall serve a renewable two-year term.
30(4) Three school district superintendents, appointed by the 
31Superintendent. Members appointed pursuant to this paragraph 
32shall represent school districts that are diverse as to geography and 
33size, and that serve socioeconomically and culturally diverse pupil 
34populations. Members appointed pursuant to
						this paragraph shall 
35serve renewable two-year terms.
36(5) Two county superintendents of schools appointed by the 
37majority of the votes of all of the county superintendents of schools. 
38Members appointed pursuant to this paragraph shall serve 
39renewable two-year terms.
P5    1(6) Three schoolsite representatives, which shall include not 
2less than two classroom teachers or instructional specialists.
3(7) The president of the state board or his or her designee.
4(e) The advisory board shall meet quarterly and shall recommend 
5policy direction and broad operational guidance to the 
6Superintendent and the Lead Education Agency. The advisory 
7board, in consultation with the Lead Education Agency, shall 
8develop recommendations for measuring the success of the 
9network,
						improving network oversight and monitoring, 
10strengthening accountability, and optimizing the use of the K-12 
11HSN and its ability to improve education. The advisory board shall 
12reportbegin insert annuallyend insert its recommendations to the Legislature, the 
13Governor, the Department of Finance, the president of the state 
14board or his or her designee, and the Legislative Analyst’s Office
15begin delete by March 1, 2007end delete. It is the intent of the Legislature that the report 
16identify and recommend specific annual performance measures 
17that should be established to assess the effectiveness of the 
18network.
19(f) The duties of the Lead Education Agency shall include all 
20of the following:
21(1) Entering into appropriate contracts for the
						provision of 
22high-speed, high-bandwidth Internet connectivity, provided such 
23contracts secure the necessary terms and conditions to adequately 
24protect the interests of the state. Terms and conditions shall include, 
25but are not limited to, all of the following:
26(A) Development of comprehensive service level agreements.
27(B) Protection of any ownership rights of intellectual property 
28of the state that result due to participation of the state in the K-12 
29HSN.
30(C) Appropriate protection of assets of the state acquired due 
31to its participation in the K-12 HSN.
32(D) Assurance that appropriate fee structures are in place.
33(E) Assurance that any interest earned on funds of the state for 
34this purpose
						are used solely to the benefit of the project.
35(2) Development of an annual budget request for the K-12 HSN 
36for submission to the department and the Department of Finance 
37to be included in the annual Budget Act.
38(3) Development, in consultation with the advisory board 
39established pursuant to subdivision (d), of specific goals and 
40objectives for the program with appropriate reporting of success 
P6    1measures developed by the Superintendent pursuant to subdivision 
2(b).
3(4) Ongoing fiscal oversight of the program, including 
4mechanisms to control statewide costs and exposure. To 
5accomplish this objective, the Lead Education Agency shall 
6contract for an annual independent audit of the program. The 
7independent auditor shall report the audit findings to the 
8Superintendent, the Legislature, and the Governor by December 
915 of each
						year.
10(5) Ongoing technical oversight of the program, including 
11external evaluation and independent validation, where appropriate. 
12To accomplish this objective, the Lead Education Agency shall 
13contract for an independent evaluation to be completed and 
14provided to the Superintendent by March 1, 2009. The 
15Superintendent shall report the results of the evaluation, including 
16a response and recommendations to correct any adverse findings 
17from the evaluation, to the Governor and the Legislature by April 
1830, 2009.
19(6)
end delete
20begin insert(5)end insertbegin insert end insert(A) The Lead Education Agency shall administer grant 
21programs to promote the most cost-effective manner for the 
22completion of connectivity for all public schools of the state and 
23cost-effective applications that meet instructional needs to the 
24extent that funds are provided for these purposes in the annual 
25Budget Act.
26(B) Before the appropriation of any state funds forbegin delete theend delete purposes 
27of this paragraph, the Lead Education Agency shall submit 
28information justifying the need for additional grant funds, 
29including, but not limited to, all of the following:
30(i) The number of schools and school districts that are already 
31connected.
32(ii) The means by which the costs associated with
						connectivity 
33were covered for schools and school districts that are already 
34connected.
35(iii) Obstacles to connection for those schools and school 
36districts that are not yet connected.
37(iv) Other local options and funding sources for purposes of 
38connectivity and applications.
39(6) Entering into appropriate contracts to provide identified 
40needs that are more efficiently and effectively provided on a 
P7    1statewide basis. The statewide education technology services to 
2be supported by this section shall include, but are not limited to, 
3all of the following:
4(A) Review of electronic learning resources, including, but not 
5limited to, software, online resources, online courses, and
						video, 
6for alignment with the common core standards adopted by the 
7state board.
8(B) Professional development focused on digital school 
9leadership for educational administrators in the areas of 
10data-driven decisionmaking, integrating technology into 
11standards-based curriculum, technology planning, professional 
12development needs of staff, financial planning for technology, and 
13operations and maintenance.
14(C) Access for schools for training, support, and other resources 
15for technical professionals in California.
16(7) Entering into appropriate contracts for regional consortia 
17to meet the locally defined educational needs of school districts 
18as they address common core standards curriculum and 
19computer-adaptive assessments that can be addressed
						effectively 
20with the use of technology, including, but not limited to, the 
21following areas:
22(A) Professional development.
end insertbegin insert23(B) Electronic learning resources.
end insertbegin insert24(C) Hardware.
end insertbegin insert25(D) Telecommunication infrastructure.
end insertbegin insert
26(E) Technical assistance to school districts in developing a 
27support system to operate and maintain an education technology
28
						infrastructure, including improving pupil recordkeeping and 
29tracking related to pupil instruction.
30(F) Coordination with, and support for, the funding and 
31implementation of federal, state, and local programs.
32(G) Funding.
end insertbegin insert
33(H) Technical assistance and information to support access, 
34planning, and the use of high-speed telecommunication networks.
35(I) Technology planning and implementation assistance to rural 
36and technologically underserved school districts and county offices 
37of
						education.
Section 51874 of the
				Education Code is amended to 
40read:
Sections 51871, 51872, 51873, this section, and the 
2heading of this article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 
32017, and as of that date are repealed, unless a later enacted statute, 
4that is enacted before January 1, 2017, deletes or extends that date.
If the Commission on State Mandates determines that 
6this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to 
7local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made 
8pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 
94 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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