§ 1 Education Code Title
This law simply says that the set of rules it creates will be called the Education Code.
This law simply says that the set of rules it creates will be called the Education Code.
This law says that, unless a specific rule says otherwise, you should use the general rules and definitions in this code to figure out what the code means.
This law creates county school boards and lets high‑school students join them as special student members if enough students sign a petition.
This law lets California state universities, school districts, community college districts, and teacher‑training schools make agreements to swap teachers or staff for up to one year, and says the paying side must cover the salary or exchange staff.
This law just tells us that the whole set of rules is called the Public Education Facilities Bond Act of 1996 and that we can refer to it by that name.
This law lets a California State University teacher‑trainer and a certified public‑school teacher swap jobs for a while, if an agreement says they can.
This law says that $2,012,035,000 from bond sales must be put into the State School Building Lease‑Purchase Fund.
This law says money put into the State School Building Lease‑Purchase Fund can be used to give financial help to school districts, county superintendents, and county boards of education, and also to pay back any loans taken from the fund with interest and to reimburse the bond expense fund.
This law says that out of the money raised by selling bonds, no more than $900 million can be spent on a list of school‑related projects such as portable classrooms, building upgrades, air‑conditioning, child‑care units, security upgrades, and hazardous‑material clean‑up.
This law says that when money is raised by selling bonds, no more than $100 million can be spent on making existing public schools safer against earthquakes.