Code of Alabama

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41-15B-2.2
for children and families in crisis. The department shall maintain standards and procedures
to require that all staff members who provide services pursuant to this subdivision have the
appropriate specialized training or experience, or both, to meet the needs of the children
and families served. b. Intensive long term programs designed to change behavior and rehabilitate
children with gang-related problems, satanic worshipping-related problems, drug or alcohol
problems or addictions. Private providers may be utilized for these drug and alcohol
and gang-related and satanic worshipping-related treatment programs. A portion of the funds
allocated pursuant to this paragraph shall be used to fund halfway houses or other graduated
release facilities for children with drug or alcohol problems or addictions. c. Any other
children's services provided by the Department of Mental Health. (7) a. Ten percent of the
funds shall be allocated to the Juvenile Probation Services Fund and...
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25-4-10
mean an individual who: (i) Furnishes individuals to perform service in agricultural labor
for any other persons; (ii) Pays (either on his or her own behalf or on behalf of such other
person) the individuals so furnished by him or her for the service in agricultural labor performed
by them; and (iii) Has not entered into a written agreement with the farm operator under which
such crew leader is designated as an employee of such farm operator. b. Domestic service after
December 31, 1977, in a private home, local college club, or local chapter of a college
fraternity or sorority performed for a person, their spouse, or estate who paid cash remuneration
of $1,000 or more in any calendar quarter in the current calendar year or the preceding calendar
year to individuals employed in such domestic service. For the purposes of this paragraph
b. the term "domestic service" includes all service for a person in the operation
and maintenance of a private household, local college club, or local...
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16-28-3
Section 16-28-3 Ages of children required to attend school; exemption for church school students;
transfer students. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), every child between
the ages of six and 17 years shall be required to attend a public school, private school,
church school, or be instructed by a competent private tutor for the entire
length of the school term in every scholastic year except that, prior to attaining his or
her 16th birthday every child attending a church school as defined in Section 16-28-1 is exempt
from the requirements of this section, provided the child complies with enrollment and reporting
procedures specified in Section 16-28-7. Admission to public school shall be on an individual
basis on the application of the parents, legal custodian, or guardian of the child to the
local board of education at the beginning of each school year, under the rules as the board
may prescribe; provided, a person who is under 19 years of age and on track to...
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16-28-2.1
Section 16-28-2.1 Adoption of standards for mandatory attendance policy; parents held accountable;
enforcement. The Legislature finds that mandatory attendance policies for schools differ from
school system to school system throughout the State of Alabama. The State Board of Education
shall adopt standards for a mandatory and enforceable attendance policy for all students in
public schools in the State of Alabama. Parents shall be held accountable in accordance with
Sections 16-28-12 and 16-28-7, for the failure of the child who is of compulsory attendance
age to attend either public, private or church-school. Enforcement of this section
shall lie with the local board of education and the juvenile court system. (Acts 1991, No.
91-323, p. 602, §15.)...
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21-1-10
Section 21-1-10 Attendance of blind, deaf, or mute children of mandatory age - Required. It
shall be the duty of any parent, guardian, or other person having control of any deaf or blind
child of mandatory school attendance age and so handicapped by deafness, blindness, or inability
to speak as to be unable to make satisfactory progress in the public schools of the community
in which such child resides to enroll such child in the Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind
located at Talladega, Alabama, not later than five days after the opening of this school and
to keep such child in school during each scholastic year for a term of 36 weeks, or for the
length of the school term. (Acts 1931, No. 61, p. 125; Code 1940, T. 52, §525; Act 2009-564,
p. 1648, §1.)...
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16-1-11
Section 16-1-11 Private schools to register and report;. All private schools
or institutions of any kind having a school in connection therewith, except church schools
as defined in Section 16-28-1, shall register annually on or before October 10 with the Department
of Education and shall report on uniform blanks furnished by the Department of Education,
giving such statistics as relate to the number of pupils, the number of instructors, enrollment,
attendance, course of study, length of term, cost of tuition, funds, value of property, and
the general condition of the school. This section may not be interpreted or construed to authorize
the Department of Education, the State Board of Education, or the State Superintendent of
Education to license or regulate any private, nonpublic, or church school offering
instruction in grades K-12, or any combination thereof. (School Code 1927, §599; Code 1940,
T. 52, §547; Acts 1982, No. 82-218, p. 260, §2; Act 2014-245, p. 785, §4.)...
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16-6D-8
Section 16-6D-8 Tax credits; Failing Schools Income Tax Credit Account. (a) To provide educational
flexibility and state accountability for students in failing schools: (1) For tax years beginning
on and after January 1, 2013, an Alabama income tax credit is made available to the parent
of a student enrolled in or assigned to attend a failing school to help offset the cost of
transferring the student to a nonfailing public school or nonpublic school of the parent's
choice. The income tax credit shall be an amount equal to 80 percent of the average annual
state cost of attendance for a public K-12 student during the applicable tax year or the actual
cost of attending a nonfailing public school or nonpublic school, whichever is less. The actual
cost of attending a nonfailing public school or nonpublic school shall be calculated by adding
together any tuition amounts or mandatory fees charged by the school to the student as a condition
of enrolling or of maintaining enrollment in the...
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16-1-11.2
Section 16-1-11.2 Autonomy of nonpublic schools - Education selection by parents; exemption
from licensure or regulation. (a) A parent or guardian shall have the right to select the
type school or method of his or her choice for the K-12 education of his or her child, whether
public or nonpublic, religious or nonreligious, and including home-based education. (b) Nonpublic
schools, including private, church, parochial, and religious schools, offering educational
instruction in grades K-12, as well as home-schooled students, are not subject to licensure
or regulation by the state or any political subdivision of the state, including the State
Department of Education. This section shall not be interpreted or construed as preventing
a nonpublic school from voluntarily participating in state audits or other state administrative
oversight in order to comply with requirements of federal grant provisions, except that any
such voluntary participation may be withdrawn by the nonpublic school...
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16-3-11
Section 16-3-11 Powers generally. The State Board of Education shall exercise, through the
State Superintendent of Education and his professional assistants, general control and supervision
over the public schools of the state, except institutions of higher learning which by law
are under the general supervision and control of a board of trustees, and shall consult with
and advise through its executive officer and his professional assistants, county boards of
education, city and town boards of education, superintendents of schools, school trustees,
attendance officers, principals, teachers, supervisors and interested citizens, and shall
seek in every way to direct and develop public sentiment in support of public education. (School
Code 1927, §35; Code 1940, T. 52, §14.)...
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21-1-13
Section 21-1-13 Prosecutions for failure of minors to attend school. Prosecution under Sections
21-1-10 through 21-1-12 and Section 16-28-12 may be begun by the county superintendent of
education, the attendance officer, the director of the Department of Human Resources, or the
president of the Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind, and it shall be the duty of the district
attorney or county solicitor in whose circuit or county such offending parent, guardian, or
other person having control of such derelict child may reside to prosecute the case. (Acts
1931, No. 61, p. 125; Code 1940, T. 52, §532.)...
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