Minn. Stat. § 124D.231
Subd. 1. Definitions.
For the purposes of this section, the following terms have the meanings given them.
Subd. 2. Full-service community school program.
(a) The commissioner shall provide funding to districts, charter schools, and Tribal contract schools with eligible school sites to plan, implement, and improve full-service community schools. Eligible school sites must meet one of the following criteria:
(b) School sites receiving funding under this section shall hire or contract with a partner agency to hire a full-time site coordinator. Districts, charter schools, or Tribal contract schools receiving funding under this section for three or more school sites shall provide or contract with a partner agency to provide a full-service community school initiative director. Districts and charter schools may receive up to:
(c) The commissioner shall consider additional school factors when dispensing funds including: schools with significant populations of students eligible for free or reduced-price meals; significant homeless and highly mobile rates; equity among urban, suburban, and greater Minnesota schools; and demonstrated success implementing full-service community school programming. In prioritizing and dispensing funds, the commissioner must not prioritize existing full-service community school sites based upon previous funding sources. The commissioner must fund programs in the following priority order:
Subd. 2a. School leadership team.
(a) To be eligible for funding under this section, a school site must establish a full-service community school leadership team responsible for developing school-specific programming goals, assessing program needs, and overseeing the process of implementing expanded programming. The school leadership team must have at least 12 members, including but not limited to the following representatives:
Subd. 2b. Baseline analysis.
To be eligible for funding under this section, school sites must complete a baseline analysis prior to the creation of a full-service community school plan. The analysis must include:
(1) a baseline analysis of needs at the school site, led by the school leadership team, including the following elements:
(ii) analysis of the student body, including:
(A) number and percentage of students with disabilities and needs of these students;
(B) number and percentage of students who are English learners and the needs of these students;
(C) number of students who are homeless or highly mobile;
(D) number and percentage of students receiving free or reduced-price meals and the needs of these students; and
(E) number and percentage of students by race and ethnicity;
(vii) evaluation of the need for and availability of full-service community school activities, including, but not limited to:
(A) integrated student supports that address out-of-school barriers to learning through partnerships with social and health service agencies and providers, and may include medical, dental, vision care, and mental health services or counselors to assist with housing, transportation, nutrition, immigration, or criminal justice issues;
(B) expanded and enriched learning time and opportunities, including before-school, after-school, weekend, and summer programs that provide additional academic instruction, individualized academic support, enrichment activities, and learning opportunities that emphasize real-world learning and community problem solving and may include art, music, drama, creative writing, hands-on experience with engineering or science, tutoring and homework help, or recreational programs that enhance and are consistent with the school's curriculum;
(C) active family and community engagement that brings students' families and the community into the school as partners in education and makes the school a neighborhood hub, providing adults with educational opportunities that may include adult English as a second language classes, computer skills, art, or other programs that bring community members into the school for meetings or events; and
(D) collaborative leadership and practices that build a culture of professional learning, collective trust, and shared responsibility and include a school-based full-service community school leadership team, a full-service community school site coordinator, a full-service community school initiative director, a community-wide leadership team, other leadership or governance teams, teacher learning communities, or other staff to manage the joint work of school and community organizations;
(3) a baseline analysis of needs in the community surrounding the school, led by the school leadership team, including:
Subd. 2c. School plan.
(a) Each school site receiving funding under this section must develop a full-service community school plan that utilizes and aligns district and community assets and establishes services in at least two of the following types of programming:
(1) early childhood:
(2) academic:
(3) parental involvement:
(4) mental and physical health:
(5) community involvement:
(b) The full-service community school leadership team at each school site must develop a full-service community school plan detailing the steps the school leadership team will take, including:
Subd. 3. Full-service community school review.
(a) A full-service community school site receiving funding under this section must submit to the commissioner, and make available at the school site and online, a report describing efforts to integrate community school programming at each covered school site and the effect of the transition to a full-service community school on participating children and adults. This report shall include, but is not limited to, the following:
(b) Reports submitted under this section shall be evaluated by the commissioner with respect to the following criteria: