Education Bills Scheduled for Week of May 9, 2016

The following is the legislative schedule for the week of May 9, 2016. Fewer bills are still in play, but they’re big ones. Please contact your legislators about these critical bills. Brief, polite calls and emails are effective; mention if you are a constituent. All contact information is at the end of this post.

 

WEDNESDAY, May 11, 2016: HOUSE SESSION, Rep Hall at 10:00am
full NH House will vote on the following bill

SB 483-FN, (New Title) establishing a committee to study the necessity of creating a chartered public school program officer position and to study appropriations to chartered public schools for the 2016 and 2017 fiscal years.
committee recommendation — Ought to Pass with Amendment, 14-6 (#1362h)
position — OPPOSE the bill, NAY on OTP/A
information — This bill creates a new position of “charter public school program officer” which incrementally grows state government. Once such positions are establishes they are exceedingly difficult to eliminate. Creation of this position further centralizes state control over charter schools and ensures more involvement of the state board of education in operations of charter schools. The state should be seeking to decentralize the existing charter school system providing for local control instead of furthering a model of state run government schools. (Source: NH Liberty Alliance)

 

THURSDAY, May 12, 2016: SENATE SESSION, Senate Chamber at 10:00am
full NH Senate will vote on the following bills

HB 504, relative to online driver education
committee recommendation — Inexpedient to Legislate, 3-1
position — SUPPORT the bill, NAY on ITL
information — This bill will increase market competition which lowers costs, improves quality, and expands access. Education, including drivers ed, is not one-size-fits-all and this bill recognizes that people have different learning needs. Online education is a proven successful method of instruction, including for drivers ed; it is used by 22 states across the country. NH currently offers a high school diploma (through VLACS), as well as hunter and boater ed through online programs. Read Senate Fails Online Drivers Ed for more information.

***HB 1637-FN, relative to school attendance in towns with no public schools.
committee recommendation — Interim Study, 5-0
position — SUPPORT amendment  #1343s, YEA on Reconsideration
information — The senate might reconsider this bill because of the disastrous floor amendment they adopted last week; it would effectively be a “do over.” The floor amendment, #1763s, that the senate passed, would harm private schools involved in contracts with public schools or choice programs. It would require them to adopt Common Core standards and administer the aligned statewide assessments. This bill as passed by the House clarifies in statute that small towns without their own public schools may offer alternative arrangements for their students, regardless of grade level. These agreements could be made with area public and private schools. This is consistent with RSA 194:22 and RSA 193:1. It is also in line with other NH districts creating tuition agreements with private schools, even some located out of state. However, the House version places the language in a part of statute that refers to the responsibilities of parents, not school boards. At the Senate public hearing, an amendment, #1343s from Sen. Avard and Rep. Hill, was discussed that would address this problem. The committee gave an Interim Study recommendation which is effectively a “soft kill.” The Avard-Hill amendment is the only acceptable version; everything else is problematic, but Interim Study would keep a bad version from advancing. Depending on the outcome in the senate, we need to be prepared for the next step. If the two legislative bodies pass different versions of the bill, HB 1637 will head back to the House. The House Education Committee must make a recommendation whether or not to concur with the Senate version or request a Committee of Conference to reconcile them. It could go badly for our efforts to support Croydon and school choice — too much would depend on how those negotiations go and who is named to the committee. In this scenario, our best and most assured option is to kill the bill and not concur with the senate version. Contact the House Education Committee and your state representatives before May 11th. Urge them to reject the Senate’s version of HB 1637 with a non-concur decision and kill the bill. For additional information, read Disaster in the Senate, School Choice for Small Towns Hits Snag in Senate and Saving School Choice.

 

CONTACT LEGISLATORS

To find your Representatives, go to “Who’s My Legislator?” Brief and polite phone calls and emails are effective, especially if you mention you are a constituent. Mass emails are far less effective, but the email for all Reps is hreps@leg.state.nh.us.

To contact the entire House Education Committee, you may send one email to HouseEducationCommittee@leg.state.nh.us. The General Court website is experiencing several technical difficulties (the committee’s email is not always working), so consider contact the Representatives directly. Particularly mention if you are a constituent. Emails for each member of the House Education Committee are as follows:

ladd.nhhouse@charter.net
john.balcom@leg.state.nh.us
beshaw3@comcast.net
ralph.boehm@leg.state.nh.us
bob.elliott@leg.state.nh.us
josh.moore@leg.state.nh.us
terry.wolf@leg.state.nh.us
junemf@comcast.net
deanna1214@aol.com
glenn.cordelli@leg.state.nh.us
cradams13@charter.net
Jason@Osborne4NH.com
Mary.Gile@leg.state.nh.us
Andrew.Schmidt@leg.state.nh.us
Mary.Heath@leg.state.nh.us
jimgreniersullivan7@gmail.com
Allen.cook@leg.state.nh.us
patchessul@comcast.net
mqgorman@comcast.net
Mel.Myler@leg.state.nh.us
james.verschueren@leg.state.nh.us

To find your NH senator, and his or her contact information, refer to the senate’s roster page, or you can email all of them at senators@leg.state.nh.us.

Jeff Woodburn — District 1, Dalton
Jeff.Woodburn@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3207

Jeanie Forrester — District 2, Meredith
jeanie.forrester@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-4980

Jeb Bradley — District 3, Wolfeboro
jeb.bradley@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-2106

David Watters — District 4, Dover
david.watters@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-8631

David Pierce — District 5, Lebanon
david.pierce@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3067

Sam Cataldo — District 6, Farmington
sam.cataldo@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-4063

Andrew Hosmer — District 7, Laconia
andrew.hosmer@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-8631

Gerald Little — District 8, Weare
Jerry.Little@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-4151

Andy Sanborn — District 9, Bedford
andy.sanborn@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-2609

Molly Kelly — District 10, Keene
molly.kelly@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3207

Gary Daniels — District 11, Milford
Gary.Daniels@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-2609

Kevin Avard — District 12, Nashua
Kevin.Avard@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-4151

Bette Lasky — District 13, Nashua
bette.lasky@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3091

Sharon Carson — District 14, Londonderry
sharon.carson@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-1403

Dan Feltes — District 15, Concord
Dan.Feltes@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3067

David Boutin — District 16, Hooksett/Manchester
dboutin1465@comcast.net
(603)271-3092

John Reagan  — District 17, Deerfield
john.reagan111@gmail.com
(603)271-4063

Donna Soucy — District 18, Manchester
donna.soucy@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3207

Regina Birdsell — District 19, Hampstead/Windham/Derry
Regina.Birdsell@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-4151

Lou D’Allesandro — District 20, Manchester
dalas@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-2117

Martha Fuller Clark — District 21, Portsmouth
martha.fullerclark@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3076

Chuck Morse —  District 22, Salem
chuck.morse@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-8472

Russell Prescott — District 23, Kingston
represcott@represcott.com
(603)271-3074

Nancy Stiles — District 24, Hampton
nancy.stiles@leg.state.nh.us
(603)271-3093

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Michelle Levell, director of GSHE