87th egislative Special Session Weekly Update | Friday, September 10, 2021
Welcome to Across the Lawn. The second special session of the 87th Texas Legislature adjourned Sine Die last week. Check out our one thing to do and five things to know.
Raise Your Hand Texas has a front-row seat to the 87th Legislature (we can see the Capitol across the south lawn). From our vantage point, public education policy issues have never been more important and is why we must make every session a public education session.
Take time to celebrate a teacher. October 5, 2021 is World Teachers’ Day.
Visit TeachersCan.org/WorldTeachersDay for more information and post your thanks and story to #WorldTeachersDay and #RYHT.
The second called special legislative session ended Thursday, September 2. The public education policy conversations centered on funding for remote learning, civics instruction, mask protocols for schools, one-time supplemental checks for retired teachers, transgender athletes in University Interscholastic League (UIL) events, instruction related to child abuse and family and dating violence, and school district property tax relief. Below is a brief summary of what passed, what didn’t, and what’s to come.
Governor Abbott issued a proclamation announcing a third called special session starting on Monday, September 20, 2021. The proclamation identifies five agenda items:
There are now several options for schools to provide remote instruction.
SB 3 (87th-2) by Sen. Hughes revises requirements for civics and social studies curriculum and instruction passed under HB 3979 (87th-R) by Rep. Toth during the regular session. HB 3979 included specific topics and requirements for the State Board of Education to include when it makes revisions to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for the social studies curriculum. SB 3 removed many of the specific historical figures and documents added by the House during the regular session. There was language added prior to the passage of SB 3; however, stating the SBOE may not use the removal of the historical figures or documents from SB 3 as a reason for removal or noninclusion from the TEKS and relisting all of the historical figures and documents that were removed.
Another provision of SB 3 creates a civics training program for teachers and administrators developed by the Texas Education Agency with advice from a nine-member advisory board of former educators. At least one teacher or principal from each campus must attend this training program to ensure civics education is taught in a manner consistent with the bill’s requirements.
SB 7 (87th-2) by Sen. Jane Huffman provides a 13th check to retired teachers up to $2,400. Retirees can expect their supplemental payments by January 2022. The state cost for this one-time check is $700 million. Retired teachers last received a supplemental payment in 2019, but prior to that, it had been over a decade since any additional benefit or adjustment in benefits were made.
Several bills of interest did not pass the second called special session, but similar legislation will likely appear during the third called special session in a few weeks. These bills include policies on mask protocols (prohibiting mask mandates or allowing schools local discretion), tweaks to the accelerated instruction requirements passed during the regular session, transgender athletes in UIL competition, and additional one-time property tax relief at an estimated cost of $4 billion.
HB 141 by Rep. Leach relating to prohibiting face-covering mandates for public school students.
HB 164 by Rep. Dutton relating to a policy requiring the use of face coverings in public schools.
HB 233 by Rep. Huberty relating to providing accelerated instruction for public school students who fail to achieve satisfactory performance on certain assessment instruments.
SB 2 by Sen. Perry relating to requiring public school students to compete in interscholastic athletic competitions based on biological sex.
SB 91 by Sen. Bettencourt relating to a temporary reduction in the maximum compressed tax rate of a school district and the form of the ballot proposition to be used in an election to approve a tax rate adopted by a school district.
Subscribe to the Intersect Ed podcast.
3 simple ways to get the scoop, get engaged, and get connected.
Subscribe to our e-newsletter for Texas education news, stories, policy insights, and ways to make a difference.
We only use this information to send emails relevant to you and will never share this information with third parties.