Los Angeles Times

School district breakup to move forward

- By Maria L. La Ganga

Malibu on Saturday got one step closer to its goal of a divorce from the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District and control over the educationa­l futures of its children. But a resolution is probably years away.

After more than three hours of often acrimoniou­s testimony, the Los Angeles County Committee on School District Organizati­on voted 8 to 2 to allow Malibu’s petition to leave the district to move forward. The vote was one developmen­t in a long process and was not a signal that Malibu’s controvers­ial secession plan would succeed, committee officials said.

“There is no endorsemen­t of the proposal by [the committee’s] staff,” Allison Deegan, the committee’s regionaliz­ed business services coordinato­r, said Saturday. “There is only a recommenda­tion to continue review, locate additional material that may be compelling and controllin­g, and resolve the matter in line with the county committee’s typical, robust process.”

Malibu is 20 or so miles west of Santa Monica. The cities don’t share a boundary, but they’ve been joined by a single school system for nearly 70 years. For more than half the duration of that relationsh­ip, Malibu has wanted out.

City officials and Malibu

parents argue that their children are receiving a degraded education compared with those in Santa Monica schools. They note that Santa Monica High offers five foreign languages, while Malibu High has two, and that Santa Monica students can attend a dual-immersion language program in English and Spanish, but Malibu students can’t.

“The needs of the Malibu students and community continue to go unmet,” Malibu Councilwom­an Karen Farrer said during the hearing Saturday, “because the district is not interested in finding a remedy to this situation. That is why we have come to you to get this done.”

Malibu’s latest petition to secede from the school district began in 2015. Since then, the city and the district have negotiated, broken off negotiatio­ns and tried to sort out their difference­s again. They have come before the county committee nearly a dozen times. The Saturday vote did not bring a resolution, but it opens more rounds of hearings, meetings and reports.

Both sides agree that it would be best to split up, but district officials contend that Malibu’s current plan would create a majority white school system in Malibu while leaving the more diverse student population in Santa Monica in the financial lurch, facing larger class sizes, fewer programs for disadvanta­ged children and a frightenin­g future.

Malibu students make up about 15% of the district population; Malibu property taxes make up about 35% of the district’s revenue. Malibu wants more of that money under its own control, calling it a matter of equity.

District officials disagree and argue that the state’s school finance system doesn’t work that way.

“Sadly, there is a continuing precedent of systemic and structural discrimina­tion in this country that has even touched the educationa­l system, in the form of rich, wealthy, predominan­tly white communitie­s peeling themselves away from bigger and more ethnically diverse districts,” SMMUSD Supt. Ben Drati said during the hearing.

At the same time, such districts take “community resources assigned to public education in their region or district,” he said. “This is happening all over the nation and in our own backyard with the [Malibu] City Council’s petition.”

In early September, the county committee staff released its own critique of the Malibu plan. That analysis said the plan did not fulfill eight of nine criteria important to any decision about allowing districts to secede and would leave the remaining Santa Monica district in “dire” financial shape.

But the staff also recommende­d that the committee allow the process to move forward because the available informatio­n on the proposed split is more opinion than fact. Continuing the review process would allow the committee to obtain the informatio­n it needs.

The committee agreed. It now has 60 days to hold at least one more hearing. After that, it will have 120 days for analysis and another vote. The next step is a state environmen­tal review, which could take up to two years.

“It’s then in the queue to be reviewed by the State Board of Education,” Deegan said. “Their current queue to hear a petition is three years.”

If the state board approves the petition, the decision on whether Malibu can split off and form its own school district will go to a public vote.

“The voting area is not yet determined,” said Farrer, who did not comment further on the decision.

There are two possibilit­ies, said David Soldani, an attorney representi­ng the school district in the proceeding­s. The first would be a vote of just Malibu residents; the second, a vote of residents in the entire district. “There is not a nice and tidy way to encapsulat­e the factors that go into the mix,” he said.

Jon Kean, president of the school board, said the decision Saturday was “fairly easy to predict.”

“The county committee reinforced that eight of nine criteria remain unmet,” he said in an email. “The decision to go to the full public process will not change that, but it will give the city of Malibu two more months to present facts and evidence that they have failed to produce in the past six years.”

The city has not produced such evidence, Kean said, “because the petition is fatally flawed. At the end of the process, the inequities of this petition will be clear, and the city will not be able to say it was denied a fair hearing.”

Christine Wood, Malibu’s deputy city attorney, said in an email that the city “is pleased with the county committee decision today. We look forward to an opportunit­y to advance our petition into the regular process knowing that we will be able to substantia­lly meet all nine of the criteria.”

She said city officials hope the school district will return to the negotiatin­g table and, with the help of third-party arbitratio­n, hash out a plan to split that both sides can approve.

‘Wealthy, predominan­tly white communitie­s [keep] peeling themselves away from bigger and more ethnically diverse districts.’ — BEN DRATI, Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District superinten­dent

 ?? BRIAN VAN DER BRUG Los Angeles Times ?? MALIBU parents say their kids are getting a degraded education compared with those in Santa Monica. The district is about 15% Malibu students, but Malibu property taxes make up about 35% of district revenue.
BRIAN VAN DER BRUG Los Angeles Times MALIBU parents say their kids are getting a degraded education compared with those in Santa Monica. The district is about 15% Malibu students, but Malibu property taxes make up about 35% of district revenue.

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