Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 160-4-8-.16 - Unsafe School Choice Option (USCO)
(1)
DEFINITIONS.
(a)
Corrective action plan - a
written plan developed by a local school system and adopted by the local board
of education for a public school that is identified as a persistently dangerous
school for the purpose of remedying the causes that result in this school being
identified as persistently dangerous.
(b)
Jurisdiction of a public school -
events that are sponsored by a public school and that occur away from
the property of a public school over which the public school has direct control
or authority.
(c)
Official
action - an official tribunal held by the school system; a hearing
conducted by a disciplinary hearing officer of the school system (O.C.G.A. §
20-2-752 through §
20-2-758); through a waiver
process; through an action of the local board of education; or for non-felony
drug offenses that result in placement in a drug intervention
program.
(d)
Persistently
dangerous school - a public school in which for each of three
consecutive years on the property of the public school, or at an event within
the jurisdiction of a public school, or at a school sponsored event:
1. At least one student enrolled in that
school is found by official action to have committed an offense in violation of
a school rule that involved one or more of the following criminal offenses.
(i) Aggravated battery (O.C.G.A. §
16-5-24)
(ii) Aggravated child molestation (O.C.G.A. §
16-6-4)
(iii) Aggravated sexual battery (O.C.G.A. §
16-6-22.2)
(iv) Aggravated sodomy (O.C.G.A. §
16-6-2)
(v) Armed robbery (O.C.G.A. §
16-8-41)
(vi) Arson - first degree (O.C.G.A. §
16-7-60)
(vii) Kidnapping (O.C.G.A. §
16-5-40)
(viii) Murder (O.C.G.A. §
16-5-1)
(ix) Rape (O.C.G.A. §
16-6-1)
(x) Voluntary manslaughter (O.C.G.A. §
16-5-2)
or
2. Two percent or more of the
student population or ten students, whichever is greater, are found by official
action to have committed an offense in violation of a school rule that involved
one or more of the following offenses:
(i)
Non-felony drugs (O.C.G.A. §
16-13-2)
(ii) Felony drugs (O.C.G.A. §
16-13-30;
16-13-31;
16-13-32.4)
(iii) Felony weapons (O.C.G.A. §
16-11-127.1)
(iv) Terroristic threats (O.C.G.A. §
16-11-37)
or
3. Any combination of paragraphs
(1)(d)1 or (1)(d)2.
(e)
Property of a public school - Any building, land, school bus, or
other vehicular equipment owned or leased by the local school system.
(f)
Student population - the
unduplicated October full-time equivalent (FTE) count.
(g)
Unsafe School Choice Option (USCO)
- the process of allowing students who attend a persistently dangerous
public school or students who become victims of a violent criminal offense
while on the property of a public school in which they are enrolled to transfer
to a safe public school.
(h)
Victim - a person against whom a violent criminal offense has been
committed and whose perpetrator has been found by official action to be in
violation of a school rule related to the violent criminal offense.
(i)
Violent criminal offense -
for the purposes of this rule, the following felony
transgressions of law as defined in state statute, including aggravated battery
(O.C.G.A. §
16-5-24), aggravated child
molestation (O.C.G.A. §
16-6-4), aggravated sexual battery
(O.C.G.A. §
16-6-22.2), aggravated sodomy
(O.C.G.A. §
16-6-2), armed robbery (O.C.G.A. §
16-8-41), first degree arson
(O.C.G.A. §
16-7-60), felony weapons charge
(O.C.G.A. §
16-11-127.1), kidnapping (O.C.G.A.
§
16-5-40), murder (O.C.G.A. §
16-5-1), rape (O.C.G.A. §
16-6-1), voluntary manslaughter
(O.C.G.A. §
16-5-2), or terroristic threats
(O.C.G.A. §
16-11-37).
(2)
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Local school systems (LSSs) shall
annually report to the Georgia Department of Education on a date and in a
manner specified by the Department data regarding students found by official
action to be in violation of a school rule related to a criminal offense as
identified in paragraphs (1)(d)1 and (1)(d)2.
(b) The Georgia Department of Education shall
identify by July 1 of each year persistently dangerous public schools using the
criteria specified in paragraph (1)(d) and shall notify the LSS superintendent
of such identification.
(c) The LSS
shall within ten school days of notification by the Georgia Department of
Education notify the parents/guardians of students enrolled in a school that
has been classified as a persistently dangerous school. This parental
notification shall be written in English and any other language prevalent in
the student population of that school. This notification shall also specify the
process adopted by the local board of education to be used for the transfer of
a student to a safe public school, including a charter school, either within
the school system or to one located in another school system with which the
system has an agreement, upon the request of a parent/guardian or by a student
if the student has reached the age of 18. Following student transfer guidelines
consistent with the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) as currently
reauthorized, LSSs shall allow students to transfer to a school that is in
compliance with current state and/or federal accountability. Student transfers
to safe schools within the school system or to a safe school within another
school system with which the school system has an agreement shall be completed
within 30 school days of the request.
(d) Any student who is the victim of a
violent criminal offense that occurs on the property of a public school in
which the student is enrolled, while attending a school- sponsored event that
occurs on the property of a public school, or while attending an event under
the jurisdiction of a public school shall be permitted to attend a safe public
school, including a charter school. Each local board of education shall adopt a
policy that facilitates the transfer of students who are victims of violent
criminal offenses. This policy shall provide that the transfer shall occur
within ten school days of the commission of the violent criminal offense, and
to the extent possible, shall allow victims to transfer to a school that is in
compliance with current state and/or federal accountability
requirements.
(e) A local board of
education with one or more of its schools identified as persistently dangerous
is not required to cover the cost of transportation to a safe public school
beyond the levels identified by federal legislation.
(f) LSSs shall develop and local boards of
education shall adopt a corrective action plan for each school identified by
the Georgia Department of Education as a persistently dangerous school. The
corrective action plan shall be based on an analysis of the problems faced by
the school and address the issues that resulted in the school being identified
as persistently dangerous. The LSS shall submit to the Georgia Department of
Education for approval the corrective action plan. This plan shall be submitted
within 20 school days after the Georgia Department of Education notifies the
local school system that a school has been classified as a persistently
dangerous school.
1. Upon completion of its
planned corrective action, a LSS may apply to the Georgia Department of
Education to have the school removed from the list of persistently dangerous
schools. After ensuring that all corrective action has been completed, the
Georgia Department of Education shall reassess the school using the criteria
for persistently dangerous schools as specified in paragraph (1)(d) of this
rule.
Notes
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