
ENROLLED
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
FOR
Senate Bill No. 522
(Senators Oliverio, Prezioso, Plymale, Edgell, Hunter, Guills, Bowman, Rowe
and Love, original sponsors)
____________
[Passed March 16, 2003; in effect ninety days from passage.]
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AN ACT to amend and reenact section one, article one, chapter
eighteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine
hundred thirty-one, as amended; to amend and reenact section
four, article two of said chapter; to further amend said
article by adding thereto a new section, designated section
five-g; to amend and reenact section seven, article two-e of
said chapter; to amend and reenact section one, article three
of said chapter; to amend and reenact sections one and two,
article four of said chapter; to further amend said article by
adding thereto a new section, designated section six; to amend
and reenact sections ten and eleven of said article; to amend
and reenact sections one-a, one-c, four, seven, thirteen,
fourteen, twenty-five and forty-five, article five of said
chapter; to amend and reenact sections two and five, article
five-a of said chapter; and to amend and reenact section four, article eight of said chapter, all relating to public
education generally; definitions; allowing state board
president to serve an unlimited number of terms, but no more
than two consecutive terms; requiring county boards to provide
certain policies, summaries of any modifications to those
policies and copies of annual reports to state board;
requiring state board to submit copies of summaries and annual
reports to the legislative oversight commission on education
accountability; allowing, with state board approval, certain
appropriations to be expended directly or through contractual
agreements with county boards and regional education service
agencies for materials and other costs associated with
installation, set-up, internet hook-up and wiring of the
computer hardware and software; clarifying that state
superintendent serves at the will and pleasure of the state
board; requiring the state board to annually evaluate the
performance of the state superintendent and publicly announce
the results of the evaluation; clarifying appointment of
county superintendents; modifying authorization for county
superintendent to transfer to a teaching position at the end
of his or her term; extending the date before which the county
superintendent is required to be appointed; requiring county
superintendent to be a resident of the county, or of a
contiguous county in this state, in which he or she serves;
modifying requirements for permanent administrative
certificate and county superintendent license; requiring state board to define three years of experience in management or
supervision in rule; modifying health-related conditions of
employment for county superintendents; providing for
discontinuing or suspending employment of county
superintendent under certain circumstances; requiring that
county superintendents be evaluated at least annually;
providing criteria for evaluation; providing for evaluation to
take place in executive session; directing county board to
release general statement to the public and provide additional
information only by mutual consent of county board and county
superintendent; delineating authorized uses of evaluation
results; allowing contract or written agreement to delineate
a county superintendent acting as chief executive officer;
removing county superintendent duty to organize and attend
district institutes and organize and direct reading circles
and boys' and girls' clubs; requiring county superintendent to
report promptly to the county board whenever any school in the
district appears to be failing to meet the standards for
improving education; requiring county superintendent to keep
county board apprised of certain issues in the district;
removing requirement for county superintendent to direct the
taking of school census; allowing county board members to
serve on certain boards; allowing request of ethics commission
for an advisory opinion; requiring ethics commission to issue
advisory opinion within thirty days; entitling county board
member who relies on opinion to reimbursement for attorney's fees and court costs incurred in certain proceedings;
prohibiting vote cast from being invalidated due to subsequent
finding that holding particular office or committee is a bar
to membership on the board; providing that good faith reliance
on a written advisory opinion is an absolute defense to
certain civil suits or criminal prosecutions; requiring county
board member training to include school performance issues;
allowing feasible and practicable extension of training time;
requiring annual county board self-assessment; specifying
focus of evaluation instrument; requiring summary of
evaluation to be made public; allowing county boards to meet
in facilities within the county other than the county board
office; authorizing lease of school property subject to
certain requirements; clarifying county board authority to
employ, contract with or otherwise engage legal counsel;
including service personnel in job sharing arrangements;
adding requirements for job sharing; limiting cost to
retirement system; requiring filing of policies and summaries
of policies that promote school board effectiveness; requiring
annual meeting with a quorum of members from each local school
improvement council; providing for meeting with less than a
quorum under certain circumstances; allowing county board to
schedule additional meeting for any low performing school in
the district; requiring county board to develop agenda for
required annual meeting with local school improvement council;
requiring certain items to be addressed; requiring county boards to make written requests for information from local
school improvement councils throughout the year or hold
community forums to receive input from the affected community
as the county board considers necessary; modifying time
requirements for reporting to state board on meetings with
local school improvement councils; authorizing county board to
request assistance from local school improvement council
members to facilitate development of report; requiring county
boards to review the policies to promote school board
effectiveness each year; eliminating duty of county
superintendent to make a tabular report to the county board
annually; eliminating requirement that certain percentage of
students be in attendance for a day to be considered
instructional; including five instructional support and
enhancement days within the instructional term that include
instructional activities, professional activities and time for
faculty senate meetings; requiring instructional activities
for students to be scheduled by appointment; requiring school
policy relating to use of time designated for instructional
activities; providing that the presence of any certain number
of students and the transportation of students is not required
on instructional support and enhancement days; declaring
instructional support and enhancement days a regular work day
for all service personnel; providing that for one school year
only, statewide assessment may not be prior to the fifteenth
day of April; requiring professional development days to be used last when making up instructional days; allowing use of
additional minutes of instruction each day for making up lost
instructional days under certain circumstances; prohibiting
more than one parent member of a local school improvement
council from being employed at the school; requiring chair to
appoint replacement of elected member of local school
improvement council if position becomes vacant; requiring
principal to appoint replacement if appointed position becomes
vacant; requiring principal to provide certain information at
the organizational meeting of the local school improvement
council; requiring local school improvement council chair, or
designee, to be prepared to address certain matters at annual
meeting and in writing; allowing state board to enter into
contracts to provide orientation training for local school
improvement council members; requiring that any training meet
guidelines established by the state board; requiring emergency
meetings of faculty senates to be held during noninstructional
time; requiring a two-hour block of time be scheduled for a
faculty senate meeting on a day scheduled for the opening of
school prior to the beginning of the instructional term;
requiring that a two-hour block of time be scheduled for a
faculty senate meeting on each instructional support and
enhancement day; and requiring state board rule excluding
certain absences for accountability purposes.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That section one, article one, chapter eighteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be
amended and reenacted; that section four, article two of said
chapter be amended and reenacted; that said article be further
amended by adding thereto a new section, designated section five-g;
that section seven, article two-e of said chapter be amended and
reenacted; that section one, article three of said chapter be
amended and reenacted; that sections one and two, article four of
said chapter be amended and reenacted; that said article be further
amended by adding thereto a new section, designated section six;
that sections ten and eleven of said article be amended and
reenacted; that sections one-a, one-c, four, seven, thirteen,
fourteen, twenty-five and forty-five, article five of said chapter
be amended and reenacted; that sections two and five, article five-
a of said chapter be amended and reenacted; and that section four,
article eight of said chapter be amended and reenacted all to read
as follows:
ARTICLE 1. DEFINITIONS; LIMITATIONS OF CHAPTER; GOALS FOR
EDUCATION.
§18-1-1. Definitions.
The following words used in this chapter and in any
proceedings pursuant thereto shall, unless the context clearly
indicates a different meaning, be construed as follows:
(a) "School" means the pupils and teacher or teachers
assembled in one or more buildings, organized as a unit;
(b) "District" means county school district;
(c) "State board" means the West Virginia board of education;
(d) "County board" or "board" means the county board of
education;
(e) "State superintendent" means the state superintendent of
free schools;
(f) "County superintendent" or "superintendent" means the
county superintendent of schools;
(g) "Teacher" means teacher, supervisor, principal,
superintendent or public school librarian; registered professional
nurse, licensed by the West Virginia board of examiners for
registered professional nurses and employed by a county board of
education, who has a baccalaureate degree; or any other person
regularly employed for instructional purposes in a public school in
this state;
(h) "Service personnel" means all nonteaching school employees
not included in the above definition of "teacher";
(i) "Social worker" means a nonteaching school employee who,
at a minimum, possesses an undergraduate degree in social work from
an accredited institution of higher learning and who provides
various professional social work services, activities or methods as
defined by the state board for the benefit of students;
(j) "Regular full-time employee" means any person employed by
a county board of education who has a regular position or job
throughout his or her employment term, without regard to hours or
method of pay;
(k) "Career clusters" means broad groupings of related occupations;
(l) "Work-based learning" means a structured activity that
correlates with and is mutually supportive of the school-based
learning of the student and includes specific objectives to be
learned by the student as a result of the activity;
(m) "School-age juvenile" means any individual who is entitled
to attend or who, if not placed in a residential facility, would be
entitled to attend public schools in accordance with: (1) Section
five, article two of this chapter; (2) sections fifteen and
eighteen, article five of this chapter; or (3) section one, article
twenty of this chapter;
(n) "Student with a disability" means an exceptional child,
other than gifted, pursuant to section one, article twenty of this
chapter;
(o) "Low-density county" means a county whose ratio of student
population to square miles is less than or equal to the state
average ratio as computed by the state department of education;
(p) "High-density county" means a county whose ratio of
student population to square miles is greater than the state
average ratio as computed by the state department of education; and
(q) "Casual deficit" means a deficit of not more than three
percent of the approved levy estimate or a deficit that is
nonrecurring from year to year.
ARTICLE 2. STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION.
§18-2-4. Organization; appointment, compensation and duties of secretary.
At its first regular meeting in every year the state board
shall elect one of its members as president, who may serve an
unlimited number of terms, but no more than two consecutive terms,
and one as vice president of the board. The state superintendent
shall be the chief executive officer of the state board and,
subject to its direction, shall execute its policies.
The state board shall appoint a secretary and fix the
secretary's salary to be paid out of the general school fund upon
warrants drawn by the state superintendent. The secretary shall
keep a record of the proceedings of the state board and shall
perform such other duties as it may prescribe.
§18-2-5g. Duty to receive and submit summary of policy
modifications and annual reports.
In addition to filing each policy as required by section
fourteen, article five of this chapter, the state board shall
require each county board to provide a summary of any modifications
to the policies and copies of annual reports developed pursuant to
section fourteen, article five of this chapter. The state board
shall submit copies of these summaries of modifications to the
policies and annual reports, together with any comments and
recommendations, to the legislative oversight commission on
education accountability, no later than the thirty-first day of
December of each year.
ARTICLE 2E. HIGH QUALITY EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS.
§18-2E-7. Providing for high quality basic skills development and
remediation in all public schools.
(a) The Legislature finds that teachers must be provided the
support, assistance and teaching tools necessary to meet individual
student instructional needs on a daily basis in a classroom of
students who differ in learning styles, learning rates and in
motivation to learn. The Legislature further finds that attaining
a solid foundation in the basic skills of reading, composition and
arithmetic is essential for advancement in higher education,
occupational and avocational pursuits and that computers are an
effective tool for the teacher in corrective, remedial and
enrichment activities. Therefore, the state board shall develop a
plan which specifies the resources to be used to provide services
to students in the earliest grade level and moving upward as
resources become available based on a plan developed by each
individual school team.
This plan must provide for standardization of computer
hardware and software and for technology upgrade and replacement
for the purposes of achieving economies of scale, facilitating
teacher training, permitting the comparison of achievement of
students in schools and counties utilizing the hardware and
software and facilitating the repair of equipment and ensuring
appropriate utilization of the hardware and software purchased for
remediation and basic skills development.
The state board shall determine the computer hardware and software specifications after input from practicing teachers at the
appropriate grade levels and with the assistance of education
computer experts and the curriculum technology resource center.
Computer hardware and software shall be purchased either
directly or through a lease-purchase arrangement pursuant to the
provisions of article three, chapter five-a of this code in the
amount equal to anticipated revenues being appropriated: Provided,
That, with the approval of the state board, the revenues
appropriated may be expended directly or through contractual
agreements with county boards and regional education service
agencies for materials and other costs associated with
installation, set-up, internet hook-up and wiring of the computer
hardware and software: Provided, however, That nothing in this
section shall be construed to require any specific level of funding
by the Legislature.
The state board shall develop and provide through the state
curriculum technology resource center a program to ensure adequate
teacher training, continuous teacher support and updates.
To the extent practicable, such technology shall be utilized
to enhance student access to learning tools and resources outside
of the normal school day, such as: Before and after school; in the
evenings, on weekends and during vacations; and for student use for
homework, remedial work, independent learning, career planning and
adult basic education.
(b) The Legislature finds that the continued implementation of
computer utilization under this section for high quality basic skills development and remediation in the middle schools, junior
high schools and high schools is necessary to meet the goal that
high school graduates will be prepared fully for college, other
post-secondary education or gainful employment. Further, such
implementation should provide a technology infrastructure at the
middle schools, junior high schools and high schools that has
multiple applications in enabling students to achieve at higher
academic levels. The technology infrastructure should facilitate
student development in the following areas:
(1) Attaining basic computer skills such as word processing,
spreadsheets, data bases, internet usage, telecommunications and
graphic presentations;
(2) Learning critical thinking and decision-making skills;
(3) Applying academic knowledge in real life situations
through simulated workplace programs;
(4) Understanding the modern workplace environment,
particularly in remote areas of the state, by bringing the
workplace to the school;
(5) Making informed career decisions based upon information on
labor markets and the skills required for success in various
occupations;
(6) Gaining access to labor markets and job placement;
(7) Obtaining information and assistance about college and
other post-secondary education opportunities and financial aid; and
(8) Other uses for acquiring the necessary skills and
information to make a smooth transition from high school to college, other post-secondary education or gainful employment.
Therefore, the state board shall extend the plan as set forth
in subsection (a) of this section, and consistent with the terms
and conditions in said subsection, to address the findings of this
subsection regarding the continued implementation of computer
hardware and software and technical planning support in the middle
schools, junior high schools and high schools of the state.
ARTICLE 3. STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS.
§18-3-1. Appointment; qualifications; compensation; traveling
expenses; office and residence; evaluation.
There shall be appointed by the state board a state
superintendent of schools who shall serve at the will and pleasure
of the state board. He or she shall be a person of good moral
character, of recognized ability as a school administrator, holding
at least a master's degree in educational administration, and shall
have had not less than five years of experience in public school
work. He or she shall receive an annual salary set by the state
board, to be paid monthly: Provided, That the annual salary may not
exceed one hundred forty-six thousand one hundred dollars. The
state superintendent also shall receive necessary traveling
expenses incident to the performance of his or her duties to be
paid out of the general school fund upon warrants of the state
auditor. The state superintendent shall have his or her office at
the state capitol. The state board shall report to the legislative
oversight commission on education accountability upon request concerning its progress during any hiring process for a state
superintendent.
The state board annually shall evaluate the performance of the
state superintendent and publicly announce the results of the
evaluation.
ARTICLE 4. COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS.
§18-4-1. Election and term; interim superintendent.





(a) The county superintendent shall be appointed by the board
upon a majority vote of the members thereof to serve for a term of
not less than one, nor more than four years. At the expiration of
the term or terms for which he or she shall have been appointed,
each county superintendent shall be eligible for reappointment for
additional terms of not less than one, nor more than four years:
Provided, That at the expiration of his or her term or terms of
service the county superintendent may transfer to any teaching
position in the county for which he or she is qualified and has
seniority, unless dismissed for statutory reasons. The appointment
of the county superintendent shall be made on or before the first
day of June for a term beginning on the first day of July following
the appointment.





(b) A county superintendent who fills a vacancy caused by an
incomplete term shall be appointed to serve until the following
first day of July: Provided, however, That the board may appoint an
interim county superintendent to serve for a period not to exceed
one hundred twenty days from the occurrence of the vacancy.
(c) The president of the county board, immediately upon the
appointment of the county superintendent, or the appointment of an
interim county superintendent, shall certify the appointment to the
state superintendent.





(d) During his or her term of appointment, the county
superintendent shall be a resident of the county, or of a
contiguous county in this state, which he or she serves. The
county superintendent in office on the effective date of this
section shall continue in office until the expiration of his or her
term.
§18-4-2. Qualifications; health certificate; disability; acting
superintendent.
(a) Each county superintendent shall hold a professional
administrative certificate endorsed for superintendent, or a first
class permit endorsed for superintendent, subject to the following:
(1) A superintendent who holds a first class permit may be
appointed for one year only, and may be reappointed two times for
an additional year each upon an annual evaluation by the county
board and a determination of satisfactory performance and
reasonable progress toward completion of the requirements for a
professional administrative certificate endorsed for
superintendent;
(2) Any candidate for superintendent who possesses an earned
doctorate from an accredited institution of higher education and
either has completed three successful years of teaching in public education or has the equivalent of three years of experience in
management or supervision as defined by state board rule, after
employment by the county board shall be granted a permanent
administrative certificate and shall be a licensed county
superintendent;

(3) The state board shall promulgate a legislative rule in
accordance with article three-b, chapter twenty-nine-a of this
code, to address those cases where a county board finds that course
work needed by the county superintendent who holds a first class
permit is not available or is not scheduled at state institutions
of higher education in a manner which will enable the county
superintendent to complete normal requirements for a professional
administrative certificate within the three-year period allowed
under the permit; and
(4) Any person employed as assistant superintendent or
educational administrator prior to the twenty-seventh day of June,
one thousand nine hundred eighty-eight, and who was previously
employed as superintendent is not required to hold the professional
administrative certificate endorsed for superintendent.
(b) In addition to other requirements set forth in this
section, a county superintendent shall meet the following health-
related conditions of employment:
(1) Before entering upon the discharge of his or her duties,
file with the president of the county board a certificate from a
licensed physician certifying the following:
(A) A tuberculin skin test, of the type Mantoux test (PPD skin test), approved by the director of the department of health, has
been made within four months prior to the beginning of the term of
the county superintendent; and
(B) The county superintendent does not have tuberculosis in a
communicable state based upon the test results and any further
study;
(2) After completion of the initial test, the county
superintendent shall have an approved tuberculin skin test once
every two years or more frequently if medically indicated.
Positive reactors to the skin test are to be referred immediately
to a physician for evaluation and indicated treatment or further
studies;
(3) A county superintendent who is certified by a licensed
physician to have tuberculosis in a communicable stage shall have
his or her employment discontinued or suspended until the disease
has been arrested and is no longer communicable; and
(4) A county superintendent who fails to complete required
follow-up examinations as set forth in this subsection shall be
suspended from employment until a report of examination is
confirmed.
§18-4-6. Evaluation of county superintendent.
(a) At least annually, the county board shall evaluate the
performance of the county superintendent. The evaluation process
to be used shall be one authorized by the state board. The West
Virginia school board association shall maintain a catalog of
evaluation instruments which comply with this section and shall make them available to county boards.
(b) At a minimum, the evaluation process shall require the
county superintendent and county board to establish written goals
or objectives for the county superintendent to accomplish within a
given period of time. Additionally, the county board shall
evaluate the county superintendent on his or her success in
improving student achievement generally across the county and
specifically as it relates to the management and administration of
low performing schools.
(c) The evaluation also may cover the performance of a county
superintendent in the areas of community relations, school finance,
personnel relations, curricular standards and programs and overall
leadership of the school district as indicated primarily by
improvements in student achievement, testing and assessment.
(d) The evaluation of a county superintendent shall occur in
executive session. At the conclusion of the evaluation, the county
board shall make available to the public a general statement about
the evaluation process and the overall result. Additional
information about the evaluation may be released only by mutual
consent of the county superintendent and the county board. The
county board may use the evaluation results to determine:
(1) Whether to extend the contract of the county
superintendent;
(2) Whether to offer the county superintendent a new contract;
and
(3) The level of compensation or benefits to offer the county superintendent in any new or extended contract.
§18-4-10. Duties of county superintendent.
The county superintendent shall:
(1) Act as the chief executive officer of the county board as
may be delineated in his or her contract or other written agreement
with the county board, and, under the direction of the state board,
execute all its education policies;
(2) Nominate all personnel to be employed; in case the county
board refuses to employ any or all of the persons nominated, the
county superintendent shall nominate others and submit the same to
the county board at a time the county board may direct. No person
or persons shall be employed except on the nomination of the county
superintendent;
(3) Assign, transfer, suspend or promote teachers and all
other school employees of the district, subject only to the
approval of the county board, and to recommend to the county board
their dismissal pursuant to the provisions of this chapter;
(4) Report promptly to the county board in such manner as it
directs whenever any school in the district appears to be failing
to meet the standards for improving education established pursuant
to section five, article two-e of this chapter;
(5) Close a school temporarily when conditions are detrimental
to the health, safety or welfare of the pupils;
(6) Certify all expenditures and monthly payrolls of teachers
and employees;
(7) Serve as the secretary of the county board and attend all meetings of the county board or its committees, except when the
tenure, salary or administration of the county superintendent is
under consideration;
(8) Administer oaths and examine witnesses under oath in any
proceedings pertaining to the schools of the district, and have the
testimony reduced to writing;
(9) Keep the county board apprised continuously of any issues
that affect the county board or its schools, programs and
initiatives. The county superintendent shall report to the county
board on these issues using any appropriate means agreeable to both
parties. When practicable, the reports shall be fashioned to
include a broad array of data and information that the county board
may consult to aid in making decisions;
(10) Exercise all other authority granted by this chapter or
required by the county board or state board; and
(11) In case of emergency, act as the best interests of the
school demand. An emergency, as contemplated in this section, is
limited to an unforeseeable, catastrophic event including natural
disaster or act of war and nothing in this section may be construed
as granting the county superintendent authority to override any
statutory or constitutional provision in the exercise of his or her
emergency power except where such authority is specifically granted
in the particular code section.
§18-4-11. Other powers and duties.
The county superintendent shall:
(1) Visit the schools as often as practicable; observe and make suggestions concerning the instruction and classroom
management of the schools and their sanitary conditions;
(2) Report to the county board cases of incompetence, neglect
of duty, immorality or misconduct in office of any teacher or
employee;
(3) Recommend for condemnation buildings unfit for school use;
(4) Call, at his or her discretion, conferences of principals
and teachers to discuss the work of the schools of the district;
(5) Report to the county board the progress and general
condition of the schools;
(6) Make reports as required by the state superintendent. In
case the county superintendent fails to report as required, the
state superintendent may direct that the salary of the county
superintendent be withheld until an acceptable report is received;
and
(7) Perform all other duties prescribed in this chapter or
required by the county board or the state board.
ARTICLE 5. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION.
§18-5-1a. Eligibility of Members; training requirements.
(a) No person shall be eligible for membership on any county
board who is not a citizen, resident in such county, or who accepts
a position as teacher or service personnel in the school district
in which he or she is a resident or who is an elected or an
appointed member of any political party executive committee, or who
becomes a candidate for any other office than to succeed oneself.
(b) No member or member-elect of any board shall be eligible
for nomination, election or appointment to any public office, other
than to succeed oneself, or for election or appointment as a member
of any political party executive committee, unless and until after
that membership on the board, or his status as member-elect to the
board, has been terminated at or before the time of his filing for
such nomination for, or appointment to, such public office or
committee: Provided, That "office" or "committee", as used in this
subsection and subsection (a) of this section, does not include
service on any board, elected or appointed, profit or non profit,
for which the person does not receive compensation and whose primary
scope is not related to the public schools.
(c) A member or member elect of a county board, or a person
desiring to become a member of a county board, may make a written
request to the West Virginia ethics commission for an advisory
opinion on whether another elected or appointed position held or
sought by the person is an office or public office which would bar
serving on the board pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of this
section. Within thirty days of receipt of the request, the ethics
commission shall issue a written advisory opinion in response to the
request and shall also publish such opinion in a manner which to the
fullest extent possible does not reveal the identity of the person
making the request. Any county board member who relied in good
faith upon an advisory opinion issued by the West Virginia ethics
commission that holding a particular office or public office is not
a bar from membership on a county board of education and against whom proceedings are subsequently brought for removal from the
county board on the basis of holding such office or offices shall
be entitled to reimbursement by the county board for reasonable
attorney's fees and court costs incurred by the member in defending
against such proceedings, regardless of the outcome the proceedings.
Further, no vote cast by the member at a meeting of the board shall
be invalidated due to a subsequent finding that holding the
particular office or public is a bar to membership on the county
board. Good faith reliance on a written advisory opinion of the
West Virginia ethics commission that a particular office or public
office is not a bar to membership on a county board of education is
an absolute defense to any civil suit or criminal prosecution
arising from any proper action taken within the scope of membership
on the board, becoming a member elect of the board or seeking
election to the board.
(d) Any person who is elected or appointed to a county board
on or after the fifth day of May, one thousand nine hundred ninety-
two, shall possess at least a high school diploma or a general
educational development (GED) diploma: Provided, That this provision
shall not apply to members or members-elect who have taken office
prior to the fifth day of May, one thousand nine hundred ninety-two,
and who serve continuously therefrom.
(e) No person elected to a county board after the first day of
July, one thousand nine hundred ninety, shall assume the duties of
board member unless he or she has first attended and completed a
course of orientation relating to boardsmanship and governance effectiveness which shall be given between the date of election and
the beginning of the member's term of office: Provided, That a
portion or portions of subsequent training such as that offered in
orientation may be provided to members after they have commenced
their term of office: Provided, however, That attendance at the
session of orientation given between the date of election and the
beginning of the member's term of office shall permit such member
or members to assume the duties of board member, as specified in
this section. Members appointed to the board shall attend and
complete the next such course offered following their appointment:
Provided further, That the provisions of this section relating to
orientation shall not apply to members who have taken office prior
to the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred eighty-eight,
and who serve continuously therefrom.
(f) Commencing on the effective date of this section, members
shall annually receive seven clock hours of training in areas
relating to boardsmanship, governance effectiveness, and school
performance issues including, but not limited to, pertinent state
and federal statutes such as the "Process for Improving Education"
set forth in section five, article two-e of this chapter and the "No
Child Left Behind Act" and their respective administrative rules.
Such orientation and training shall be approved by the state board
and conducted by the West Virginia school board association or other
organization or organizations approved by the state board: Provided,
That the state board may exclude time spent in training on school
performance issues from the requisite seven hours herein required: Provided, however, That if the state board elects to exclude time
spent in training on school performance issues from the requisite
seven hours, such training shall be limited by the state board to
a feasible and practicable amount of time. Failure to attend and
complete such an approved course of orientation and training
relating to boardsmanship and governance effectiveness without good
cause as determined by legislative rules of the state board shall
constitute neglect of duty. 
(g) In the final year of any four-year term of office, a member
shall satisfy the annual training requirement before the first day
of January. The state board shall petition the circuit court of
Kanawha County to remove any county board member who has failed to
or who refuses to attend and complete the approved course of
orientation and training. If the county board member fails to show
good cause for not attending the approved course of orientation and
training, the court shall remove the member from office.
§18-5-1c. Organization of board; evaluation.
(a) On the first Monday of July, following each biennial
primary election, each respective county board shall organize and
shall elect a president from its own membership for a two-year term.
The county board shall report promptly to the state superintendent
the name of the member elected as county board president.
(b) Annually, each county board shall assess its own
performance using an instrument approved by the state board. In
developing or making determinations on approving evaluation
instruments, the state board may consult with the West Virginia school board association or other appropriate organizations. The
evaluation instrument selected shall focus on the effectiveness of
the county board in the following areas:
(1) Dealing with its various constituency groups and with the
general public;
(2) Providing a proper framework and the governance strategies
necessary to monitor and approve student achievement on a continuing
basis; and
(3) Enhancing the effective utilization of the policy approach
to governance.
At the conclusion of the evaluation, the county board shall
make available to the public a summary of the evaluation, including
areas in which the board concludes improvement is warranted.
§18-5-4. Meetings; employment and assignment of teachers; budget
hearing; compensation of members; affiliation with
state and national associations.
(a) The county board shall meet on the first Monday in July,
and upon the dates provided by law for the laying of levies, and at
any other times the county board fixes upon its records. Subject
to adequate public notice, nothing herein shall prohibit the county
board from conducting regular meetings in facilities within the
county other than the county board office. At any meeting as
authorized in this section and in compliance with the provisions of
article four of this chapter, the county board may employ qualified
teachers, or those who will qualify by the time they enter upon their duties, necessary to fill existing or anticipated vacancies
for the current or next ensuing school year. At a meeting of the
county board, on or before the first Monday in May, the county
superintendent shall furnish in writing to the county board a list
of those teachers to be considered for transfer and subsequent
assignment for the next ensuing school year. All other teachers not
listed are considered as reassigned to the positions held at the
time of this meeting. The list of those recommended for transfer
shall be included in the minute record and the teachers listed shall
be notified in writing. The notice shall be delivered in writing,
by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the teachers' last
known addresses within ten days following the board meeting, of
their having been recommended for transfer and subsequent
assignment.
(b) Special meetings may be called by the president or any
three members, but no business may be transacted other than that
designated in the call.
(c) In addition, a public hearing shall be held concerning the
preliminary operating budget for the next fiscal year not fewer than
ten days after the budget has been made available to the public for
inspection and within a reasonable time prior to the submission of
the budget to the state board for approval. Reasonable time shall
be granted at the hearing to any person who wishes to speak
regarding any part of the budget. Notice of the hearing shall be
published as a Class I legal advertisement in compliance with the
provisions of article three, chapter fifty-nine of this code.
(d) A majority of the members of the county board constitutes
the quorum necessary for the transaction of official business.
(e) Board members may receive compensation at a rate not to
exceed one hundred sixty dollars per meeting attended, but they may
not receive pay for more than fifty meetings in any one fiscal year.
Board members who serve on an administrative council of a
multicounty vocational center also may receive compensation for
attending up to twelve meetings of the council at the same rate as
for meetings of the county board. Meetings of the council are not
counted as board meetings for purposes of determining the limit on
compensable board meetings.
(f) Members also shall be paid, upon the presentation of an
itemized sworn statement, for all necessary traveling expenses,
including all authorized meetings, incurred on official business,
at the order of the county board.
(g) When, by a majority vote of its members, a county board
considers it a matter of public interest, the county board may join
the West Virginia school board association and the national school
board association and may pay the dues prescribed by the
associations and approved by action of the respective county boards.
Membership dues and actual traveling expenses incurred by board
members for attending meetings of the West Virginia school board
association may be paid by their respective county boards out of
funds available to meet actual expenses of the members, but no
allowance may be made except upon sworn itemized statements.
§18-5-7. Sale of school property at public auction; rights of grantor of lands in rural communities; oil and gas leases;
disposition of proceeds; lease of school property.
(a) Except as set forth in subsection (b) of this section, if
at any time a county board determines that any building or any land
is no longer needed for school purposes, the county board may sell,
dismantle, remove or relocate the building and sell the land on
which it is located at public auction, after proper notice and on
such terms as it orders, to the highest responsible bidder.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this
section, in rural communities, the grantor of the lands or his or
her heirs or assigns has the right to purchase at the sale, the
land, exclusive of the buildings on the land and the mineral rights,
at the same price for which it was originally sold: Provided, That
the sale to the board was not a voluntary arms length transaction
for valuable consideration approximating the fair market value of
the property at the time of the sale to the board: Provided,
however, That the provisions of this section may not operate to
invalidate any provision of the deed to the contrary.
(c) The county board, by the same method set forth in
subsection (a) of this section for the sale of school buildings and
lands, may, in lieu of offering the property for sale, enter into
a lease for oil or gas or other minerals any lands or school sites
owned in fee by it. The proceeds of the sales and rentals shall be
placed to the credit of the fund or funds of the district as the
county board may direct.
(d) The county board may make any sale of property subject to
the provision that all liability for hazards associated with the
premises are to be assumed by the purchaser. In any sale by the
county board of improved property in which the actual consideration
is less than ten thousand dollars or in any sale of unimproved
property in which the actual consideration is less than one thousand
dollars, the county board shall make any sale of property subject
to the provision that all liability for hazards associated with the
premises are to be assumed by the purchaser. The county board shall
inform any prospective purchaser of known or suspected hazards
associated with the property.
(e) Except as provided by the provisions of subsection (b) of
this section, where a county board determines that any school
property is no longer needed for school purposes, the county board
may, upon determining that it will serve the best interests of the
school system and the community, offer the property for lease. The
procedure set forth in subsection (a) of this section relating to
sale of school buildings and lands shall apply to leasing the school
property. Any lease authorized by the provisions of this subsection
shall be in writing. The writing shall include a recitation of all
known or reasonably suspected hazards associated with the property,
an assumption by the lessee of all liability related to all hazards,
whether disclosed or not, and provisions wherein the lessee assumes
all liability for any actions arising from the property during the
term of the lease.
(f) Notwithstanding any provision of this section to the contrary, the provisions of this section concerning sale or lease
at public auction may not apply to a county board selling, leasing
or otherwise disposing of its property for a public use to the state
of West Virginia, or its political subdivisions, including county
commissions, for an adequate consideration without considering alone
the present commercial or market value of the property.
§18-5-13. Authority of boards generally.



Each county board, subject to the provisions of this chapter
and the rules of the state board, has the authority:



(a) To control and manage all of the schools and school
interests for all school activities and upon all school property,
whether owned or leased by the county, including the authority to
require that records be kept of all receipts and disbursements of
all funds collected or received by any principal, teacher, student
or other person in connection with the schools and school interests,
any programs, activities or other endeavors of any nature operated
or carried on by or in the name of the school, or any organization
or body directly connected with the school, to audit the records and
to conserve the funds, which shall be considered quasipublic moneys,
including securing surety bonds by expenditure of board moneys;



(b) To establish schools, from preschool through high school,
inclusive of vocational schools; and to establish schools, programs
or both, for post-high school instruction, subject to approval of
the state board;



(c) To close any school which is unnecessary and to assign the
pupils of the school to other schools. Provided, That the closing shall be officially acted upon, and teachers and service personnel
involved notified on or before the first Monday in April, in the
same manner as provided in section four of this article, except in
an emergency, subject to the approval of the state superintendent,
or under subdivision (e) of this section;



(d) To consolidate schools;



(e) To close any elementary school whose average daily
attendance falls below twenty pupils for two months in succession
and send the pupils to other schools in the district or to schools
in adjoining districts. If the teachers in the closed school are
not transferred or reassigned to other schools, they shall receive
one month's salary;



(f) (1) To provide at public expense adequate means of
transportation, including transportation across county lines for
students whose transfer from one district to another is agreed to
by both county boards as reflected in the minutes of their
respective meetings, for all children of school age who live more
than two miles distance from school by the nearest available road;
to provide at public expense, according to such rules as the board
may establish, adequate means of transportation for school children
participating in county board-approved curricular and
extracurricular activities; to provide at public expense, by rules
and within the available revenues, transportation for those within
two miles distance; and to provide, at no cost to the county board
and according to rules established by the board, transportation for
participants in projects operated, financed, sponsored or approved by the commission on aging, all subject to the following:



(A) All costs and expenses incident in any way to
transportation for projects connected with the commission on aging
shall be borne by the commission or the local or county chapter of
the commission;



(B) In all cases, the school buses owned by the county board
shall be driven or operated only by drivers regularly employed by
the county board;



(C) The county board may provide, under rules established by
the state board, for the certification of professional employees as
drivers of county board-owned vehicles with a seating capacity of
less than ten passengers used for the transportation of pupils for
school-sponsored activities other than transporting students between
school and home. The use of the vehicles shall be limited to one
for each school-sponsored activity; and



(D) Buses shall be used for extracurricular activities as
provided in this section only when the insurance provided for by
this section is in effect;



(2) To enter into agreements with one another as reflected in
the minutes of their respective meetings to provide, on a
cooperative basis, adequate means of transportation across county
lines for children of school age subject to the conditions and
restrictions of this subsection and subsection (h) of this section;



(g) (1) To lease school buses operated only by drivers
regularly employed by the county board to public and private
nonprofit organizations or private corporations to transport school-age children to and from camps or educational activities in
accordance with rules established by the county board. All costs
and expenses incurred by or incidental to the transportation of the
children shall be borne by the lessee;



(2) To contract with any college or university or officially
recognized campus organizations to provide transportation for
college or university students, faculty or staff to and from the
college or university. Only college and university students,
faculty and staff may be transported pursuant to this section. The
contract shall include consideration and compensation for bus
operators, repairs and other costs of service, insurance and any
rules concerning student behavior;



(h) To provide at public expense for insurance against the
negligence of the drivers of school buses, trucks or other vehicles
operated by the board; and if the transportation of pupils is
contracted, then the contract for the transportation shall provide
that the contractor shall carry insurance against negligence in an
amount specified by the board;



(i) To provide solely from county board funds for all regular
full-time employees of the county board all or any part of the cost
of a group plan or plans of insurance coverage not provided or
available under the West Virginia public employees insurance act;



(j) To employ teacher aides, to provide in-service training for
teacher aides, the training to be in accordance with rules of the
state board and, in the case of service personnel assuming duties
as teacher aides in exceptional children programs, to provide a four-clock-hour program of training prior to the assignment which
shall, in accordance with rules of the state board, consist of
training in areas specifically related to the education of
exceptional children;



(k) To establish and conduct a self-supporting dormitory for
the accommodation of the pupils attending a high school or
participating in a post high school program and of persons employed
to teach in the high school or post high school program;



(l) At the board's discretion, to employ, contract with or
otherwise engage legal counsel in lieu of utilizing the prosecuting
attorney to advise, attend to, bring, prosecute or defend, as the
case may be, any matters, actions, suits and proceedings in which
the board is interested;



(m) To provide appropriate uniforms for school service
personnel;



(n) To provide at public expense and under rules as established
by any county board for the payment of traveling expenses incurred
by any person invited to appear to be interviewed concerning
possible employment by the county board;



(o) To allow or disallow their designated employees to use
publicly provided carriage to travel from their residences to their
workplace and return: Provided, That the usage is subject to the
supervision of the county board and is directly connected with and
required by the nature and in the performance of the employee's
duties and responsibilities;



(p) To provide, at public expense, adequate public liability insurance, including professional liability insurance for county
board employees;



(q) To enter into agreements with one another to provide, on
a cooperative basis, improvements to the instructional needs of each
district. The cooperative agreements may be used to employ
specialists in a field of academic study or support functions or
services, for the academic study. The agreements are subject to
approval by the state board;



(r) To provide information about vocational or higher education
opportunities to students with handicapping conditions. The county
board shall provide in writing to the students and their parents or
guardians information relating to programs of vocational education
and to programs available at state funded institutions of higher
education. The information may include sources of available
funding, including grants, mentorships and loans for students who
wish to attend classes at institutions of higher education;



(s) To enter into agreements with one another, with the
approval of the state board, for the transfer and receipt of any and
all funds determined to be fair when students are permitted or
required to attend school in a district other than the district of
their residence; and



(t) To enter into job-sharing arrangements, as defined in
section one, article one, chapter eighteen-a of this code, with its
employees, subject to the following provisions:



(1) A job-sharing arrangement shall meet all the requirements
relating to posting, qualifications and seniority, as provided for in article four, chapter eighteen-a of this code;



(2) Notwithstanding any provisions of this code or legislative
rule and specifically the provisions of article sixteen, chapter
five of this code to the contrary, a county board which enters into
a job-sharing arrangement in which two or more employees voluntarily
share an authorized full-time position shall provide the mutually
agreed upon employee coverage but shall not offer insurance coverage
to more than one of the job-sharing employees, including any group
plan or group plans available under the state public employees
insurance act;



(3) Each job-sharing agreement shall be in writing on a form
prescribed and furnished by the county board. The agreement shall
designate specifically one employee only who is entitled to the
insurance coverage. Any employee who is not so designated is not
eligible for state public employees insurance coverage regardless
of the number of hours he or she works;



(4) All employees involved in the job-sharing agreement meet
the requirements of subdivision (3), section two, article sixteen,
chapter five of this code; and



(5) When entering into a job sharing agreement, the county
board and the employees involved in the job-sharing agreement shall
consider issues such as retirement benefits, termination of the job
sharing agreement and any other issue the parties to the agreement
consider appropriate. Any provision in the agreement relating to
retirement benefits shall not cause any cost to be incurred by the
retirement system that is more than the cost that would be incurred if a single employee were filling the position.



"Quasipublic funds" as used in this section means any money
received by any principal, teacher, student or other person for the
benefit of the school system as a result of curricular or
noncurricular activities.



Each county board shall expend under rules it establishes for
each child an amount not to exceed the proportion of all school
funds of the district that each child would be entitled to receive
if all the funds were distributed equally among all the children of
school age in the district upon a per capita basis.
§18-5-14. Policies to promote school board effectiveness.



(a) No later than the first day of August, two thousand three,
each county board shall adopt and file with the state board copies
of policies and summaries of policies that promote school board
effectiveness. These policies may be modified by the county board
as necessary, but shall be refiled with the state board following
each modification. The policies shall address the following
objectives:



(1) Establishing direct links between the county board and its
local school improvement councils and between the county board and
its faculty senates for the purpose of enabling the county board to
receive information, comments and suggestions directly from the
councils and faculty senates regarding the broad guidelines for
oversight procedures, standards of accountability and planning for
future needs as required by this section. To further development
of these linkages, each county board shall:



(A) Meet at least annually with a quorum of members from each
local school improvement council in the district, at a time and in
a manner to be determined by the county board, except, in order to
facilitate scheduling, the county board may adopt an alternate
procedure allowing it to conduct the required annual meeting with
each council in the absence of a quorum of council members if the
alternate procedure has received prior approval from the state board
and if the school district serves more than twenty thousand students
or has more than twelve public schools.



Nothing in this section prohibits a county board from meeting
with representatives of a local school improvement council, but at
least one annual meeting shall be held, as specified in this
section.



At any time and with reasonable advance notice, county boards
may schedule additional meetings with the council for any low
performing school in the district;



(B) At least thirty days before an annual meeting with each
local school improvement council, develop and submit to the council
an agenda for the annual meeting which requires the council chair
or a member designated by the chair, to address items designated by
the county board from the report created pursuant to this section,
and one or more of the following issues:



(i) School performance;



(ii) Curriculum;



(iii) Status of the school in meeting the unified school
improvement plan established pursuant to section five, article two-e of this chapter; and



(iv) Status of the school in meeting the county plan
established pursuant to section five, article two-e of this chapter;



(C) Make written requests for information from the local school
improvement council throughout the year or hold community forums to
receive input from the affected community as the county board
considers necessary; and



(D) Report details to the state board concerning the meeting
or meetings held with councils, as specified in this section. The
information shall be provided to the state board at the conclusion
of the school year, but no later than the first day of September of
each year, and shall become an indicator in the performance
accreditation process for each county. In order to facilitate
development of this report, a county board may consult with and
request assistance from members of the councils.



(2) Providing for the development of direct links between the
county board and the community at large allowing for community
involvement at regular county board meetings and specifying how the
county board will communicate regularly with the public regarding
important issues;



(3) Providing for the periodic review of personnel policies of
the district in order to determine their effectiveness;



(4) Setting broad guidelines for the school district, including
the establishment of specific oversight procedures, development and
implementation of standards of accountability and development of
long-range plans to meet future needs as required by this section; and



(5) Using school-based accreditation and performance data
provided by the state board and other available data in county board
decisionmaking to meet the education goals of the state and other
goals as the county board may establish.



(b) On or before the first day of August of each year, county
school boards shall review the policies listed in subsection (a) of
this section and may modify these policies as necessary.
§18-5-25. Duties of superintendent as secretary of board.



The county superintendent as secretary of the board shall:



(1) Take the oath prescribed in the constitution before
performing any of the duties of his office;



(2) Attend all board meetings and record its official
proceedings in a book kept for that purpose;



(3) Record the number of each order issued the name of the
payee, the purpose for which the order was issued, and the amount
thereof. Every order shall be signed by the secretary and the
president of the board;



(4) Care for and keep all papers belonging to the board,
including evidences of title, contracts and obligations. They shall
be kept in the secretary's office, accessibly arranged for
reference;



(5) Record and keep on file all papers and documents pertaining
to the business of the board;



(6) Keep the accounts and certify the reports required by law
or requested by the board;



(7) Administer oaths to school officers, teachers and others
making reports;



(8) Deliver in proper condition to his successor all records
and property pertaining to his office; and



(9) Exercise such other duties as are prescribed by law.
§18-5-45. School calendar.



(a) As used in this section, the following terms have the
following meanings:



(1) "Instructional day" means a day within the instructional
term which meets the following criteria:



(A) Instruction is offered to students for the amounts of time
provided by state board rule;



(B) Instructional time is used for instruction, cocurricular
activities and approved extracurricular activities and pursuant to
the provisions of subdivision (12), subsection (b), section five,
article five-a of this chapter, faculty senates; and



(C) Such other criteria as the state board determines
appropriate.



(2) "Bank time" means time added beyond the required
instructional day which may be accumulated and used in larger blocks
of time during the school year for instructional or noninstructional
activities, as further defined by the state board.



(3) "Extracurricular activities" are activities under the
supervision of the school such as athletics, noninstructional
assemblies, social programs, entertainment and other similar
activities, as further defined by the state board.



(4) "Cocurricular activities" are activities that are closely
related to identifiable academic programs or areas of study that
serve to complement academic curricula as further defined by the
state board.



(b) Findings. -



(1) The primary purpose of the school system is to provide
instruction for students.



(2) The school calendar, as defined in this section, is
designed to define the school term both for employees and for
instruction.



(3) The school calendar traditionally has provided for one
hundred eighty actual days of instruction but numerous circumstances
have combined to cause the actual number of instructional days to
be less than one hundred eighty.



(4) The quality and amount of instruction offered during the
instructional term is affected by the extracurricular and
cocurricular activities allowed to occur during scheduled
instructional time.



(5) Within reasonable guidelines, the school calendar should
be designed at least to guarantee that one hundred eighty actual
days of instruction are possible.



(c) The county board shall provide a school term for its
schools that contains the following:



(1) An employment term for teachers of no less than two hundred
days, exclusive of Saturdays and Sundays; and



(2) Within the employment term, an instructional term for students of no less than one hundred eighty separate instructional
days.



(d) The instructional term for students shall include, one
instructional day in each of the months of October, December,
February, April and June which is an instructional support and
enhancement day scheduled by the board to include both instructional
activities for students and professional activities for teachers to
improve student instruction. The instructional activities for
students may include, but are not limited to, both in-school and
outside of school activities such as student mentoring, tutoring,
counseling, student research and other projects or activities of an
instructional nature, community service, career exploration, parent
and teacher conferences, visits to the homes of students, college
and financial aid workshops and college visits. The instructional
activities for students shall be determined and scheduled at the
local school level. The first two hours of the instructional day
shall be used for instructional activities for students which
require the direct supervision or involvement by teachers, and such
activities shall be limited to two hours. To ensure that the
students who attend are properly supervised, the instructional
activities for students shall be arranged by appointment with the
individual school through the principal, a teacher or other
professional personnel at the school. The school shall establish
a policy relating to the use of the two-hour block scheduled for
instructional activities for students. The professional activities
for teachers shall include a two-hour block of time immediately following the first two hours of instructional activities for
students during which the faculty senate shall have the opportunity
to meet. Any time not used by the faculty senate and the remainder
of the school day, not including the duty free lunch period, shall
be used for other professional activities for teachers to improve
student instruction which may include, but are not limited to,
professional staff development, curriculum team meetings,
individualized education plan meetings and other meetings between
teachers, principals, aides and paraprofessionals to improve student
instruction as determined and scheduled at the local school level.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law or policy to the
contrary, the presence of any specific number of students in
attendance at the school for any specific period of time shall not
be required on instructional support and enhancement days and the
transportation of students to the school shall not be required.
Instructional support and enhancement days are also a scheduled work
day for all service personnel and shall be used for training or
other tasks related to their job classification if their normal
duties are not required.



(e) The instructional term shall commence no earlier than the
twenty-sixth day of August and terminate no later than the eighth
day of June.



(f) Noninstructional days shall total twenty and shall be
comprised of the following:



(1) Seven holidays as specified in section two, article five,
chapter eighteen-a of this code;



(2) Election day as specified in section two, article five,
chapter eighteen-a of this code;



(3) Six days to be designated by the county board to be used
by the employees outside the school environment; and



(4) Six days to be designated by the county board for any of
the following purposes:



(A) Curriculum development;



(B) Preparation for opening and closing school;



(C) Professional development;



(D) Teacher-pupil-parent conferences;



(E) Professional meetings; and



(F) Making up days when instruction was scheduled but not
conducted.



(g) Three of the days described in subdivision (4), subsection
(f) of this section shall be scheduled prior to the twenty-sixth day
of August for the purposes of preparing for the opening of school
and staff development.



(h) At least one of the days described in subdivision (4),
subsection (f) of this section shall be scheduled after the eighth
day of June for the purpose of preparing for the closing of school.
If one hundred eighty separate instruction days occur prior to the
eighth day of June, this day may be scheduled on or before the
eighth day of June.



(i) At least four of the days described in subdivision (3),
subsection (f) of this section shall be scheduled after the first
day of March.



(j) At least two of the days described in subdivision (4),
subsection (f) of this section, will be scheduled for professional
development. The professional development conducted on these days
will be consistent with the goals established by the state board
pursuant to the provisions of section twenty-three-a, article two,
chapter eighteen of this code.



(k) Subject to the provisions of subsection (h) of this
section, all noninstructional days will be scheduled prior to the
eighth day of June.



(l) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the state
board may not schedule the primary statewide assessment program
prior to the fifteenth day of May of the instructional year, unless
the state board determines that the nature of the test mandates an
earlier testing date. For the school year beginning two thousand
three only, the state board may not schedule the primary statewide
assessment program prior to the fifteenth day of April of the
instructional year.



(m) If, on or after the first day of March, the county board
determines that it is not possible to complete one hundred eighty
separate days of instruction, the county board shall schedule
instruction on any available noninstructional day, regardless of the
purpose for which the day originally was scheduled, and the day will
be used for instruction: Provided, That the noninstructional days
scheduled for professional development shall be the last available
noninstructional days to be rescheduled as instructional days:
Provided, however, That on or after the first day in March, the county board also may require additional minutes of instruction in
the school day to make up for lost instructional days in excess of
the days available through rescheduling and, if in its judgment it
is reasonable and necessary to improve student performance, to avoid
scheduling instruction on noninstructional days previously scheduled
for professional development. The provisions of this subsection do
not apply to: (1) Holidays; and (2) election day.



(n) The following applies to bank time:



(1) Except as provided in subsection (m) of this section, bank
time may not be used to avoid one hundred eighty separate days of
instruction;



(2) Bank time may not be used to lengthen the time provided in
law for faculty senates;



(3) The use of bank time for extracurricular activities will
be limited by the state board; and



(4) Such other requirements or restrictions as the state board
may provide in the rule required to be promulgated by this section.



(o) The following applies to cocurricular activities:



(1) The state board shall determine what activities may be
considered cocurricular;



(2) The state board shall determine the amount of instructional
time that may be consumed by cocurricular activities; and



(3) Such other requirements or restrictions as the state board
may provide in the rule required to be promulgated by this section.



(p) The following applies to extracurricular activities:



(1) Except as provided by subdivision (3) of this subsection, extracurricular activities may not be scheduled during instructional
time;



(2) The use of bank time for extracurricular activities will
be limited by the state board; and



(3) The state board shall provide for the attendance by
students of certain activities sanctioned by the secondary schools
activities commission when those activities are related to statewide
tournaments or playoffs or are programs required for secondary
schools activities commission approval.



(q) Noninstructional interruptions to the instructional day
shall be minimized to allow the classroom teacher to teach.



(r) Nothing in this section prohibits establishing year-round
schools in accordance with rules to be established by the state
board.



(s) Prior to implementing the school calendar, the county board
shall secure approval of its proposed calendar from the state board
or, if so designated by the state board, from the state
superintendent.



(t) The county board may contract with all or part of the
personnel for a longer term.



(u) The minimum instructional term may be decreased by order
of the state superintendent in any county declared a federal
disaster area and where the event causing the declaration is
substantially related to a reduction of instructional days.



(v) Where the employment term overlaps a teacher's or service
personnel's participation in a summer institute or institution of higher education for the purpose of advancement or professional
growth, the teacher or service personnel may substitute, with the
approval of the county superintendent, the participation for up to
five of the noninstructional days of the employment term.



(w) The state board shall promulgate a rule in accordance with
the provisions of article three-b, chapter twenty-nine-a of this
code for the purpose of implementing the provisions of this section.
ARTICLE 5A. LOCAL SCHOOL INVOLVEMENT.
§18-5A-2. Local school improvement councils; election.



(a) A local school improvement council shall be established at
every school consisting of the following:



(1) The principal, who shall serve as an ex officio member of
the council and be entitled to vote;



(2) Three teachers elected by the faculty senate of the school;



(3) Two school service personnel elected by the school service
personnel employed at the school;



(4) Three parent(s), guardian(s) or custodian(s) of students
enrolled at the school elected by the parent(s), guardian(s) or
custodian(s) members of the school's parent teacher organization:
Provided, That if there is no parent teacher organization, the
parent(s), guardian(s) or custodian(s) members shall be elected by
the parent(s), guardian(s) or custodian(s) of students enrolled at
the school in such manner as may be determined by the principal;



(5) Two at-large members appointed by the principal, one of
whom resides in the school's attendance area and one of whom represents business or industry, neither of whom is eligible for
membership under any of the other elected classes of members;



(6) In the case of vocational-technical schools, the vocational
director: Provided, That if there is no vocational director, then
the principal may appoint no more than two additional
representatives, one of whom represents business and one of whom
represents industry;



(7) In the case of a school with students in grade seven or
higher, the student body president or other student in grade seven
or higher elected by the student body in those grades.



(b) Under no circumstances may more than one parent member of
the council be then employed at that school in any capacity.



(c) The principal shall arrange for such elections to be held
prior to the fifteenth day of September of each school year to elect
a council and shall give notice of the elections at least one week
prior to the elections being held. To the extent practicable, all
elections to select council members shall be held within the same
week.



(d) Parent(s), guardian(s) or custodian(s), teachers and
service personnel elected to the council shall serve a two-year term
and elections shall be arranged in such a manner that no more than
two teachers, no more than two parent(s), guardian(s) or
custodian(s) and no more than one service person are elected in a
given year. All other non-ex officio members shall serve one-year
terms.



(e) Council members may only be replaced upon death, resignation, failure to appear at three consecutive meetings of the
council for which notice was given, or a change in personal
circumstances so that the person is no longer representative of the
class of members from which appointed. In the case of a vacancy in
an elected membership, the chair of the council shall appoint
another qualified person to serve the unexpired term of the person
being replaced or, in the case of an appointed member of the
council, the principal shall appoint a replacement as soon as
practicable.



(f) As soon as practicable after the election of council
members, and no later than the first day of October of each school
year, the principal shall convene an organizational meeting of the
school improvement council. The principal shall notify each member
in writing at least two employment days in advance of the
organizational meeting. At this meeting, the principal shall
provide each member with the following:



(1) A copy of the current applicable sections of this code;



(2) Any state board rule or regulation promulgated pursuant to
the operation of these councils; and



(3) Any information as may be developed by the department of
education on the operation and powers of local school improvement
councils and their important role in improving student and school
performance and progress.



(g) The council shall elect from its membership a chair and two
members to assist the chair in setting the agenda for each council
meeting. The chair shall serve a term of one year and no person may serve as chair for more than two consecutive terms. If the chair's
position becomes vacant for any reason, the principal shall call a
meeting of the council to elect another qualified person to serve
the unexpired term. Once elected, the chair is responsible for
notifying each member of the school improvement council in writing
two employment days in advance of any council meeting.



(h) School improvement councils shall meet at least once every
nine weeks or equivalent grading period at the call of the chair or
by three fourths of its members.



(i) The local school improvement council shall meet at least
annually with the county board, in accordance with the provisions
in section fourteen, article five of this chapter. At this annual
meeting, the local school improvement council chair, or another
member designated by the chair, shall be prepared to address any
matters as may be requested by the county board as specified in the
meeting agenda provided to the council and may further provide any
other information, comments or suggestions the local school
improvement council wishes to bring to the county board's attention.
Anything presented under this subsection shall be submitted to the
county board in writing.



(j) School improvement councils shall be considered for the
receipt of school of excellence awards under section three of this
article and competitive grant awards under section twenty-nine,
article two of this chapter and may receive and expend such grants
for the purposes provided in such section. In any and all matters
which may fall within the scope of both the school improvement councils and the school curriculum teams authorized in section five
of this article, the school curriculum teams shall be deemed to have
jurisdiction. In order to promote innovations and improvements in
the environment for teaching and learning at the school, a school
improvement council shall receive cooperation from the school in
implementing policies and programs it may adopt to:



(1) Encourage the involvement of parent(s), guardian(s) or
custodian(s) in their child's educational process and in the school;



(2) Encourage businesses to provide time for their employees
who are parent(s), guardian(s) or custodian(s) to meet with teachers
concerning their child's education;



(3) Encourage advice and suggestions from the business
community;



(4) Encourage school volunteer programs and mentorship
programs; and



(5) Foster utilization of the school facilities and grounds for
public community activities.



(k) On or before the eighth day of June, one thousand nine
hundred ninety-five, each local school improvement council shall
develop and deliver a report to the countywide council on productive
and safe schools. The report shall include guidelines for the
instruction and rehabilitation of pupils who have been excluded from
the classroom, suspended from the school or expelled from the
school, the description and recommendation of in-school suspension
programs, a description of possible alternative settings, schedules
for instruction and alternative education programs and an implementation schedule for such guidelines. The guidelines shall
include the following:



(1) A system to provide for effective communication and
coordination between school and local emergency services agencies;



(2) A preventive discipline program which may include the
responsible students program devised by the West Virginia board of
education as adopted by the county board of education, pursuant to
the provisions of subsection (e), section one, article five, chapter
eighteen-a of this code; and



(3) A student involvement program, which may include the peer
mediation program or programs devised by the West Virginia board of
education as adopted by the county board of education, pursuant to
the provisions of subsection (e), section one, article five, chapter
eighteen-a of this code.



(l) The council may include in its report to the county-wide
council on productive and safe schools provisions of the state board
of education policy 4373, student code of conduct, or any expansion
of such policy which increases the safety of students in schools in
this state and is consistent with the policies and other laws of
this state.



(m) Councils may adopt their own guidelines established under
this section. In addition, the councils may adopt all or any part
of the guidelines proposed by other local school improvement
councils, as developed under this section, which are not
inconsistent with the laws of this state, the policies of West
Virginia board of education or the policies of the county board of education.



(n) The state board of education shall provide assistance to
a local school improvement council upon receipt of a reasonable
request for that assistance. The state board also may solicit
proposals from other parties or entities to provide orientation
training for local school improvement council members and may enter
into contracts or agreements for that purpose. Any training for
members shall meet the guidelines established by the state board.
§18-5A-5. Public school faculty senates established; election of
officers; powers and duties.



(a) There is established at every public school in this state
a faculty senate which is comprised of all permanent, full-time
professional educators employed at the school who shall all be
voting members. Professional educators, as used in this section,
means professional educators as defined in chapter eighteen-a of
this code. A quorum of more than one half of the voting members of
the faculty shall be present at any meeting of the faculty senate
at which official business is conducted. Prior to the beginning of
the instructional term each year, but within the employment term,
the principal shall convene a meeting of the faculty senate to elect
a chair, vice chair and secretary and discuss matters relevant to
the beginning of the school year. The vice chair shall preside at
meetings when the chair is absent. Meetings of the faculty senate
shall be held during the times provided in accordance with
subdivision (12), subsection (b) of this section as determined by the faculty senate. Emergency meetings may be held during
noninstructional time at the call of the chair or a majority of the
voting members by petition submitted to the chair and vice chair.
An agenda of matters to be considered at a scheduled meeting of the
faculty senate shall be available to the members at least two
employment days prior to the meeting. For emergency meetings the
agenda shall be available as soon as possible prior to the meeting.
The chair of the faculty senate may appoint such committees as may
be desirable to study and submit recommendations to the full faculty
senate, but the acts of the faculty senate shall be voted upon by
the full body.



(b) In addition to any other powers and duties conferred by
law, or authorized by policies adopted by the state or county board
of education or bylaws which may be adopted by the faculty senate
not inconsistent with law, the powers and duties listed in this
subsection are specifically reserved for the faculty senate. The
intent of these provisions is neither to restrict nor to require the
activities of every faculty senate to the enumerated items except
as otherwise stated. Each faculty senate shall organize its
activities as it deems most effective and efficient based on school
size, departmental structure and other relevant factors.



(1) Each faculty senate shall control funds allocated to the
school from legislative appropriations pursuant to section nine,
article nine-a of this chapter. From such funds, each classroom
teacher and librarian shall be allotted fifty dollars for
expenditure during the instructional year for academic materials, supplies or equipment which, in the judgment of the teacher or
librarian, will assist him or her in providing instruction in his
or her assigned academic subjects or shall be returned to the
faculty senate: Provided, That nothing contained herein prohibits
the funds from being used for programs and materials that, in the
opinion of the teacher, enhance student behavior, increase academic
achievement, improve self-esteem and address the problems of
students at-risk. The remainder of funds shall be expended for
academic materials, supplies or equipment in accordance with a
budget approved by the faculty senate. Notwithstanding any other
provisions of the law to the contrary, funds not expended in one
school year are available for expenditure in the next school year:
Provided, however, That the amount of county funds budgeted in a
fiscal year may not be reduced throughout the year as a result of
the faculty appropriations in the same fiscal year for such
materials, supplies and equipment. Accounts shall be maintained of
the allocations and expenditures of such funds for the purpose of
financial audit. Academic materials, supplies or equipment shall
be interpreted broadly, but does not include materials, supplies or
equipment which will be used in or connected with interscholastic
athletic events.



(2) A faculty senate may establish a process for faculty
members to interview new prospective professional educators and
paraprofessional employees at the school and submit recommendations
regarding employment to the principal, who may also make independent
recommendations, for submission to the county superintendent: Provided, That such process shall be chaired by the school principal
and must permit the timely employment of persons to perform
necessary duties.



(3) A faculty senate may nominate teachers for recognition as
outstanding teachers under state and local teacher recognition
programs and other personnel at the school, including parents, for
recognition under other appropriate recognition programs and may
establish such programs for operation at the school.



(4) A faculty senate may submit recommendations to the
principal regarding the assignment scheduling of secretaries,
clerks, aides and paraprofessionals at the school.



(5) A faculty senate may submit recommendations to the
principal regarding establishment of the master curriculum schedule
for the next ensuing school year.



(6) A faculty senate may establish a process for the review and
comment on sabbatical leave requests submitted by employees at the
school pursuant to section eleven, article two of this chapter.



(7) Each faculty senate shall elect three faculty
representatives to the local school improvement council established
pursuant to section two of this article.



(8) Each faculty senate may nominate a member for election to
the county staff development council pursuant to section eight,
article three, chapter eighteen-a of this code.



(9) Each faculty senate shall have an opportunity to make
recommendations on the selection of faculty to serve as mentors for
beginning teachers under beginning teacher internship programs at the school.



(10) A faculty senate may solicit, accept and expend any
grants, gifts, bequests, donations and any other funds made
available to the faculty senate: Provided, That the faculty senate
shall select a member who has the duty of maintaining a record of
all funds received and expended by the faculty senate, which record
shall be kept in the school office and is subject to normal auditing
procedures.



(11) Any faculty senate may review the evaluation procedure as
conducted in their school to ascertain whether the evaluations were
conducted in accordance with the written system required pursuant
to section twelve, article two, chapter eighteen-a of this code and
the general intent of this Legislature regarding meaningful
performance evaluations of school personnel. If a majority of
members of the faculty senate determine that such evaluations were
not so conducted, they shall submit a report in writing to the state
board of education: Provided, That nothing herein creates any new
right of access to or review of any individual's evaluations.



(12) A local board shall provide to each faculty senate a two-
hour block of time for a faculty senate meeting on a day scheduled
for the opening of school prior to the beginning of the
instructional term, and a two-hour block of time on each
instructional support and enhancement day scheduled by the board for
instructional activities for students and professional activities
for teachers pursuant section forty-five, article five of this
chapter. A faculty senate may meet for an unlimited block of time per month during noninstructional days to discuss and plan
strategies to improve student instruction and to conduct other
faculty senate business. A faculty senate meeting scheduled on a
noninstructional day shall be considered as part of the purpose for
which the noninstructional day is scheduled. This time may be
utilized and determined at the local school level and includes, but
is not limited to, faculty senate meetings.



(13) Each faculty senate shall develop a strategic plan to
manage the integration of special needs students into the regular
classroom at their respective schools and submit the strategic plan
to the superintendent of the county board of education periodically
pursuant to guidelines developed by the state department of
education. Each faculty senate shall encourage the participation
of local school improvement councils, parents and the community at
large in developing the strategic plan for each school.



Each strategic plan developed by the faculty senate shall
include at least: (A) A mission statement; (B) goals; (C) needs; (D)
objectives and activities to implement plans relating to each goal;
(E) work in progress to implement the strategic plan; (F) guidelines
for placing additional staff into integrated classrooms to meet the
needs of exceptional needs students without diminishing the services
rendered to the other students in integrated classrooms; (G)
guidelines for implementation of collaborative planning and
instruction; and (H) training for all regular classroom teachers who
serve students with exceptional needs in integrated classrooms.
ARTICLE 8. COMPULSORY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE.
§18-8-4. Duties of attendance director and assistant directors;
complaints, warrants and hearings.
(a) The county attendance director and the assistants shall
diligently promote regular school attendance. They shall ascertain
reasons for inexcusable absences from school of pupils of compulsory
school age and students who remain enrolled beyond the sixteenth
birthday as defined under this article and shall take such steps as
are, in their discretion, best calculated to correct attitudes of
parents and pupils which results in absences from school even though
not clearly in violation of law.
(b) In the case of five consecutive or ten total unexcused
absences of a child during a school year, the attendance director
or assistant shall serve written notice to the parent, guardian or
custodian of such child that the attendance of such child at school
is required and that within ten days of receipt of the notice the
parent, guardian or custodian, accompanied by the child, shall
report in person to the school the child attends for a conference
with the principal or other designated representative of the school
in order to discuss and correct the circumstances causing the
inexcusable absences of the child; and if the parent, guardian or
custodian does not comply with the provisions of this article, then
the attendance director or assistant shall make complaint against
the parent, guardian or custodian before a magistrate of the county.
If it appears from the complaint that there is probable cause to
believe that an offense has been committed and that the accused has committed it, a summons or a warrant for the arrest of the accused
shall issue to any officer authorized by law to serve the summons
or to arrest persons charged with offenses against the state. More
than one summons or warrant may be issued on the same complaint.
The summons or warrant shall be executed within ten days of its
issuance.
(c) The magistrate court clerk, or the clerk of the circuit
court performing the duties of the magistrate court as authorized
in section eight, article one, chapter fifty of this code, shall
assign the case to a magistrate within ten days of execution of the
summons or warrant. The hearing shall be held within twenty days
of the assignment to the magistrate, subject to lawful continuance.
The magistrate shall provide to the accused at least ten days'
advance notice of the date, time and place of the hearing.
(d) When any doubt exists as to the age of a child absent from
school, the attendance director shall have authority to require a
properly attested birth certificate or an affidavit from the parent,
guardian or custodian of such child, stating age of the child. The
county attendance director or assistant shall, in the performance
of his or her duties, have authority to take without warrant any
child absent from school in violation of the provisions of this
article and to place such child in the school in which such child
is or should be enrolled.
(e) The county attendance director shall devote such time as
is required by section three of this article to the duties of
attendance director in accordance with this section during the instructional term and at such other times as the duties of an
attendance director are required. All attendance directors hired
for more than two hundred days may be assigned other duties
determined by the superintendent during the period in excess of two
hundred days. The county attendance director shall be responsible
under direction of the county superintendent for the efficient
administration of school attendance in the county.
(f) In addition to those duties directly relating to the
administration of attendance, the county attendance director and
assistant directors shall also perform the following duties:
(1) Assist in directing the taking of the school census to see
that it is taken at the time and in the manner provided by law;
(2) Confer with principals and teachers on the comparison of
school census and enrollment for the detection of possible
nonenrollees;
(3) Cooperate with existing state and federal agencies charged
with enforcement of child labor laws;
(4) Prepare a report for submission by the county
superintendent to the state superintendent of schools on school
attendance, at such times and in such detail as may be required.
The state board shall promulgate a legislative rule pursuant to
article three-b, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code that sets forth
student absences that shall be excluded for accountability purposes.
The absences that shall be excluded by the rule shall include, but
not be limited to, excused student absences, students not in
attendance due to disciplinary measures and absent students for whom the attendance director has pursued judicial remedies to compel
attendance to the extent of his or her authority. The attendance
director shall file with the county superintendent and county board
of education at the close of each month a report showing activities
of the school attendance office and the status of attendance in the
county at the time;
(5) Promote attendance in the county by the compilation of data
for schools and by furnishing suggestions and recommendations for
publication through school bulletins and the press, or in such
manner as the county superintendent may direct;
(6) Participate in school teachers' conferences with parents
and students;
(7) Assist in such other ways as the county superintendent may
direct for improving school attendance;
(8) Make home visits of students who have excessive unexcused
absences, as provided above, or if requested by the chief
administrator, principal or assistant principal; and





(9) Serve as the liaison for homeless children and youth.