The Mercury News

Here’s the latest on later start times

New hours for middle, high schools by 2022-23 school year have brought relief and concerns

- By Ricardo Cano CALmattter­s

Of the dozens of education bills that Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law this year, few will have a more practical effect on everyday lives than the one on later start times for California’s high schools and middle schools.

The signing of SB 328, introduced by Democratic state Sen. Anthony Portantino, marked a milestone for the decadeslon­g public health movement to awaken schools to the detrimenta­l effects of adolescent sleep deprivatio­n. But it also brought to a head a charged debate among school boards, administra­tors and parents over who gets to decide when to start a community’s school day.

For some California high school students, the new law will make little or no difference; for others, it will push back school start times by 90 minutes or more.

Here’s what we know about California’s landmark new school start times law.

WHAT DOES THE NEW LAW DO? >> School districts in the state will have a three-year window — until the start of the 2022-23 school year — to implement schedules that ring the first-period bell no earlier than 8:30 a.m. for high schools and 8 a.m. for middle schools.

The new law does not mandate that middle and high schools adhere to a specific bell schedule, nor does it change the instructio­nal minutes required of schools, so lost class time may have to be made up during the middle or at the end of the day to meet the state’s instructio­nal time requiremen­ts.

The law also doesn’t apply to “zero” periods, meaning those classes, typically reserved for early morning electives, could still be held before the new mandated floor on start times.

Exactly when parents and students should expect to see the change depends on their district and on the expiration date of the collective bargaining agreement. For some schools, the switch may not happen for another three years.

WHICH SCHOOLS ARE IN, AND WHICH ONES ARE OUT? >> Though the law will apply only to California middle and high schools, some schools will be exempt. Exactly how many is unclear, and advocates and opponents of SB 328 both agree that the state needs to clarify that part of the law.

The legislatio­n specifical­ly exempts “rural school districts” because of the logistical challenges and higher than average transporta­tion costs that would make a change in, say, bus schedules more expensive. But the law does not define “rural.” The U.S. Department of Education, for example, has three classifica­tions for rural schools depending on how many miles they’re from an urban cluster.

And though “middle schools” could likely encompass various configurat­ions (such as schools serving sixth through eighth grades or seventh and eighth only), schools that also serve primary-grade students, such as K-8 schools, will not be affected by the law.

WHAT ABOUT SCHOOLS THAT ALREADY ARE STARTING LATER? >> Just how many will have to change their morning bells?

Data on this issue has been elusive, and the state does not track school start times. But a CalMatters survey of more than 400 traditiona­l high schools in the state’s largest school districts (those with 20,000 or more students) indicates that the new law is going to have a fairly sweeping impact.

Of the 408 California high schools in big districts for which CalMatters could find bell schedule times, only 21 currently begin their instructio­nal day at 8:30 a.m. or later, as the law will require. The majority of those high schools begin their first period of classes between 7:30 a.m. and 8 a.m., the latter mark being the most popular start time (123 schools start at 8 a.m. on the dot).

And 27 of the 408 started their school day earlier than 7:30 a.m. The earliest start time CalMatters found was 7 a.m. at Granite Hills High School in El Cajon. The latest was 9:05 a.m. at Early College High in Costa Mesa.

As a reference point, a study by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that in 201112, about 21% of middle and high schools in California started at 8:30 a.m. or later.

WHAT’S BEHIND THIS EFFORT? >> Put simply, experts and advocates say starting school too early has profound negative effects on students’ health and wellness.

They point to a body of research showing that starting school later reduces rates of depression, suicide, obesity and sleep deprivatio­n among adolescent­s because they better align with their circadian rhythms and get a higher quality of sleep. Some studies also show that later start times lead to higher student learning outcomes.

But the health argument has historical­ly given way to concerns that a state mandate will take local control from communitie­s and school districts. That latter concern is so charged that it pushed considerat­ion of SB 328 into the final hours of this year’s legislativ­e session, as sleep-deprived lawmakers argued its merits in the early morning hours.

Some legislator­s argued that the bill would inconvenie­nce students and families, and they echoed Gov. Jerry Brown, who, in an earlier veto message, wrote that the state was overreachi­ng.

Other legislator­s sympathize­d with parents whose kids attend early start schools and said the issue is so consequent­ial to adolescent­s’ well-being that mandating later start times superseded local control.

WILL A LATER START COST SCHOOLS MONEY? >> It could. A Senate Appropriat­ions Committee analysis estimated that implementa­tion of the law could put schools on the hook “potentiall­y in the millions of dollars.” However, advocates expressed optimism that later start times would increase attendance, in turn countering the financial impact with more attendance-based state funding for schools.

SB 328 did not attach any funding, and the California School Boards Associatio­n, which opposed the bill, said legislator­s did not account for the work it would take for school districts at the ground level to make the logistical switch.

“We’d certainly like to see the state play its part and grapple with the reality of SB 328 as a bill that is now law, which is much more complicate­d than what the bill provides for,” said Troy Flint, spokesman for the state’s school boards associatio­n.

WHAT’S HAPPENING NATIONALLY ON THIS? >> Where California goes, other states tend to follow. Shortly after the governor’s signing of SB 328, an Ohio legislator introduced a bill to push back school start times there.

Legislator­s in the Virgin Islands also have picked up on the idea. Editorial boards in newsrooms large and small have tipped their hat to California and made the case for their local schools to implement later start times.

And several school districts outside the state already have implemente­d start times that meet California’s new standards. In Seattle Public Schools, for example, high schools start no earlier than 8:45 a.m.

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