45th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2001
RELATING TO SCHOOL ATTENDANCE; PROVIDING FOR A SCHOOL ATTENDANCE OFFICER AT EACH SCHOOL TO ASSIST THE SCHOOL IN THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE PROVISIONS OF THE COMPULSORY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE LAW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 22-12-7 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1967, Chapter 16, Section 175, as amended) is amended to read:
"22-12-7. ENFORCEMENT OF ATTENDANCE LAW--PENALTY.--
A. Each local school board [and each governing
authority of a private school] shall designate a school
attendance officer at each school.
B. The school attendance officer shall:
(1) determine daily which students enrolled in the school are absent from school and whether the absence is excused;
(2) initiate the enforcement of the provisions of the Compulsory School Attendance Law for students enrolled in their respective schools pursuant to Subsection D of this section; and
(3) annually report to the local school board the number of students who were absent in the previous school year and whether the absences were excused.
C. Each governing authority of a private school shall initiate the enforcement provisions of the Compulsory School Attendance Law for students enrolled in their respective schools pursuant to Subsection D of this section.
[B.] D. To initiate enforcement of the provisions
of the Compulsory School Attendance Law, a [local school board
or] school attendance officer or a governing authority of a
private school or its authorized representatives shall give
written notice by certified mail to or by personal service on
the parent, guardian or custodian of a student subject to and
in noncompliance with the provisions of the Compulsory School
Attendance Law.
[C.] E. If violations of the provisions of the
Compulsory School Attendance Law continue after written notice
as provided in Subsection [B] D of this section has occurred,
the student shall be reported to the probation services office
of the judicial district where the student resides for an
investigation as to whether the student shall be considered to
be a neglected child or a child in need of supervision and
thus subject to the provisions of the Children's Code.
[D.] F. If, after review by the juvenile probation
office of the children's court division or by the district
judge of the children's court division where the student
resides, a determination and finding is made that the
nonattendance by the student may have been caused by the
parent, guardian or one having custody of the student, then
the matter will be referred by the juvenile probation office
or by the children's court division of the district court to
the district attorney's office or any law enforcement agency
having jurisdiction for appropriate investigation and filing
of charges allowed under the Compulsory School Attendance Law.
[E.] G. A parent, guardian or one having custody
of the student who, after receiving written notice as provided
in Subsection [B] D of this section and after the matter has
been reviewed in accordance with Subsection [D] F of this
section, knowingly allows the student to continue to violate
the Compulsory School [Attendence] Attendance Law shall be
guilty of a petty misdemeanor. Upon the first conviction, a
fine of not less than twenty-five dollars ($25.00) or more
than one hundred dollars ($100) may be imposed, or the parent,
guardian or one having custody of the student may be ordered
to perform community service. If violations of the Compulsory
School Attendance Law continue, upon the second and subsequent
convictions, the parent, guardian or one having custody of the
student who knowingly allows the student to continue to
violate the Compulsory School Attendance Law shall be guilty
of a petty misdemeanor and shall be subject to a fine of not
more than five hundred dollars ($500) or incarceration for a
period not to exceed six months or both.
[F.] H. The provisions of this section shall apply
beginning July 1, 1987."