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Staff walks senators through H.955 plan to convert BOCES into seven statutory 'Seesaws' and fund study committees
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Summary
Committee staff gave a detailed, line‑by‑line overview of H.955, explaining provisions that would statutorily create seven cooperative educational service areas ('Seesaws'), require study committees and facilitators for potential unified union school districts, set timelines through 2029, and specify appropriations (startup grants, facilitator contracts, reimbursements and other seed funding).
Committee staffers walked the Senate Education Committee through H.955, the lengthy house education report that would recast the existing BOCES framework into statutorily required cooperative educational service areas — repeatedly labeled in testimony as 'Seesaws.' The presentation covered definitions, membership, governance, required services, the role of the Vermont Learning Collaborative, mandated facilitators, study committee groupings, deadlines and appropriations.
Major features outlined by staff include:
- Definition and structure: The bill would convert voluntary BOCES arrangements into seven statutorily defined Seesaw regions with boards and bylaws; staff emphasized most current employment, retirement and collective‑bargaining provisions would carry forward.
- Required services and optional use: Seesaws would be required to offer example services (professional development, curriculum coordination, transportation, special‑education coordination), but member districts would not be forced to use those services; committee members asked for clarity on what "shall offer" means in practice.
- Implementation timeline and facilitators: The Vermont Learning Collaborative (an existing entity) would be asked to contract for seven regional facilitators and one lead facilitator to convene study committees; first meetings must occur by 12/01/2026 and final study‑committee reports are due by 12/01/2027. If a study committee recommends a unified union school district, voter decisions would be scheduled by 11/07/2028 and a lead facilitator's final report back to the legislature by 01/01/2029.
- Funding and seed grants: The bill increases existing start‑up grants for cooperative entities from $10,000 to $15,000. Testimony referenced facilitator contract amounts (a $50,000 figure per facilitator and $60,000 for the lead facilitator in the appropriation language), a $50,000 start‑up contribution for hiring an executive director at each Seesaw (for six Seesaws that need it), and a $10,000 reimbursement cap per study committee for allowable costs. Staff said many of the appropriations would be allocated from previously authorized education transformation funds rather than new general‑fund spending.
Committee members pressed staff on several points: how proportional representation on Seesaw boards will be determined (the bill does not change the current law method), whether stand‑alone CTE centers are included as members (they are not members directly; their school boards participate via districts), what compels districts to participate in study committees (the bill requires assigned districts to attend the assigned study committee process), and how available Seesaw services will be phased in relative to the facilitator and study committee timelines.
Staff also walked through significant Ways and Means amendments that push some foundation‑formula contingent effective dates into 2029/2030, asked whether the committee wanted finance staff to testify separately on taxation and formula changes, and summarized JFO/Building Bright Futures tasks (pre‑K cost modeling and reporting) and associated appropriations.
No final votes were taken. Committee members asked for additional briefings from finance and agency experts, maps of proposed Seesaw boundaries, and clarifications about CTE center participation and service launch timelines.

