Source: https://www.cga.ct.gov/2012/rpt/2012-R-0085.htm
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 20:02:52+00:00

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You asked for a summary of (1) statutory requirements and State Department of Education (SDE) guidelines concerning a school district's responsibility to provide transportation for students to and from school and (2) state school transportation funding.
State law requires school districts to provide transportation for all school-age children whenever it is "reasonable and desirable" (CGS § 10-220(a)). In general, this requirement is limited to transportation to public and certain nonprofit, private schools located within the school district. The only out-of-district transportation school districts must provide is for students attending state technical high schools and district-designated regional agricultural science and technology centers.
Within these requirements, local and regional boards of education retain discretion over district transportation policies, including the number of school buses, bus routes and stops, the students to whom they will provide transportation, and maximum walking distances. The SDE has issued guidelines for district policies (School Accommodations Workshop Package, October 2008, pp. 28-31), but they are not mandatory.
The state provides an annual grant to local school districts that reimburses them for part of the cost of providing public school transportation. Reimbursement percentages vary from zero to 60% depending on the relative wealth of the town or towns making up the district. The state also provides additional funds for school districts, regional education service centers, and other entities that provide transportation for students attending certain schools outside their home districts.
The law requires boards of education to furnish, by transportation or otherwise, school accommodations so that each child five years of age and over and under age 21 who has not graduated from high school or vocational school may attend public school (CGS §10-186 (a)). The law further states that each board of education must provide each child who is of school age and residing in the district with the opportunity to attend public school and provide transportation for children wherever it is “reasonable and desirable” (CGS §10-220 (a)). A parent, guardian, surrogate parent, emancipated minor, or student of eligible age is entitled to a hearing before the board of education when a school accommodation, such as transportation, is denied.
5. parents are reimbursed if they provide transportation for the students, as long as no parent is required to provide transportation (Conn. Agencies Regs., § 10-76d-19).
School boards have the authority to create their own transportation policies within the confines of the law, for instance, determining what constitutes a hazardous route or setting maximum walking distances.
3. for a student older than age14 or enrolled in grades 9-12, 2 miles.
The guidelines cite various other conditions considered hazardous, including streets with no sidewalks, roads and sidewalks next to railroad tracks if there is no barrier between the tracks and the walk or road, or requirements that students walk to or from school or the bus stop within one-half hour before sunrise or after sunset.
The guidelines specify that pupils with physical handicaps or health conditions rendering them unable to walk to the bus stop or school, as determined by their physician and the school medical advisor, must receive appropriate transportation. They also state that special education pupils should be judged on an individual basis.
The state reimburses school districts for between zero and 60% of their eligible school transportation costs. The actual percentage reimbursement depends on the school district's wealth, with poorer districts receiving a higher percentage. The regular reimbursement rate is increased by 10 percentage points for K-12 regional districts and five percentage points for high school regional districts. By law, reimbursements are capped at the amount appropriated for the grants in each year's state budget. If the total grants payable exceed the appropriated amounts, the grants must be proportionately reduced. Grants have been capped in this manner since FY 2004 (CGS § 10-266m).
A school district must provide transportation to a vocational-technical (V-T) school located outside the district for any student who lives in the district, is under age 21, and has not graduated from high school. The amount a district must spend on such transportation is limited to $6,000 per student.
The state reimburses districts for these costs through the regular school transportation grant. For expenses exceeding $800 per student, the district's regular percentage reimbursement is increased by 20 percentage points (CGS § 10-97). In addition, the education commissioner may reimburse up to $2,000 per student for transporting Hartford students to V-T schools outside Hartford to help meet desegregation goals (CGS §§ 10-264i, 10-266m).
A district that does not offer a vocational agriculture program must designate one or more regional agricultural science and technology centers that students who live in the district may attend. The district must pay the cost of such a student's transportation to the designated center or centers, up to a maximum of $6,000 per student.
As with V-T school transportation, the state reimburses districts for these costs through the regular school transportation grant. For expenses exceeding $800 per student, the district's regular percentage reimbursement is increased by 20 percentage points. Reimbursement is available only for the cost to transport a student to the center that was nearest to the student's home district at the time he or she enrolled in the center (CGS § 10-97).
In addition, the education commissioner may reimburse up to $2,000 per student for transporting Hartford students to centers outside Hartford to help meet desegregation goals (CGS §§ 10-264i, 10-266m).
A district must provide transportation for its resident students to attend an interdistrict magnet school located in the same district. The state reimburses districts for those costs through the regular school transportation grant (CGS § 10-264l (f)).
School districts may, but are not required to, provide transportation for their students attending magnet schools outside the district. The state gives a separate grant for magnet school students transported out-of-district. That grant reimburses a school district or other transportation provider for the reasonable costs of the interdistrict transportation up to a maximum of $1,300 per student. For each Hartford student attending a magnet school outside Hartford to help meet desegregation goals, the maximum state reimbursement is $2,000. Expenditures exceeding these limits are eligible for reimbursement in the following year through the regular school transportation grant (CGS § 10-264i).
The school district where a charter school is located must provide transportation to any of its students attending the charter school unless the school makes other arrangements. Any district may voluntarily provide transportation for any of its resident students to attend a charter school in another district. In either situation, the district is eligible for state reimbursement for those costs through the regular school transportation grant (CGS § 10-66ee(f)).
State law requires towns to provide their resident students with the same school transportation services to private, nonprofit schools located in the school district as it does to public schools, provided a majority of the students attending the private school are Connecticut residents. The amount a town must spend to provide this transportation is limited to twice the per-pupil amount it spent on public school transportation in the preceding school year (CGS § 10-281). Towns receive the same state grant for providing required transportation to private schools within their school districts as they do for providing public school transportation.
The law also allows, but does not require, towns to provide transportation to private, nonprofit schools outside the district but within the state, but the state does not reimburse towns for providing this transportation unless the town does not maintain a high school and, as a result, it provides transportation to a private high school outside the school district (CGS §§ 10-277 and 10-280a).

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