HB 399 finally passed the Senate in the wee small hours of Friday morning. However, it's passage came with two senate amendments attached to the bill which the House had already passed by a unanimous vote. DSEA is deeply appreciative to its members, parents, and members of the community who supported our efforts to secure passage of the original bill passed in the House. The letters, emails, and phone calls which were made to legislators were very helpful in maintaining a firewall of support for the bill as it endured an onslaught of attacks from groups who sought to kill it. While the results of the bill were not "perfect", politics rarely produces "perfect" results. We believe this is an important step forward, one which will help repair the damage done to DPAS in years past. It must be noted that the final result was not a "compromise bill" in our eyes. We fought throughout day and night (literally) to maintain the original integrity of the bill, opposing Senate Amendment 1, but were unsuccessful. Nevertheless, we think the changes will help improve the quality of educator evaluations in Delaware going forward. Full text of the bill is available at: http://bit.ly/hb399-final. The main victories which were maintained in the bill: (1) Each component of DPAS will have equal weight in the overall score. This ends the past practice where Component V, which was built on the student score on the state standardized test, played a disproportionate level of influence on an educator's evaluation. (2) Codified the requirement of annual evaluations for all educators holding an initial license and all other educators to be evaluated every two academic years. (3) Codified the allowance for the educator to select/determine a measure which they feel will demonstrate student improvement, in addition to measure(s) selected by their evaluator. Senate Amendment 1 (http://bit.ly/hb399-sa1) to HB 399 was authored by Sen. David Sokola. DSEA opposed the amendment. Sen. Sokola's amendment made the following changes to the bill: (1) Clarifies that administrators maintain the final say, or discretion, to determine whether the State standardized assessment should be used as part of an educators evaluation. (2) Clarifies that the proposed changes to the DPAS II evaluation system, as recommended by the DPAS II Advisory Committee, are intended to be piloted in three local education agencies to evaluate their effectiveness before any changes are permanently incorporated. (3) Inputs comments received from stakeholders to include parent and student surveys in the pilot as well as include the alternate evaluation systems in the evaluation study. Senate Amendment 2 (http://bit.ly/hb399-sa2) to HB 399 was authored by Sen. Bryan Townsend. Sen. Townsend's amendment helped to codify the requirement that the educator be able to select/determine one measure of student improvement (see item #3 in "victories" listed above).