HBA-MPM H.B. 2049 77(R) BILL ANALYSIS Office of House Bill AnalysisH.B. 2049 By: Burnam Public Education 3/18/2001 Introduced BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Current law requires students to attend school, with certain exceptions, until they are 18 years of age. School districts have the authority to assign attendance officers to investigate unexcused student absences, enforce the mandatory attendance law, and perform related duties such as filing a complaint against a parent whose child does not comply with the state's mandatory attendance policy and referring a truant student to juvenile court. However, because open-enrollment charter schools are not defined as a school district, they cannot enforce attendance requirements through an attendance officer. House Bill 2049 authorizes open-enrollment charter schools to select a school attendance officer to perform the same duties as an attendance officer of a school district. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that this bill does not expressly delegate any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or institution. ANALYSIS House Bill 2049 amends the Education Code to authorize the governing body of an open-enrollment charter school (charter school) to select a school attendance officer and provides that the officer may be compensated by funds from the charter school. If the governing body of a charter school has not selected an attendance officer, the duties of the attendance officer are required to be performed by the peace officers of the county where the school is located. EFFECTIVE DATE On passage, or if the Act does not receive the necessary vote, the Act takes effect September 1, 2001. The Act applies beginning with the 2001-2002 school year.