Ìýis scheduled to go before Georgia’s Senate Education and Youth Committee on Tuesday, March 21. Shelly Echols, District 49, is carrying the bill in the Senate after it passed the Georgia House 145 to 17.Ìý
HB 318Ìýis aÌýcrucialÌýcharterÌýschool bill championed by the Georgia Charter Schools Association and key state lawmakers. The billÌýis sponsored by Rep. Scott Hilton, District 48, and addresses four important issues continually flagged by charter schools: Letters of Assurance, administrative withhold fees, localÌýcharterÌýschool funding, andÌýcharterÌýschool oversight.
- Shifts the state’s existing Office of Charter School Compliance from the Georgia Department of Education to the State Charter Schools Commission.
- Requires charter school authorizers to itemize and value the services provided to each local charter school in exchange for any administrative fees withheld from the school.Ìý
- Clarifies the allowable usage of Letters of Assurance.Ìý
- Ensures that local school boards fund charter schools based on actual student enrollment rather than projected enrollment provided that the school has not exceeded the school-wide enrollment cap outlined in its charter contract.
In addition to HB 318, the Georgia House has recommended a total of $9.2 million for Georgia’s Charter School Facility Grant Fund in FY24. That’s a significant increase from last year and would give every eligible charter school in Georgia $100,000 if approved by the Senate! The House’s recommendation comes as a result of the Georgia Charter Schools Association’s advocacy efforts at the Georgia Capitol. Last year, 91³Ô¹Ï successfully fought for an additional $3 million in facilities funding and brought the grant fund up to $7.5 million — which provided all eligible charter schools an annual grant award of approximately $75,000 to offset significant facility costs. You can read 91³Ô¹Ï’s complete list of 2023 legislative prioritiesÌýhere.