The Signal

Changes proposed

Bill looks to restrict districts from starting school any earlier than 8:30 a.m.

- By Brennon Dixson Signal Staff Writer

California teens may soon be able to snooze their alarms an extra time or two after state lawmakers approved a bill Friday that aims to regulate school start times.

The bill Senate Bill 328, which Gov. Jerry Brown has yet to sign, would restrict school districts from starting middle and high school classes any earlier than 8:30 a.m.

Existing law allows the governing board of each school district to set the length of the day for its school sites, but if the new bill is signed, public and chartered schools will have until 2021 to adjust their instructio­n times.

More than three-quarters of California’s middle and high schools start classes before 8:30 a.m., according to a legislativ­e analysis, which means nearly 2,000 schools across the state would have to change their start times.

Proponents of SB 328 say the new time limits would prevent sleep deprivatio­nand the harmful effects that it can have on young students, but state Sen. Scott W ilk, who voted against the bill four times, said the decision on school start times should remain in the hands of the school boards.

“Too often Sacramento sends down edicts and makes requiremen­ts that mayor may not work in the best interests of the community,” Wilk said. “The fact of the matter is we have local school districts with locallyele­cted school boards that are there to make the decision son the best interests of the students .”

Wilk said a “one-size-fits-all-program” might be more harmful to the students than beneficial, which matches the concerns of the California School Boards Associatio­n.

When SB 328 failed top ass the state assembly in 2017, CSBA officials said the bill would affect working families and the schools that purpose ly stagger start times to meet student demand for bus transporta­tion.

“I had a school district in the Antelope Valley try this a couple years ago and it didn't work,” Wilk said, which is why he believes the state should show the sleep deprivatio­n study results to the local districts and leave it to the community to decide what' s in the best interest of students.

Research detailing the effects of sleep deprivatio­n and the benefits of a later school start time is expected to be posted on the State Department of Education’ s website if the new legislatio­nis signed by Gov. Brown, according to the bill’s text.

It is currently unknown if or when the governor plans to sign or veto the prospectiv­e legislatio­n.

 ?? Signal file photo ?? Bridgeport Elementary School students enter the campus at 7:50 a.m. on the first day back to school in August 2017.
Signal file photo Bridgeport Elementary School students enter the campus at 7:50 a.m. on the first day back to school in August 2017.
 ?? Signal file photo ?? First-grader Hannah Ramirez receives a free backpack courtesy of Costco’s fresh start backpack program on her first day of school at Cedarcreek Elementary School in Canyon Country.
Signal file photo First-grader Hannah Ramirez receives a free backpack courtesy of Costco’s fresh start backpack program on her first day of school at Cedarcreek Elementary School in Canyon Country.

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