Federal Updates
- The House plans to take up a continuing resolution this week to extend government funding at current levels into November.
- Senate Appropriations Committee passed fiscal year 2020 spending levels, including $187.7 billion for Labor, Health and Human Services and Education.
- House Education and Labor Committee Democrats released a report titled, Investing in Economic Mobility: The Important Role of HBCUs, TCUs, and MSIs in Closing Racial and Wealth Gaps in Higher Education.
- Public comments will be accepted until November 5, 2019 on a draft form from the Department of Education that proposes a new information collection process for colleges to report foreign gifts and contracts.
State Updates
- New York is considering legislation to expand privacy protection for students. S 6690 would establish the Student Privacy Protection Act which prescribes when student information may be disclosed and what student information may be disclosed. This measure is designed to enhance safeguards for students by defining student information that may be disclosed, limiting the purpose for disclosure, and providing parents and eligible students the opportunity to further protect themselves.
- In Illinois, the legislature passed HB 3606 creating the Student Online Personal Protection Act of 2019. The legislation bans schools from commercially selling the meta-data of K-12 students who use school computers, and provides parents with some control over how the data may be used. The bill also establishes a Student Data Protection Oversight Committee. The committee is required to submit an annual report to the General Assembly and State Board of Education with recommendations for policy revisions or legislative amendments if needed to carry out the intent of the Act.
- California introduced legislation that would revise the calculation for college admissions-related standardized test sponsors to disclose certain test materials. AB 1234 would change the required calculation for the number of test administrations from which a test sponsor must provide certain test materials to 50% of regular test administrations. The legislation would also streamline state reporting requirements for entities who conduct standardized college admission tests in California and provides students with an additional opportunity to take college-admissions tests in July.
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