GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2003
H D
HOUSE DRH70394-LYz-161* (4/14)
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Short Title: School Calendar Changes. |
(Public) |
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Sponsors: |
Representatives C. Wilson, Culpepper, Miner, Hill (Primary Sponsors); LaRoque, Church, Daughtridge, Decker, and Jones. |
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Referred to: |
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A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT to reduce the number of noninstructional teacher workdays; to provide that public schools shall open after August 25 and close not after June 10, except in unusual circumstances or in year‑round schools; to ensure that teachers may be paid in august if they so desire; and to provide that salaries not decrease as a result of the reduction in teacher workdays.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. G.S. 115C‑84.2 reads as rewritten:
"§ 115C‑84.2. School calendar.
(a) School Calendar. – Each local board of education
shall adopt a school calendar consisting of 220 210 days
all of which shall fall within the fiscal year. A school calendar shall include
the following:
(1) A minimum of 180 days and 1,000 hours of instruction covering at least nine calendar months. The local board shall designate when the 180 instructional days shall occur. The number of instructional hours in an instructional day may vary according to local board policy and does not have to be uniform among the schools in the administrative unit. Local boards may approve school improvement plans that include days with varying amounts of instructional time. If school is closed early due to inclement weather, the day and the scheduled amount of instructional hours may count towards the required minimum to the extent allowed by State Board policy. The school calendar shall include a plan for making up days and instructional hours missed when schools are not opened due to inclement weather.
(1a) (Applies only to 2002‑2003 school year – See editor's note.) Notwithstanding subdivision (1) of this subsection, a local board may decide to make up a maximum of three instructional days by adding instructional hours to previously scheduled instructional days. A local board shall make this decision only if all of the following criteria are met:
a. The days to be made up were missed when schools were unable to be opened due to unusual and extraordinary inclement weather conditions.
b. It would cause undue hardship to parents, children, and teachers to make up those days.
c. The school calendar continues to have a minimum of 1,000 instructional hours covering at least nine months.
d. The additional hours must equal the regularly scheduled number of instructional hours at each school.
If a local board adds instructional hours to previously scheduled days under this subdivision, the local school administrative unit is deemed to have a minimum of 180 days of instruction, teachers employed for a 10‑month term are deemed to have been employed for the days being made up, and all other employees shall be compensated as if they had worked the days being made up.
(2) A minimum of 10 annual vacation leave days.
(3) The same or an equivalent number of legal holidays occurring within the school calendar as those designated by the State Personnel Commission for State employees.
(4) Eight Five days, as
designated by the local board, for use as teacher workdays, additional
instructional days, or other lawful purposes. A local board may delegate to
the individual schools some or all of the eight days to schedule under
subdivision (5) of this subsection. A local board may schedule different
purposes for different personnel on any given day and is not required to
schedule the same dates for all personnel.workdays. These days
shall be protected to allow teachers to complete instructional and classroom
administrative duties. The local school administrative unit shall not impose any
additional tasks on these days. The local board shall
schedule one of these days at the
beginning of the school year and one at the end of each academic quarter.
(5) The remaining days scheduled by each school's principal for any of the purposes allowed under subdivision (4) of this subsection. Before scheduling these days, the principal shall work with the school improvement team to determine the days to be scheduled and the purposes for which they should be scheduled. Days may be scheduled and planned for different purposes for different personnel and there is no requirement to schedule the same dates for all personnel. However, if during the last two years the local school administrative unit has made up an average of at least eight days for school closing because of inclement weather, the local board may designate up to two of these days as additional make‑up days to be scheduled after the last day of student attendance.
Local boards and individual schools are encouraged to use the calendar flexibility in order to meet the annual performance standards set by the State Board. Local boards of education shall consult with parents and the employed public school personnel in the development of the school calendar.
Local boards and individual schools shall give teachers at least 14 calendar days' notice before requiring a teacher to work instead of taking vacation leave on days scheduled in accordance with subdivision (4) or (5) of this subsection. A teacher may elect to waive this notice requirement for one or more such days.
(b) Limitations. – The following limitations apply when developing the school calendar:
(1) The total number of teacher workdays for teachers
employed for a 10 month term shall not exceed 200 190 days.
(2) The calendar shall include at least 42 consecutive days when teacher attendance is not required unless: (i) the school is a year‑round school; or (ii) the teacher is employed for a term in excess of 10 months. At the request of the local board of education or of the principal of a school, a teacher may elect to work on one of the 42 days when teacher attendance is not required in lieu of another scheduled workday.
(3) School shall not be held on Sundays.
(4) Veterans Day shall be a holiday for all public school personnel and for all students enrolled in the public schools.
(c) Emergency Conditions. – During any period of emergency in any section of the State where emergency conditions make it necessary, the State Board of Education may order general, and if necessary, extended recesses or adjournment of the public schools.
(d) Opening and Closing Dates. – Local boards of
education shall determine the dates of opening and closing the public schools
under subdivision (a)(1) of this section. Except for year‑round
schools, the opening date for students shall not be before August 25 and the
closing date for students shall not be after June 10. The State Board
of Education may waive this requirement on a showing of good cause. A
local board may revise the scheduled closing date if necessary in order to
comply with the minimum requirements for instructional days or instructional
time. Different
opening and closing dates may be fixed for schools in the same administrative
unit. For purposes of this subsection, the term 'good cause' means that
schools in the local school administrative unit have been closed an average of
eight days per year during any five of the last 10 years because of severe weather
conditions, energy shortages, power failures, or other emergency situations."
SECTION 2. G.S. 115C‑302.1(b) reads as rewritten:
"(b) Salary Payments. – State‑allotted teachers shall be paid for a term of 10 months. State‑allotted months of employment for vocational education to local boards shall be used for the employment of teachers of vocational and technical education for a term of employment to be determined by the local boards of education. However, local boards shall not reduce the term of employment for any vocational agriculture teacher personnel position that was 12 calendar months for the 1982‑83 school year for any school year thereafter.
Each local board of education shall establish a set date on
which monthly salary payments to State‑allotted teachers shall be made.
This set pay date may differ from the end of the month of service. The daily
rate of pay for teachers shall equal one twenty‑second one twenty‑first of
the monthly rate of pay. If requested by the teacher,
the initial pay date for a teacher who is not employed in a year‑round school
shall be no later than August 31 and shall include a full monthly payment.
Subsequent pay dates shall be spaced no more than one month
apart and shall include a full monthly payment.
Teachers may be prepaid on the monthly pay date for days not yet worked. A teacher who fails to attend scheduled workdays or who has not worked the number of days for which the teacher has been paid and who resigns, is dismissed, or whose contract is not renewed shall repay to the local board any salary payments received for days not yet worked. A teacher who has been prepaid and continues to be employed by a local board but fails to attend scheduled workdays may be subject to dismissal under G.S. 115C‑325 or other appropriate discipline.
Any individual teacher who is not employed in a year‑round
school may be paid in 12 monthly installments if the teacher so requests on or
before the first day of the school year. The request shall be filed in the
local school administrative unit which that employs the
teacher. The payment of the annual salary in 12 installments instead of 10
shall not increase or decrease the teacher's annual salary nor in any other way
alter the contract made between the teacher and the local school administrative
unit. Teachers employed for a period of less than 10 months shall not receive
their salaries in 12 installments."
SECTION 3. G.S. 115C‑316(a)(2) reads as rewritten:
"(2) School Employees Paid on an Hourly or Other
Basis. – Salary payments to employees other than those covered in
G.S. 115C‑272(b)(1), 115C‑285(a)(1) and (2), 115C‑302.1(b)
and 115C‑316(a)(1) shall be made at a time determined by each local board
of education. If requested by the school employee, the
initial pay date for one of these employees who is employed for a term of 10
calendar months and is not employed in a year‑round school
shall be no later than August 31 and shall include a full monthly payment.
Subsequent pay dates shall be spaced no more than one month apart and shall
include a full monthly payment. Expenditures for
the salary of these employees from State funds shall be within allocations made
by the State Board of Education and in accordance with rules and regulations
approved by the State Board of Education concerning allocations of State funds:
Provided, that school funds. School employees employed for a
term of 10 calendar months in year‑round schools shall be paid in 12
equal installments:
Provided further, that any installments. Any individual
school employee employed for a term of 10 calendar months who is not employed
in a year‑round school may be paid in 12 monthly installments if the
employee so requests on or before the first day of the school year. Such This request
shall be filed in the local school administrative unit which that employs
the employee. The payment of the annual salary in 12 installments instead of 10
shall not increase or decrease said the annual salary
nor in any other way alter the contract between the employee and the said local school
administrative unit. Employees may be prepaid on the set pay date
for days not yet worked. An employee who fails to attend scheduled workdays or
who has not worked the number of days for which the employee has been paid and
who resigns or is dismissed shall repay to the local board any salary payments
received for days not yet worked. An employee who has been prepaid and who
continues to be employed by a local board but fails to attend scheduled
workdays may be subject to dismissal or other appropriate discipline. The daily
rate of pay shall equal the number of weekdays in the pay period. Included
within the term of employment shall be provided for full‑time employees
annual vacation leave at the same rate provided for State employees, computed
at one‑twelfth (1/12) of the annual rate for State employees for each
calendar month of employment, to be taken under policies determined by each
local board of education. On a day that employees are required to report for a
workday but pupils are not required to attend school due to inclement weather,
an employee may elect not to report due to hazardous travel conditions and to
take one of his that employee's annual
vacation days or to make up the day at a time agreed upon by the employee and his the
employee's immediate supervisor or principal. On a day that school
is closed to employees and pupils due to inclement weather, the employee shall
work on the scheduled makeup day. Included within their term of employment,
each local board of education shall designate the same or an equivalent number
of legal holidays occurring within the period of employment as those designated
by the State Personnel Commission for State employees."
SECTION 4. For school‑based employees who are employed during the 2005‑2006 school year in the same position in which they were employed during the 2004‑2005 school year and who continue to work the same number of hours in a workday, the annual rate of pay beginning with the 2005‑2006 school year shall not be reduced as the result of this act.
SECTION 5. This act becomes effective July 1, 2004, and applies to school years beginning with the 2005‑2006 school year.