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CSBA Urges Future Governor to Release $7 Billion in School Facilities Funding

Prop 51 overwhelming approved by voters in 2016, yet only a fraction of the funds have been released.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SACRAMENTO, Calif., (August 14, 2018) – California students are going back to school this week and, unfortunately, many will be returning to inadequate school facilities. In 2016, California voters approved $7 billion in facility bond funds to address this issue and repair, upgrade and modernize California schools. Two years later, the state is holding on to those funds — against the will of the voters — instead of releasing the money so it can be used to improve school environments and optimize student learning. That’s just wrong. 

The California School Boards Association wrote the following open letter to California’s gubernatorial candidates asking them to release the full $7 billion in school facilities funds when they take office so schools can better meet the needs of California’s students. The letter appeared in today's editions of the Los Angeles Times, Sacramento Bee, San Diego Union Tribune, and the Bay Area News Group newspapers, including the East Bay Times, Marin Independent Journal and the San Jose Mercury News. 

Click image to view published ad.

 

See full letter text below:



An Open Letter to the Next
Governor of California

Let’s stop playing games: It’s time to release
the $7 billion in school facilities funding approved by voters



Dear Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom and Mr. John Cox:

In November, Californians will head to the polls and elect one of you as our state’s next Governor. The election of California’s Governor is an expression of our democracy and a reflection of the voters’ will.

Two years ago, the voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition 51 to provide $7 billion for the renovation, modernization and construction of K-12 schools and to fund facilities for charter schools and Career Technical Education programs. The California School Boards Association urges the next Governor — whoever he may be — to respect the will of the voters and release the funding they approved for the betterment of public schools.

Every day during the academic year, California’s public schools welcome more than six million students. Our schools are living laboratories designed to impart knowledge and promote intellectual curiosity, help develop our state’s pipeline of workers and mold the next generation of civic leaders to serve as the caretakers of our democracy. In our classrooms, children learn how to read and write for the first time, discover robotics, participate in apprenticeship programs, study science and chemistry, or develop their artistic talents. It’s essential that we provide our students with the best possible learning environment for these formative experiences.

Voters, particularly parents, have an expectation that their local school districts, with state-funded assistance, will make every effort to meet the needs of students and communities by building and modernizing schools. How do we know? Because they already declared this at the voting booth with their resounding approval of Proposition 51.

Yet, in the last two state budgets combined, only 20 percent of the promised Proposition 51 money has been made available to school districts and county offices of education, leaving them unable to address their pressing facility needs. In essence, the state has defied voters by withholding funding for building and modernizing schools.

This manipulation of the initiative process by the state undermines our students, subverts our democratic principles and values, and erodes trust in state officials and state agencies.

We call upon the next Governor of California to uphold the will of the voters and support students by promptly authorizing the release of the full $7 billion in K-12 school facilities construction and modernization funds approved by voters in 2016.

California’s Office of Public School Construction currently has a backlog of more than $3.5 billion in approved school construction and modernization projects — projects where local communities are paying a share of the costs — that await state funding. Many of the schools in the queue have been there far too long — in some cases, several years — waiting to put shovels in the ground or to be reimbursed for past projects so that new ones can begin.

Another recession is inevitable and, given the length of the current economic expansion, will likely occur during your term as Governor. So, not only does CSBA’s call to release the voter-approved bond funds make good policy sense, it makes good economic sense as well.

California should move quickly to harness the economic boon and job creation that comes with $7 billion worth of school construction and modernization projects. Trickling these funds out at a snail’s pace actually costs taxpayers more as interest rates and construction costs increase over time.

The benefits of Proposition 51 funding to students and local communities are as varied and expansive as the local communities that populate our state. From safeguarding against natural disasters like earthquakes or fires, to capital investments designed to bolster campus security, many of the projects awaiting funding are designed with student safety and academic achievement in mind.

If we want our students to succeed, we have to develop facilities that are conducive to academic success. Californians have already voted “Yes” to providing facilities that prepare students for success in college, career and civic life. We are asking you, as the next Governor of California, to say “Yes” to our students and families, “Yes” to the sanctity of our initiative process and “Yes” to our democratic principles by committing to the full and complete release of Proposition 51 funds.


Mike Walsh, President
California School Boards Association

Vernon M. Billy, CEO & Executive Director
California School Boards Association


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CSBA is a nonprofit association representing nearly 1,000 PreK-12 school districts
and county offices of education throughout California.
www.csba.org