Bill
Bill > HSB778
IA HSB778
IA HSB778A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the education system, including the funding and operation of the department for the blind, department of education, state board of regents, and department of workforce development, and modifying provisions related to the Iowa special education council, the school budget review committee, and the calculation of basic enrollment, and including applicability provisions.(See HF 2783.)
summary
Introduced
04/14/2026
04/14/2026
In Committee
04/14/2026
04/14/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill relates to and makes appropriations to the education system. The bill appropriates moneys for FY 2026-2027 from the general fund of the state and other funds to the department for the blind, department of education, state board of regents and its institutions, and department of workforce development. The bill is organized by divisions. DEPARTMENT FOR THE BLIND. The bill appropriates moneys to the department for the blind for its administration. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. The bill appropriates moneys to the department of education for purposes of the department’s general administration and for purposes of supporting the department’s various entities, programs, funds, and duties, including but not limited to the public broadcasting division, community colleges, the Iowa school for the deaf and Iowa educational services for the blind and visually impaired program, the division of special education, and the college student aid commission. The bill also appropriates moneys from the Iowa skilled worker and job creation fund to the department of education for various purposes. STATE BOARD OF REGENTS. The bill appropriates moneys to the state board of regents for the board office, universities’ general operating budgets, the western Iowa regents resource center, the state university of Iowa, the Iowa state university of science and technology, and the university of northern Iowa. STANDING APPROPRIATIONS. For FY 2026-2027, the bill limits H.F. _____ the appropriation associated with programs for at-risk children under Code section 279.51 and eliminates the appropriation associated with the work-study program under Code section 256.209. IOWA TUITION GRANTS. Current Code section 256.191 establishes a tuition grants program for students attending for-profit institutions, and current Code section 256.192 establishes a tuition grants program for students attending a vocational-technical or career option program at a community college. The bill modifies current Code section 256.192 to allow students attending for-profit institutions to apply for a vocational-technical tuition grant. The bill repeals Code section 256.191 and transfers any moneys appropriated for purposes of the Iowa tuition grants for-profit institutions fund that remain unencumbered or unobligated as of July 1, 2026, to the vocational-technical tuition grants fund. The bill increases the standing appropriation for tuition grants for qualified students under the vocational-technical tuition grants program. STATE PROGRAM ALLOCATION. Code section 284.13 establishes how moneys appropriated for purposes of the student achievement and teacher quality program are to be allocated. The bill extends such allocations to FY 2026-2027. The bill provides that beginning in FY 2027-2028, of the moneys appropriated for purposes of the student achievement and teacher quality program, the final priority for the allocation is $10 million for purposes of implementing the supplemental assistance for high-need schools provisions of Code section 284.11. IOWA SPECIAL EDUCATION COUNCIL —— REPEAL. Current Code section 256.35B establishes an Iowa special education council to act in an advisory capacity to the department of education in promoting, directing, and supervising education for children requiring special education in the schools under the supervision and control of the department. The bill repeals Code section 256.35B. H.F. _____ APPROVAL OF REQUESTS FOR A MODIFIED SUPPLEMENTAL AMOUNT. The bill modifies provisions related to what the boards of directors of school districts must approve in order to request to use a modified supplemental amount for costs in excess of the amount received under Code section 257.11(4). The bill prohibits the school budget review committee and the department of education from decreasing a school district’s modified supplemental amount that was approved in a prior budget year due to the failure of the board of directors of a school district to annually approve the school district’s program plan for dropout prevention. The bill requires the school budget review committee and the department of management to reverse any negative modified supplemental amount that was assessed against a school district from July 1, 2024, through June 30, 2027, due to the failure of the board of directors of the school district to properly approve the school district’s program plan for dropout prevention. FY 2026-2027 APPROPRIATIONS —— DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT. The bill appropriates $9.5 million from the general fund of the state to the department of workforce development for FY 2026-2027 for deposit in the career training physical expansion program fund created in Code section 84J.3, if enacted by 2026 Iowa Acts, House File 2466, section 16, or successor legislation. Moneys appropriated pursuant to this provision are contingent on the career training physical expansion program fund receiving no other moneys for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2026, in any Act of the general assembly. BASIC ENROLLMENT —— CORRECTION. The bill changes a reference from “basic” enrollment to “actual” enrollment to reflect the proper enrollment terminology used to determine basic enrollment under Code section 257.6(2) following enactment of 2026 Iowa Acts, chapter 1001. HIGHER EDUCATION —— CIVIC PROFICIENCY. The bill provides H.F. _____ that the state board of regents must require each institution of higher education to establish as a requirement for the completion of any general education requirements or core curricula that an undergraduate student complete introductory survey courses in American history and American government. The requirement applies to undergraduate students beginning enrollment at institutions in academic years beginning on or after July 1, 2028. An institution shall assign a value of at least three semester hours of credit to each course. A required course shall be a comprehensive survey of all American history and American government. A required course shall fulfill the general education or core curriculum requirement for social sciences or humanities, as designated by the institution, that a student is required to complete as a condition of graduation. The bill requires an institution of higher education to provide equivalent credit toward the required courses to a student transferring to the institution for previous substantially similar coursework. The division does not apply to a student completing a degree program designated by an institution as a degree program of three years or less in duration. The bill requires the center for cyclone civics at Iowa state university and the center for civic education at the university of northern Iowa to annually designate courses at their respective institutions that satisfy these requirements. The bill provides that the center for intellectual freedom at the state university of Iowa shall be the sole academic unit at the state university of Iowa responsible for offering courses that satisfy these requirements. The bill strikes a requirement that the center for intellectual freedom at the university of Iowa offer at least one three-semester credit hour course in American history and civil government. The bill requires the state board of regents to conduct a H.F. _____ review of all undergraduate general education requirements and core curricula at institutions by the semester beginning fall 2028. The bill requires the center for intellectual freedom at the university of Iowa, the center for cyclone civics at Iowa state university, and the center for civic education at the university of northern Iowa to each establish an ongoing lecture and debate series by December 31, 2026. The series must promote civil dialogue and debate on the issues most important to the American republic. The bill requires the directors of the center for cyclone civics at Iowa state university and the center for civic education at the university of northern Iowa to each submit an annual report to the governor, the general assembly, and the board of regents by December 31. The report must provide a full account of the respective center’s achievements and identify any opportunities, challenges, and obstacles in the development of the center. HIGHER EDUCATION —— TUITION. The bill requires the state board of regents to direct each regents institution to establish a policy whereby the tuition amount charged to students classified as residents that is charged to an undergraduate student in the student’s first academic year of enrollment will not increase in the student’s subsequent academic years of undergraduate enrollment. This requirement applies to a student’s first academic year of enrollment that begins in or after 2027. The bill provides limitations on this requirement. The bill requires the state board of regents to limit any increase in the amount of tuition charged by an institution of higher education to a resident undergraduate student to the average of the increases in the higher education price index in the previous three years; provided, however, that this provision does not apply to a resident undergraduate student in an academic year if the tuition amount that can be charged to H.F. _____ the student is limited pursuant to the bill’s provisions. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION —— REPORTING REQUIREMENTS RELATED TO ANTIBULLYING PROGRAMMING. The bill requires the department of education to submit an annual report to the general assembly that contains, in part, information related to the department’s antibullying programming.
AI Summary
This bill appropriates funds for the Iowa education system for the fiscal years 2026-2027, covering various departments and institutions.
* **Department for the Blind:** $3,207,190 from the General Fund for administration.
* **Department of Education:**
* $7,073,808 from the General Fund for general administration.
* $8,165,236 from the General Fund for the Public Broadcasting Division.
* $2,952,459 from the General Fund for reimbursement of career and technical education expenditures.
* $2,176,797 from the General Fund for school food service programs.
* $1,721,400 from the General Fund for expansion of birth through age three services, with $383,769 allocated to the child health specialty clinics at the State University of Iowa.
* $9,946,450 from the General Fund for Jobs for America's Graduates program.
* $7,824,782 from the General Fund for successful progression for early readers.
* $1,915,000 from the General Fund for an early warning system for literacy.
* $1,500,000 from the General Fund for the Iowa Reading Research Center.
* $1,899,682 from the General Fund for school-based children’s mental health services, including a $200,000 pilot program for grief and loss services in rural areas.
* $247,008,533 from the General Fund for general state financial aid to community colleges.
* $12,813,313 from the General Fund for the Iowa School for the Deaf.
* $5,112,412 from the General Fund for the Iowa Educational Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired Program.
* $6,310,409 from the General Fund for the STEM collaborative initiative.
* $10,000,000 from the General Fund for the Division of Special Education.
* $591,533 from the General Fund for the administration of the College Student Aid Commission.
* $6,600,000 from the General Fund for the National Guard Service Scholarship Program.
* $3,229,468 from the General Fund for the All Iowa Opportunity Scholarship Program.
* $1,041,361 from the General Fund for the Teach Iowa Scholar Program.
* $7,985,911 from the General Fund for the Health Care Professional Incentive Program.
* $700,000 from the General Fund for the Rural Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program.
* $23,927,005 from the General Fund for the Future Ready Iowa Skilled Workforce Last-Dollar Scholarship Program.
* $425,000 from the General Fund for the Future Ready Iowa Skilled Workforce Grant Program.
* $6,500,000 from the General Fund for the Iowa Workforce Grant and Incentive Program.
* $5,000,000 from the Iowa Skilled Worker and Job Creation Fund for skilled workforce shortage tuition grants.
* $15,100,000 from the Iowa Skilled Worker and Job Creation Fund for workforce training and economic development funds.
* $6,000,000 from the Iowa Skilled Worker and Job Creation Fund for capital projects at community colleges.
* $4,800,000 from the Iowa Skilled Worker and Job Creation Fund for the Pathways for Academic Career and Employment Fund.
* $2,000,000 from the Iowa Skilled Worker and Job Creation Fund for the Gap Tuition Assistance Fund.
* **State Board of Regents:**
* $764,642 from the General Fund for the Office of the State Board of Regents.
* $268,297 from the General Fund for the Western Iowa Regents Resource Center.
* $223,496,355 from the General Fund for the State University of Iowa's general university operations.
* $101,894,146 from the General Fund for the University of Northern Iowa's general university operations.
* $229,864,938 from the General Fund for Iowa State University of Science and Technology's general university operations.
* **Department of Workforce Development:** $9,500,000 from the General Fund for deposit in the Career Training Physical Expansion Program Fund, contingent on the fund not receiving other appropriations.
The bill also includes provisions related to tuition grants, modifies requirements for school district budget approvals, and mandates introductory survey courses in American history and government for undergraduate students at regent institutions starting in the 2028 academic year. Additionally, it requires regent institutions to establish policies to prevent tuition increases for resident undergraduates after their first year, starting with students enrolling in or after 2027. The bill repeals the Iowa Special Education Council and modifies provisions related to the Iowa Tuition Grants program.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
Appropriations (House)
Last Action
Committee report approving bill, renumbered as HF 2783. (on 04/21/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=HSB778 |
| Fiscal Note/Analysis - NOBA: House Sub | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/NOBA/1604405.pdf |
| BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/HSB778.html |
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