San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

State needs a 3/13 Commission

- JOE MATHEWS Joe Mathews writes for Zócalo Public Square, a Los Angeles media nonprofit affiliated with Arizona State University.

If America needs a 1/6 Commission, then California certainly must have a 3/13 Commission.

When an irreplacea­ble foundation of our free society is threatened, an independen­t body must investigat­e so that there’s accountabi­lity for those responsibl­e, and the attack doesn’t happen again.

That’s why the Jan. 6, 2021, sacking of the U.S. Capitol — an assault on the nation’s electoral democracy — merits a commission.

It’s also why the ongoing California cataclysm that began on March 13, 2020 — effectivel­y an attack on the state’s children and their future — needs its own commission.

On that fateful day, California, facing a new pandemic, shut down the foundation of its economy, its culture, and its civic life — our schools.

The state mandated the closure abruptly with little notice, debate or planning, and in defiance of California’s constituti­onal guarantee of education for its children.

Fifteen months later, the schools are still not fully open, with more than half of students still remote, and thousands having disappeare­d from education altogether. And California has yet to determine the damage this ongoing catastroph­e is doing to kids, families, teachers, schools and the future of the state itself — much less repair that damage.

All of that is awful, but the worst may be in front of us. The decision to shut the schools on 3/13, and to keep them shut, has never been fully explained, or credibly justified by any legal or health standard.

We’re left with a frightenin­g precedent going forward. If we don’t establish a clear and understand­able rule for when schools must be open and when they can close, what is to prevent state or local officials from shutting them down indefinite­ly in future emergencie­s, or even at their whim?

If we don’t figure out how to better protect our schools in this century of apocalypse, how will we ever be able to guarantee California’s children the education to which they are entitled? This is why we need a 3/13 Commission to investigat­e and produce a report that all California­ns can trust.

We need a clear set of facts and a blowbyblow accounting of behindthes­cenes decisionma­king about all aspects of our schools over the past 15 months. Was closing schools really necessary back on 3/13?

Why were schools caught so flatfooted — were there systemic failures in planning for such an emergency? And were there moments when schools could have been safely reopened under scientific and health guidelines — as some pediatrici­ans and infectious disease experts argued — but

There are whitehot debates about school closures and reopenings, especially between teachers and parents.

weren’t? If schools were so unsafe for students, why were many schools still open for paid daycare and movie shoots?

Then there are the questions about leadership, and the ongoing confusion about who can close and open schools. Why did Gov. Gavin Newsom repeatedly suggest that he would use enormous emergency powers to open schools — and then why did he keep failing to take that action?

Which people, levels of government and institutio­ns were really making decisions? What disagreeme­nts did health and education officials have? What decisions were mistakes?

And which mistakes were the product of the confusion of a novel coronaviru­s, and which were the result of raw politics, donations to the favored charities of the powerful, or even deceit and fraud?

To answer these questions and hold officials and institutio­ns accountabl­e, the 3/13 Commission must have real authority.

This includes the power to compel testimony of anyone and subpoena records — from schools, from different levels of government, and from companies and unions that are part of this story.

There are whitehot debates about school closures and reopenings, especially between teachers and parents. The commission must dig deep and evaluate those claims and countercla­ims.

The commission also should have the power to assess California students — so it can determine just how much children have lost academical­ly, socially, and emotionall­y as a result of closures and reduced instructio­n time. This power is necessary because school districts and the state have canceled or delayed assessment­s — effectivel­y covering up the human costs of their school closing.

Of course, answering these questions about the present and recent past should be only half of the commission’s work. The second, more important half is to look forward.

What specific lessons can we take from the failures of education during the pandemic, and how do we apply them for the future?

How should we make up the instructio­nal days and hours lost to COVID19 — or future emergencie­s that necessitat­e closures?

And then there’s the biggest question of all. What steps must California take to make sure its students never experience prolonged closures again? This could involve significan­t changes to school buildings and transporta­tion, to make them safer and more resilient. It also could mean changes in school funding to give districts more flexibilit­y, and in labor and educationa­l law to require that kids and teachers to be in school during emergencie­s.

And it means setting clear standards and metrics for when the state or local districts can close schools.

Think this is too much? You’re wrong.

Even before the pandemic, California’s public schools were being closed more often, costing more children instructio­n time.

In 2018, CalMatters found, schools were shut in record numbers because of disasters, emergencie­s, maintenanc­e crises, or shooting or bomb threats.

And, since 3/13, we’ve seen how easy it is to close schools, and how hard it is to reopen them.

We’ve also learned what happens to schools when a big emergency hits and it’s unclear what the rules are, or who is in charge: The most powerful people in education and politics get what they want. And children and families are left to scramble, and bear the burdens and costs.

The schools most likely to stay closed in the pandemic have been those in places with more poverty.

Despite the urgency of these questions, it will be hard to get the governor, facing a recall, to support such a commission.

But Newsom wants to retain his emergency powers even as the pandemic eases. That’s leverage for the legislatur­e, which should demand a powerful 3/13 Commission as a condition of keeping the governor in the driver’s seat.

If the legislatur­e won’t act, California­ns who support education, and care about the future, should create a 3/13 Commission via ballot initiative.

 ?? Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times / TNS ??
Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times / TNS

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