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S 360

Relates to expanding the health department's review of correctional health services

2025 Regular Session Introduced by April Baskin and 3 co-sponsors

Massachusetts schools must start high schools no earlier than 9:00 a.m. and middle schools no earlier than 8:30 a.m. by July 1, 2028, to improve student health and learning.

REFERRED TO HEALTH
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Bill Summary · S 360

Summary — S.360 (Commonwealth of Massachusetts): “An Act relative to school start times for middle and high school students”

Note on source materials: The materials provided contained multiple, conflicting texts (including unrelated federal budget rescission language and inconsistent sponsor lists). This summary focuses on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts bill filed as Senate No. 360 (filed 1/17/2025), titled “An Act relative to school start times for middle and high school students,” as presented in the Massachusetts Senate file.

Main purpose / intent

Require later morning start times for public middle and high schools across Massachusetts to align school schedules with adolescent sleep research and improve student health, safety, and learning.

Key provisions

  • Amends Chapter 69 (new Section 1G) to set minimum start times:
    • High schools (including charter high schools) shall begin no earlier than 9:00 a.m.
    • Middle schools (including charter middle schools) shall begin no earlier than 8:30 a.m.
  • Defines “school day” by the local school district or charter school’s definition used to calculate average daily attendance for state funding apportionments.
  • The Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (the board) must promulgate rules and regulations necessary to implement the section “in a manner that is fair and equitable.”
  • Compliance condition for state funding: A public school will not be entitled to state apportionments unless the trustees’/board’s report for the preceding school year shows the school followed this section.
  • If the board determines the section imposes state-mandated costs on local agencies or districts, reimbursement shall be made pursuant to chapters 70 and 71 (state school finance/statutory reimbursement mechanisms).

Implementation timeline

  • Schools must implement the new start-time requirements no later than July 1, 2028, OR the date on which a school district’s or charter school’s collective bargaining agreement that was operative on January 1, 2026 expires — whichever is later.
  • The section applies to all academic years after July 1, 2028.

Who is affected

  • All public middle and high schools in Massachusetts, including charter schools.
  • Students (grades served by middle and high schools), families (childcare/commute arrangements), school transportation providers, athletic and extracurricular programs, teachers and staff, and school district budgets.
  • Local collective bargaining stakeholders (because implementation may implicate contracts and staffing schedules).

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Positive effects anticipated: improved adolescent sleep, attendance, performance, and safety.
  • Operational and fiscal impacts: likely changes to bus schedules, transportation contracts, extracurricular/athletics scheduling, after-school programs, staff scheduling; potential additional costs to districts for buses, personnel, or extended childcare needs for families.
  • Compliance enforcement: linkage of state funding to documented compliance may create strong incentive to conform; state reimbursement may be required if costs are deemed state-mandated.
  • Collective bargaining: the implementation date is linked to existing contracts to reduce immediate contract conflicts but could delay full statewide implementation in some districts until contract expirations.

Legislative status (as provided)

  • Filed: 1/17/2025 (Senate Docket No. 2351)
  • Introduced/Read and referred: Feb 3, 2025
  • Referred to Education; reported and committed to Finance (dates in record)
  • Passed Senate: May 28, 2025
  • Delivered to Assembly / Referred to Health; hearing scheduled (06/17/2025, 1:00–5:00 PM, B-2)
  • Related/companion bill: H. A. 2149 (companion)

If you want, I can:
- Produce a short one-page explainer for parents or for school administrators outlining operational steps districts should consider, or
- Produce an analysis of likely fiscal impacts and implementation challenges for a typical medium-sized district.

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

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