San Francisco Chronicle

Nov. 6 race proxy war over schools

- Dan Walters is a columnist for CAL matters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

Aficionado­s of political jousting will find little of interest in the array of statewide offices to be filled on Nov. 6.

The most interestin­g statewide contest this year is for an office that’s little known to the public but affects arguably the most important state responsibi­lity, K-12 education.

The state superinten­dent of public instructio­n oversees, along with a state Board of Education appointed by the governor, a system that spends about $90 billion in local, state and federal funds each year to educate 6 million children and adolescent­s.

Tom Torlakson, a former teacher and legislator, is departing after eight years in the office, having barely defeated charter school and education reform advocate Marshall Tuck in his re-election four years ago. Tuck’s back on the ballot this year, facing Assemblyma­n Tony Thurmond. They virtually tied in June’s primary election.

It’s a battle between two Democrats but one that encapsulat­es the political war over California education that has been raging for years between the education establishm­ent, particular­ly the California Teachers Associatio­n, and an “Equity Coalition” of civil rights groups and Tuck’s fellow reform advocates.

Their No. 1 issue is how to deal with the stubborn gap between low-achieving poor and “English learner” students — about 60 percent of the state’s 6 million K-12 students — and their more affluent, higher-achieving classmates.

Whites and Asians dominate the upper portion of the “achievemen­t gap” while Latino and black kids are concentrat­ed in the lower.

The establishm­ent, which generally backs Thurmond, argues that the gap is best attacked with more money, pointing out that California is below average in per-pupil spending vis-à-vis other states.

During a quasi-debate with Tuck last month, Thurmond said that, if elected, he wants California to move into the “top 10 in the first four years and No. 1 in eight years.”

Tuck, reflecting the reformer position, also calls for more money, but laments that the sharp increase in school financing during the last halfdecade, about 50 percent in per-pupil spending, isn’t being used effectivel­y. “The system is not working,” he said. “We’ve neglected our kids for decades.”

The broader conflict they represent revolves largely around the Gov. Jerry Brown-sponsored Local Control Funding Formula, which provides extra money to districts with large numbers of lowachievi­ng, “at-risk” students.

Brown and the establishm­ent have largely left decisions on how to spend the extra money to local school districts, but reformers contend that it’s often been squandered on spending that doesn’t directly benefit the targeted students.

Torlakson, counterman­ding his own department’s advice, gave districts permission to use local control funding formula funds for overall salary increases, for instance, and Tuck declares that if elected, “On Day One, we’re going to change that.”

There are many other points of conflict, from teacher tenure to paying experience­d teachers more to work in schools with low achievemen­t levels.

While the governor and the Legislatur­e set overall education policy, and provide the system’s money, the superinten­dent does have considerab­le authority. That’s particular­ly true, as Tuck’s comment on salaries implies, in overseeing how schools are spending those many billions of dollars, and that’s why the Thurmond-Tuck duel is a proxy war for the larger conflict.

 ?? Andrew Seng / Sacramento Bee 2014 ?? Tom Torlakson is departing as head of public instructio­n.
Andrew Seng / Sacramento Bee 2014 Tom Torlakson is departing as head of public instructio­n.

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