The Honorable Kay O'Connor State Senator, 9th District State Capitol, Room 521-S Topeka, Kansas 66612-1504
Dear Senator O'Connor:
You request our opinion regarding "the constitutionality of a unified school district charging tuition or special fees to the families of `out district' students which do not offset a cost."
State statute requires, with some limited exceptions, that a child between the ages of seven and 18 years of age attend school.1 The child is eligible for attendance in the unified school district in which the parent or person acting as parent resides.2 The board of education of any other school district may permit a nonresident child to attend school within its district.3 Such attendance may be allowed by agreement between the sending school district and the receiving school district or may result from the unilateral approval of the receiving district.4
Section
While your request regards the constitutionality of charging for attendance, the issue appears to be more a matter of statutory authority. Responsibility for paying the costs of educating a pupil shifts depending on the type of action that allows a nonresident pupil to attend school in a receiving school district. If such attendance results from an agreement between the districts, the pupil "shall not be charged for attendance at school."5 The sending school district remains responsible for paying the costs of the pupil's attendance in accordance with the provisions of the agreement between the two districts.6
A board of education that unilaterally permits a nonresident pupil to attend school may do so without charge to the nonresident pupil or "may charge such pupils for attendance at school to offset, totally or in part, the costs of providing for such attendance."7 Any payment of these charges is deposited in the general fund of the receiving school district.8 The payments are deemed to be "local effort" for purposes of the school finance formula.9
The State Board of Education determines the entitlement of state financial aid for each school district.10 A rudimentary explanation of the entitlement is that it is a compilation of base state aid per pupil multiplied by the district's adjusted or weighted enrollment.11 Local effort is then subtracted from the entitlement in order to determine the amount of state financial aid that will be paid to the school district.12 If the amount of local effort exceeds the amount of entitlement as determined by the State Board, the school district does not receive any state financial aid.13 "If the amount of the district's local effort is less than the amount of state financial aid determined for the district for the school year, the state board shall subtract the amount of the district's local effort from the amount of state financial aid. The remainder is the amount of general state aid the district is entitled to receive for the current school year."14 Any charges paid by a nonresident pupil are deemed to be local effort of the district and are, therefore, subtracted from the amount of general state aid to which the receiving school district is entitled.
Any charges made by a receiving school district against a nonresident pupil pursuant to K.S.A.
Because your request regards "special fees," it is necessary to review charges that may be assessed pursuant to K.S.A.
"(a) The board of education of any school district may prescribe, assess and collect fees and supplemental charges for:
"(1) The use, rental or purchase by pupils of any of the items designated in K.S.A.
72-5389 ,16 and amendments thereto, to offset, in part or in total, the expense of purchasing such items; and"(2) participation in activities, or the use of facilities, materials and equipment, which participation or use is not mandatory, but optional to pupils, whether incidental to curricular, extracurricular or other school-related activities."
"A statute is presumed constitutional, and all doubts must be resolved in favor of its validity."17 While Article
Charges received from a pupil pursuant to K.S.A.
In review, any charges collected from a nonresident pupil by a receiving school district pursuant to K.S.A.
Sincerely,
PHILL KLINE Attorney General of Kansas
Richard D. Smith Assistant Attorney General
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