Daily News (Los Angeles)

Long Beach Unified pays kids $1,400 to be leftist agitators

- By Timothy K. Minella

Enhancing students' skills in reading and math — or training students in progressiv­e activism?

Long Beach Unified School District seems to favor the latter, paying high school students $1,400 each in taxpayer money to become left-wing social justice warriors. And we wouldn't even know about it if not for an investigat­ive report from The Free Press highlighti­ng the urgent need for transparen­cy in public schools so that parents can find out what's happening to their children.

According to The Free Press, the district paid students to join a club run by California­ns for Justice, a nonprofit that claims to be a “youth-powered organizati­on fighting for racial justice.”

These stipends for students engaging in activism were just one of the many payments that the district made to the progressiv­e special interest group. Between 2019 and 2023, the district paid California­ns for Justice nearly $2 million for various programs, including training sessions for teachers and students. According to the Free Press report, these sessions involved California­ns for Justice-trained students lecturing their teachers on such topics as “implicit bias,” “student voice” and “antiblack racism.”

One teacher in the district said the students in these trainings were “obviously reading scripts that have words that they don't know how to say ... it just feels like indoctrina­tion and not informatio­n.” Another teacher observed, “They're teaching them parroting, which is the exact opposite of how you empower children.”

The district shelled out heaps of taxpayer money to California­ns for Justice despite persistent shortcomin­gs in student academic performanc­e. In the 2022-23 school year, less than half of the students in the district met the California state standard in assessment­s for English. Only one-third of

students met the standard for math.

California­ns for Justice, in contrast, has benefitted immensely from its contracts with Long Beach Unified and other California school districts. In the 2022 fiscal year alone, the group reported over $10 million in revenue and almost $16 million in assets.

Long Beach Unified's largesse toward California­ns for Justice is just the latest example of California public school districts getting in bed with leftist advocacy organizati­ons. Just last month, a report revealed that a Bay Area elementary school is spending $250,000 in federal grant money for

teacher training sessions run by Woke Kindergart­en, a for-profit entity that advocates for “queer and trans liberation.” Journalist Kenny Xu has reported on a corrupt scheme in the Santa Barbara Unified School District involving a nonprofit known as “AHA!” that provided programmin­g in social-emotional learning for students. The district paid AHA! with the understand­ing that the funds would enable AHA! to secure a large donation from a private donor.

Do students and teachers really benefit from giving massive amounts of taxpayer money to organizati­ons with such a clear ideologica­l agenda? Surely this money would be better spent on improving core academic outcomes rather than enriching the

Long Beach Unified School District Superinten­dent Jill Baker visits Roosevelt Elementary School and speaks to the media on the first day of school in Long Beach in 2021.

heads of leftist organizati­ons and training footsoldie­rs for the progressiv­e cause.

This latest grift demonstrat­es the urgent need

for transparen­cy in public schools.

Parents deserve to know what their children are learning, and parents and taxpayers alike

should know whether school districts are giving sweetheart deals to progressiv­e organizati­ons. But when parents seek informatio­n about the materials used in their child's classroom or extracurri­cular programmin­g at their child's school, public school districts often stonewall the request or demand thousands of dollars in fees to retrieve the documents.

That's why the Goldwater Institute, where I work, has released a landmark Academic Transparen­cy reform that brings much-needed sunlight into the classroom by requiring public school districts to disclose the books and teaching materials used in the classroom. No parent or taxpayer should need to become an expert in requesting public

records to know what our schools are teaching — and what organizati­ons they're paying.

California should move quickly to arm parents and taxpayers with informatio­n that enables them to hold public schools accountabl­e. And the leaders of our public schools must return these institutio­ns to their core purpose — the education of skilled and knowledgea­ble citizens, not the creation of a progressiv­e activist corps.

Timothy K. Minella is a senior fellow at the Goldwater Institute's

Van Sittert Center for Constituti­onal Advocacy. He advances policies and develops programmin­g that promote constituti­onal principles in education and public life.

 ?? BRITTANY MURRAY — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
BRITTANY MURRAY — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER

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