Los Angeles Times

RACE, GENDER ON BALLOT

Voters in November will get a chance to erase Prop. 209’s ban on affirmativ­e action.

- BY JOHN MYERS

State voters in November will get a chance to erase Propositio­n 209’s ban on affirmativ­e action. Above, students at UC Berkeley.

SACRAMENTO — California could allow college admissions and government contractin­g decisions with a focus on race and gender diversity under a measure placed on the November ballot Wednesday, a decision that would reverse strict limits imposed by voters in 1996.

The ballot measure, which won final approval from the state Senate, could become a centerpiec­e in the national reckoning over racism and systemic inequities. The measure, an amendment to the California Constituti­on, was approved two weeks ago by the state Assembly and now moves to the Nov. 3 ballot.

Propositio­n 209, an intensely debated and controvers­ial ballot measure approved by voters 24 years ago, said that government agencies “shall not discrimina­te against, or grant preferenti­al treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin.” Its prohibitio­n on affirmativ­e action policies extends to colleges and universiti­es, the awarding of public contracts and decisions in hiring government employees.

Like the earlier debate in the Assembly, Wednesday’s discussion was personal for many lawmakers. Black and Latino senators said the 1996 ballot measure had not lived up to its backers’ promises of creating a level playing field for millions of California­ns who no longer represent a minority of the state’s population.

“I challenge my white colleagues: I bet you can count on one hand the number of times that you’ve walked into a room, walked into an organizati­on, and you’re the only one that looks like you,” said state Sen. Steven Brad

ford (D-Gardena), who is Black. “I know about discrimina­tion. I live it every day.”

No Democrat in the Senate voted against the measure, Assembly Constituti­onal Amendment 5. All but one Republican — state Sen. Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita) — voted against putting the proposal on the ballot this fall.

GOP lawmakers who spoke during the long floor debate echoed some of the messages used to support Propositio­n 209 almost a quarter-century ago.

“The problem with ACA 5 is that it takes the position that we must fight discrimina­tion with more discrimina­tion,” state Sen. Ling Ling Chang (R-Diamond Bar) said. “Preference­s for any purpose are anathema to the very process of democracy.”

While Propositio­n 209 imposed a ban on race and gender considerat­ions across a wide swath of government decisions, it has been a f lashpoint for decades about the fairness of admission policies at California’s colleges and universiti­es. While the topic was a key point in Wednesday’s debate, Democratic lawmakers said discrimina­tion begins much earlier for some students.

“When I was in high school, I went to my college counselor to say that I wanted to go to college,” state Sen. Susan Rubio (DBaldwin Park) said. “And I was told that that’s not a place for me — that Latinas, that I wasn’t college material.”

Other Democrats said that standardiz­ed testing used during the college admissions process failed to provide an equal opportunit­y for many students who didn’t grow up in white or affluent communitie­s. Republican­s, on the other hand, insisted state officials have done little to ensure quality teachers and school choices for K-12 students who come from disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

Senate GOP Leader Shannon Grove (R-Bakersfiel­d) said that Black and Latino supporters of charter schools, for example, have been stymied by Democrats who have imposed strict limits on the expansion of those schools.

“We need to start at the level of K-12 and giving parents the opportunit­y to be able to choose the best school for their children and not make them stay in the ZIP Codes in which they are living in,” she said.

Wednesday’s vote to send the issue to California voters marked a sharp change from just six years ago. At that time, a similar effort in the state Capitol stalled after Asian American advocacy groups warned that reinstatem­ent of any kind of affirmativ­e action policy would limit college admissions for Asian American students.

State Sen. Holly Mitchell (D-Los Angeles), who is Black, said the long floor debate between lawmakers hinted at a larger problem that is reflected in the conversati­on now playing out across the nation.

“I think perhaps we don’t have enough opportunit­y to have these kinds of conversati­ons and clearly don’t have enough opportunit­y to have conversati­ons about race because that’s the real crux of the problem with our country,” she said. “So we really have work to do.”

 ?? Ben Margot Associated Press ??
Ben Margot Associated Press
 ?? Alex Garcia Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS JOIN hands in Santa Ana’s civic center in 1996 to oppose the recently passed Prop. 209. In the decades since, the measure has been a f lashpoint for debate about the fairness of university admission policies.
Alex Garcia Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS JOIN hands in Santa Ana’s civic center in 1996 to oppose the recently passed Prop. 209. In the decades since, the measure has been a f lashpoint for debate about the fairness of university admission policies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States