Showing posts with label California Education Budget. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California Education Budget. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

MORE SCHOOLING: letter to the LA Times + smf seconds the motion

letter to the editor | http://lat.ms/ozaUFz

Re "Keeping pupils' skills sharp," July 7 | http://bit.ly/nVyqwY
12 July 2011 - With 2 1/2 months off, of course students lose a lot over the summer. The assertion that drop-in-the-bucket, feel-good grants by some corporations to school districts to "close the achievement gap" make a significant difference obscures the central issue.

Why does any state embrace the antiquated agrarian calendar for education that caps learning at 180 school days? Increasing the school year to 216 days and mandating that there are no breaks of greater than three consecutive weeks would have a significant impact on reducing student retrenchment.

To do so would require increasing education funding, which the U.S. Department of Education can do in the form of a per capita block grant. It's time to make education a federal priority to provide equal opportunities for all.

Stephen Jarvis
Los Angeles

smf: Jarvis is right.

But if we want more education we will have to pay for it – and there is no popular enthusiasm for paying for more – instead+regretfully we are merrily on track for settling for less.

  • LAUSD has cut instructional days per year – (the state didn't say we had to, it was an an option we chose) and adds furlough days at every turn.
  • Testing reduces instructional days.
  • And the new state budget will further reduce instructional days if revenue targets are not met and they are currently not on track to do so.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

CALIFORNIA MAY WIN SMALLER GRANT FROM FEDERAL 'RACE TO THE TOP'

California's previous plan for schools could have won $700 million from 'Race to the Top,' but federal officials may award $50 million to the Golden State after revisions.

by Howard Blume - LA Times | http://lat.ms/l2OVAU


Race to the Top

From left, Ted Mitchell, then-president of the California board of education, then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and then-State Superintendent Jack O'Connell sign the second phase of the "Race to the Top" application at Lafayette Elementary School in Long Beach. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / June 1, 2010)


Federal officials also announced a new competition Wednesday for grants from a $500-million fund established to promote early childhood education. This opportunity arises as the Los Angeles Unified School District is poised to slash funding to such programs amid an ongoing budget crisis.

The Race to the Top dollars would go to state finalists that fell short in two previous rounds.

"We had many more competitive applications than we had funds to award," said U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. "Every state that applied … has a blueprint for raising educational quality across America. These funds will encourage states to continue their courageous work to challenge the status quo."

To claim the money, California must scale back its most recent plan, for which it could have received $700 million. The revised proposal must pass muster with federal officials, and there could be complications.

The new state schools superintendent, Tom Torlakson, strongly opposed provisions of the state's first Race to the Top application. And pending legislation could restrict the future expansion of charter schools, a limitation that federal officials oppose.

"That would clearly put us in a disadvantageous position to compete for those federal dollars," said Jed Wallace, who heads the California Charter Schools Assn.

On the other hand, a group of seven school systems, including L.A. Unified and Long Beach Unified, has already pushed forward with measures outlined in the state's second, nearly successful application.

The districts are planning the looming shift to national curriculum standards recently adopted by California. The federal application also had included a commitment to using student test-score data as part of teachers' evaluations, among other elements.

"The bottom line is that we can't do this just for the money, and we shouldn't," said Long Beach Supt. Christopher J. Steinhauser. "We need to do these reforms based on what's best for students."

The early education grants drew an enthusiastic response from advocates; such programs have fallen under the budget knife in many financially strapped school systems.

"At the very least, it dangles a big carrot in front of state policymakers, who may be prone to forget the long-term payoff that comes from making investments in early childhood programs," said Lisa Guernsey, director of the Early Education Initiative at the Washington, D.C.-based New America Foundation.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

NEW STUDY SHOWS SEVERE CUTS TO STATE PRESCHOOL PROGRAMS - MORE EXPECTED: Recession Forces Severe Cuts to Some State Preschool Programs Annual survey labels impact ‘a depression for many young children’.

press release | Executive summary | California Highlights

National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) @ the Graduate school of Education, Rutgers University | http://www.nieer.org

26  April 2011 – Washington, D.C. — For the second year in a row preschool-age children felt the effects of the recession only the impact was far greater the second year, according the annual survey of state-funded early education programs.

“Overall, state cuts to preschool funding transformed the recession into a depression for many young children,” said W. Steven Barnett, co-director of the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) and author of the report, The State of Preschool 2010: State Preschool Yearbook.

“In the 2009-2010 school year the effects of the recession became fully apparent despite federal government aid to the states for education,” Barnett said. “Total enrollment barely increased over the prior year. Total spending by the states decreased, and per-child spending declined in inflation-adjusted dollars.”

smf: In a press briefing prior to the report’s release US Education Secretary Arne Duncan noted that pre-K has proven its effectiveness but is susceptible to budget cuts because 3 and 4 year olds can't vote and they don't have a union or hire lobbyists. He also warned against across the board cuts for states. States need to look at what works (pre-K) and cut what doesn't on a state-by-state basis.

Barnett questioned some of the priority-setting being done by state governments. “We don’t eliminate first grade in tough economic times …why do we cut preschool?

“Prioritizing cutting pre-K budgets now is done at the high cost of failure in the future. I was just in Shanghai – as you know one of the leaders in early childhood education. There the government has said that because parents in a recession have less to spend on preschool the government will spend more.”

The funding situation may get worse even as the economy slowly recovers. Federal funds to help states weather the recession are now gone. Without the aid from the federal economic stimulus, funding per child would have been even lower, approaching its lowest level since 2002 when NIEER began tracking state preschool performance.

The Yearbook findings were released today at the Oyster-Adams Bilingual Elementary School by Barnett and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.
The depth of the decline varied considerably by state. A few made modest progress. Many held steady. In others, cutbacks were sometimes severe.

On the positive side, two states, Alaska and Rhode Island, started programs for the first time. These are the first new states to provide pre-K in many years, though both efforts are modest pilot programs. The top 10 states ranked by percentage of children served at age 4 were Oklahoma, Florida, West Virginia, Georgia, Vermont, Wisconsin, Texas, New York, Arkansas, and Iowa. On the other end of the scale, 10 states still provided no state-funded preschool education programs. They were Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming.

NIEER reports state rankings on enrollment, spending, and quality standards (how many of 10 benchmarks the state meets). Key findings in this year’s Yearbook include:

Enrollment

  • Five states (Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, and Ohio) now enroll fewer children in state preschool programs than they did 10 years ago.
  • Enrollment nationally increased by 26,996 children. Nearly 1.3 million children attended state-funded preschool education, more than 1 million at age 4 alone.
  • Fourteen states increased the percent of 3- and 4-year-olds enrolled in state pre-K programs by at least one percentage point while seven states decreased by at least one percentage point in the 2009-2010 school year.
  • Enrollment of 3-year-olds decreased across the country with nine states cutting enrollment by 10 percent or more. They were Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, Ohio, South Carolina, and Washington.

Spending

  • The 2009-2010 school year was the first tracked by NIEER in which total state funding for pre-K fell from the prior year.
  • State pre-K spending per child decreased by $114 to $4,028 adjusted for inflation even with funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). This year NIEER adds a second estimate of per-child spending, $4,212, which reflects a redefinition of California's preschool program.
  • State spending per child was almost $700 below its 2001-2002 level.
  • After adjusting for inflation, state funding per child declined in 19 of 40 states with programs. While only three states (Connecticut, Maine, and Vermont) increased per-child spending by more than 10 percent, nine states (Alabama, Arizona, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska, Ohio, and South Carolina) cut per-child spending by more than 10 percent.

Quality Standards

  • Twenty-three of 40 states failed to fully meet NIEER benchmarks for teacher qualifications and 26 failed to meet the benchmark for assistant teacher qualifications.
  • Five state programs met all 10 quality standards. They were Alabama, Alaska, one of the three Louisiana programs, North Carolina, and Rhode Island.
  • Four states (Georgia, Kentucky, Missouri, and West Virginia) improved on NIEER’s Quality Standards Checklist, but two states (Ohio and Nebraska) lost ground.

Years of research have demonstrated the benefits of high-quality preschool. Compared to children denied high-quality preschool, children who attend are more likely to graduate high school and go on to higher education. They are less likely to require special education or repeat a grade, become teenage parents, or commit crimes as teens or adults, all at great savings to taxpayers. As adults, they are more likely to be qualified to fill the demand for skilled workers that will keep America competitive in the global economy.

Cutting state pre-K puts pressure on the larger system of public supports for early learning that includes federally funded Head Start and child care. Congress is considering steep cuts to Head Start and child care that would further decrease support at a time when parents are less able to pay for early education on their own. Rather than cut federal support for early learning, Congress should find ways to increase support. The President has proposed an Early Learning Challenge Fund to incentivize states to increase and maintain their support rather than cut.

Summing up the findings of the Yearbook, Barnett said:

“America has far to go before every child has access to a high-quality education even at age 4, much less earlier. Yet, in much of the rest of the world this opportunity is taken for granted. As America falls behind in the early education of our children, we also fall behind in school success and economic competitiveness. As we exit the current recession, America will make critical decisions about how much we are willing to invest in our children’s future. Decisions about state pre-K will be among the most important.”

####

The National Institute for Early Education Research (www.nieer.org), a unit of the Graduate School of Education, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, supports early childhood education policy by providing objective, nonpartisan information based on research. NIEER is supported through grants from The Pew Charitable Trusts and others.

NIEER Yearbook 2010: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

STATE-FUNDED PRE-K PROGRAMS IN DECLINE NATIONWIDE

In the 2009-2010 school year the effects of the recession became fully apparent despite federal government aid to the states for education. Total enrollment barely increased over the prior year. Total spending by the states decreased, and per child spending declined in inflation-adjusted dollars. Without the aid from federal economic stimulus, funding per child would have been even lower, approaching its lowest level since 2002 when NIEER began tracking spending.

The depth of the decline varies considerably by state. A few states made modest progress. Many held steady.

Others faced cutbacks that were sometimes severe. Overall, state cuts to pre-K transformed the recession into a depression for many young children in the 2009-2010 school year.

All the news was not bad. Alaska and Rhode Island created new pre-K programs in the 2009-2010 school year. These are the first new states to provide pre-K in many years, though both efforts are modest pilot programs. Nationally, pre-K enrollment was just over 26 percent at age 4 as the total across all states increased by nearly 27,000 children.

Yet the bad news outweighed the good. The decline in spending per child comes on top of the previous year’s decline. Many states already failed to provide enough funding to ensure programs could meet minimum quality standards, so this is a serious problem. Rather than raising quality, states are struggling not to lose what they have.

image

WHAT’S NEW?

• Total state funding for pre-K decreased by nearly $30 million and would have fallen by at least an additional $49.3 million if not for funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). This is the first time since NIEER began tracking spending that total spending decreased from the previous year.

• State pre-K spending per child decreased by $114 to $4,028 adjusted for inflation even with ARRA funds.

This year we add a second estimate of per-child spending, $4,212, which reflects a redefinition of California’s preschool program.*

• After adjusting for inflation, state funding per child declined in 19 of 40 states with programs. While three states increased their per-child spending by more than 10 percent, nine states cut per-child spending by more than 10 percent.

• Only 17 states could be verified as providing enough funding to meet all 10 benchmarks for quality standards.

• Enrollment increased by 26,996 children. Nearly 1.3 million children attended state-funded preschool education, more than 1 million at age 4 alone.

• Fourteen states increased the percent of 3- and 4-year-olds enrolled in state pre-K programs by at least one percentage point, while seven states decreased by at least one percentage point in the 2009-2010 school year.

• Two states had programs for the first time this year—Alaska and Rhode Island.

• Combining general and special education enrollments, 31 percent of 4-year-olds and 8 percent of 3-year-olds are served across the states.

• Four states improved on NIEER’s Quality Standards Checklist, while two states lost ground on standards.

• Twenty-three of 40 states failed to fully meet NIEER benchmarks for teacher qualifications and 26 failed to meet the benchmark for assistant teacher qualifications.†

THE PICTURE IN CALIFORNIA IS SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT, SOMEWHAT CONFUSING AND HIGHLIGHTED WITH A LARGE ASTERISK

It all started out well enough....

In 1965, California became one of the first states in the nation to make state-funded preschool education available through the State Preschool Program (CSPP). The state later established the Prekindergarten and Family Literacy Program (PKFLP) in the 2007-2008 school year, modeling the initiative after CSPP. PKFLP provided either half- or full-day services with an added literacy component to children who are from families at or below 75 percent of the state median income (SMI), are receiving protective services, or are at risk for abuse, neglect, or family violence.

The California State Preschool Program Act was signed into law in 2008, with the purpose of streamlining funding for the state’s multiple preschool programs. As of July 1, 2009, all part-day and full-day programs in CSPP and PKFLP, as well as General Child Care programs that served preschool age children, were consolidated into a newly formed California State Preschool Program. The program provides 3- and 4-year-old children with part- and full-day services through local education agencies, colleges, community action agencies, and private nonprofit agencies.

image

Unless children are receiving protective services or have been referred as at risk of abuse, neglect, or exploitation, families must have an income of 75 percent of the SMI to be eligible for the program.

State funding for the current State Preschool Program is provided to school districts, private child care and faith- based centers, and Head Start agencies and other public agencies through a competitive application process.

image CSPP usually funds part-day programs, but also provides a full-day program and works with other state-funded and federal child care assistance programs to fund extended days for children whose parents who work full time.

Eligibility is limited to children ages 3 to 5 from families with an income below 75 percent of the SMI or to children who have experienced or are at risk for abuse, neglect, or exploitation.

In 2008, California also developed and published the California Preschool Learning Foundations, a set of early learning standards focusing on social-emotional development, language and literacy, English language development, and mathematics. Although these standards have not yet been implemented, a second volume of the California Preschool Learning Foundations focusing on visual and performing arts and physical development and health will be released in the spring of 2011. The California State Preschool Program uses the Desired Results for Children and Families system, which has been aligned with the Preschool Learning Foundations Volume I, to record children’s development and to plan curriculum and other developmentally appropriate activities.

* Due to changes in the California State Preschool Program, funding and enrollment figures for the 2009-2010 school year represent the effects of program consolidation rather than an actual increase over previous years.

In prior years, California funded child care programs with the same standards as state preschool, but because eligibility was based on parental work status and income NIEER did not count them as preschool. In 2009, California merged these child care programs into state preschool. With this policy change, preschool data from California are no longer consistent with those from previous years. Therefore, we report two figures for spending in the 2009-2010 school year. The first ($4,028) nets out the effect of the California policy change on the national average to produce a figure consistent with prior years. The second ($4,212) calculates a new national average that includes. California’s consolidated preschool. Note that because California did not increase enrollment or funding, this higher figure is purely the result of program redefinition.

The State of Preschool 2010

http://nieer.org/yearbook/

by W. Steven Barnett, Ph.D., Dale J. Epstein, Ph.D., Megan E. Carolan, Jen Fitzgerald, Debra J. Ackerman, Ph.D., Allison H. Friedman, Ed.M.

The 2010 State Preschool Yearbook is the eighth in a series of annual reports profiling state-funded prekindergarten programs in the United States. This latest Yearbook presents data on state-funded prekindergarten during the 2009-2010 school year. The first report in this series focused on programs for the 2001-2002 school year and established a baseline against which we may now measure progress over nine years. Tracking these trends is essential, since changes in states' policies on preschool education will influence how successfully America's next generation will compete in the knowledge economy.

Full Report

Full Report
(8MB PDF)

Executive Summary

Executive Summary
(400KB PDF)

Contents

Table of Contents

State Data

State Data

Charts

Charts

All Yearbooks

All Yearbooks

The 2010 Yearbook is organized into three major sections. The first section offers a summary of the data, and describes national trends for enrollment in, quality of, and spending on preschool. The second section presents detailed profiles outlining each state's policies with respect to preschool access, quality standards, and resources for the 2009-2010 program year. In addition to providing basic program descriptions, these state profiles describe unique features of a state's program and recent changes that can be expected to alter the future Yearbook statistics on a program. Profile pages are again included for states without state-funded programs. A description of our methodology follows the state profiles. The last section of the report contains appendices, which are available online only. The appendices include tables that provide the complete 2009-2010 survey data obtained from every state, as well as Head Start, child care, U.S. Census, and special education data.

State-funded preschool programs represent an important and sizeable component of the nation's patchwork of early childhood education programs. The National Institute for Early Education Research has developed the State Preschool Yearbook series to provide information on services offered through these programs to children at ages 3 and 4. We hope that this report will serve as a resource for policymakers, advocates, and researchers to make more informed decisions as state-funded preschool education moves forward.

While parents strive to guide children's growth and development in the home, state and local governments bear primary responsibility for classroom-based education in the United States. Programs that serve young children operate under a variety of names and auspices, including the federal Head Start program as well as privately and publicly funded child care. State prekindergarten programs will play an increasingly important role as part of this larger array of programs. The Yearbook seeks to improve the public's knowledge and understanding of state efforts to expand the availability of high-quality education to young children in the 21st century.

Limited time offer: Receive a free printed copy of the Yearbook
To receive a free printed copy of the 2010 State Preschool Yearbook, please e-mail your name and mailing address to yearbook@nieer.org. Complimentary copies of some previous editions are also available.

View the complete report (8MB PDF)

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

SIGN THE PETITION: Maintain the Integrity of the Arts Instructional Programs of LAUSD + traduccion en español


View Current Signatures   -   Sign the Petition

(Para una traduccion en español, por favor consulte: http://lausdartsed.blogspot.com/, 12/3/09)


To:  Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education Members: Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte, Monica Garcia, Tamar Galatzan, Richard Vladovic, Yolie Flores, Nury Martinez, Steve Zimmer; Superintendent Of Schools, Ramon C. Cortines

Background:

On February 9, 1998, the Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education unanimously adopted a Resolution to Restore Arts Education as an essential part of the core curriculum for all students. In 1999, the Board adopted the Arts Education Plan, which ensures comprehensive, quality education in Dance, Music, Theater and Visual Arts by providing resources necessary to implement arts programs to every child, K-12.

Since that time, articulated arts programs have been established across the District from elementary to secondary serving as a powerful factor in motivating student interest in school. Through the implementation of the Elementary Arts Program, which was expanded in the 2009-2010 school year to include all elementary schools, over 3 million elementary students have received arts instruction by highly-qualified arts educators. LAUSD is the only large urban district in the United States that provides an equitable standards-based arts education for all of its elementary students by giving them the opportunity to experience all of the four arts disciplines through the Elementary Arts Program.

Yet in June of 2009, after ten years of growth and restoration of arts education, the LAUSD Board of Education passed a three-year budget that includes a 50% cut to the Elementary Arts Program for the 2010-2011 school year, and the elimination of the entire Program for 2011-2012. Superintendent Ramon Cortines and Board of Education Members have demonstrated support for the District Arts Programs in the past but are now faced with difficult budget decisions.

Full Petition Text:

We can't afford to cut Arts Education for our children and the children of the future!!!

  • We have come too far as a District - not only in restoring arts education, but in becoming a nationally recognized leader in arts education - to step back now.
  • Arts are a primary, central, academic core subject that must be funded as consistently as math, language arts, science and history/social science.
  • The proposed cuts to the Elementary Arts Program will have deep ramifications to arts programs at the secondary level, resulting in displaced teachers and leaving students less prepared for arts instruction in middle and high school.
  • We do not think it reasonable for LAUSD students and employees to shoulder the entire responsibility for our statewide budget deficits with salary
  • reductions, staff reductions and cuts to vital instructional programs and support services. We must all share the obligation of the education of our children.
  • We advocate that non-essential, non-school based services, and any non-instructional program be considered for cuts prior to approving any reductions to instructional programs, including the Elementary Arts Program.
  • We advocate that the LAUSD Education Foundation (501(c)(3) non-profit) be utilized to help support and preserve the integrity of the Elementary Arts Program.
  • We advocate for statewide and local legislative changes, including local parcel taxes, in order to create more sustainable and locally controlled funding sources for education.
  • We as concerned citizens, in endorsing the principles and proposals set forth above, are holding Superintendent Cortines and the Board of Education to their commitment to arts education, and to the consistent funding of LAUSD Arts Education Programs now and into the future."

This petition was written by LAUSD Elementary Arts Teachers, November 2009

Sincerely,

The Undersigned

View Current Signatures


The Maintain the Integrity of the Arts Instructional Programs of LAUSD Petition to Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education Members: Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte, Monica Garcia, Tamar Galatzan, Richard Vladovic, Yolie Flores, Nury Martinez, Steve Zimmer; Superintendent Of Schools, Ramon C. Cortines was created by and written by Ginger Fox and Michael Blasi, Chair and Co-Chair of the Elementary Arts Committee, United Teachers Los Angeles (blasikin@gmail.com). 

This petition is hosted at www.PetitionOnline.com as a public service. There is no endorsement of this petition, express or implied, by Artifice, Inc. or our sponsors. For technical support please use our simple Petition Help form.

tags: arts ed arts education dance drama LAUSD music Theater theatre visual arts

Send Petition to a Friend - Petition FAQ - Start a Petition - Contributions - Privacy - Media Kit

Sunday, October 11, 2009

SCHWARTZENEGGER VETOES SB 84 (QEIA FUNDING)

by smf

The Governor has vetoed SB 84 by Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) - Education finance, which would have restored funding to the Quality Education Investment Act (QEIA); itself a court-approved fix for previous Schwarzenegger funding cuts.

When does it end?

This just in: SCHWARZENEGGER SIGNS 14 EDUCATION BILLS, VETOES 17

 

from Capitol Alert | SAcramento Bee

October 11, 2009 | As legislative leaders continue talks on a package of water bills, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's office released word of the fate of 183 bills.

The governor, who threatened to veto "a lot" of bills if leaders can't strike a water deal, has until midnight to act on the more than 500 bills remaining on his desk.

See the governor's office's list of the 89 bills he signed and the 94 bills struck down with the veto pen after the jump.

EDUCATION BILLS IN RED

Bills Signed:

  • SB 19 by Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) - Education data.
  • SB 36 by Senator Ron Calderon (D-Montebello) - Real estate, finance lender, and residential mortgage lender licenses: mortgage loan originators.
  • SB 48 by Senator Elaine Alquist (D-San Jose) - Joint powers agencies: City of Santa Clara.
  • SB 102 by Committee on Local Government - Validations.
  • SB 103 by Committee on Local Government - Validations.
  • SB 117 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Adult day health care services: eligibility criteria: Medi-Cal reimbursement methodology and limit.
  • SB 136 by Senator Bob Huff (R-Diamond Bar) - State real property.
  • SB 143 by Senator Gilbert Cedillo (D-Los Angeles) - Hazardous materials: California Land Reuse and Revitalization Act of 2004.
  • SB 147 by Senator Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) - California State University: career technical education courses.
  • SB 148 by Senator Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach) - Mammogram machines: inspection: posting of results.
  • SB 149 by Senator Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego) - Claims against the state: appropriation.
  • SB 150 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Sentencing.
  • SB 224 by Senator Lou Correa (D-Santa Ana) - Housing assistance.
  • SB 237 by Senator Ron Calderon (D-Montebello) - Real estate appraisers.
  • SB 239 by Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) - Mortgage fraud.
  • SB 240 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Vehicles: Department of Transportation vehicles.
  • SB 247 by Senator Elaine Alquist (D-San Jose) - Instructional materials.
  • SB 249 by Senator Dave Cox (R-Fair Oaks) - Vaccinations: meningococcal disease.
  • SB 273 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Domestic Violence.
  • SB 283 by Senator Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) - Department of Water Resources: recycled water.
  • SB 285 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Disability benefits: attachment.
  • SB 312 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Public meetings and hearings.
  • SB 337 by Senator Elaine Alquist (D-San Jose) - Health information.
  • SB 357 by Senator Denise Moreno Ducheny (D-San Diego) - Tribal gaming: grants to local jurisdictions.
  • SB 412 by Senator Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego) - Electricity: self-generation incentive program.
  • SB 419 by Committee on Veterans Affairs - County veteran service officers: funding.
  • SB 448 by Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) - California State Safe Harbor Agreement Program Act.
  • SB 471 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - California Stem Cell and Biotechnology Education and Workforce Development Act of 2009.
  • SB 478 Senator Lois Wolk (D-Davis) - Employment safety: manlifts.
  • SB 481 by Senator Dave Cox (R-Fair Oaks) - Airports: wildlife.
  • SB 511 by Committee on Education - Education.
  • SB 519 by Senator Roy Ashburn (R-Bakersfield) - Public employment.
  • SB 532 by Senator Dave Cogdill (R-Modesto) - State Highway Routes 1, 108, 132, and 201.
  • SB 538 by Committee on Public Employment and Retirement - County employees' retirement: mandatory retirement.
  • SB 588 by Committee on Public Safety - Sex Offender Management Board.
  • SB 592 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Charter Schools Facilities Program.
  • SB 614 by Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) - Vessels.
  • SB 619 by Senator Tony Strickland (R-Thousand Oaks) - Flood control: County of Santa Barbara: Lower Mission Creek.
  • SB 651 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Pupil retention.
  • SB 680 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - School attendance: interdistrict transfers.
  • SB 702 by Senator Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) - Ancillary day care centers: employees: trustline providers. See attached signing message.
  • SB 734 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Transportation.
  • SB 744 by Senator Tony Strickland (R-Thousand Oaks) - Clinical laboratories.
  • SB 751 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Teacher credentials.
  • SB 792 by Senator Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) - Tidelands and submerged lands: City and County of San Francisco: Hunters Point Naval Shipyard and Candlestick Point.
  • SB 822 by Committee on Revenue and Taxation - Property taxation: local administration.
  • SB 826 by Committee on Governmental Organization - General obligation bonds.
  • SB 827 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - South Coast Air Quality Management District: CEQA: permits.
  • SB 831 by Committee on Governmental Organization - California State Lottery: multistate lottery.
  • SB 833 by Committee on Natural Resources and Water - Natural resources: mining: conservation lands: Native American historical sites: tidelands and submerged lands.
  • SBX3 18 by Senator Denise Moreno Ducheny (D-San Diego) - Corrections.
  • AB 14 by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes (D-Sylmar) - Vehicles: nuisance abatement: impoundment.
  • AB 37 by Assemblymember Warren Furutani (D-South Los Angeles County) - Public postsecondary education: honorary degrees.
  • AB 66 by Assemblymember Joel Anderson (R-El Cajon) - Pupil work permits.
  • AB 73 by Assemblymember Mary Hayashi (D-Hayward) - Marriage licenses: vital records: fees: domestic violence.
  • AB 74 by Assemblymember Wesley Chesbro (D-Arcata) - Flood control: Middle Creek and Hamilton City Flood Damage Reduction and Ecosystem Restoration Projects.
  • AB 92 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - State claims.
  • AB 93 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - Claims against the state: appropriation.
  • AB 94 by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) - Natural Heritage Preservation Tax Credit Act of 2000.
  • AB 136 by Assemblymember Jim Silva (R- Huntington Beach) - Horse racing: imported harness or quarter horse races.
  • AB 154 by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) - Adoption assistance: federal law.
  • AB 167 by Assemblymember Anthony Adams (R-Hesperia) - High school graduation: local requirements: foster children.
  • AB 236 by Assemblymember Sandré R. Swanson (D-Alameda) - Employment: car washes.
  • AB 242 by Assemblymember Pedro Nava (D-Santa Barbara) - Dog fighting.
  • AB 246 by Senator (former Assemblymember) Curren Price (D-Inglewood) - Horse racing: deductions and distributions: trust funds: harness and quarter horse racing.
  • AB 262 by Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) - American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan: energy activities, programs, or projects.
  • AB 275 by Assemblymember Jose Solorio (D-Anaheim) - Missing persons: DNA database.
  • AB 282 by Committee on Transportation - Transportation.
  • AB 286 by Assemblymember Mary Salas (D-Chula Vista) - Vehicles: additional registration fees.
  • AB 287 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Persons with developmental disabilities: employment.
  • AB 292 by Assemblymember Yamada (D-Solano) - Personal income taxes: contributions: Alzheimer's disease.
  • AB 293 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - Gambling regulation.
  • AB 299 by Committee on Insurance - Insurance.
  • AB 318 by Assemblymember Bill Emmerson (R-Redlands) - Bureau of Automotive Repair: inspection fees.
  • AB 329 by Assemblymember Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles) - Reverse mortgages.
  • AB 343 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Pupils: military families.
  • AB 344 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) - State highways: relinquishment.
  • AB 386 by Assemblymember Ira Ruskin (D-Redwood City) - Public postsecondary education: instructional materials: disabled students.
  • AB 399 by Assemblymember Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica) - Public employee benefits.
  • AB 483 by Assemblymember Joan Buchanan (D-Alamo) - Workers' compensation: Internet Web sites.
  • AB 485 by Assemblymember Wilmer Amina Carter (D-Rialto) - Civil Air Patrol: California Wing: employment leave.
  • AB 523 by Assemblymember Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) - Hospitals: seismic safety.
  • AB 530 by Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) - Unlawful detainer: controlled substances and firearms.
  • AB 547 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - Commercial feed: license fee: inspection tonnage tax.
  • AB 595 by Assemblymember Anthony Adams (R-Hesperia) - Placement of children: criminal background checks.
  • AB 601 by Assemblymember Martin Garrick (R-Carlsbad) - Motor vehicle insurance: special assessments.
  • AB 636 by Assemblymember Dave Jones (D-Sacramento) - Charter-party carriers: busdrivers.
  • AB 654 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - State teachers' retirement.
  • AB 665 by Assemblymember Alberto Torrico (D-Fremont) - State adoption services: investment.

Bills Vetoed:

  • SB 20 by Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) - Personal information: privacy.
  • SB 34 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Petitions: compensation for signatures.
  • SB 45 by Senator Alex Padilla (D-Pacoima) - Public works: payment of prevailing wage: violations.
  • SB 84 by Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) - Education finance.
  • SB 86 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Public postsecondary education: executive officer compensation.
  • SB 109 by Senator Ron Calderon (D-Montebello) - Auctioneers: real estate.
  • SB 115 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Public employment.
  • SB 158 by Senator Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa) - Health care coverage: cervical cancer screening: human papillomavirus vaccination. .
  • SB 161 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Health care coverage: cancer treatment.
  • SB 172 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Voter registration.
  • SB 173 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Food safety: testing and recalls.
  • SB 193 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Class size reduction: Long Beach Unified School District.
  • SB 196 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Emergency medical services.
  • SB 201 by Senator Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach) - Vehicles: illegal taxicabs.
  • SB 212 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Pupil health: communicable diseases.
  • SB 213 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Gambling licenses.
  • SB 218 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Public records: state agency: auxiliary organizations.
  • SB 219 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Disclosure of improper governmental activities: University of California: damages.
  • SB 242 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Civil rights: language restrictions.
  • SB 248 by Senator Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach) - Educational equity: Title IX.
  • SB 257 by Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) - Lactation accommodation: state employees.
  • SB 262 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Coastal resources: California Coastal Commission: meeting.
  • SB 272 by Senator Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa) - Local government: organization.
  • AB 1 by Assemblymember William Monning (D-Carmel) - Teachers: program of professional growth: conflict resolution. See attached veto message.
  • AB 3 by Assemblymember V. Manuel Pérez (D-Coachella) - Workforce development: Renewable Energy Workforce Readiness Initiative: local workforce investment boards.
  • AB 6 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Initiatives: paid circulators.
  • AB 8 by Assemblymember Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica) - Education finance: working group.
  • AB 21 by Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) - Renewable energy resources.
  • AB 24 by Assemblymember Marty Block (D-San Diego) - California State University: feasibility study: Chula Vista.
  • AB 43 by Assemblymember Sam Blakeslee (R-San Luis Obispo) - California Earthquake Authority: employees.
  • AB 56 by Assemblymember Anthony Portantino (D-Pasadena) - Health care coverage: mammographies.
  • AB 57 by Senator (former Assemblymember) Curren Price (D-Inglewood) - University of California hospitals: staffing.
  • AB 82 by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) - Dependent children: psychotropic medications.
  • AB 98 by Assemblymember Hector De La Torre (D-South Gate) - Maternity services.
  • AB 101 by Assemblymember Joel Anderson (R-El Cajon) - Elections: vote by mail ballots.
  • AB 115 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Adult Health Coverage Expansion Program.
  • AB 120 by Assemblymember Mary Hayashi (D-Hayward) - Healing arts: peer review.
  • AB 132 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - School safety: immigration investigations.
  • AB 146 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - Instructional materials: delivery.
  • AB 147 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Hazardous waste: electronic waste.
  • AB 213 by Assemblymember Bonnie Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Vehicles: parking.
  • AB 217 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Medi-Cal: alcohol and drug screening and brief intervention services.
  • AB 241 by Assemblymember Pedro Nava (D-Santa Barbara) - Dogs and cats: breeding for sale.
  • AB 243 by Assemblymember Pedro Nava (D-Santa Barbara) - Animal abuse: penalties.
  • AB 244 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Health care coverage: mental health services.
  • AB 245 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Physicians and surgeons.
  • AB 249 by Assemblymember Wilmer Amina Carter (D-Rialto) - Health facilities: marking patient devices.
  • AB 261 by Assemblymember Mary Salas (D-Chula Vista) - Pupil records: privacy rights.
  • AB 267 by Assemblymember Tom Torlakson (D-Antioch) - Education finance districts: taxes.
  • AB 311 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Property taxation: certificated aircraft assessment.
  • AB 320 by Assemblymember Jose Solorio (D-Anaheim) - County jails: reentry facilities.
  • AB 322 by Assemblymember Jim Silva (R-Huntington Beach) - Less lethal weapons.
  • AB 324 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Aging: Elder Economic Security Standard Index.
  • AB 330 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Elections: voting devices.
  • AB 335 by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes (D- Sylmar) - Employment contracts.
  • AB 337 by Assemblymember Norma Torres (D-Pomona) - Juvenile court records: sealing and destruction.
  • AB 338 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Transit village developments: infrastructure financing.
  • AB 358 by Assemblymember Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) - Criminal procedure: narcotics and drug abuse cases.
  • AB 368 by Assemblymember Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) - State lands: oil, gas, and mineral leases.
  • AB 369 by Assemblymember Mariko Yamada (D-Solano) - Adult day health care centers.
  • AB 374 by Assemblymember Marty Block (D-San Diego) - Consequences of dropping out notice.
  • AB 382 by Assemblymember Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) - Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation: inmates and wards: classification.
  • AB 402 by Assemblymember Mike Davis (D-Los Angeles) - Employment: entertainment work permits.
  • AB 423 by Assemblymember Norma Torres (D-Pomona) - Emergency telephone systems.
  • AB 429 by Assemblymember Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica) - Public school accountability: advisory committee.
  • AB 436 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Elections: initiatives.
  • AB 442 by Assemblymember Juan Arambula (I-Fresno) - Notaries public.
  • AB 443 by Assemblymember Cathleen Galgiani (D-Livingston) - Apple pests: pest and disease prevention.
  • AB 469 by Assemblymember Mike Eng (D-Monterey Park) - Sales and use taxes: qualified use tax payment.
  • AB 472 by Assemblymember Bob Blumenfield (D-San Fernando Valley) - Earthquake and emergency preparedness.
  • AB 473 by Assemblymember Bob Blumenfield (D-Woodland) - Solid waste: recycling: multifamily dwellings.
  • AB 476 by Assemblymember Tom Torlakson (D-Antioch) - Standardized Testing and Reporting Program.
  • AB 503 by Assemblymember Warren Furutani (D-South Los Angeles County) - Battered women's shelters: grant program.
  • AB 504 by Assemblymember Warren Furutani (D-South Los Angeles County) - Peace officers: training.
  • AB 513 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - Health care coverage: breast-feeding.
  • AB 517 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Safe Body Art Act.
  • AB 527 by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes (D-Sylmar) - Employee complaints: proceedings: payroll records.
  • AB 543 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Perinatal care: The Nurse-Family Partnership.
  • AB 1401 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Transition to Organics Act.
  • AB 1404 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006: offsets.
  • AB 1435 by Assemblymember V. Manuel Perez (D-Coachella) - Public school accountability.
  • AB 1439 by Assemblymember Jose Solorio (D-Anaheim) - Gang and youth violence: prevention.
  • AB 1447 by Assemblymember John Perez (D-Los Angeles) - State Compensation Insurance Fund: audits.
  • AB 1462 by Assemblymember Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles) - Medi-Cal: inpatient hospital services contracts.
  • AB 1510 by Assemblymember Mike Eng (D-Monterey Park) - Public schools: parental access.
  • AB 1512 by Assemblymember Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) - Food and drugs: sale.
  • AB 1527 by Assemblymember Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) - Motor vehicle emission reduction projects.
  • AB 1559 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Workforce development: summer youth job training.
  • AB 1561 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Occupational safety and health: citation outcome analysis.
  • AB 1562 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Employment: garnishment of wages.
  • AB 1563 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Employment: contracts or agreements for labor or services.
  • AB 1567 by Committee on Veterans Affairs - Employment training panel: 3-year plan: training programs: veterans.
  • AB 1577 by Assemblymember Joe Coto (D-San Jose) - Problem and pathological gambling.
  • AB 1580 by Assemblymember Charles Calderon (D-Montebello) - Taxation: federal conformity.

Report: SCHOOL STIMULUS FUNDS NOT USED AS INTENDED

 

by Claudio Sanchez | National Public Radio | Weekend Edition Sunday

October 11, 2009 -- The Department of Education's inspector general reports that some states are using stimulus dollars to replace money they've cut from their education budget — despite instructions to the contrary.

When the Department of Education began releasing stimulus funds last April, it told states the money was to be used to boost funding for schools and colleges and protect key programs and jobs.

And from the get-go, the Obama administration's message to states was that stimulus funds earmarked for education are to "supplement, not supplant" state funding for schools and colleges.

"We're really focused on making sure states are using the stimulus money well," said Education Secretary Arne Duncan."But what we want to do is make sure people aren't playing games."

Shuffling Funds

Nonetheless, it wasn't long before the Education Department started hearing about states playing what it called "shell games" with stimulus funds. In at least one case, department officials blocked a state from drawing stimulus money because it was cutting school funding so deeply.

This growing dispute with states has become so politically charged that the department declined to comment for this story.

The department's inspector general, on the other hand, isn't shy at all.

In its report about how states were spending stimulus funds, the inspector general's office found that over a dozen states are inappropriately using stimulus dollars to replace the money they're cutting from education. It specifically cited Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Connecticut.

"We're really perplexed at this report and need to sort it out," says Thomas Murphy, spokesman for Connecticut's department of education. He says his state got high marks this summer, when federal education officials looked at its proposal for spending stimulus funds.

"These funds came with the greatest flexibility to help states stabilize their education programs, and that's how Connecticut used those funds," Murphy says.

Murphy says Connecticut is in compliance as long as it doesn't cut education spending below 2006 levels. But it's clear that lots of states won't be able to maintain that level of funding, let alone boost spending on education, as the Obama administration would like.

Not Enough To Cover Shortfalls

According to Jon Shure of the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, 25 states have cut funding for K-12 education, and 34 have cut higher-education funding. Shure says that the stimulus has covered no more than 30 percent of states' budget shortfalls.

"States are facing such a severe crisis that a lot of the federal money is just helping states stay even and avoid further budget cuts," Shure says.

Minnesota, for example, is balancing its budget by delaying almost $2 billion in payments to schools. Michigan plans to cut per-student funding by $218. Missouri has indefinitely frozen funding for its public colleges.

"We have to make do with the money we have, and given that our revenues are doing much worse than anticipated, we will have to make additional reductions in the budget to keep it in line with available revenue," says Linda Luebbering, Missouri's budget director.

Education, says Luebbering, will be the last thing Missouri cuts.

Duncan warns that if states cut education below 2006 levels and use stimulus funds to plug holes in their education budgets, he may exclude them from billions of dollars that the administration is offering states for reforming their schools.

  • The OIG Hotline is a toll-free telephone number (1-800-MISUSED) and email box (oig.hotline@ed.gov) where individuals can report potential instances of fraud, waste, or abuse relating to Department programs.
  • The percentage of the State’s total revenues expended on education must be greater than or equal to the percentage expended in the fiscal year preceding the year for which the waiver is being requested.

RFK SITE TO BECOME SCHOOLS + smf comments

 

By Tony Castro, Staff Writer | LA Newspaper Group (Daily News)

October 11, 2009 -- On the grounds of the old Ambassador Hotel where Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1968, officials Saturday dedicated a site of national tragedy into one of potential local triumph.

Two of Kennedy's grandchildren were among those who witnessed ribbon-cutting ceremonies for a new elementary education facility featuring two pilot schools.

"This is sacred ground," labor leader and Kennedy friend Dolores Huerta told about 500 people who attended the dedication.

The ceremony marked the culmination of a long political battle to raze the famed hotel and convert the 24-acre grounds into an urban school site. In addition to the new elementary schools, a new Robert F. Kennedy High School is scheduled to open in September 2010.

"My father was a champion of those who suffered disadvantages in America," Kennedy's son Maxwell said in a statement released by the Los Angeles Unified School District.

"This new K-12 learning center will educate and empower our young people and their parents to fight for economic and social justice. "I know of no better way to advance the living legacy of Robert Kennedy."

When complete, the educational complex will serve 4,400 students in grades K-12 in heavily Latino neighborhood west of downtown.

"My dream has been to make the schools a living memorial to Robert Kennedy," said Paul Schrade, a former senior aide to the late senator and head of the RFK-12 Community Task Force, the local group that worked toward construction of the learning complex.

Among obstacles that had to be overcome were Donald Trump's dream to build five towers at the site, one of them 125 stories tall, plans by Wal-Mart to put a store at the location and a movement by the Los Angeles Conservancy to preserve the landmark.

"Robert Kennedy told us what makes life worthwhile is the health of our children and the quality of their education," said Schrade.

Kennedy was gunned down at the Ambassador Hotel just minutes after winning the Democratic Party's 1968 California primary, an attack in which Schrade was also wounded.

LAUSD school board President Monica Garcia said Kennedy's message is "alive with us as we celebrate the opening of not one, but two exciting new pilot schools."

"We are inspired by the memory of Senator Kennedy who reminds us every day that we each have something to contribute," Garcia said. "And he reminds us every day that we can absolutely do better."

______________________

●● what smf said at the RFK-12 ribboncutting:

The good news is that I'm the last speaker today.

The really good news is that the youngsters behind me haven’t waited for any of us to sit down and shut up to play on the playground equipment behind this stage!

President Obama reminded us yesterday that we rise to meet challenges far more often than we solve them. This city and this school district have risen to meet the challenges of overcrowding and forced busing and the year round calendar; of disrepair and lack of vision. Those will, in time certain, be obstacles in the rear view mirror, thanks to the voters and taxpayers of this city.

Other challenges loom: Class sizes and underinvestment; a misunderstanding of the roles of art and music and physical activity in education and society. You kids must rise and meet the challenge of education and education reform --- you must rise to it, accept it and make the best of it …here in this new school, your new school – and onward – ever onward …into the high school that will be part of this incredible complex – and on to colleges and universities and art schools - to law school and medical school and engineering school; architecture school, trade school and business school.

Be safe here, Make lifelong friends. Do good work. Learn from your mistakes. Have fun.

It is a hero's journey: You must go forth …and come back and build the future. That is the dream and the vision and the promise of RFK-12.

Robert Kennedy made Bernard Shaw’s words his own: "Some men see things as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say why not”. Those words, Boys and Girls, must be your words; those dreams must be your dreams. THEN we will be the City of Angeles we aspire to be.

Dare to dream. Ask "Why not?" Re-imagine the American Dream. Your dreams are our future.

Because you, the students, are the magic, and the promise.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

IN EDUCATION REFORM, SOME STATES RACE FROM THE BOTTOM: According to a report by the New Teacher Project, state laws have disqualified some states from winning Race to the Top money


California was one of five states ranked least likely to compete for the money, according to a report released this August by the New Teacher Project.    “California will take whatever money it can get,” said Brian Edward, a policy analyst for EdSource, a California education watchdog.


by Chris Linden | Medhill Reports - Northwestern University.  A Washington publication of the Medill School.

Thursday, August 27, 2009 -- WASHINGTON—State officials are scrambling to win a federal competition that encourages education reform, but as they modify their education laws to get in line, high hurdles are forcing some of the states into a race from the bottom.

At stake is $4.35 billion in federal stimulus cash from the Department of Education. The Race to the Top Fund is only a small chunk, but states are finding it’s difficult to pass up the money.

Experts suggest Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is using Race to the Top as political leverage, positioning states for an upcoming revision to No Child Left Behind. Some states are perfectly positioned, experts said, but there’s a long road ahead for others.

“California will take whatever money it can get,” said Brian Edward, a policy analyst for EdSource, a California education watchdog.

California was one of five states ranked least likely to compete for the money, according to a report released this August by the New Teacher Project. The group, which supports initiatives to train teachers and measure their performance, also rated Nevada, Wisconsin, New York and Pennsylvania as ineligible because state laws and revised stimulus requests disqualify them from the federal competition.

To qualify, states must show reformed education laws fitting four federal priorities: standardized curriculum; building new student data systems; linking teacher performance to test scores, and raising the number of charter schools.

In California, the biggest hang-up involves the use of test data to evaluate a teacher’s effectiveness. State law prevents using students’ test scores to rate a teacher, except for the purposes of local school districts, where officials can monitor a student’s progress from year to year.

Secretary Duncan has several times called those laws a “firewall” that stall reform. He has suggested student test scores should be used to evaluate a teacher’s effectiveness.

Duncan’s suggestion has met with fierce resistance from teachers and their unions, who argue that student scores should not be a sole factor in evaluating teachers.

Linden_RACE2BOTTOM_0826_graphic

Chris Linden/MNS

Representatives for state and national teachers unions said test scores must be combined with other factors, such as observation by a principal, lesson planning forms and portfolios. They said they fear test data vary too much from year to year and build only a partial picture of a teacher’s performance.

“Just like we think a student is more than a number, we think a teacher is more than a test score,” said Robert Kim, a senior policy analyst for the National Education Association, the nation’s largest teachers union.

The temptation of those federal dollars, though, is driving states to fall in line. Officials in many states are proposing changes that would better position them for a stake in that cash from Washington. But places like California and Wisconsin, where the barriers are higher, will need more time to prepare, experts said.

States can apply for the money later this year, though other states will wait for the second phase in late 2010. Most states are mobilizing now.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in late August proposed sweeping changes to state laws that would link test scores to teacher performance, lift charter school caps and provide more options for children in under-performing schools.

Given the state’s budget crisis, it’s hard to pass up additional federal money, said Edward, the California policy analyst. Despite the best of intentions, it will take time to develop the best reforms, Edward said. California has a long road ahead.

“Right now, some of those [reforms] are a dream in California,” Edwards said.

Sunday, August 02, 2009

AMID FISCAL CRISIS, L.A. GIVES SCHOOL SITE COUNCILS REINS

Education Weekcollection logo

Published Online: July 14, 2009

Published in Print: July 15, 2009

By Stephen Sawchuk | Education Week

Los Angeles -- In theory, it is every school’s dream to control its own destiny, rather than having administrators impose spending plans and reform initiatives from the central office.

At Jefferson High School, one of the largest high schools here, a governing body made up of teachers, nonclassroom-based educators, parents, and Principal Michael Taft appears to be living the dream, to the extent such a thing is possible during a staggering fiscal crisis.

The leadership team, officially known as a “school site council,” has mainly used an infusion of federal stimulus funding to keep class sizes around 25 students. With its remaining money, it has preserved a successful “eighth period”—a mandatory after-school class for students struggling to pass the California High School Exit Exam, or CAHSEE, a graduation prerequisite.

The example sums up the goal of district leaders, who have allotted nearly $114 million in Title I economic-stimulus funds to school site councils like the one at Jefferson High to spend on their own needs.

Decentralized Decisionmaking

According to the California Education Code, school site councils are elected bodies charged with setting and measuring the effectiveness of improvement strategies at the school, seeking input from other school advisory committees, revising strategies and expenditures, and creating and monitoring the approved “single plan for student achievement”—a consolidated plan requested of schools receiving state or federal school improvement funding.

The councils are made up of:
• The principal
• Representatives of teachers selected by teachers at the school
• Other school personnel selected by peers at the school
• Parents of students attending the school selected by such parents
• Students selected by students attending the school (at the middle and high school levels)

Middle and high school councils are composed to ensure parity among the principal, classroom teachers, and other school personnel. additionally, they must ensure that equal numbers of parents or other community members selected by parents and students serve on the council.

SOURCE: California Education Code

“If parents and the community feel they have some responsibility, they’ll be accountable for the direction of the school,” said Ramon C. Cortines, the superintendent of the district. “When [a school] is faced with the draconian cuts I’ve made, ... [it] needs parents and the community to be engaged and involved on an ongoing basis.”

Decentralization has long been a rallying cry among constituents in this sprawling district of 700,000 students. But as some Los Angeles educators are discovering, it pays to be careful what you wish for.

The influx of money this year through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act carries much higher stakes for the site councils for several reasons. First, the funding will double some schools’ typical Title I allocations, and thus it will be closely scrutinized.

These are not funds for a rainy day; they are a stopgap. In preparing budgets, the councils have had to determine how many teaching positions to preserve, how small they can afford to keep class sizes, and which local initiatives are worth saving. Many are making those decisions for the first time.

In effect, the district has spread the decision about cutting programs and personnel from seven school board members to 700 councils.

The decentralization has been praised by some Los Angeles administrators for moving instructional policy closer to the schools. But it has raised the hackles of other administrators, some parent groups, and the teachers’ union.

“There was no transition plan to develop the capacity of these schools that in some cases received an embarrassment of riches,” said Bill Ring, who heads TransParent, a grassroots organization that seeks to increase parents’ voices in school decisions.

Back and Forth

Required by the California Education Code, the school site councils have been around since the 1970s. But the discretionary pots of money they oversee typically wax and wane depending on the current district leadership. Some superintendents have funneled more discretionary funding, including federal Title I aid for disadvantaged students, to the councils; others have chosen to manage those funds centrally.

Mr. Cortines, who became the district chief in 2008, has generally favored a more localized approach to school instruction. Previously, during a stint as Los Angeles’ interim superintendent, in 2000, he broke the district into subdistricts, each overseen by a superintendent.

His latest push for decentralizing is unusual, though, not only for the amount of money involved, but also in its timing.

As the councils geared up to meet this spring, Los Angeles officials watched as their tax revenues dropped and as Sacramento made a succession of cuts to state funding. To reduce the resulting shortfall, the school board canceled programming, sent out more than 4,000 layoff notices to teachers, and pared the central-office staff. Upon receiving its first stimulus allocations, the district put most of its state-stabilization money and eligible money from the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act toward its bottom-line deficit. But officials also decided to pass the Title I stimulus dollars to the councils, rather than filling in holes centrally.

With the money, schools could, for instance, “buy back” classroom teaching positions that had been eliminated under the central budget. Alternatively, they could choose to maintain after-school tutoring, preserve the jobs of school psychologists and counselors, or hire instructional coaches to help teachers make sense of the data from periodic student assessments.

More Discretionary Aid

In addition, the district liquidated a centrally run coaching program and federal Title II teacher-quality funding and disbursed those dollars to schools—a change officials said provided more discretionary aid to schools receiving small or no allocations under Title I.

The district, the Los Angeles teachers’ union, and others collaborated on a series of training sessions for school-site-council personnel, beginning last winter. Part of that training included mock council meetings to give educators clear examples of good and poor collaborative decisionmaking.

Mr. Cortines also gave each school a lot of data on student demographics and test scores to help the councils as they set their budgets.

Mr. Taft, the Jefferson High principal, and members of that school’s team—while not in agreement on every detail—felt it was worthwhile to maintain classroom teaching positions and the eighth period, and they had three years of higher scores to back up their decisions.

“Because of the success we’ve had, our parents are getting more involved in their child’s education,” Mr. Taft said. “When their child comes home and says he passed the math portion of the CAHSEE, that’s like handing them a $20 bill. They can see it, they can feel it, they understand it.”

But others say that Mr. Taft’s experience has been the exception, not the norm. Mr. Ring of the parents’ group said that the district’s efforts to build schools’ capacity to spend the money wisely have so far only scratched the surface.

“It’s exposure, not culture change,” he said of the training.

The teachers’ union, meanwhile, has grown increasingly critical of the plan, saying it has unnecessarily compromised teachers’ jobs and raised class sizes. District figures show that schools have kept a significant number of nonclassroom positions, such as coaches.

The district, officials of United Teachers Los Angeles say, shouldhave spent the stimulus money centrally to ensure a minimum class size for all elementary students and to preserve more classroom teaching positions.

“I honestly don’t think Ray [Cortines] understood that you can’t just snap your fingers and go turn an authoritarian system into a decentralized one,” said Daniel Barnhart, a UTLA board member.

The union has also accused the district of pressuring principals on the councils to maintain reading coaches over classroom teachers, and it has filed 17 grievances alleging that schools didn’t staff or conduct their councils in accordance with state law.

“Decentralization is illusory,” said Sean Leys, a teacher at Lincoln High School who went on a well-publicized hunger strike to protest the layoffs. “Without a doubt, there are hundreds of school councils that show no oversight because they have no idea what the role of the council is.”

District Response

Monica Garcia, the president of the Los Angeles school board, concedes that the district has more work to do on training. But she argues that the district’s centrally mandated strategies were not always effective for all schools.

Schools likely to benefit most under the shift are big high schools like Jefferson, which serves 2,800 students, many disadvantaged. At Jefferson, Mr. Taft estimates that during the upcoming school year, the council will oversee a total of $8 million to $9 million in regular Title I money, stimulus funding, and other state and federal bilingual education grants, for instance.

“For the first time, our large high schools have a good chunk of money to do things with,” Ms. Garcia said. “I think that is probably the silver lining, that these large underperforming high schools got attention on what they needed, rather than what we prescribed.”

And district officials flatly deny the union’s charge that they have acted as puppetmaster over councils and principals.

“It’s very frustrating because [the union] supported decentralization in 2000,” Mr. Cortines said. “But it came to the bottom line. If [the council] didn’t spend the money the way UTLA wanted, it was wrong.”Michelle King, a local area superintendent in west Los Angeles, said that schools there did make classroom teachers a priority.

But councils nevertheless struggled with the buy-back process because of seniority provisions in the district contract, she said. Local schools budget classroom “positions,” so buy-backs do not guarantee the return of beloved instructors—merely teachers who fit the appropriate categories and are next on the seniority roll.

“I think of all the messages, that was the one we had to repeat over and over,” Ms. King said.

Still, Ms. King expects councils to take on more responsibilities over time, such as promoting school safety and ensuring spending is aligned with academic goals.

“[Decentralization] was a shock to the system, but it’s something the community has been asking for a long time,” she said.

Observers hope for the best, but some harbor doubts. David Tokofsky, a consultant for the principals’ union and a former school board member, worries not just about the logistics of the move, but has a philosophical concern, too.

While it may complete Mr. Cortines’ long-held decentralization plans, it may not satisfy the reform-minded rhetoric coming from President Barack Obama’s administration on the use of stimulus funds, he suggested.

“They say all politics are local politics. Well, in Los Angeles, we say all politics are ‘loco’ politics,” Mr. Tokofsky said. “And right now, the politics of the past are racing forward at the very time that Obama is putting more money and attention toward education.”

Coverage of leadership is supported in part by a grant from The Wallace Foundation, at www.wallacefoundation.org.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

BUDGET VIDEO FROM SPEAKER BASS: California faces the worst financial crisis since the depression, and the options are between bad and worse.

http://democrats.assembly.ca.gov/members/a47/

This video highlights what would happen if we accept the Governor's proposals without any modifications.  As you can see, the picture is not pretty.

As your Assemblymember, I need to know your priorities as I prepare to vote on the difficult choices before us.  Please take this budget survey to assist me with this urgent matter.

http://democrats.assembly.ca.gov/speaker/FightingForOurFamilies/default.aspx?utm_source=email&utm_medium=eAlert&utm_campaign=SpeakerBassFightingForFamilies

Thank you for taking an active part in California's future.

Sincerely,


Speaker Karen Bass

Press Release Update: June 24, 2009

 

Assembly Speaker Bass Updates Budget Progress

(Sacramento) – The State Assembly and State Senate debated and voted today on the spending cuts included in the Legislative Budget Conference Committee’s revisions to the state budget. The Conference Committee’s proposal was defined after more than a month of public debate. However, GOP Lawmakers refused to vote for the spending cuts, leaving the state without the needed budget revisions for another day. The budget revision package will be reconsidered tomorrow.

Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) and Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa), Chair of the Budget Conference Committee, told reporters it is critically important for the Legislature to pass the budget package because the state will be out of cash as of July 1st.

 

Budget Conference Committee Chair Evans Updated Budget Status

Sacramento) – The State Assembly and State Senate debated and voted today on the spending cuts included in the Legislative Budget Conference Committee’s revisions to the state budget. The Conference Committee’s proposal was defined after more than a month of public debate. However, GOP Lawmakers refused to vote for the spending cuts, leaving the state without the needed budget revisions for another day. The budget revision package will be reconsidered. Budget Conference Committee Chair Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) says Republicans should not be claiming they don’t know what’s in the legislation and says it’s critically important for the Legislature to pass the budget package because the state will be out of cash as of July 1st.  Here’s more in this Assembly Access video.

Here are links to audio of Speaker Bass and Assemblymember Evans:

Speaker Bass’ opening statement to reporters this afternoon after the Assembly floor session. (2:30)

Speaker Bass says it’s ironic that GOP lawmakers refused to vote for billions of dollars in cuts because they say they want deeper cuts.

Speaker Bass says Democrats do not want to vote for the deep spending cuts but did so because it’s the right thing to do.

Speaker Bass says policy reforms need to be considered immediately after the Governor and Legislature deal with the immediate cash crisis.

Assemblymember Evans says GOP lawmakers should know what’s in the legislation.

Assemblymember Evans says she remains hopeful the GOP lawmakers will decide to vote for the budget solutions.

Capitol Office:
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA 94249-0047
(916) 319-2047
Fax: (916) 319-2147

District Office:
5750 Wilshire Blvd.
Suite 565
Los Angeles, CA
90036
(323) 937-4747
Fax: (323) 937-3466