Bill would create JLARC‑staffed commission to review public education mandates and funding
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HB 2636 would establish a 15‑member Public Education Performance, Operations and Funding Review Commission staffed by JLARC to examine whether policies and funding enacted in the prior 10 years achieved intended outcomes and to recommend changes; sponsors framed it as a tool to identify underfunded mandates.
House Bill 2636 would establish a 15‑member Public Education Performance, Operations and Funding Review Commission, with staff support provided by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC). Nonpartisan staff briefed the commission’s composition and duties: annually examine policy requirements and funding enacted by the legislature in the prior 10 years, evaluate whether those requirements achieved intended outcomes and cost‑benefit expectations, and recommend whether provisions should be maintained, modified or repealed.
Sponsor Representative Skyler Rood described the bill as a response to frequent district complaints about unfunded mandates and administrative burden; he said the commission is designed to be low or no fiscal impact by using JLARC’s capacity. Public testimony included support from students, citizens and a director representing rural districts; speakers urged clearer expectations for legislative follow-through on recommendations and suggested accelerating the commission’s start date and adding an ESD superintendent to membership.
The bill sets an effective date in 2029 with the first annual report due 11/01/2030 in briefing text; witnesses urged moving timelines earlier. JLARC and stakeholders will need to define scope and workload and consider member composition and prioritization of the highest-impact mandates for review.
