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Sen. Nilo's SB 1082 to speed interdistrict transfer reviews clears Senate Education
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Summary
SB 1082 would require clearer timelines, concurrent review, and notices to reduce lengthy interdistrict transfer delays that can leave students unenrolled; the committee passed the bill to appropriations after supportive testimony from county boards and parent groups.
Senator Nilo presented SB 1082 as an amendment package to streamline interdistrict transfer applications by clarifying timelines, requiring districts to notify families within 30 days when an application is incomplete, and permitting concurrent review by both sending and receiving districts.
Bina Lefkowitz, president of the Association of California County Boards of Education, said the bill "creates a more fair, more clear, and more timely interdistrict transfer process for both families and school districts," while emphasizing that the bill does not change a district's authority to approve or deny transfers.
Paulina Spolvada, a lead organizer with Families in Action for Quality Education, described the delays families face and said the measure preserves parents' appeal rights while preventing procedural denials: "Right now, when districts delay or fail to act, families experience that as a denial even when no formal decision has been made."
Opponents or cautious observers, including the California School Boards Association, thanked the author for accepting amendments but asked for more statewide data to confirm the scope of the problem.
The committee voted to pass SB 1082 as amended to the Senate Appropriations Committee for fiscal review; later recorded committee notes show the bill reported out with unanimous support.
Next steps: SB 1082 proceeds to the Appropriations Committee for fiscal analysis and further stakeholder conversations.
