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HB 121

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2025 Regular Session Introduced by Ocean Andrew and 12 co-sponsors

HB 121 gives local school boards broader calendar flexibility (open dates) with annual start/end reporting and expanded remote-instruction options for emergencies.

S 3rd Reading:Failed 14-16-0-0-1
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Bill Summary · HB 121

Summary — HB 121: School Calendar Flexibility / Statewide / Open Calendar

Status: Enacted (applies beginning with 2025–2026 school year; effective when law takes effect / implementation timeline reflected in bill)
Primary subject: Education — local school calendars (amendment to G.S. 115C‑84.2 and G.S. 115C‑84.3)

Purpose
- To give local boards of education greater flexibility in adopting school calendars while increasing transparency about start/end dates and establishing expanded remote‑instruction options for units that have experienced repeated emergency closures.

Key provisions
- Annual reporting of start/end dates (G.S. 115C‑84.2):
- By April 1 each year, each local board must report to the State Superintendent and State Board of Education the instructional start and end dates for every school for the next academic year.
- For schools starting earlier than the Monday closest to August 26, the report must identify the statutory exception authorizing the earlier start.
- The State Board must compile and submit to the Joint Legislative Education Oversight Committee a statewide report by June 15 listing schools that start earlier than the Monday closest to August 26 and the statutory exceptions used.

  • Opening and closing dates / waiver authority (G.S. 115C‑84.2(d)):

    • Default (non–year‑round schools): opening no earlier than the Monday closest to August 26; closing no later than the Friday closest to June 11.
    • The State Board may waive the opening‑date restriction for “good cause” and allow local boards to open as early as the Monday closest to August 19. “Good cause” is defined as a local unit in a county having been closed eight days per year during any four of the last ten years due to severe weather, energy shortages, power failures, or other emergencies.
    • Year‑round schools and schools operating under preexisting modified calendars (since 2003–04) remain exempt.
  • Expanded remote instruction allowances (G.S. 115C‑84.3):

    • Public school units in counties that have received a “good cause” waiver may use up to 15 remote instruction days (or 90 remote instruction hours) when schools cannot open for emergency reasons; these may count toward required instructional days/hours.
    • All other public school units may use up to 5 remote instruction days (or 30 hours) for emergency closures.

Who is affected
- Local boards of education (responsible for calendar adoption and required reporting).
- Local schools, students, teachers, parents, and related support services (transportation, childcare, athletics) — due to potential shifts in start/end dates.
- State Board of Education and Superintendent (new reporting and waiver roles).
- Counties with chronic emergency closures (gain additional scheduling and remote‑instruction flexibility).

Procedural/timing details
- Reporting deadlines: local boards by April 1; State Board report to legislature by June 15.
- Waiver process: State Board may grant a waiver on showing of “good cause.”
- Applies beginning with the 2025–2026 school year (per bill language).

Potential impacts and considerations
- Increased local flexibility may help districts manage makeup days and align calendars with local needs (e.g., travel, regional events).
- Earlier start dates remain limited and require justification or statutory exception, preserving a statewide baseline.
- Expanded remote instruction for chronically impacted counties can reduce the need for make‑up days but may raise equity, access, and instructional‑quality concerns where remote learning replaces in‑person instruction.
- The bill does not itself appropriate new state funds; fiscal impacts (e.g., on transportation, childcare, collective‑bargaining calendars) will vary by district and are not quantified in the bill text.

Statutory references amended: G.S. 115C‑84.2 and G.S. 115C‑84.3.

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

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