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SB 163

Including certain mental health disorders in existing public health programs

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Laura Chapman

Chatham County Schools can start earlier than usual and schedule fall assessments earlier if their calendar ends the fall semester before December 31.

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Bill Summary · SB 163

Summary — SB 163: SchCalFlex/Chatham/Aug 10 and Assessments

Status: Passed 1st Reading (introduced Jan 23, 2025)
Primary subject areas: Education; School calendars; Assessments; Local (Chatham County)

Main purpose

SB 163 gives Chatham County Schools limited, statutory flexibility to set an earlier start date for the school year and clarifies when certain statewide assessments and final exams may be scheduled for districts that end the fall semester early. The bill applies only to Chatham County Schools.

Key provisions

  • Calendar opening/closing (amends G.S. 115C‑84.2(d)):

    • Retains existing rule that, except for year‑round schools, the student opening date generally may be no earlier than the Monday closest to August 26 and the closing date no later than the Friday closest to June 11.
    • Adds an explicit allowance enabling a local board (in this case, Chatham County) to set an earlier opening date — referenced in the bill text as the Monday closest to August 10 — providing Chatham County an exception to the general statewide opening‑date constraint.
    • Keeps the existing State Board waiver authority (on showing of “good cause”) that can allow opening as early as the Monday closest to August 19 when makeup day capacity is needed.
    • Local boards may revise scheduled closing dates as needed to meet minimum instructional day/time requirements.
  • Assessments and final exams (amends G.S. 115C‑174.12(a)(4)):

    • Keeps the general requirement that statewide annual assessments and final exams be administered within the final instructional days of the year/semester (final 10 days for year‑long courses; final 5 days for semester courses).
    • Adds an explicit exception allowing a local board that concludes the fall semester prior to December 31 to administer required assessments prior to the conclusion of that semester (i.e., permits scheduling assessments earlier if the district’s calendar ends the fall semester earlier).

Who is affected

  • Directly: Chatham County Schools (the bill is explicitly limited to that county).
  • Indirectly: students, families, school staff, extracurricular schedules, local childcare providers and employers in Chatham County who may be affected by an earlier start date; district test coordinators and teachers responsible for scheduling assessments.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • Introduced Jan 23, 2025; passed first reading (per bill header). If enacted, the bill is written to apply beginning with the 2025–2026 school year.
  • No state appropriation or funding changes are included in the bill text.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Pros: Allows local control for Chatham County to adopt a calendar that better suits local needs (e.g., to avoid compressed grading or accommodate weather makeup days), and aligns assessment scheduling with an earlier semester finish.
  • Cons / practical considerations: An earlier start date can affect family schedules, summer employment, childcare arrangements, and local operations; schools must ensure compliance with required minimum instructional days/time and make logistical adjustments (transportation, extracurricular calendars, staff contracts).
  • Fiscal: The bill contains no appropriation; no direct state fiscal impact is specified. Local administrative adjustments (calendar planning, communications, testing logistics) may incur routine costs.

If you want, I can:
- Pull the exact statutory lines changed and produce side‑by‑side language showing deletions/insertions; or
- Draft a one‑page briefing for Chatham County stakeholders (parents, staff, childcare providers) on operational implications.

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

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