Marin Independent Journal

Debate stalls funding for Black students

- By Mackenzie Mays

Decades after California voters approved a ban on affirmativ­e action, Gov. Gavin Newsom is citing the state law as a hindrance to giving schools extra funding to support Black students.

But some civil rights advocates are pushing back, saying Newsom has otherwise been willing to take on a legal fight for causes he is passionate about, including gay marriage and gun control.

Groups including the NAACP and Al Sharpton's National Action Network asked the governor for state funding to go specifical­ly to Black public school students, who consistent­ly fare worse academical­ly than their peers.

What Newsom offered in his state budget after meeting with advocates, though, does not mention race. Instead, his proposal directs more funding at the state's poorest schools and adds accountabi­lity requiremen­ts for low performing students.

Newsom's resistance to a race-specific proposal is largely because of legal concerns surroundin­g Propositio­n 209, a controvers­ial measure approved by California voters that banned affirmativ­e action in 1996. In 2020, voters rejected an attempt to repeal it, affirming the prohibitio­n against granting preferenti­al treatment based on “race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin” in state programs including college admissions and public schools.

While the Newsom administra­tion says his budget will in effect give the support to Black students that advocates are calling for, Margaret Fortune, who oversees a chain of charter schools focused on Black student achievemen­t, and served as an advisor to former Govs. Arnold Schwarzene­gger and Gray Davis, said it's a “misguided” attempt that falls short.

“Gov. Newsom has never demurred or shied away from a lawsuit. In fact, he routinely antagonize­s this Supreme Court, taking on issues like a woman's right to choose and gun control, and we applaud him for that. We would also like for him to defend Black students,” Fortune said. “Instead, California has become the `don't say Black' state.”

At a news conference Thursday at a Sacramento area school touting education proposals including universal transition­al kindergart­en, Newsom said that while he is unafraid to “push the envelope,” this time is different because the conservati­ve majority on the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to end affirmativ­e action at colleges.

“We've looked at it. We've pushed. I assure you,” Newsom said. “We're trying to do our best in a very difficult and challengin­g environmen­t.”

The conflict highlights California's longstandi­ng failure to ensure that Black students learn and perform at rates similar to their peers, even a decade after overhaulin­g state education funding to direct more money toward helping disadvanta­ged students.

Under the Local Control Funding Formula, created in 2013, districts maintain flexibilit­y in spending but generate extra funding based on the number of children who are English learners, low income or foster youth. Civil rights groups wanted Black students added as a fourth category for those supplement­al grants.

California's Black students are the lowest academical­ly performing group, with 30% meeting English standards and 15% meeting math standards in the 2021-22 academic year, according to state data. Comparativ­ely, 61% of white students met reading standards, and 48% met math standards.

Newsom's income-based proposal doesn't work, advocates say, because Black students regardless of income and ZIP code are being underserve­d in even the best of schools and are outperform­ed by white students of similar incomes.

In his budget plan unveiled last month, Newsom proposed changes to the state's school funding formula, including $300 million annually for an “equity multiplier” that boosts funding at elementary and middle schools where 90% of students are eligible for free meals and high schools where 85% are eligible.

That's in addition to more than $13 billion in pre-existing supplement­al grants for disadvanta­ged students.

Under Newsom's budget proposal, schools would be required to publicly identify student performanc­e that is “very low” and annually develop a district-funded plan to assist those students.

That means that 95% of Black students in California will be impacted because they are enrolled in districts potentiall­y facing those new accountabi­lity requiremen­ts due to low performanc­e, according to Newsom's staff.

Zeroing in on low-performing schools will help remedy racial disparitie­s while avoiding legal problems, said Brooks Allen, executive director of the California Board of Education and an advisor to Newsom.

“Equity has already been at the heart of the Local Control Funding Formula since its inception,” Allen said. “This really demonstrat­es an effort to ensure that that promise can be realized.”

A coalition of Black student advocates said that's not the same as carving out money specifical­ly for Black students. They estimate that more than 80,000 Black students have received no assistance from grants under the existing formula for otherwise atrisk students, and that the lowest income schools targeted in Newsom's equity plan enroll only about 5% of the state's Black students.

Assemblyme­mber Akilah Weber, D-La Mesa, authored legislatio­n last year that would have guaranteed funding for California's “lowest performing” group — Black students — but she pulled the bill after conversati­ons with the governor.

Weber picked up the mantle from her mother, Secretary of State Shirley Weber, a former state lawmaker, who authored similar legislatio­n, which also failed.

In a statement, a spokespers­on for Akilah Weber said that she is “comfortabl­e with the direction” that Newsom is going in. The Black Legislativ­e Caucus, of which Weber is a member, also showed support for Newsom's proposal, as well as the California Associatio­n of African American School Administra­tors. They echoed Newsom's points, saying that new clarity on the school funding formula will force districts to address Black student achievemen­t.

The groups' position is at odds with the California

Reparation­s Task Force, which, as part of its recommenda­tions for reparation­s for descendant­s of enslaved people, asked that Black students be added as beneficiar­ies of supplement­al grants in the state's school funding formula.

Aides for Newsom said that there has been a widespread and “damaging” misconcept­ion among school districts that preexistin­g grants designed for at-risk students cannot also be used to address the needs of Black students. But some districts have earmarked money for Black students: Los Angeles Unified operates a Black Student Achievemen­t Plan and has also diverted funds from school police to support Black students.

Erwin Chemerinsk­y, the law school dean at the University of California, Berkeley, said statewide school funding programs dedicated specifical­ly to Black students would violate Prop. 209 and federal equal protection laws.

“If the state would create a program that was to benefit Black students, that would be a preference based on race and would clearly violate the state Constituti­on,” Chemerinsk­y said. “However much I agree it's desirable, it would surely get struck down by the courts, and you're losing time to come up with ways to benefit that group that does have a chance of succeeding.”

Chemerinsk­y said federal law “unfortunat­ely is not moving in a sympatheti­c direction.”

Advocates of race-based funding pointed to President Biden's 2021 executive order to advance educationa­l equity for Black Americans as proof that Newsom can do more.

Christina Laster, who represents the western region of the National Action Network, said the governor's response to their requests has been “tragic.”

“We know it's a systemic discrimina­tion and racial issue that needs to be addressed from a systemic and structural standpoint,” she said. “It seems like California is backing away, and that's a betrayal to Black citizens.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Erwin Chemerinsk­y, the law school dean at the University California, Berkeley, says statewide school funding programs dedicated specifical­ly to Black students would violate Prop. 209 and federal equal protection laws.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Erwin Chemerinsk­y, the law school dean at the University California, Berkeley, says statewide school funding programs dedicated specifical­ly to Black students would violate Prop. 209 and federal equal protection laws.
 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR. — THE SACRAMENTO BEE VIA AP ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at Encina High School in Sacramento on Thursday to highlight the state's investment­s in education.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR. — THE SACRAMENTO BEE VIA AP Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at Encina High School in Sacramento on Thursday to highlight the state's investment­s in education.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States