TITLE: Relating to open-source instructional material for public schools.

SUMMARY: Relating to open-source instructional material for public schools.

FULL TEXT:
AN ACT relating to open-source instructional material for public schools. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Section 31.002(1-a), Education Code, is amended to read as follows: (1-a) "Open-source instructional material" means teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that allows for free use, reuse, modification, and sharing with others, including full courses, course materials, modules, textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other tools, materials, or techniques used to support access to knowledge. [electronic instructional material that is available for downloading from the Internet at no charge to a student and without requiring the purchase of an unlock code, membership, or other access or use charge, except for a charge to order an optional printed copy of all or part of the instructional material.] The term includes state-developed open-source instructional material purchased under Subchapter B-1. SECTION 2. Section 31.071(c), Education Code, is amended to read as follows: (c) Except as provided by Section 31.0711, a state-developed [State-developed] open-source instructional material must be irrevocably owned by [or licensed to] the state [for use in the applicable subject or grade level].The state must have unlimited authority to modify, delete, combine, or add content to the instructional material after purchase. SECTION 3. Subchapter B-1, Chapter 31, Education Code, is amended by adding Section 31.0711 to read as follows: Sec. 31.0711. CONTENT NOT OWNED BY STATE. Instructional material purchased under this subchapter may include content not owned by the state and for which preexisting rights may exist if the content: (1) is in the public domain; (2) may be used under a limitation or exception to copyright law, including a limitation under Section 107, Copyright Act of 1976 (17 U.S.C. Section 107); or (3) is licensed to the state under a license that: (A) grants the state unlimited authority to modify, delete, combine, or add content; (B) permits the free use and repurposing of the material by any person or entity; and (C) is for a term of use acceptable to the commissioner to ensure a useful life of the material. SECTION 4. Section 31.075, Education Code, is amended by amending Subsections (b) and (c) and adding Subsections (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h) to read as follows: (b) To encourage the use of instructional material purchased by the state under this subchapter by school districts and open-enrollment charter schools, the [The] commissioner shall provide a license for the instructional material that allows for the free use, reuse, modification, or sharing of the material by any person or entity [to each public school in the state, including a school district, an open-enrollment charter school, and a state or local agency educating students in any grade from prekindergarten through high school, to use and reproduce state-developed open-source instructional material].(c) The terms of a license provided by the commissioner under this section: (1) shall require that a user who reproduces the instructional material in any manner: (A) except as provided by Subdivision (2)(A), must keep all copyright notices for the material intact; (B) except as provided by Subdivision (2)(A), must attribute the authorship of the material to the agency or another person specified by the commissioner; (C) must indicate if the user has modified the material; (D) may not assert or imply any connection with or sponsorship or endorsement by the agency or this state, unless authorized by the commissioner; and (E) to the extent reasonably practicable, must provide in any product or derivative material a uniform resource identifier or hyperlink through which a person may obtain the material free of charge; (2) must provide that: (A) the commissioner may request that a user remove a copyright notice or attribution from the material and that a user must comply with the request to the extent reasonably practicable; and (B) the rights granted under the license to a user are automatically terminated if the user fails to comply with the terms of the license; and (3) may include any additional terms determined by the commissioner [The commissioner may provide a license to use state-developed open-source instructional material to an entity not listed in Subsection (b). In determining the cost of a license under this subsection, the commissioner shall seek, to the extent feasible, to recover the costs of developing, revising, and distributing state-developed open-source instructional materials].(d) The commissioner may exempt a license under this section from including one or more of the requirements under Subsection (c)(1). (e) The commissioner shall determine what is considered reasonably practicable for purposes of Subsections (c)(1)(E) and (c)(2)(A). (f) The commissioner may: (1) specify requirements to reinstate a user's rights under a license that has been terminated; and (2) reinstate a user's rights on completion of those requirements. (g) The commissioner may use a license commonly applied to an open education resource in implementing this section. (h) The attorney general shall represent the agency in an action brought under this section and may recover reasonable expenses incurred in obtaining relief, including court costs, reasonable attorney's fees, investigative costs, witness fees, and deposition costs. SECTION 5. Section 31.076(b), Education Code, is amended to read as follows: (b) A decision by the commissioner regarding the purchase, revision, cost, licensing, or distribution of state-developed open-source instructional material is final and may not be appealed. SECTION 6. Section 31.077, Education Code, is repealed. SECTION 7. The commissioner of education may apply the changes in law made by this Act to instructional material purchased by the state under Subchapter B-1, Chapter 31, Education Code, regardless of whether the instructional material was purchased before, on, or after the effective date of this Act. SECTION 8. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.