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HB 286

Administrative Procedure (UAPA) - As introduced, requires each state agency head to complete periodic training for purposes of complying with the requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 2007. - Amends TCA Title 4, Chapter 5.

114th Regular Session (2025-2026) Introduced by Justin Lafferty

HB 286 lets Vance County Schools start as early as the Monday closest to August 19, with a State Board waiver for good cause to cover emergency makeup days.

P2C, caption bill, held on desk - pending amdt.
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Bill Summary · HB 286

Summary — HB 286: School Calendar Flexibility / Vance County (Open Calendar)

Status: Passed 1st Reading (filed in 2025)
Introduced: 2025 (bill text cites application beginning with 2025–2026 school year)

Purpose

HB 286 authorizes a narrow, county‑specific flexibility to the State law that governs public school opening and closing dates. The bill’s intent is to allow Vance County Schools to adopt a slightly earlier opening date when justified, so local calendars can better accommodate anticipated makeup days resulting from past emergency closures.

Key provisions

  • Amends G.S. 115C‑84.2(d) (Opening and Closing Dates) to permit an exception for Vance County:
    • Under current general law: non‑year‑round schools must open no earlier than the Monday closest to August 26 and close no later than the Friday closest to June 11.
    • Under HB 286 (for Vance County only): the State Board of Education may waive the standard opening date (Monday closest to August 26) and allow Vance County’s local board to set an opening date as early as the Monday closest to August 19 — but only “on a showing of good cause” and only to the extent necessary to provide sufficient days to accommodate anticipated makeup days.
  • Retains authority for local boards to revise scheduled closing dates as needed to meet minimum instructional days or instructional time.
  • Defines “good cause” in the statute (unchanged): typically demonstrated where schools in a local unit have been closed 8 days per year during any 4 of the last 10 years because of severe weather, energy shortages, power failures, or other emergency situations.
  • Confirms that the statute’s other exceptions (e.g., schools operating under previously designated modified calendars) remain unaffected.
  • Geographic scope: applies only to Vance County Schools.
  • Effective timing: the bill takes effect upon becoming law and is written to apply beginning with the 2025–2026 school year.

Who is affected

  • Primary: Vance County Schools — local board, principals, teachers, students, and families.
  • Secondary: State Board of Education (must evaluate and grant the waiver upon showing of good cause); neighboring LEAs (limited administrative or scheduling coordination impacts only if calendars shift).
  • Potentially affects ancillary stakeholders: childcare providers, athletic schedules, transportation contractors, and colleges/departmental admissions timelines (if start dates change relative to regional norms).

Expected impacts and considerations

  • Practical effect: grants Vance County limited ability to start school up to one week earlier than statewide non‑year‑round start limitation, solely to ensure adequate instructional time after anticipated makeup days.
  • Administrative: requires the State Board to consider and approve waiver requests based on the statutory “good cause” standard.
  • Operational/community impacts: earlier start can improve ability to absorb emergency closure days without extending the school year, but may affect family childcare arrangements, summer employment and program schedules, and synchronization with outside calendars (colleges, athletics).
  • No fiscal analysis is included in the bill text; anticipated fiscal impacts are minimal and chiefly administrative (calendar planning, communications).

Procedural / timeline notes

  • The bill is limited in scope (county‑specific) and becomes operative for the 2025–2026 school year if enacted.
  • As of filing/first reading, the bill was moving through the legislative process and would require enactment (signature or other final action according to state procedure) before the waiver authority could be used.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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