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Bill

Bill

S 457

Jaime Harrison

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Margie Bright Matthews

Establishes a Commonwealth Middle School Innovation Fund to finance grants and supports for project‑based, multidisciplinary 5–8 programs, with DESE administration and equitable gr

Introduced and adopted
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Bill Summary · S 457

Summary — S.457 (Commonwealth Middle School Innovation Fund)

Note: The submitted package contains conflicting metadata (titles, referral committees, and sponsors). This summary is based on the bill text filed in the Massachusetts Senate by Sen. Bruce E. Tarr (filed 1/17/2025) titled “An Act to establish the Middle School Innovation Fund” and appearing under Senate No. 457.

Purpose

Establish a Commonwealth Middle School Innovation Fund to provide grants and other support to local school district programs that use project‑centered, group learning in grades 5–8. Emphasis is on multidisciplinary learning (including science and mathematics), accommodating students at multiple skill levels, and complying with statutory and regulatory time‑on‑learning requirements (e.g., 603 CMR 27.00).

Key provisions

  • Creates the Commonwealth Middle School Innovation Fund on the books of the Commonwealth to finance eligible middle‑school innovation programs.
  • Authorized uses of grant funds include personnel costs, curriculum development and design, and instructional materials (not limited to these).
  • Funding sources: legislative appropriations, gifts, grants, and other sources. The Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) is directed to seek outside grants “to the maximum feasible extent.”
  • Fund amounts do NOT revert to the General Fund and remain available to DESE for distribution.
  • DESE must promulgate regulations to distribute grants “in a fair and equitable manner,” considering geographic distribution, district size, and maximizing replicability and sustainability of programs.

Administration and governance

  • DESE will administer the fund and establish the Commonwealth Middle School Innovation Council to advise on effectiveness, sustainability, and practicality.
  • Council composition:
    • Chair: Commissioner of Elementary and Secondary Education
    • Members: Secretary of Education; Secretary of Energy and Economic Development; plus 9 governor‑appointed members representing:
    • Massachusetts Association of School Committees (1)
    • Massachusetts Association of School Superintendents (1)
    • Middle school educators from diverse regions (3)
    • Local charitable education foundations (1)
    • Parents of middle school students (2)
    • An organized labor organization representing educators (1)
    • An institution of higher learning with expertise in education and STEM (1)
  • Council must meet at least twice yearly; meetings are public and must allow remote observation.

Reporting and accountability

  • DESE must produce an annual report (filed with the clerks of the House and Senate and posted publicly by December 31 each year) detailing:
    • Grant amounts and recipients
    • Innovative programs developed/supported
    • Opportunities for replication
    • Legislative or regulatory recommendations to support the fund’s work

Who is affected

  • Primary beneficiaries: public school districts (grades 5–8), middle school educators, students (especially in STEM and project‑based contexts), curriculum developers, and potentially local education foundations and higher‑education partners.
  • State agencies: DESE (administrator) and executive branch offices represented on the advisory council.

Procedural status (from available records)

  • Bill filed in the Senate (Senate No. 457) and presented by Sen. Bruce E. Tarr. The bill text identifies the subject as education. Other listed legislative actions in the package are inconsistent; meeting/hearing dates or committee referrals should be verified on the official legislative website for current status.

Potential impacts

  • Encourages adoption and scaling of project‑based, interdisciplinary middle‑school programs statewide.
  • Supports curriculum development and staffing costs that districts may not otherwise fund.
  • Seeks to prioritize equitable geographic and district‑size distribution and promote replicable, sustainable models.

If you want, I can: (1) verify the current procedural status on the Massachusetts legislative website, (2) extract the exact regulatory citations referenced (603 CMR 27.00) and summarize their relevance, or (3) draft a short one‑page briefing for school district leaders on applying for such grants.

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

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