(a) At least one scholarship under this article shall be made available each year to each high school participating in the program to award to a pupil who is enrolled in that high school. One additional scholarship shall be available each year to each participating high school for each 1,000 pupils enrolled in that school in excess of 1,000 pupils. (b) Each participating high school shall establish and maintain a community service scholarship committee that consists of the following persons: (1) One full-time teacher employed by the school. (2) One employee of the school who is a classified employee or pupil counselor, and who has contributed to the academic or personal development of high school pupils. In the event that no person meets those qualifications, the principal of the school shall designate any other employee of the school to serve on the committee. (3) One parent of any pupil who is enrolled in the high school but is not an applicant for a scholarship under this article. (4) Two representatives from community organizations or agencies, as described in subdivision (c). (c) Scholarships made available to the participating high school shall be awarded by the community service scholarship committee to pupil applicants determined by a majority vote of the membership of the committee to have made significant contributions to the community through community service. For the purposes of this article, âcommunity serviceâ means volunteer work for any nonprofit organization that meets the description set forth in paragraph (3) of subsection (c) of Section 501 of Title 26 of the United States Code, or for any other community service agency or organization that is nonprofit, nonpartisan, and nonsectarian, which work is performed to further purposes of education, environmental quality, health care, local, state, or federally funded public assistance, public safety crime prevention or control, transportation, recreation, housing and neighborhood improvement, rural development, conservation, child care, senior citizensâ quality of life, outdoor beautification, or any other purpose of human betterment and community improvement. In the event that the community service scholarship committee determines that the number of applicants who qualify for a scholarship under this subdivision exceeds the number of scholarships available to the high school under this article, the committee shall apply the following additional criteria in order to select scholarship recipients: (1) The applicantâs financial status, including the applicantâs ability to finance a college education. (2) The extent to which the applicantâs capacity to provide volunteer service has been limited by the applicantâs other extracurricular activities, summer or part-time employment, or responsibilities to the applicantâs family. (3) Whether the applicant would be the first member of the applicantâs immediate family to attend an institution of higher education. (d) Each scholarship awarded shall be for a period of one year, subject to the requirement that no scholarship funding shall be payable as to any academic term in which the recipient fails to both maintain a course load of at least six semester units or the equivalent and meet or exceed the institutionâs standards for satisfactory academic progress. For purposes of this determination, homelessness, as defined as a âhomeless individualâ within the meaning of the federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 11302(a)), or as defined as a âhomeless child or youth,â as defined in subsection (2) of Section 725 of the federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 11434a(2)), is an extenuating circumstance for students who are otherwise unable to meet the requirements deemed to constitute âsatisfactory academic progressâ at that institution that may be considered by the institution to alter or excuse compliance with those progress requirements. (e) No later
‹ Prev All California sections Next ›
Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.