(1) Existing law requires the principal of a school or the principal’s designee to notify the appropriate law enforcement authorities of the county or city in which the school is situated of any acts of a pupil to be suspended or expelled that may violate penal prohibitions against assault with a deadly weapon or force likely to produce great bodily injury. Existing law also requires the reporting of any acts of a suspended or expelled pupil that involve possessing, using, selling or otherwise furnishing, or being under the influence of a controlled substance, alcoholic beverage, or intoxicant; or offering, arranging, or negotiating the sale of a controlled substance, alcoholic beverage, or intoxicant and then selling, delivering, or otherwise furnishing another liquid, substance, or material and representing the liquid, substance, or material as a controlled substance, alcoholic beverage, or intoxicant. Existing law also requires the reporting of any acts of a pupil that may involve the possession or sale of narcotics or a controlled substance, the possession in a school zone, as defined, of a firearm, or the possession on school grounds of certain other weapons.
This bill would require the principal or the principal’s designee to report immediately or as soon as practicably possible by telephone or by any other means to local law enforcement authorities, and where appropriate, to the school police, any acts of a pupil that may constitute certain enumerated crimes, and would make failure to so report a misdemeanor, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program by creating a new crime. This reporting requirement would also impose a state-mandated local program.
(2) Existing law requires the parent, guardian, or other person having control or charge of any minor between the ages of 6 and 16 years who removes the minor from any city, city and county, or school district before the completion of the current school term, to enroll the minor in a public full-time day school of the city, city and county, or school district to which the minor is removed.
This bill would require a school district into which a pupil is transferring to request that the school district in which the pupil was last enrolled provide any records regarding acts committed by the transferring pupil that resulted in the pupil’s suspension from school or expulsion from the school district. The bill would require the school district into which the pupil is transferring to inform any teacher of the pupil that the pupil was suspended from school or expelled from the school district in which the pupil was last enrolled and the act which resulted in that action. By requiring a school district to take these actions, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would make a school district, or school district officer or employee, civilly and criminally immune for providing information in compliance with this measure unless it is proven that the information was false and that the district or district officer or employee knew that the information was false, or that the information was provided with a reckless disregard for its truth or falsity. The bill would make an officer or employee of a school district who knowingly fails to provide information as required guilty of a misdemeanor, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program. The bill would require that information received by a teacher be received in confidence and would prohibit the teacher from further disseminating the information.
(3) Existing law requires a school district to inform the teacher of each pupil who has engaged in, or is reasonably suspected to have engaged in, certain acts for which the pupil may be suspended or expelled that the pupil engaged in, or is reasonably suspected to have engaged in, those acts.
This bill would add sexual harrassment, hate violence, terroristic threats, and certain acts of harrassment, threats, or intimidation to those for which a school district is required to provide information, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program.
(4) This bill would provide that it would become operative only if SB 334 is also enacted.
(5) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement, including the creation of a State Mandates Claims Fund to pay the costs of mandates that do not exceed $1,000,000 statewide and other procedures for claims whose statewide costs exceed $1,000,000.
This bill would provide that with regard to certain mandates no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
With regard to any other mandates, this bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs so mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.