Assembly Standing Committee on Education
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, thank you very much for your patience. This is a hearing of the Assembly Education Committee calling it to order. I saw a Republican here, Vice Chair Flora. He just checked in. Let's see. And we have Mister Alvarez here. Thank you very much. And so we will proceed as a Subcommitee and hopefully we'll be joined with the rest of the Committee real soon. Good afternoon.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I would like to hold off on calling the roll, the established decorum and announce that we have 29 bills on file today. Three bills have been pulled from the agenda for today's hearing. And so if you hear one of the following bills, if you hear for any of the following three bills, they will not be heard today. So you can go home. Those are file item number four, Assembly Bill 29. File item number five, Assembly Bill 2097. And file item number eight, Assembly Bill 2165.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, thank you. There are, is it 11 or 10 bills on consent? 10 bills on consent. They are. So these bills will be heard or voted on as a group. They will not, you will not see an individual hearings on any of these following bills. They are AB 1971, AB 2137 with amendments, AB 2181 with amendments AB 2534 AB 20714 AB 2771 AB 2932 with amendments AB 3223 AB 3262 with amendments and AB 3271.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
So you will not hear any presentation on those 10 bills. And we will. Be voting on them as a group. Two bills have been pulled from the consent agenda. They are file item 19, AB 2876 and file item 26, AB 32. So these two bills will be heard as they have been pulled from the consent calendar. Bills will be heard in sign in order. I have a sign in list with Mister Meinschein's name at the top there. Hold on.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
As a reminder, for each Bill we will have up to two witnesses in support, two witnesses in opposition, each of whom may speak for up to two minutes. Members of the public in the hearing room will have an opportunity to state your position on the Bill. Please state your name, affiliation and position on the Bill only. Members of the public are also welcome to provide further comment through the position letter portal on the Committee's website. And I believe that covers all the preliminary.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And so we will start with the first and sign in order. File item 20. Assembly Bill 2887. Mister Maienschein, welcome.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you very much, Mister chair and Members. First, I'd like to start by accepting the Committee's amendments. Each year, over 356,000 Americans experiences cardiac arrest outside of a hospital. Without immediate intervention, 90% of these cases result in fatalities. Among the most vulnerable are children under the age of 18, with approximately 23,000 experiencing out of hospital cardiac arrest each year, AB 2887 seeks to address this issue by ensuring schools have protocols in place to respond effectively in a medical emergency, particularly sudden cardiac arrest.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Crucial to the effectiveness of a proposed school safety plan is the increased access to automatic external defibrillators, or, as they're more commonly known, AEDs. These have been statistically proven to increase the chances of survival following sudden cardiac arrest as well as improvements in neurological outcomes. Proponents of community based AED programs, including the Center for Disease Control, advocate for placing AEDs in high traffic areas such as schools, airports, federal buildings, workplaces, and fitness centers.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Equipping schools with the necessary procedures and equipment to promptly and effectively address sudden cardiac arrest enhances the probability of favorable outcomes during such emergency. AB 2887 prioritizes the health and safety of our students, staff, and visitors and ensures schools have the necessary resource and protocols to respond effectively to medical emergencies. By implementing comprehensive protocols and ensuring access to life saving equipment like AEDs in schools, we're taking proactive steps to protect our communities. Thank you, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
With me here to testify and support is Doctor Rao from Rady Children's Hospital of San Diego, along with Heather Freligh, a survivor of sudden cardiac arrest, joined by her father, Derek from Tracy, California.
- Heather Freligh
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Heather Freligh, and I go to Art Freiler Elementary School in Tracy, California. My dad is here with me, he told me to speak clearly and smile and make eye contact. I am a daughter, a sister, a basketball teammate, and a survivor of sudden cardiac arrest, but I almost didn't survive. It is hard to tell my story because it seems so unreal.
- Heather Freligh
Person
But I know telling my story could bring hope to others, and a single story can change the hearts and minds of those it touches. On September 22, 2023 I suffered sudden cardiac arrest in my classroom sitting next to my classmate and friends. I fell to the ground as my lips turned blue and my heart stopped beating. As the principal began CPR and first responders continued CPR, I died and flatlined on the monitor. I was lucky because the paramedics had an AED and I was being monitored as my life signs flatlined.
- Heather Freligh
Person
The AED device recommended to shock me. One shocks, two shocks, and three shocks were delivered, but my heart did not start again. On the fourth shock, my heart finally started to beat again, and I showed signs of life.
- Heather Freligh
Person
Once I was stabilized and placed in a medically induced coma, I was airlifted to UCSF and placed in the ICU. For 24 hours, my mom and dad held my hand, not knowing if I was going to wake up and what permanent damage I may have. After 24 hours, I finally woke up. I squeezed my dad's hand and moved my eyes. Looking into is eyes, I saw my dad break down into tears, saying my name over and over again.
- Heather Freligh
Person
My dad knew right then and there that he had witnessed a miracle. After 18 days in the ICU at UCSF, I walked out of the hospital with no complications and a new outlook and chance at life. I am here today because of the grace of God in Jesus Christ through the actions of the principal of first responders that day, the actions of CPR done by the principal, and the actions of the AED device operated by first responders.
- Heather Freligh
Person
The principal had just received CPR training two weeks prior to my sudden cardiac arrest. The first responders arrived in time with an AED device who were properly trained on how to use it. They will forever live in my family's memories as heroes who were a part of a miracle that day. Now I'm an ambassador for the American Heart Association, doing my part to help save lives.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Could I ask you to wrap up? You're doing great. Thank you.
- Heather Freligh
Person
As you have heard from my story and my survival, CPR in the proper chaining of an AED device saves lives, especially this girl. And I can't forget my classmates who called 911. We are closer than ever now because of the American Heart Association, I know I'm not alone in helping make a difference.
- Heather Freligh
Person
Schools need to have emergency plans and aeds in place to make sure that when another child or adult has let in cardiac arrest on a school campus, there will be someone who is trained in CPR and knows how to use an AED device. I personally want to make sure that they have a chance at survival like I did. Stand with me, my dad and the American Heart Association so we can save lives together.
- Heather Freligh
Person
Because you never know when the person next to you may save your life or a loved one. Please support Assembly Bill 2887.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness, please.
- Rohit Rao
Person
My name is Doctor Rohit Rao. I am a pediatric cardiologist and I'm a Professor at UCSD. I take care of kids like Heather all the time in an intensive care unit. I'm also the medical Director of Project Adam, which has been going since 1999. Adam Lemmel was a high school kid in Whitefish Bay that went down during basketball and was not as fortunate, was resuscitated really well by EMT, but he did not make it.
- Rohit Rao
Person
So his parents have taken it upon themselves to continue his legacy. And we go out to schools and provide schools with help with making cardiac emergency response plans in place and make sure there is device is ready to go. Sudden cardiac arrest is electrical problem in the heart, it's not like a heart attack. The heart muscle is a pump and the electricity drives that pump. And ventricular fibrillation is the event that happens that causes this sudden cardiac arrest, which is a sudden loss of electrical power.
- Rohit Rao
Person
So two things you need to start pumping, which is the CPR, and somebody needs to deploy the AED to turn the electricity back on. And it is imperative that schools have this in place so that this can be done within three minutes. Otherwise the survival is usually 10%, which is the statistics right now.
- Rohit Rao
Person
And there is a study for two years in 2000 schools, they found that the survival can go up to 70% to 80% if the school has a plan in place and an AED is deployed within three minutes, because after three minutes, every minute is 10% loss of chance of survival. Average response time of EMT in this country is around eight minutes. So you can see where that 80% mortality comes from.
- Rohit Rao
Person
- Rohit Rao
Person
So I'm very happy and glad to be here and I fully support the bill and hope that we can make a case for it.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any public comments in support of the bill please come forward to the microphone. And while we actually let me pause for a quick minute and take roll to establish quorum.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Here.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Muratsuchi, here. Laura? Addis? Alvarez?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Here.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarez, here. Bonta?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Here.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bonta, here. Hoover?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
- Committee Secretary
Person
Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Here.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Hoover, here. Mccarty?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, we have quorum, please.
- Timothy Madden
Person
Thank you, Chairman, Members. Tim Madden, representing the California Chapter of the American College of Cardiology, in support.
- David Quintana
Person
David Quintana, on behalf of the Habematolel Pomo tribe of Upper Lake, in support.
- Jamie Morgan
Person
Good afternoon. Jamie Morgan, on behalf of the American Heart Association, proud sponsor of the bill. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any witnesses in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Any public comments in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Let me bring it to the Committee. Any questions or comments from the Committee Members? Seeing none. Thank you, Mr. Maienschein, for always fighting for your constituents, especially making sure that our school safety plans ensure that people are properly trained and that they have the equipment to be able to respond to situations like Ms. Freely shared.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Freely, for sharing your personal experience so that, you know we can make sure that all students have a good outcome, like you. We would like to advance this bill forward. Happy to support this bill. Mr. Maienschein, would you like to close?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Yeah. Thank you very much. And respectfully request an aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Motion's been made, seconded. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 19, AB 2876. The motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations--. Oh, sorry. I'm sorry. Thank you. File item 20, AB 2887. The motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations. [Roll call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
4-0. The bill is out. Congratulations.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, next in sign-in File Item Order, File Number 21: AB 2901 by a Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Take any seat you want in here. Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Under current state law, educators cannot earn any paid pregnancy leave. Only after they have used all of their sick leave are educators eligible to receive differential pay when they cannot work due to pregnancy-related disabilities. And in case you are not familiar with differential pay, it is paying educators at a regular salary, minus--let's put it there--minus the cost of their substitute.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
School employees are left with the decision to either 'schedule' pregnancies based on the school calendar year or to try to get by with less pay. You know, any mother or father or those who have tried to have children can get an ironic chuckle out of that suggestion. This current standard of pregnancy leave for educators straight up discriminates against women, and studies released since this policy was attempted before now prove the repercussions in equity in retirement.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
We now have data from CalSTRS that shows women will receive almost 100,000 less in retirement benefits than their male counterparts. 100,000 dollars less. In a profession where over 70 percent women, that is shocking and unacceptable, and it's about time we fix it. Speaking in support with me today is Erika Jones, Secretary Treasurer of the California Teachers Association, and Erika Torres, Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction for the California Department of Education. Welcome.
- Erika Jones
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members. My name is Erika Jones. I am a kindergarten teacher and currently serving as the Secretary Treasurer for California Teachers Association, representing 310,000 members statewide, and we are honored to be sponsoring this bill also. This is incredibly important to me and very personal. In August, I gave birth to my daughter Josephine, who just started crawling. So that's been a bit much right now.
- Erika Jones
Person
But I have visited lunchrooms, school lunchrooms across the state, and you hear educators trying to figure out planning pregnancies around school calendars or even trying to look at their retirement, noticing that they have to serve more years than their male counterparts. I have friends where both the male and female are educators, where they have to work four more to five more years than their husband because they were the birthing parent. Look, we have zero-paid pregnancy leave. We have to use our sick leave.
- Erika Jones
Person
And then once that's exhausted, as Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry said, then you go into differential pay. Having children is not an illness. This is a wage gap issue. This is an equity issue. And the time is now for us to do the right thing.
- Erika Jones
Person
During this time of educator shortage, we are seeing birthing parents leave the profession because of the lack of support. We should be able to build our families without the added stress of exhausting our sick days, sacrificing our sick days, and then, of course, lower pay. And God forbid you actually get sick after you've exhausted your sick days or your child is sick. In this day of Covid, you know that's just not realistic right now. So we urge you to support Assembly Bill 2901.
- Erika Jones
Person
Joining me I have CTA Legislative Advocate Seth Bramble, who can answer any technical questions, and we are incredibly thankful for the Majority Leaders, the Honorable Aguiar-Curry, for your leadership in authoring this bill. Thank you so much.
- Erika Torres
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. My name is Dr. Erika Torres, and I serve as Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction for the California Department of Education. I am representing Tony Thurmond, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and he regrets not being able to be here today. Superintendent Thurmond is pleased to join State Treasurer Fiona Ma and the California Teachers Association in co-sponsoring Assembly Bill 2901 to establish paid pregnancy leave for teachers and public school employees.
- Erika Torres
Person
This bill grants up to 14 weeks of leave with full pay when an employee is experiencing pregnancy, miscarriage, childbirth, termination of pregnancy, or recovery from those conditions. I would like to thank Majority Leader Aguiar-Curry for authoring this important measure, which will have a lasting impact on California educators and their families. Currently, educators cannot earn paid pregnancy leave, disproportionately impacting women by forcing them to exhaust their sick leave and get by with less pay.
- Erika Torres
Person
This impacts educators even through retirement, with female educators earning approximately 100,000 dollars less in retirement than their male counterparts. AB 2901 will help promote equity for California's educators. By providing paid pregnancy leave for California's teachers, we will take an important step toward achieving gender equity in teacher pay, and we all know that in California, we're facing a teacher shortage. Therefore, it is imperative to ensure our teachers, who are predominantly women, are not penalized financially for starting a family.
- Erika Torres
Person
Establishing paid pregnancy leave as a universal right is a fundamental step toward this goal. AB 2901, the Pregnancy Leave for Educators Act, is an excellent step in providing greater support for our teachers and educators and ultimately the students of our great State of California. I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any public comments in support of the bill, please come forward. Again, a reminder: please limit your comments to name, affiliation, and your position on the bill.
- Nikki Milevsky
Person
May I begin?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Yes.
- Nikki Milevsky
Person
Good afternoon. I'm Nikki Milevsky. I'm a school psychologist and I'm President of the Sacramento City Teachers Association. On behalf of my 2,800 members, I urge you to support AB 2901. Thank you.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Thank you. Mitch Steiger with CFT, also in support.
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
Coby Pizzotti. I'm a Washington Unified School District Trustee, in support.
- Mara Harvey
Person
Mara Harvey, President, Natomas Teachers' Association, in support.
- Shaye Stephens
Person
Shaye Stephens, President, Anderson Union School District, in support.
- Riki Nunn
Person
Riki Nunn, middle school teacher, San Juan School District, yes vote. Thank you.
- Martha Diaz
Person
Martha Zaragoza-Diaz, representing the Delta Kappa Gamma California, which is a statewide women educators organization, in support.
- Jennifer Baker
Person
Good afternoon. Jennifer Baker with the California Retired Teachers Association, proud to support this bill.
- George Parampathu
Person
George Parampathu, on behalf of the California Labor Federation, in support. Thank you.
- Karen Stout
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Karen Stout, here on behalf of Reproductive Freedom for All California. We want to thank the author for commitment to the rights of pregnant people, and here in support.
- Joycelyn Martinez-Wade
Person
Good afternoon. Joycelyn Martinez Wade with the California State Teachers Retirement System, in support. Thank you.
- Cassie Mancini
Person
Good afternoon. Cassie Mancini, on behalf of the California School Employees Association, in support.
- Connie Chan
Person
Connie Chan, on behalf of California State Treasurer Fiona Ma, proud co-sponsor of AB 2901.
- Nora Lynn
Person
Nora Lynn, on behalf of Children Now, in support.
- Brittany Ward
Person
Brittany Ward, third grade teacher at Twin Rivers, and I'm in support.
- Rebecca Ledoux
Person
Rebecca LeDoux, President of Twin Rivers United Educators, in support.
- Jeanette Sansenbach
Person
Jeanette Sansenbach, fourth grade teacher, and also FCEA--Folsom Cordova Association, in support.
- Jenya Cassidy
Person
Jenya Cassidy, California Work and Family Coalition, in strong support. Also testifying on behalf of the following organizations in strong support: Asian Law Alliance, Breastfeed LA, California Breastfeeding Coalition, Caring Across Generations, Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice, Center for Workers' Rights, Citizens for Choice, Electric Universe, Equal Rights Advocates, LA Alliance for a New Economy, and LA Best Babies Network.
- Sarah Diaz
Person
Sarah Diaz with the California WIC Association, in support. Also testifying in support of the following organizations: the National Council of Jewish Women, Los Angeles, National Partnership for Women and Families, National Women's Political Caucus of California, Orange County Equality Coalition, Parent Voices California, Public Council, Worksafe, California Child Care Resource and Referral Network, Child Care Law Center, Friends Committee on Legislation of California, and Our Family. Thank you.
- Melissa Nance
Person
Melissa Nance, high school teacher at Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District, and I support this. Thank you.
- Ana Petero
Person
Ana Petero, Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District Governing Board, Trustee Area Six, in full support. Thank you.
- Anna Matthews
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Anna Matthews with the Faculty Association of the California Community Colleges, in strong support of this bill. Thank you.
- Jennifer Robles
Person
Jennifer Robles with Health Access California, in support.
- Karen Humphrey
Person
Good afternoon, and thank you. I'm Karen Humphrey, National Women's Political Caucus Policy Co-Chair. We really support this bill enthusiastically. Thank you very much.
- Janice O'Malley
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Janice O'Malley with the American Federation of State, County Municipal Employees, here in support. Thank you.
- Kimberly Rosenberger
Person
Kimberly Rosenberger with SEIU, in support.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, any further witnesses in support--public comments in support of the bill? Seeing none, any witnesses in opposition to the bill, please come forward.
- Dorothy Johnson
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members. Dorothy Johnson, on behalf of the Association of California School Administrators. Our opposition is probably better suited for the Appropriations Committee, so I'll keep my comments brief. We've appreciated the comment or the conversation with the sponsors and the author's office in light of our the concerns about the fiscal pressures, and we recognize the intent of AB 2109 and we do not oppose the idea of leave for pregnancy, disability, family care, and other needs. It's the reality of being a human being.
- Dorothy Johnson
Person
However, there is no dedicated funding resource available, and unfortunately, without that, it means that existing resources from a finite pot of money will be drained, and that means that students will see this impact and employees may see this impact as well. We're dealing with a finite pool of money, and again, our deep concern about the fiscal impact remains, regardless of the good intentions behind this bill. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Mishaal Gill
Person
Mishaal Gill, on behalf of California Association of School Business Officials. We oppose due to the same reasons stated by my colleague at ACSA. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. So we heard from two witnesses in opposition. Any public comments in opposition, please come forward. Seeing none, bring it back to the Committee. Ms. Bonta then Mr. Hoover.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I want to thank the author for bringing forward this bill, and very proud to have you as the Vice Chair of the California Legislative Women's Caucus bringing forward this bill as well. It strikes me that we're dealing with--largely--with our educators, a largely woman-focused employee base.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And the fact that you've outlined a way in which we have that workforce severely impacted over the course of time because of the impacts on retirement and cost of living is certainly not lost on me in my individual support for this bill, which I wholeheartedly do--I'm a co-author of this bill--and I also just kind of wanted to frame this issue around opportunity costs and what it actually costs when we take on these opportunities.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
My understanding is that whenever an employee leaves, a teacher leaves their position, it costs anywhere between 70,000 to 110,000 to get another person to be able to take their place in terms of the training that's required, the opportunity costs associated with having empty, an empty classroom, the cost of refilling that position. So whatever we can do to ensure that when somebody leaves for the beautiful opportunity of parenting, that they have the ability to come back into that position.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I think we often think about costs in a very myopic way, and I appreciate that you've laid out with this legislation, Majority Leader, a way for us to think more holistically about the cost of work and the cost of living, and the cost of educating every child.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
And the cost of having a loving family around them for a longer period of time.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. First, I just want to say I strongly support the goal of your bill, and I just had a few questions for you in terms of how you chose the number 14 weeks. So I noticed in the Committee analysis that most of the school districts--and I don't know if anyone else wants to speak on this either--but the ones that have negotiated leave, it's been about, around six weeks. I know there was a previous bill in this body that was six weeks, so just curious on how that number came to be and--yeah. So I'll just put that out there.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Go ahead.
- Seth Bramble
Person
I did see in a very well-drafted--Seth Bramble, sorry; California Teachers Association--I did see in the well-drafted and Committee analysis, a mention of the International Labor Organization, 14 weeks was the standard worldwide for where countries were moving towards in terms of the leave that they were providing moms that are having children. That's where we kind of set it based on what the international standard is.
- Seth Bramble
Person
But the truth is United States is really way behind a lot of the world when it comes to how we support new moms. So this is, I think, a really important step for, as we define the California way for, you know, what we should be doing for moms, not just in public education, but in our workforce.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And maybe, Seth, if I could follow up with you too on, do you have any concerns or does CTA have any concerns on how this like fiscal pressure--especially as we enter kind of a tough budget cycle--will have on collective bargaining at the local level in other areas? Like is it going to put cost pressures and maybe limit the ability of districts to potentially fund raises and things like that? I was just curious what your general thoughts are.
- Seth Bramble
Person
So I think it's important in this climate that we make the case not just for the fact that we need to be taking big steps to address the shortage of workers who are choosing public education as a career, and we know that certainly salary benefits, working conditions drive that. We think this bill is a big step and worth the investment in terms of improving working conditions in the State of California, especially in an industry that's primarily women.
- Seth Bramble
Person
But I think it's also important when we make the case for why we should make this investment to think about the fact that at the moment, as was mentioned by the author, women who are retiring because they have to burn through their sick leave result in a retirement benefit that's 100,000 dollars less than men over the course of their lifetime. That kind of inequity is something that the state should take action to address. So I recognize that in some areas, as you mentioned, there's been bargaining.
- Seth Bramble
Person
But if the outcome has been this kind of structural inequity, specifically in our retirement system, then I think it's an incumbent upon the state to take action and right that wrong.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Well, I appreciate that. I appreciate the thoughtful responses. I will be supporting the bill today. The only thing I would, I guess, just ask is that as this gets into Appropriations Committee, I think there would be some things that would, I think, potentially make it easier to support for more of my colleagues on the floor that may be reducing the number of weeks to maybe--understandably, I think 14 is a great goal, but maybe a more reasonable level.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And then also, just, I didn't see a limit in the bill on how many times per year this can be used, and so I don't know if there's discussions or language that could happen to address ACSA's concerns, because I do also understand kind of the perspective of ACSA, and I think their concerns are valid as well. So, thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Alvarez.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you to the author and the sponsors of the bill for your work on this. I think what I'd like to do is perhaps lay out the facts of where we're at and why this is such a significant, in my opinion, piece of legislation.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Currently educators, depending on where you are, but according to the research that was done and presented in our analysis, with limited exceptions, do not receive paid leave when they are experiencing either a pregnancy or any of the experiences that are laid out in this bill. Is that correct? Okay.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So with limited exceptions, there are some who participate in the state disability program, which that program actually only covers--as a person married to an educator who had two children--roughly at this point it's like 500 dollars every two weeks, I believe. Is that the program that those that do participate in paid leave participate in? Do any of you know?
- Seth Bramble
Person
Sorry, your question is how much someone who participates in--? Yeah, I mean, because I'm from a world public education for the most part that does not participate in State Disability Insurance, that's a challenge. What we have in our law is differential pay, which I know the author described you have to subtract the cost of what a substitute gets. I think there's a value for employers because there's not really a cost there. They're going to be paying for that position anyway and there's a value for employees. The problem with a differential pay system is that you have to burn through your sick leave first, and that's why we're seeing this inequity that we're trying to write with.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And I was going to get to that because I think that's like really important to lay out so people understand the significance of this. So the SDI Program, from my knowledge and experience, definitely doesn't pay you your full salary. It is a portion of it usually. I think it's in the 500 range, but I could be wrong on that. It's per pay period.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And so this would now allow educators who are experiencing this in their life to be able to take up to 14 weeks, but not required 14 weeks. It depends on their personal situation and obviously decisions that they make with their health care provider as to how much time they need, and that has to be--can you just clarify, does that have to be approved by the health care provider? Is like a doctor's note required? What is that verification process?
- Seth Bramble
Person
The bill suggests that it's really between the patient and the doctor, so how much time you're going to need, but it is for the physical act of recovering from the act of pregnancy, miscarriage, all those pieces that are in the bill, but it is between the doctor and the patient.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So again, because if this is successful, I know that, you know, clearly all the educators here, but the hundreds of thousands in our state, I would look forward to this. Under the current version, what we're voting on today, you would not be required by your school district or your employer to provide some sort of doctor notification of the 14 weeks?
- Seth Bramble
Person
You know, I do think that that could look different in different places. Ultimately, you know, in this--when I was a teacher, it was like if you were out for more than three days, you had to come with a doctor's note. So there may be some variance, but ultimately it's going to be a decision between the patient and the doctor, and the employer may determine that they want some evidence that, you know, this is what the doctor is determining.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Okay. Regardless of this bill, we do have the California Medical or Family Leave Law, which allows you to take up to 12 weeks, I believe, of leave. That is all unpaid. That will continue to exist as a benefit to anyone in the education or anybody who's employed. What does this bill do or say about someone who's married to someone who needs time off as a result of either pregnancy or the other conditions that are outlined in the bill? Is there any--is it just for the person who's experiencing it themselves or what about other individuals?
- Seth Bramble
Person
I mean, I think eventually we would love to include both parents. You know, I think we are kind of cognizant to the fiscal reality that we're facing right now as a state. So we're starting with actually the physical act of pregnancy. So it's only for, you know, recovering from that condition. It's not for the other parent in this particular vehicle, but we would love to expand because I think it's important that we support things like baby bonding. And, you know, there's countries right now where, you know, they support you to be bonding with your child for a year, which is--let's get there.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So then tell me about if you are the partner of someone who would, under this law, benefit from these new rights, if you wanted to take time off to also be supportive, you'd have to take unpaid leave and you'd only have up to 12 weeks, so you'd use the current California Family Leave Act?
- Seth Bramble
Person
I think we did pass a law that said you can use sick leave for baby bonding, so you could potentially use that time for baby bonding as well as the differential pay, and then eventually you would get to, as you described.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Okay. I guess what I wanted to get to the bottom of is, at what point does someone who may want to support someone who needs time off, at what point are they required for this--they pay out of their leave for the substitute? I mean, this is just, to me, when I first heard about this was just kind of mind-boggling that we have someone who's taking leave, their earned leave, and they're using it to pay for someone else to cover for them.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Just doesn't make much sense. So I guess I'm trying to figure out if somebody, that is--my understanding of that is correct, right? If you take leave like this, you're utilizing your paid--earned, paid leave to pay for somebody else to cover for you.
- Seth Bramble
Person
What happens is you have to initially burn through your sick leave. So you get ten--well, for certificated employees, you get ten days every year, and then once you burn through your sick leave, you have access to differential pay. Differential pay--so if I was still employed, my employer's gonna pay my salary.
- Seth Bramble
Person
So when I'm out on differential pay, they're paying the same amount, the employer's paying the same amount, so they're paying the substitute and they're paying me the difference between what I would have got and what the substitute would got. Does that make sense?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Yeah. Okay. Thank you for answering those questions. I think it just--the author did introduce the bill that way, but I just think it's worthwhile. It might not sort of feel like that's the reality, but that is the reality and it's something that needs to be addressed. I will just end by saying, obviously, as Chair of the Subcommittee on Education Finance, we do need to have a conversation.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I acknowledge the opposition's comments on the fiscal realities of our state, and I think we should definitely have a conversation about making sure that if we are going to offer this benefit, that we do not jeopardize school funding, which I know none of you actually want to ever be in that position, but I think we just have to be cognizant of that, and I definitely like to explore more about what that would mean. So thank you all. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Ms. Addis.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I just wanted to come in and say I'm internally grateful to you for bringing this bill forward. I lived through 20 years of public teaching, two children, used all my sick leave, paid the differential for substitutes. My retirement still suffers from that today, even though I've moved over to the Legislature. Still suffering, still suffering from-- right? Exactly. Nothing to add on. That's another story for a different day, but just want to very much appreciate that you're doing this.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, any other comments from the Committee? Seeing none, Majority Leader, thank you very much for this very consequential bill. As Mr. Bramble indicated, the U.S. is behind the rest of the world in providing this type of paid pregnancy leave. And obviously for important--not just for teachers, but for all women. I'm proud to support your measure also, and would love to be added as a co-author of your bill.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
I'd be honored.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Would you like to close?
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
I would. AB 2901 will finally end the discriminatory practice of giving employees who are pregnant no choice but to deplete their sick leave, a benefit that directly affects teachers' compensation now and their retirement forever. At a time when teachers are so stressed that they are leaving the profession and young people are choosing different careers, we must do everything we can to help recruit and retain educators. And it's time that we stopped charging women 100,000 dollars to care for their child until they return to care for ours. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Madam Secretary, please call the roll. Oh, a motion and a second? Madam Secretary.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File Item 21: AB 2901: the motion is 'do pass to Higher Education.' [Roll Call].
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Five/zero. The bill is out. Congratulations.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Thank you very much. Thank you, Chairman.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, next. And sign in order, before we take up the next. Well, while Mister Berman is getting set up, file item number 19, AB 2876 we will entertain a motion for the consent calendar. Second, I think, Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Okay. Motions for the consent calendar. AB 1971, the motion is do pass to the floor. AB 2137, the motion is do pass, as amended, to human services. AB 2181, the motion is do pass, as amended, to appropriations. AB 2534, the motion is do pass to appropriations. AB 20714, the motion is do pass to appropriations. AB 2771, the motion is do pass to appropriations. AB 2932, the motion is do pass, as amended, to appropriations.
- Committee Secretary
Person
AB 20 or 3223, the motion is do pass to human services. AB 3262, the motion is do pass, as amended, to the floor. And AB 3271, the motion is do pass to health. Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Muratsuchi, aye. Flora.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Flora, aye. Addis.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Aye.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Addis, aye. Alvarez? Bonta?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bonta, aye. Hoover?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Hoover, aye. McCarty.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Aye.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
5-0. The consent calendar is passed. Welcome Mister Berman.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you Mister Chair and Members. First, I want to sincerely thank the Chair and the Committee staff for patiently working with a, at times, very frustrated author on this bill. And to be clear, my frustration does not lie with the Committee. Many of you might recognize some components of this bill relating to media literacy because they are very similar to a bill I ran last year.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Last year, the Legislature passed my AB 873 with bipartisan support, which aligned California with a growing number of states adding media literacy to k-12 curriculum. The Bill directed the Instructional Quality Commission and the State Board of Education to integrate media literacy into four core subject areas when they next update their curriculum frameworks. According to the state board, this is supposed to happen every eight years and that three of the four subjects would be updated in the next few years.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
However, after the bill was signed into law, we were informed by the State Board that they had no plans to update the curriculum frameworks. As you all can imagine, that was pretty frustrating. However, even if the State Board is not updating their curriculum frameworks, I have been told that they will be updating their instructional materials.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Therefore, I'm back with a new bill, AB 2876, that directs the Instructional Quality Commission to incorporate media literacy content into the math, science, history, and English instructional materials at their next revision. In addition, and very importantly, AB 2876 will ensure that all K12 students in California are prepared with the AI literacy skills necessary to comprehend basic AI principles and applications, to recognize when AI is employed, and to understand AI's implications, limitations, and ethical considerations.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
AI has the potential to positively impact the way we live, but only if we know how to use it and use it responsibly. As AI grows in popularity and gets integrated into more and more elements of society, children growing up in today's digital world need to be better equipped than any generation before to understand these principles. Developing AI literacy in schools is an imperative for first step. I am accepting the committee's amendments, but this is an old version of my talking points.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
You struck the frustrated part.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
I struck up a part. It wasn't - yes, but I want to be clear and state on the record that I'm accepting the more permissive language because I've been assured by the State Board, or I've been assured that the State Board and the IQC will still take this as direction from the legislature. Therefore, I respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 2876, and with me today is Ronak Deylami, Policy Advocate for the California Chamber of Commerce.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Thank you, Chair and members: Ronak Deylami with Cal Chamber representing over 14,000 businesses across the great State of California. We're here as the proud sponsor of AP 2876. We cannot thank Assemblymember Berman enough for bringing forward this critical legislation, and I don't mean that lightly. I know it's kind of pro forma to say that, but we truly mean it.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Our members strongly believe that AI literacy and media literacy encompass basic skills that future generations need if they are to succeed as workers, as consumers, and voters in the modern world. We all know that AI is an undeniably transformative technology that will have a widespread impact on virtually every aspect of our lives, our society, and our economy, perhaps more so than any technological advancement since the Internet.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
It presents a lot of opportunity and promise, from making life saving advancements in medicine to addressing climate change and more. But we also know that it can be applied in ways that are less desirable, such as spreading disinformation. Equally true, we don't have enough understanding of the technology in our communities, workplaces, or government.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
When we pulled likely voters of California - when we polled likely California voters and parents specifically, we learned that 39% of parents think AI will have a positive impact on their child's life over the next several decades, whereas 40% said they believe it will have a negative impact.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Implicit in AB 2876 is the concept that knowledge is power. That if we truly want to harness the promise of AI and support both the responsible development and deployment of this technology, we have to start from the ground up. We need to ensure that future generations have the understanding and skills necessary to navigate this technology, which includes understanding its limitations, its implications, and ethical considerations. From our view, AI literacy and media literacy are going to be as fundamental to learn as reading, writing, and arithmetic.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
In close, I'll just say it's imperative that our education systems start to arm kids with the knowledge and skills necessary now because it is, again, it's going to impact every facet of their lives and every industry they might work in, not just computer science or something related to that. So again, we're incredibly grateful to the author and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any public comments in support of the bill please come forward.
- Naomi Padron
Person
Good afternoon, Chair Members. Naomi Padron, on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association, proud to support.
- Andrea Deveau
Person
Good afternoon, Andrea Devoe, on behalf of Technet and Outschool, in support.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Seeing no further public comments in support. There's some people getting standing up in the back. Any witnesses in opposition to the bill, please come forward. Any public comments in opposition to the bill, please come forward. Did we have public comments in the back there and in support? Did you miss your opportunity? If you like, please come forward.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We gotta get you in a bigger room.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
That's right. It's pretty packed today. All of your supporters. Mister Berman?
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Yeah.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Motion's been made.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Second.
- Kaylee Fulcher
Person
My name is Kaylee Fulcher, I'm a student at Solano Community College, and I am in support of this. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Arthie Sherma
Person
My name is Arthie Sherma and I'm a high school student at Folsom high school, and I'm in support of this. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. All right, I'm glad we got those two. Any public comments in opposition to the Bill? Seeing none, bring it back to the Committee.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just want to thank the author for bringing this forward. And it's no more powerful a thing than to hear a high school student from Folsom and, and a college student talk about the importance of making sure that they have the kind of media literacy and AI literacy that we need.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
If we really want to truly be a part of this competitive workforce landscape that we know is global and evolving, we need to make sure that our students are armed with the tools to be able to do that in a way that is ethical and innovative in all the best forms that it should.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I'm very thankful to the author for bringing this forward, enduring the frustration associated with this, and recognizing that we need to ensure that our State Board of Education, our California Department of Education, all of the agencies associated with education, are providing us with the tightest and best curriculum in a timely manner to actually make an impact. So thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Vice Chair, Flora. No, tell me later.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Tell me later.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Andy, for the comments from the Committee.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
You Vice Chair too many committees for the record.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, Mister Berman, thank you very much. You know, I was looking at all of your history of bills championing media literacy, you know, artificial intelligence literacy, computer science. As the representative from Palo Alto in the Silicon Valley, you certainly have been a leader, and we thank you very much for all of your work. I just wanted to, well, first, I would be happy, I am happy to support your bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I wanted to assure you that, you know, this Committee, we receive a lot of bills attempting to mandate curriculum content and, you know, without identifying various causes, the cumulative effect. You know, every author sees the importance of a particular subject matter, but we always have to keep the cumulative impact on a student's curriculum.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And so that's one of our challenges, which is why we defer it to the Instructional Quality Commission and the State Board of Education to look at the big picture with educators rather than the Legislature not having a full understanding of all of the, not only the big picture, but all the educational implications of each proposal taken in isolation, how does it all come together to ensure that we're serving the overall educational well being of our students?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I know you understand this, Mister Berman, but I was just handed this summary that I believe your staff either has already received it, you may have already received it, but examples where we asked the Instructional Quality Commission to consider subject matter to be incorporated into the curriculum that in fact was incorporated into the curriculum.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
It includes things like 21st century skills, financial literacy, Filipino American contributions to the Farm Labor Movement, the Bracero program, the Armenian genocide, Filipino American contributions to World War two, the presidency of Barack Obama, voter education. So that's just a short list of the many bills that we have received, this Committee has received, where in fact, that subject matter has been incorporated into the curriculum framework. And so I want to assure you that you are not alone.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And that again, thank you for your making sure that all students learn, have media literacy, have the artificial intelligence literacy, but I wanted to provide that background, and with that, you have the last word.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
I appreciate that. Thank you, Mister Chair. Thank you to your Committee staff for preparing that. And it's heartening to see the history of the IQC and the board of education taking very seriously the guidance that we give them in the past. And I look forward to following closely to make sure they do that in the future. And I don't envy your position as gatekeeper of all of our different ideas that we all have. So appreciate your support and, and again, the work of the Committee staff.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Absolutely. Thanks. And respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Secretary. Please call the vote. I believe we had a motion.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Make a motion.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I had a thought too.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Fonta sent.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 19, AB 2876. The motion is do pass as amended, to appropriations. Muratsuchi?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Muratsuchi, aye. Flora?
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Flora, aye. Addis?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Addis, aye. Alvarez? Bonta?
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Aye.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bonta, aye. Hoover?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Hoover, aye. Mccarty?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
5-0. The Bill is out.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. All right, next in signing order is file item 24 AB 3074, Assemblymember Schiavo.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Good afternoon. Thank you so much, Mister Chair and members. I am grateful for the opportunity to present AB 3074 to you today and I'll be accepting all of the committee amendments. Thank you for those. You know, as a student-athlete, I know how much pride and team spirit come from mascots. And yet, for too long, some mascots have instead been a source of shame and cultural appropriation.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
AB 3074 would prohibit all public schools, K-12 schools in the State of California from using Native American terms for school or athletic team names, mascots, and nicknames. Mascots are a huge part of school events, and they are what draw people to dress up for their team or by memorabilia. However, they can have a huge negative effect on Native American communities whose likeness is used for mascots.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Several studies have shown that these Native American mascots have detrimental effects on indigenous peoples, both as an individual and at a community level. Some school teams and even professional teams have already started the process to change their names of negative to prevent the negative effects to Native American communities and the controversy that it brings teams.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Hart High School in my school district just went through a name change process, and they have changed their name from the Indians to the Hawks, the new mascot being voted on by the student body. However, there are still over 2000 schools nationwide that have Native American-themed mascots, and many of them are in California.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
AB 3074 will create a safe place in schools so that it makes certain that everyone feels welcome and protected and like they're part of the community, and certain individuals will no longer have to deal with bullying, mockery, and isolation due to the name of a mascot. School is already a scary place, and there's no need to make it worse for folks. And joining me today is chairperson Sherry Trepa from the Sherry Treppa from the Habematolel Pomo. Did I say that right?
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Habematolel.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Habematolel Pomo, Upper Lake tribe, and also joining me is Assembly fellow Julia Estrada, who is originally from my district and worked on changing the name of the Hart High School Mascot to talk about her experience as well.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Chairman and members of the assembly. My name is Sherry Treppa. I'm the Chairwoman of Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake tribe. We are one of seven federally recognized tribes in Lake County, California. Thank you for allowing me to testify today and to testify on behalf of the Assembly Members who are sponsoring Schiavo and Ramos on AB 3074, the California Racial Mascots Act. The legislation prohibits public schools from using Native American terms for school or athletic teams names, mascots, or nicknames.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Some examples of Native American terms that would be inclusive here, but not limited to, are terms like Apaches, big reds, braves, chiefs, chieftains, Chippewa, Comanches, Indians, savages, squaw, and tribe. Under existing law, currently only the term Redskins is prohibited. As I mentioned, our tribe is in Lake County, California. We're in Upper Lake, where many Pomo people have resided since time immemorial.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
The tribes in that area, including ours, have suffered centuries of federal policies that subjected them to unspeakable crime, cruelties, and tragedies throughout our history, including an attempted genocide in the 1850s, also known as the Bloody Island Massacre, led by Captain Andrew Kelsey.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Unfortunately, the town of Kelseyville is just 20 minutes away from Upper Lake, and the event where the massacre occurred is just 1 mile away from Upper Lake, where our offices are serving as a constant reminder of the brutality towards the ancestors of the tribes that lived there in the area. This has been an ongoing local dispute between tribes and Kelseyville community, which unsuccessfully has not changed the name.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Many nontribal people might not understand the impacts that a name or a mascot might have on a group of people that have historically and consistently been threatened, forgotten, and mistreated, leading to generational trauma that really does have impacts not only on our elders but now our youth.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
While this legislation affects only schools, it is a step in the right direction toward taking action to rectify the historic mistreatment towards tribes and recognition by this California Legislature that tribal culture is something to be celebrated and appreciated rather than mocked and appropriated. Other local examples in the area that I live in currently, Napa High School, where my son went to school, changed their names from Indians a few years back.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Treppa, I'm going to ask you to try to wrap up.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Sure. Habmatolel supports AB 3074, and we appreciate the spot sponsors' efforts here, and we wish that you would support it as well. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Julia Estrada
Person
Hello. Thank you Chair and members, for the opportunity to speak today to briefly introduce myself. My name is Julia Estrada, and I am a native of Arapaho, Comanche alumni of Hart High School from Assemblymember Schiavo's district and back all the way in 2020 when I had a lot of time; I led and successfully led the initiative to retire Hart High School's Indian mascot. As of March 19 of this year, it was officially changed to the Hawks.
- Julia Estrada
Person
So it took a long time, and when I share this story alongside the tribal Chairwoman, I'll give the student perspective of my experience going to a public high school that had Indians as a mascot. I was very involved. I played tennis, and a core memory of mine is finally my family was able to make time to come to a tennis match, and we finished up. We won.
- Julia Estrada
Person
And to celebrate the winning of that game, all of my team members engaged in what I refer to as a Peter-Pan-like, whooping call like and I just remember looking at my parents, and they were just incredibly uncomfortable. And I was just silent, and my coach didn't say anything. And because it was accepted and it was part of the school culture.
- Julia Estrada
Person
And I think that alongside at football games of party city headdress being thrown around in the bleachers indicates the desensitization of sacred cultural significant items. And so what this bill would do is it would set a precedent by the State of California that we no longer tolerate antiquated mascots like the Indians, Chiefs, etcetera and that we're taking a step in the right direction by listening to native voices that have been advocating for this since 1968.
- Julia Estrada
Person
The National Congress of American Indians, one of the largest bodies of tribal advocates, has been advocating since 1968 for the retirement of this imagery and these mascots, and so we're pretty behind. A lot of states have done this already. There's peer-reviewed research from Harvard that has recently come out, I think, in 2022 or 23, by a tribal individual that discovered and proved that this imagery promotes the stereotyping of native people and mythological perceptions that we don't exist anymore.
- Julia Estrada
Person
Just like, you know, you'll have a Viking or something like that, a miner, you know, occupations. We're not an occupation. We're a group of people. And so by doing this, you'll be listening to native voices, protecting native students, making them feel more included in public schools, and creating a space where we teach about native peoples and engage them in the conversation. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Public comments in support of the bill. Please come forward.
- David Quintana
Person
Good afternoon. David Quintana, in addition to the Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake, also the Kiowia band in support.
- Pamela Lopez
Person
Pamela Lopez with K Street Consulting on behalf of the Tule River tribe and the Santa Rosa Rancheria Tachi Yokuts tribe. Thank you.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Mitch Steiger with CFT, also in support.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
Rachel Bhagwat with ACLU California Action and support.
- Annie Chou
Person
Annie Chou with the California Teachers Association. We're processing a support this weekend. Thank you.
- Kayleigh Fulcher
Person
Kayleigh Fulcher, student at Solano Community College; in support of this. Thank you.
- Arthur Sherma
Person
Arthur Sherma, student at Folsom High School, in support of this.
- Quinn Oftab
Person
Quinn Oftab, student at Early College High School, in support of this. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Any further public comments? Seeing none. Anymore witnesses in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Any public comments in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Bring it back to the committee. Miss Bonta?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Just want to thank the author for bringing this forward, and I wanted to share some comments from one of my staff members who's deeply connected to this and want to thank Julia, actually, for sharing your earlier story. Indigenous students who attend schools with an Indian mascot become targets for bullying and other unwanted attention. Native communities already struggle with many issues, including self-identity, and any school with such a mascot not only harms students but whole communities.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
No other race or ethnicity is so often subjected to being mocked as the mascot. These mascots encouraged fans to taunt native people by playing Indian, doing the tomahawk chop, and wearing sacred headdresses. Not long ago, a high school drill team performing at Disney World had a video go viral with the team yelling, Scalp 'em Indians. Scalp 'em. These mascots do not represent Native Americans, and they do not honor them. Instead, they dehumanize and stereotype California's first people.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
It's not just, it's not about a mascot, but what the mascot represents. I want to thank the author for bringing forward this bill, and I just also had a question related to how we actually support the reparations around this. Julia, you shared that it took you four years to be able to have this final naming change happen, and I know that the Commission on State Mandates is actually only willing to fund the cost for school districts associated with just the uniforms.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
We know that mascots get put on banners, they get put on websites, they get put on school insignia that are put into the, you know, the basketball courts and turned over. And I just wanted to ask you all, from their personal experience, what the impact of having to have this process happen over so many years, essentially, kind of as cost allows, will have.
- Julia Estrada
Person
Yeah. So, I can speak to personal experience with how our school board did that and through my involvement with the school. A lot of those changes that you were mentioning tend to be depending on the school district, of course, in the school cost-free on an annual basis. So I'm thinking, for example, our yearbook was called the Tomahawk. Our newspaper was called The Smoke Signal. Those items are printed on an annual basis and are subject to graphic design.
- Julia Estrada
Person
And so a lot of those things were able to be made. A lot of those changes were able to be made cost-free, although things like a gym floor, like a - I'm forgetting the name, but - scoreboard. Yes. Thank you. Those through my district are being changed on an as-needed basis. So the next time the gym floor is refurbished, that will be changed, which is frustrating but expensive to appropriate money to do so because gym floors could be up to.
- Julia Estrada
Person
I think our schools was $100,000, and they replaced it right before I started bugging them about this. And so they were not officially fan of that. But a lot of the immediate changes, like covering, we had a big Indian Head on our campus that they plan to paint over. Paint is pretty inexpensive, so a lot of the changes are pretty cost effective, but the larger ones definitely will probably take negotiating between school boards.
- Julia Estrada
Person
But changes like this prompt negotiations between local tribes and school districts, and a lot of those agreements are agreed upon between local tribes and school districts. So, our tribe was advocating for immediate changes in certain areas and was more okay with letting other things change over time. So, I think that's probably how that would play out over time.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
So thank you for the questions. Great. As my esteemed colleague has well explained, I don't think it should be left to the local tribe to cover the costs, although I can tell you my tribe has. We paid for the lights for the football field, and we've currently funded in high school, and we've currently funded the spore board for the middle school's gymnasium. All to really promote education and well-rounded children, and I think, you know, over time, with the changes that are being made and that this legislature recognizes, I think it will change for the better. I do have concerns over towns that revere the person that led the massacre of our people. And I do hope that in some time, you know, in the near future, that will change. But this is a good start.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Mister Alvarez.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you to the author for the bill, and I want to particularly thank Miss Estrada, who is found fellow in our office this year and really proud of the work that Miss Schiavo has allowed our office to participate in this effort. I want to just publicly acknowledge that your collaboration and your passion for this issue and for allowing us to participate in that way.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I will also think it's important to acknowledge San Diego County is home to the largest number of tribal nations in the entire United States, and so we have a lot of experience with our tribal governments in San Diego. And we don't have a lot, thankfully, don't have a lot of mascots or school names that are. That are impactful to our native communities, which is good, and I want to share that what we've done in San Diego County is we've invited to our metropolitan planning organization, our MPO. There's a seat at the table, actually, for a tribal representation in different government agencies, local government agencies, and it's something we've worked on for many years, and that previous legislators really led on. And so we're proud of the work that has been done, but clearly more needs to be done. That's what this bill really recognizes, is that there's still more work to be done.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
There was a success roughly ten years ago with the previous legislation of the California Racial Mascots Act, which made some progress, and this B=bill, I think, makes even more progress. So again, I want to thank you for your dedication and I'm proud co-author of this bill, and I look forward to continuing to support in every way and continuing to share the message of why this is important for all of us to continue to learn and acknowledge the history and learn about the history of California.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So thank you very much and proud to support the bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any other comments from the committee? Seeing none. Thank you, Miss Schiavo, for this important bill. This bill is clearly long overdue, and so we thank you and Mister Ramos for bringing this forward. I do have a few questions to clarify the expected impact of this bill. There's a provision in the bill that allows for schools to keep their mas- their name if a tribe agrees to them. Could you expand on your rationale behind that?
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
So there's currently a tribe in California who does have such agreement, and I think what's behind that is really the intention.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
If it's done in coordination with the tribe, if it's done, done in a way that's respectful and not appropriating an image or a name, then it's something that's done in this situation, how it's used, how it's talked about, images, all of those things are agreed to in a contract with the tribe, and so they're able to impact making sure it's done in a respectful way instead of a derogatory way.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
And so when those instances happen, then we think it's important to allow for that space, for that, when it's done in the right way and done in a way to show respect and to honor people. But I think for that to happen, then the tribe has to be involved in that, and they have to help lead that process.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Sure. Chairwoman, Miss Estrada, do you have any comments from your perspective?
- Julia Estrada
Person
Sure. I can only speak to my tribe. We regularly work with the county and local officials on a government-to-government basis and enter into memorandums of understanding to address cultural protection, law enforcement, mitigation, things of law enforcement, and then mitigation of impacts, for an example, of our casino. So, I would respect another sovereign government to make the decision that's in their best interest.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
So, I would imagine if a tribe enters into a relationship with a county or a school or that is totally up to them, and I would respect that.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
So, yeah and to just add onto that really quick, an example of this is, in Florida, their university, the Florida Seminoles. They actually entered an agreement with the Seminole tribe that allowed them to keep their imagery and mask on. And although I don't agree with that, I respect that native people aren't a monolith and that tribal opinions on things like this might differ throughout our state.
- Julia Estrada
Person
So, a key part of getting this done is having discussions between tribal governments and school districts, and so should something of an agreement like that come up, I respect that. And at least there's conversations that will potentially drive an agreement.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. Yeah. I wasn't aware of the Seminoles of Florida state entering into that agreement. I know, and I appreciate the Chairwoman's testimony as well as Miss Estrada, a reminder to me that, you know, it's the impact on the listener or especially of native people and not those that would feel nostalgic about, you know, their longtime mascots. I know, for example, in my district, you know, Guardian of High School is now the Guardian of High School Panthers.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But the old timers, or those that like to signal that they're the old timers, are always proud to call themselves a Mohican. You know, I'm not a Panther. I'm a Mohican. And, you know, it kind of, for them, it's a term of affection. It's a term of fond memories. But, you know, as you're indicating, and appropriation, and it's done without the permission of the Mohicans. Another - I also have another high school in my district, the West Torrance High School Warriors.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And am I correct in understanding that, for example, I believe I should know this, but I believe they use native imagery for the West High Warriors? But if they were to change their mascot, like, you know, to a Nordic warrior, for example, is it your understanding this bill will not prohibit them from continuing to use West High Warriors?
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Good question. I mean, it's not, so warriors are not named in the bill specifically. It's not restricted to the terms that are named in the bill, though, and so we cast a wide net on Native American terms generally. But I think in that example if they're not using imagery or anything that's associated with it, probably it would not fall within the bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Do your witnesses have any thoughts or comments, either personal?
- Sherry Treppa
Person
I would agree with the sponsor here. I don't think - I think it's intent. And should there not be native regalia or any native imagery, it would be acceptable, I would think.
- Julia Estrada
Person
Yeah.
- Sherry Treppa
Person
Sorry.
- Julia Estrada
Person
And this bill, it doesn't name warriors just because schools have actually switched from the Indian to the warrior. And it's a very vague, you know, what is the warrior at that school? I've seen it like a Nordic warrior, and I've seen it, like, still a native person. But this bill also allows for schools to kind of petition for that imagery should they deem it inappropriate to be recognized under this law. So if there are cases or, I believe something maybe like that.
- Julia Estrada
Person
But, yeah, I think that's a pretty general term for a mascot that we knew could get complicated. And so we were making sure to include all of the very obviously inappropriate mascots listed.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. Thank you. Thank you for sharing. Again, I recognize, you know, the impact, the importance of this bill, and I'm proud to support this bill. I would love to be added as a co-author to this bill.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Thank you. That would be wonderful. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Would you like to close?
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Yeah, I just thank you so much to the committee, to the discussion here today, and really a special thank you to Assemblymember Alvarez for loaning your fellow to us. Obviously, she's incredibly capable and well-spoken and really an expert on this issue, and I appreciate you being a part of this. And the Chairwoman for being here today and respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, we need a motion and a second. Motion. Second. All right. Madam Secretary, please call the roll file.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item 24, AB 3074. The motion is do pass as amended to Higher Education. [Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
3-0. The bill is on call. Thank you very much. Thank you to both of you. All right, next in sign-in order, we have file item number two, AB 1947, by Assemblymember Luz Rivas.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members. I want to start by thanking Debbie for her work and thoughtful analysis on this bill. AB 1947 would expand the number of staff training days for California State Preschool Programs and allocate one of those days for DLL training. In 2020, the Governor released the master plan intended to transform the state's approach to early childhood education.
- Luz Rivas
Person
The master plan provides a roadmap to address racial and economic inequities and calls for legislation to require developmental assessments both in English and in children's home languages, among other things. In 2021, California signed into law AB 1363, which was one of my bills, which took the first step of implementing the master plan by requiring the State Superintendent of Public Instruction to develop a standardized process for California State Preschool Program providers to identify dual language learners.
- Luz Rivas
Person
AB 1947 builds on the progress made in AB 1363 in achieving the goals of the master plan to support our children who are dual language learners by helping our educators cater to the learning needs of our children. Today, I have with me to provide testimony Patti Herrera, Executive Vice President of School Services of California, and Vanessa Gutierrez, preschool teacher with the Los Rios Community College District.
- Patti Herrera
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the Committee. I am Patti Herrera, here on behalf of Early Edge California, one of the proud co-sponsors of AB 1947. First, we really need to thank Assemblymember Rivas for her continued commitment to California's dual language learners. Her leadership in this space, as she mentioned, led to the establishment of a first in the nation policy to identify and understand the state's dual language learner child population. And AB 1947, as she mentioned, is simply an extension of that policy and her leadership.
- Patti Herrera
Person
Second, we'd also like to thank Debbie for her comprehensive analysis of our bill that clearly articulates the why behind our bill, which is that California is home to the largest percentage of children with the rich and promising asset of becoming bilingual and biliterate in their lives.
- Patti Herrera
Person
That research consistently shows that bi or multilingualism reaps lifetime benefits for children as well as larger socioeconomic benefits for the state of California and finally, that staff who teach and support our young dual language learners need access to training about how best to support their cultural and language development needs, as well as how to effectively engage their parents to further support their children at home.
- Patti Herrera
Person
As noted in the analysis, early learning educators who undergo DLL specific professional development completed their programs better equipped, more knowledgeable, and more confident about their ability to support their children and their families. We simply cannot ignore the need in our state to ensure that our dual language learner children are given the proper support they need to thrive and for these reasons, we ask for your aye vote today.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
Good afternoon Mr. Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Vanessa Gutierrez and I am a former preschool teacher and current assistant supervisor at the Cosumnes River College Child Development Center. I am here today to share why it is important that early learning educators receive high quality coaching and training to support multilingual learners and families.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
As you are aware, California is the most diverse state in the nation and as such, it is critical for educators to receive professional development courses in order to adequately support our diverse California communities. I grew up in a very small town in Mexico until I was 18 years old, which was when I moved to California to live with my brother and attend school.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
I didn't know any English at the time, but I was committed to my education and studies, which has led me to where I am today.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
My passion for learning and serving the community drove much of my work, but it wasn't until I received extensive professional development on serving multilingual learners that I truly understood how much more I had to learn and how much more I could be doing for children and families, simply having a diverse background is not enough if we want to truly serve our communities.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
As a preschool teacher, I was fortunate to be offered a professional development opportunity to take a course on supporting dual language learners through the California State University Channel Islands. This course was offered as a cohort system that made fellow classmates and educators feel more connected and open.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
In addition to direct instruction about how to improve my practices as a preschool teacher, the program provided materials that help make the coursework more accessible, easy to understand, and that I immediately applied to my work with children and families, such as books in multiple languages, cards, handouts, and real life examples on how to implement personalized oral language learning or POLL strategies that integrated family environment and instructional support to best serve multilingual learners.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
This program was easily accessible and created a warm atmosphere while also challenging me as an educator and guiding me to better provide services that were more closely aligned with the needs of the children and families that I served, especially those who were dual language learners.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I'm going to ask you to try to wrap up.
- Vanessa Gutierrez
Person
Well trained, prepared educators are key to high quality programs for California dual language learners. For this reason, I ask you to vote yes on AB 1947.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Thank you. Public comments in support of the bill, please come forward.
- Cristina Salazar
Person
Cristina Salazar with Californians Together, proud co-sponsor.
- Mary Creasy
Person
Mary Creasy on behalf of The Children's Partnership, in support.
- Pamela Gibbs
Person
Good Afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members. Pamela Gibbs, representing the Los Angeles County Office of Education, in support of the bill.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair, Members. Tristan Brown of CFT, a union of educators and classified professionals, including early childhood educators here in strong support. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Any further public comments in support? Seeing none. Any witnesses in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Any public comments in opposition to the bill? See none. I'll bring it back to the Committee. Questions or comments from the Committee? Mr. Alvarez.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you for the bill. Just a quick question for clarification as hopefully this gets implemented.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I'm reading in the bill language that I just want to make sure is not a way out for people because I think this should be done. We should provide this training given the overwhelming number of children who would would benefit from this. It reads that training provided pursuant to the subdivision is encouraged to include but not be limited to. And then it talks about the dual language biliteracy development, but the intent still is for there to be a requirement of some type of biliteracy training.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Is that correct? I just want to make sure?
- Luz Rivas
Person
I'll let our witness--
- Patti Herrera
Person
Thank you, Assemblymember Alvarez. Yes, that's absolutely correct. There's an other subdivision or a paragraph in that same subdivision that specifies that if contractors take the opportunity to provide at least three days of professional development and have a certain percentage, 25% of their children are dual language learners, that one of those days has to be dedicated to a dual language learner PD.
- Patti Herrera
Person
The provision that you are referring to outlines the elements of what research has shown to be effective professional development to support dual language learners. The reason why we took amendments to encourage a program to include all of those elements is because we understood that oftentimes professional development can also promote pedagogical practices in support of the whole child, including but not limited to their dual language learner support needs. So we didn't want it--
- Patti Herrera
Person
We didn't want those elements to eclipse the ability to actually provide professional development that is sort of wrapped around the whole child need, if that makes sense.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
It makes total sense and I completely agree with the approach and appreciate wanting to give that flexibility for the different types. I just wanted to on the record here, this language sort of continues and this is what becomes law, to make it really clear that this is what the intent is, that it is about providing some type of training and professional development that is inclusive of not just-- this is not just a suggestion that this is, it's more expansive than this, basically. So appreciate that.Thank you again for the work on this. Look forward to supporting the bill and move it when appropriate.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any further comments or questions from the Committee? Seeing none. Thank you very much, Ms. Rivas, for your continued leadership for dual language learners. Happy to support the bill. Would you like to close?
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Mr. Chair, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. We need a second for the motion made by Mr. Alvarez. Seconded. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item two, AB 1947. The motion is due pass to Appropriations. [Roll call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
4-0. The bill is out.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Before we go to the next sign in and sign an order. File item number one. AB 1851. Mister Holden, I do want to take a moment to acknowledge. On today's consent calendar was file item number 17, Assembly Bill 2714 by Mister Wallis. A Bill that is cited as Zacky's Food Allergy Safety Treatment Act. I was just informed that Zacky is in the audience.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Welcome Zackie, to the state capitol.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And you just got a bill that is named after you moving out of this Committee. So congratulations. All right, Mister Holden.
- Chris Holden
Person
I yield to Zacky every time. I'd like to thank you, Mister Chair and Members of the Committee for the Opportunity to present Assembly Bill 1851, which would create a pilot program for school site led testing. I appreciate the Committee working with our staff and the amendments that have been proposed.
- Chris Holden
Person
I'm happy to accept those and look forward to moving forward under what I believe are some good directions from the Committee. Led is a dangerous toxin. There is no safe amount of lead in a child's drinking water. Even low levels of exposure can cause learning and behavioral problems for children and damage their organs and nervous systems.
- Chris Holden
Person
In 2018, I authored a bill that tasked the Department of Social Services, in consultation with the State Water Board, with developing regulations for the regular testing of lead in the drinking water of child daycare centers. Through those regulations, the bill testing standard for children or child care centers is set at five parts per billion.
- Chris Holden
Person
AB 1851 builds on that important work by implementing a school led testing pilot program designed to produce a report around feasibility of requiring schools selected by the Superintendent and Community Water systems to collaborate on comprehensive sampling plan to test for lead and drinking water outlets using a five part per billion threshold, a standard used in many other states, including Maryland, Montana and Washington. Faucets and outlets that test higher than that lead threshold are required to be shut down and either replaced or properly filtered.
- Chris Holden
Person
Because transparency is an important part of this process, schools must notify parents if outlets that their child's school tests above the lead threshold. I'm sure you'll agree our students access to safe water shouldn't depend on income level or skin color. Testifying in support of AB 1851 as Associate Director of Children Now, Nora Lynn and Senior Advocate for Environmental Working Group Susan Little. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Nora Lynn
Person
Good afternoon Mister Chairman, Members. My name is Nora Lynn and I am with Children Now. It's a statewide policy, research and advocacy organization focusing on children's well being. This bill implements a comprehensive water testing and lead remediation pilot program for state schools built before 2010, building on work undertaken previously by Mister Holden and Miss Gonzalez in 2017. Too many children are falling through prevention safety nets lead poisoning screening rates for children in Medi-Cal are low.
- Nora Lynn
Person
Less than 27% of eligible Medi-Cal children received both of their required tests, with only 45% of black kids being screened. A US EPA analysis found that communities of color and low income neighborhoods are at disproportionate risk of lead exposure in drinking water. Educators and school employees are also at risk. Lead exposure in adults is linked with an increase in mortality of 37% for all causes, 70% for cardiovascular, and 108% for heart disease. We know that one size fits all doesn't work for our schools.
- Nora Lynn
Person
The flexible remediation approach in 1851 allows for both faucet replacement and filter installation based on the school's needs and capacity. We have been and are continuing to meet with state and federal EPA, education, environmental justice, and children's health stakeholders. On behalf of California's kids and families, I ask you to support AB 1851. Thank you.
- Susan Little
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. My name is Susan Little and I work for the Environmental Working Group.
- Susan Little
Person
One of the AB 1851 co sponsors. Comprehensive and well controlled lead testing in the drinking water of Californians licensed childcare centers found that one in four centers, 1,700 out of 6,500 centers evaluated, had water led levels above the five part per billion limit, and many centers had levels far above this threshold, 259 centers up and down the state found lead levels between 50 and 1,000 parts per billion, that is 10 to 200 times the allowable amount.
- Susan Little
Person
And nine centers found lead above 1000 parts per billion, with one center discovering levels over 11,000 parts per billion. In addition, very limited lead testing in school drinking water found elevated lead above five parts per billion in the water of 18% of school campuses. Keep in mind that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states that there's no safe level of lead exposure for children, and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that water children drink contain no more than one part per billion lead.
- Susan Little
Person
Also concerning is information received from the public contractor that lead tested the water at almost a third of the childcare centers. According to the contractor, replacement of faucets and fixtures did not bring lead levels below five parts per billion and 28% of the outlets remediated.
- Susan Little
Person
So as we work to remove the lead and water that children drink, we're faced with not only solid data indicating that lead in children's water in California is an urgent problem, but also questions about how to remediate the lead as quickly and effectively as possible while being protective of children's health. Unfortunately, pending federal regulations about lead and water will not provide states much guidance on how to reduce lead levels in schools.
- Susan Little
Person
AB 1851 sets up a pilot project to address the urgent questions around lead in California school drinking water. The bill also sets a health protective goal of zero lead and water children drink at school and childcare facilities, and we would ask that you please support this proposal. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Public comments in support of the bill.
- Whitney Francis
Person
Good afternoon. Whitney Francis with the Western Center on Law and Poverty in support.
- Jessica Moran
Person
Good afternoon Chair and Members. Jessica Moran with the California Dental Association in support.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Mitch Steiger with CFT also in support.
- Savannah Jorgensen
Person
Savannah Jorgensen with the Lutheran Office of Public Policy in Support.
- Lea Jones
Person
Good afternoon Chair and Committee Members. Lea Jones on behalf of A Voice For Choice Advocacy in full support and also Non Toxic Schools impulse support. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Any further public comments and support? Any witnesses in opposition to the bill or any tweeners?
- Jerry Desmond
Person
The latter, Chair. Jerry Desmond with Plumbing Manufacturers International. Support the legislation's objectives and have worked with Assemblymember Holden so that the faucets on the market today in no way can contribute to the five parts billion. We are just working with the author and proponents on amendments to structure the testing and the remediation in a way that's effective. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any other?
- Susan Little
Person
Assembly Member? I just wanted to weigh in on behalf of the California Nurses Environmental Health and Justice Clean Earth for Kids and Friends Committee on legislation of California, as they're also in support.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any public comments in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Any? Bringing it back to the Committee? Any questions? Comments from the Committee? Seeing none. Mister Holden, thank you very much for your ongoing leadership to get lead out of the drinking water for our school children. Happy to support the bill. Would you like to close?
- Chris Holden
Person
Well, I would just ask for your aye vote, but I'd also like to say appreciation to Nora Lynn and to Susan Little for their advocacy.
- Chris Holden
Person
Whether it's on bills that I've written, but on others who have really been fighting the good fight. And they've been very successful. I'm so happy that they're continuing to be advocates for us on the work that we're doing here. So I thank them. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Holden
Person
Thank you. We need a motion and a second. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item one, AB 1851. The motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
5-0. The bill is out. Thank you. Waiting patiently is Mr. Lowenthal. File item number 14, AB 2551. Oh, wait. I said... 2351. I'm sorry. AB 2351.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Mr. Chair, do I have permission to use props?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Yes.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. I am pleased to present AB 2351, which clarifies existing law regarding the authority of a superintendent or principal to suspend or expel people for acts such as bullying, harassment, sexual harassment, intimidation, threats of violence that occur outside of school hours, provided that the conduct when engaged in off campus is sufficiently severe or pervasive to have the actual and reasonably expected personnel or pupils by creating an intimidating or hostile educational environment.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I would like to start by accepting the Committee amendments, and I'd like to thank the Chair and Committee for their very thoughtful work on this bill. The topic of this bill is tricky. This is not one that I'm excited about putting forward. Can be used as a hot potato. It does indeed question the limits of speech and expression. And it is not, I repeat, it is not intended to increase punitive action towards our youth. It's not an issue I take lightly.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
It's aimed at addressing a gap that we have in the system. A gap that's elevated and amplified by our digital world, an area where the victims are not protected and often can only find remedy by having to leave their environment. It is an important issue that is impacting students across the state, including my own daughters. Bullying, harassment, and intimidation amongst public pupils in school is not a new phenomenon.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
It's an age old problem that administrators, faculty, parents, and children have confronted and which continues to persist year in and year out in our schools. However, the ways these acts are being perpetrated have shifted significantly from the age old archetype of a bully on the playground intimidating few students for their lunch money.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
The digital age has substantially expanded the time, the place, the manner by which students coalesce with each other, and has therefore substantially expanded the time, the place, the manner for bullying, harassment, intimidation to take place. Only a decade ago, school bullying ended once you got home and were safe. Today, many of these activities are now taking place online, off campus, in the digital ether, and outside regular school hours, and there is nowhere and no time that our kids are truly safe.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
The shift to time, place, and manner has resulted in perpetrators enjoying a certain level of immunity from punitive action for activities that would be unacceptable and punishable should they have occurred on campus during regular school hours. To restate, acts of bullying, harassment, intimidation between pupils are now taking place 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and a pupil who's being bullied at school can no longer simply go home to escape their oppressor.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Today's schoolyard bully is now empowered to continue their harassment and intimidation via social media platforms, text messages, and email circulating harmful, humiliating, harassing, and intimidating content, not only to the pupil they are bullying, but to a much wider audience of the pupil's peers. These circumstances create an undeniably hostile educational environment for the pupils who are experiencing this type of harassment and intimidation.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I'm going to refer you to my own daughter's experience with bullying and harassment that have been perpetrated both online and through activities that have occurred off campus regular hours. I want to draw your attention to this here, which is a screenshot of a story on Snapchat. My girls are in 8th grade, 6th grade, and 4th grade, and middle school, as we all know, is a very challenging time where boundaries are being learned. This story is obviously of a swastika drawn.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
What you cannot see, what is xed out was my daughter's handle, which was tagged in this story. So the bullying isn't just directly to her, it's to a wider net as well. We went to law enforcement. Law enforcement was outraged and was limited in what they could do because this did not rise to the level of a hate crime. We went to the school, to the Principal, teachers, administrators, board members, Superintendent, all of whom were outraged.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
And in their district, through their legal interpretation of how the law is written right now, they were only able to use restorative justice. Now, in our family, we are firm believers in restorative justice and believe that it should be the way that we resolve all conflict in a schoolyard capacity at every opportunity. The problem is what happens when that does not solve the problem, when it is exhaustive and it hasn't cured it.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
And what we see and what we had to consider as a family is leaving the school. And so the victims are the ones who are actually punished in this situation. Stated in my opening, there's a lack of clarity under existing law regarding a superintendent or principal's authority to suspend or expel people for acts such as bullying or harassment that may occur off campus and after regular school hours, which creates a hostile educational environment.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
This lack of clarity is leading to an unequal application of the law amongst our districts. Some schools and districts are feeling as though their hands are tied when it comes to addressing bullying and harassment that occurs outside of school hours and off campus, despite witnessing the effects these harmful activities bleeding into the classroom and impacting campus climate.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Students who are engaged in harassment intimidation of their fellow pupils must be held accountable for their actions, regardless whether the act takes place on campus or during regular school hours, and it is essential that superintendents and principals are empowered with the appropriate tools to address these issues when they do arise and have a full understanding of their jurisdiction over activities that have an impact on pupils in their schools.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Going back to this, please note that it is time stamped, and you see that it's taking place at 6:00 PM, roughly 6:00 PM. If this had happened a few hours early, they would have that jurisdictional authority according to the law. Simply because it happens an hour or two later, they do not. School is our children's workplace. It should be a safe place where they can go and learn the skills they need to be productive adults.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
In our own workplaces, we can expect an environment free of bullying, intimidation, harassment, and other activities that create a hostile work environment. And if someone engages in these behaviors in off hours and outside of work, we can expect there will be consequences for those actions. Additionally, we can expect that if we go out with our coworkers after hours or are tagged in social media posts that we will not be subjected to bullying, intimidation, harassment, or threats by our coworkers in those exchanges.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
If we are the, individuals responsible for those behaviors and activities will be held accountable through their actions. Our children should enjoy the same protections and assurances at their own workplaces for behavior that takes place during and after regular hours if it is going to create a hostile learning environment for them, regardless if the behavior activity took place on or off campus. I want to be clear.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I believe that suspension, expulsion should always be used as measures of the very, very last resort after all other interventions have been exhausted. I wholeheartedly support and I'm an advocate for interventions that are less punitive and disruptive to student academic and personal life. Moreover, I'm confident that student behavior will change, and this is important, with the understanding that bullying behavior and creating a toxic learning environment is intolerable. In my family's case, once those children understood that nothing could happen to them, they continued. They continued.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I welcome opportunities to work with stakeholders, including those in opposition to this bill, and I mean that, on additional solutions that expand other interventions and implement existing remedies more effectively. Existing law recognizes that a suspension and expulsion should be used as a last resort and that interventions such as restorative justice should be the first steps to addressing bullying, harassment, and intimidation. Again, I support that fully.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Additionally, I support efforts to reduce suspensions and expulsions and have voted for legislation such as Assembly Member McCarty's AB 1165 from last year, which upholds and promotes these interventions, and AB 2351 does not shift this approach. This bill is not designed to increase suspensions or expulsions.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Rather, it's intended just to clarify the existing law and ensure that superintendents and principals have clear cut authority in statute to take the action they deem appropriate for behavior and actions that create a hostile educational environment on campus so that our children have a safe and productive environment to learn. Mr. Chair, I'm very pleased to be joined by Arnedra Jordan, Vice President of Legislation for Long Beach PTA, and Coby Pizzotti, Vice President of Washington Unified School District Board of Education. Mr. Pizzotti is testifying on his own behalf and his remarks do not reflect the position of the board.
- Arnedra Jordan
Person
All right, hello and thank you for having me. Since we are increasingly seeing that activities and behaviors are off campus, especially online, have a direct and profound impact on our students, their academic performance, and emotional wellbeing, we are here today to ask you to support this bill. I'm gonna share a story with you. My son, he is 11 years old. His name is Mason. Mason was being bullied online after school. Mason loves school. Mason decided that he didn't want to go to school anymore.
- Arnedra Jordan
Person
And so when I asked him why didn't he want to go to school, because he gets up and goes because he's the only child in the home. He told me, he said, well, I just don't feel good. And I said, let's go back. Why don't you want to go to school? And it was because he was being bullied online after school. So this is important to me. Even though, I will say that, at the school, they did intervene. We did get the kids stopped bullying Mason.
- Arnedra Jordan
Person
We talked with the parents. What if a child doesn't have a parent to advocate for them? Or what if we, the parents, just don't intervene? I was lucky enough that the parents were like, oh, thank you for letting us know. We would like to intervene. So there has to be something that the principal or the school administration can do because the principal told me, he said, there's nothing I can do about after school. Why don't you just have them block him, block them.
- Arnedra Jordan
Person
And so we did that, of course, but then they made another account and came in and still bullied him. So it was, for us, if it hadn't have been resolved at the school, the problem would have been then that we would have had to go to the district. So I would like to say that AB 2351 does not impose new mandates on school districts. I wanted to make that clear.
- Arnedra Jordan
Person
Instead, it authorizes them to take appropriate action when students off campus activities, including online conduct, negatively impacts the school environment, which is kind of important for, especially for Mason, because had we not intervened with the parents, had parent teacher conference, the principal wouldn't have been able to do anything. So this bill provides the necessary flexibility and authority for districts to address issues that are increasing part of our students daily lives. And so thank you for listening to me.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. My name is Coby Pizzotti, and I'm a Washington Unified School District trustee and a father of a daughter who has suffered from bullying due to her IEP. I'm here today in support of AB 2335. As a school board trustee, I'm deeply committed to fostering safe and supportive learning environments for all of our students, and I felt moved today to testify in support of this important bill.
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
You know, gone are the days when bullying was confined to a schoolyard and is limited to physical altercations or taunts during recess. In today's interconnected world, the reach of bullying really knows no bounds anymore. The advent of social media, texting, and emails allows perpetrators to inflict harm on their peers around the clock and transcends the confines of the campus and regular school hours.
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
This shift has not only intensified the trauma experienced by the victims, it's also created such an incredible challenge for educators and administrators tasked with maintaining a safe and conducive learning environment. This summer in our school district, there were two girls beating up a third with an IEP. All three girls attended the same school and were in the same grade. Unfortunately, WSD could not do anything regarding the situation because the incident happened during non-school hours.
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
This caused the family, the victim's family, to feel so uncomfortable with returning back to the school that they not only left the school, they left the district. Crucially, this legislation does not mandate punitive measures such as suspension or expulsion, but rather provides educators with the discretion to respond appropriately to each unique situation. By clarifying the jurisdiction of the school authorities over off campus conduct that impacts the school community, AB 2351 equips our schools with the necessary tools to combat bullying and create a culture of accountability and respect.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Public comments in support of the bill? Any witnesses in opposition to the bill, please come forward.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
Hello, Chair and Members. Hold on. My name is Rachel Bhagwat. I'm a Legislative Advocate at the ACLU California Action. Along with tens of other advocates across the state, ACLU does oppose AB 2351. I want to start by thanking the Assembly Member for sharing his family's personal experience and also those of the primary support witnesses on this bill. Our opposition to this bill does not signify anything about our position on cyberbullying or hate crimes or any of, you know, the situations listed.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
It's simply a situation of whether this is the right approach to address this issue. The advocates in opposition to this bill disagree with the assertion that this would not expand exclusionary discipline in the state. Unfortunately, because of the way the education code is written and suspension and expulsion code, there are portions of this code, including the one that is potentially being expanded here, that are very vulnerable to being interpreted and racially biased and disparate ways.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
We know that the Leg Counsel's Digest, for example, talks about materially disrupting schoolwork and classwork. When we think about terms like disruptive and disruption, defiance, these are the same kinds of suspension and expulsion categories that we've actually sought as a Legislature and this Committee to reduce and bring in, because we know that data, you know, data shows that perceptions of which behavior is disruptive and threatening are full of implicit and explicit bias.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
So we offer simply that, if there are districts in the state that are not interpreting our existing laws appropriately to be addressing heinous behavior, you know, in schools, then there are other approaches that can be taken to address that. We did meet with the Assembly Member's office, a number of advocates did, and would be glad, if your office is open to it, to be working towards other ways to address this situation without expanding the exclusionary discipline codes of the state.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
But we do believe that existing federal and state law already allows schools to regulate state student speech that violates rights to the extent permissible under the Constitution. I do want to highlight just, I believe the Committee brought forth some amendments to address some of the First Amendment concerns in this bill. We have not had a chance to review those amendments, but I did just want to share that, in general, it's hard to imagine a way this bill wouldn't have First Amendment concerns.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
Only in the sense that we, we know this Legislature has taken significant action in the last several years to protect student right to expression. But we regularly, ACLU's intakes are full of families and students reaching out with schools and districts already violating First Amendment on due process rights. We believe simply because schools and districts don't understand what schools are allowed to regulate and are sort of not, we have not seen the state be able to provide appropriate guidance. And so we worry that expanding what kind of speech can be regulated explicitly in law invites additional violations thereof. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any further witnesses in opposition to the Bill, please come forward.
- Gregory Cramer
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members. Gregory Cramer on behalf of Disability Rights California in opposition to the bill. With your indulgence, I have authorized opposition from the following groups: the Alliance for Boys and Men of Color, the Alliance for Children's Rights, Black Parallel School Board, Cancel the Contract Antelope Valley, Center for Leadership, Equity, and Research, Children's Rights Clinic at Southwestern Law School, Coleman Advocates for Children and Youth.
- Gregory Cramer
Person
The Dolores Huerta Foundation, East Bay Community Law Center, Empowering Marginalized Asian Communities, Equal Justice Society, Pacific Juvenile Defender Center, Public Advocates, Public Counsel, the Collective for Liberatory Lawyering, and the Youth Justice Education Clinic at Loyola Law School. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any further, any public comments in opposition to the bill? Seeing none. Bring it back to the Committee. Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I want to first start out by thanking and recognizing and acknowledging the intent of the author by bringing forward this legislation, and by way of just sharing that I completely understand the intent. Share with you that I also had my 7th grade daughter completely transformed because she was cyberbullied over the course of time and found myself, our family, in a situation where the school system essentially said because it was online and happened outside of the purview of school, they were not able to do anything.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And so the exact kind of fact pattern that you are offering with your very poignant stories of what happened to your children happened to mine as well. So I fully understand the intention of this legislation. The challenge that I have is the reality of practice in our school districts when it comes to getting involved in situations beyond their kind of known scope.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I also have worked with my own children and with other children where they have been on the opposite side of this situation and have engaged in activity off campus that kind of essentially got pulled into the purview of the school system where restorative justice was not an option. Because it is not a required measure of student engagement around any kind of negative action on a school community. It's not widely available.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
There are not programs required by every single school district to engage in restorative justice where the only options that school districts have are suspension and expulsion. And those kids who find themselves, as this legislation is currently written, who are outside of the school purview. And I just wanna say that each of you shared a specific example around bullying. Right?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
The scope of this legislation, however, reaches into student activity that includes causing or attempting to cause damage to private property, stealing or attempting to steal private property, possessing or using tobacco, products containing tobacco, or nicotine products, committing or engaging in habitual profanity or vulgarity, unlawfully possessing drug paraphernalia, disrupting through willful by willful defiance the authority of supervisors, knowingly receiving stolen school property.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
These are all things that are happening outside of the purview of the school campus, the behaviors that children are engaging in that are certainly challenging, but because of the way that this legislation is written, don't mandate, but certainly authorize, the school authorities to suspend or expel. And that, for me, is the quintessential definition of contributing to the school to prison pipeline.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Because what happens is that kids who are engaged in these practices, who then get caught up in a school system that doesn't have the actual wherewithal to engage in restorative practices and does choose to suspend or expel because they have, now, the authority, even though they aren't mandated to do so, will find themselves not receiving education, expelled from their school community because we've given them, the school system, as a point of policy, the ability to reach into the lives of children outside of the school campus.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And that is deeply problematic for me. So while I fervently, kind of fundamentally, like at a visceral level, understand the intention of this legislation in terms of trying to ensure that our children are not harmed by the actions that happen now with the Internets and all the things, the counterbalancing impact of what will happen to children by offering such a broad brush set of activities that will impact children is even more troubling to me.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So the author, if you can kind of work through that. It's deeply concerning to me that every social justice and criminal justice reform group, including the ACLU Action sitting here, is also opposed to this bill. So I just, I just, I needed to just hopefully get your reaction about that. But I'm deeply troubled by this legislation. Although I fundamentally believe the intent.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I can't imagine a scenario where I'm on a different side of the bill from Mia Bonta and the ACLU. It's a surreal moment for me because I'm so aligned and so respectful of the work that your organization has done. It's a voice that I don't know where we would be without you. And I think that the comments, Assembly Member, that you put forward are thoughtful. The way that we approached this bill was simply to expand the hours of the things that were reasons granted.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
But I think that you make some very important points. And so I think an approach to bifurcate bullying and specifically digital bullying and bullying activities outside that are putting the victims in a situation where they're not protected at all. And all of us, I think, what I hope all of us can acknowledge is that there is a gap right now where there is no body that can oversee any type of significant justice associated with this.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
That it doesn't rise to the level of law enforcement is extremely problematic. And, you know, some of the data that we have that we're seeing in our youth, the levels of issues around mental health and what they're facing right now are off the charts. So who is our village to address this? Who is it? Ideally it's parents, but we can't rely on that in every situation.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Ideally it's the schools and the administrators in the schools, within reason and within scope of what should be allowed so that we don't continue a pipeline to prison, to your very, very important point. And anybody who's in the education community understands in this situation that every situation is unique. Everyone. What the bullying actually is, what is happening with the perpetrators, what is going on with the victims, what is going on with the families, is it sensitive to the community? This is extremely sensitive to my community.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
As a matter of fact, this bill is a Jewish Caucus Priority Bill. And what's happening. So what my commitment to you is, is to continue to work forward on this bill with all of the issues that you raised right now, which are very important ones, and to be able to bifurcate those things.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Vice Chair Flora.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I just thank my colleague for bringing this forward. And I want to acknowledge there may potentially be some concerns with certain communities. And I respect that. On a personal note, we've dealt with this, and it's pretty devastating when you see a kid being bullied and then your kid has to go to school with the individual that's bullying her, and there's no consequences. Right. And so I agree with you, preferably this is done at home with parents or mentors, right.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
But sometimes that's not an option. But at some point we have to look out for our kids too. And two wrongs don't make a right. And I, and I know, I just, I'll just say this. I just trust you enough to sort out the issues with some of the opposition because your heart's in the right place. And I certainly support this bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Yeah. I just want to thank you for bringing this forward. And my heart breaks for your daughter, I think I appreciate you sharing that story. In my community, we have lost students who have committed suicide, right, as a result of bullying, particularly cyberbullying.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And the way that I view this legislation is, you know, not so much that you're expanding on anything, but you are simply modifying the law that exists now to today's new world that we face with, you know, the ubiquity of smartphones and social media. And so, you know, I actually, I do understand where you're going with this, and I think it is honestly relatively pretty targeted at a specific issue. And so I'll be supporting the bill today. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Mr. Alvarez. I'm sorry, did you want to respond to Mr. Hoover?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
As a response, it is not targeted at all. If you look at the legislation, there are many things beyond cyberbullying that are captured as behaviors that are within scope, essentially, for school administrators to be able to respond to. So with all due respect, this is not a targeted bill, which is largely why it is deeply problematic for me.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Mr. Hoover, would you like to...
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I just, I guess I should clarify. I guess, I mean, you know, it's expanding or it's refocusing what already exists, you know, on, you know, an extended number of hours. I guess that's what I meant. So apologies. Thank you for the response.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Alvarez.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you for, first of all, sharing the personal stories. Parent of an 8th grader myself and so plenty of stories that happen on a daily basis. I think I should start off by saying I actually am not entirely sure how I feel about the legislation before us. I think there are excellent points made as to why it should happen, but I also am concerned about true implementation.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
You know, every school is just very different and every school has very number various amounts of resources that they can dedicate. You know, the restorative justice movement, if people are being really honest, hasn't really worked because it has not been implemented in a way that it should be. And so to believe that we can just rely on that to address some of these concerns is really not being honest about our current situation of behavioral issues, mental health issues that are being dealt with at our schools.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Schools are losing, we're hearing about all this in our Budget Committee, resources to hire mental health professionals. Those resources are not going to exist probably next year. So I'm genuinely very conflicted about this bill. I also am not sure that schools are the right entity to, I want to be careful not to try to stigmatize or label this, but to essentially police the behavior outside of school hours.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I don't know that schools want that responsibility. Which ones will take on the responsibility and which ones won't. And, you know, with the schools that my kids go to, which are you know, low income, Title I schools, you know, if I would want them to address this behavior, but to believe that they actually have the capacity to do so, I don't think they do. And so it's really, I may be speaking very much right now from the heart.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I'm not entirely sure that we get to a place where I know you want to get to with your legislation, which is a good place for kids. I know that's the intent for sure. And I don't know what to offer you to feel that I can help build on this important conversation that you've started to help us get there. I'm kind of feeling like a parent who doesn't really like what I do is what we can do. We all do as parents what we can do.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And in my case, we don't have devices for our kids, but not everybody can have that situation because people need to be communicating with their kids often. And so I'm conflicted. I just don't know that this is the right approach to accomplish what you're looking to accomplish. And I'm certainly appreciative of the conversation and the dialogue that's been had to try and get me to understand why perhaps this is the right approach, but I'm definitely not there at the moment.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Yes.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
May I respond? First of all, thank you for your candor, Assembly Member. I want to restate that this bill does not obligate any district to do anything different than they're doing right now. It is simply an opportunity. If a district has a unique situation that is truly impacting what's going on with a student, and written as such right now, that it's just a continuation of something. If it were happening during school hours, if it was, was something that they would be able to do, that they also have the ability to do it if it were happening afterwards. There is absolutely zero obligation associated with this.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
And finally, I would ask, if you are able to support the bill today, we will continue to work on it. Because I don't think there's anybody who's pointed out here, I don't think there's anybody here who hasn't pointed out that their own family doesn't have a major problem with this. People in their own lives have a major problem that's had significant impacts. So if there's a way that we can continue to move forward and work on the bill, we should.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Before I turn to miss Addis, I just want to, for the sake of our discussion, make sure that Committee Members are aware that under the current Education Code, as indicated on page four of the analysis, the current code requires that before a suspension can be imposed, a suspension can be imposed only when other means of correction fail to bring about proper conduct, and the other means may include, but are not limited to, and then there's a list of about 10, including restorative justice.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
It does not require restorative justice, but it is one of the options that may be used. But the current code is clear that other means of correction, that a suspension may only be imposed when other means of correction fail to bring about the proper conduct. Ms. Addis and Ms. Bonta.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Well, this is super tough. I can feel my heart beating very fast because it's an incredibly important subject and a tough subject. I want to start from the core that our schools exist to provide education. But in order to do that, we have to have safe and affirming environments for every student. Not just students who maybe have harassed others, but students who have survived that harassment. And I want to take this beyond cyberbullying, and this is the part that gets my heart beating quickly.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
We have a student in our district right now who was filmed consensually in a sex act, and then unconsensually, that film was spread around and then was used to bully that student on the school bus, in the school campus, to the point where that student stopped going to school. Happened outside of school hours. Hands were tied, quote unquote. And I would say we failed to provide a safe and affirming learning environment for that student.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I will also say my own child was physically assaulted by somebody who had previously physically assaulted another child, not during school hours, off campus. Nothing was done. When my child went back, they were victim blamed. They lost their friend group. They faced immense hardship and did finish the school year. But again, I would say we failed to offer a safe and affirming environment for that child. And I would offer that for the perpetrator of that violence, it wasn't a good environment either.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Their behavior was condoned and they went on to have other difficulties in their education. So in not answering this, in not rising to the call to answer this behavior, I think we're causing issues for all kiddos. I'm very sensitive, and I want to absolutely respect what Assembly Member Bonta brought up. There are some things in here that I would agree, probably go past the intention of what we're talking about. And I do want to appreciate you for looking at that very specifically.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And then I want to comment also, being a member of the Jewish Caucus, you mentioned this as a Jewish Caucus Priority Bill. The reason this rises to the level of a Jewish Caucus Priority Bill is the rise in antisemitism and the rise in Islamophobia that we're seeing on school campuses. So while some people will look at the swastika and say that's just kids being kids, they need to learn more about the holocaust, whatever. That's not the truth right now.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
The truth is there's an absolute rise in hate crimes on school campuses, and it's our responsibility, I believe, to put a stop to that. I think this bill puts us well on the path to taking action that is new, that is different. I know it's only doing a minor change of changing the hours, but I do think it can go a long way to creating those safe, affirming environments. With that, I'd like to move the bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just...
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Motion's been made, and a second.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
in response. So to Assembly Member Alvarez in particular, one of the things that I always focus in on is what is going to be the actuality of the implementation of a bill, of any legislation that we pass. And I don't think that providing an opportunity for additional suspension or expulsion is doing anything new. It's actually just doing what has been done before.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
The colloquial language that we've been using here around extension of the school of the hours is a student goes to school from 8:30 to 3:30. This legislation, as it's currently written, allows for the behavior of that child from 3:30 until the following morning, 8:30, to be a part of what the school district and school administrators have the ability to reach into, to be able to shape what is happening for that child or children within the school environment. That is very broad.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
The items here that are included are incredibly broad. And while I appreciate, Chair, you outlining the alternative methods that a school district has the ability to avail themselves of in response to any of these actions, as a school board member, as a mother of three, and as a person who's worked with over 20 school districts throughout the State of California, I can tell you right now that school districts are not equipped to be able to do what this bill is asking, which is, in very plain terms, police children outside of the school day. Assembly Member Alvarez, you didn't use that phrase, but I think it's very apt.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So to, again, I think, often, as legislators, we kind of have visceral responses because we have personal experiences and we all expressed having some version of the same story that Assembly Member Lowenthal shared, me included. I just am very concerned about the unintended consequences on this for the majority of schoolchildren. And we are not doing anything to reinvent the wheel, to reinvent a different approach to being able to address harms that are committed.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And we are actually just playing into the very system that has led to so many children not having the kind of quality education that they deserve. And with that, I will let this one go. There's a motion and a second.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Ms. Addis.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
If I could just clarify. When I talk about what's new here, when I talk about what's new here, it's new for survivors to be free from having a face perpetrators on a school campus if the option for suspension is there. And I think when we think about survivors and what they've faced and creating safe and affirming environments on school campuses, survivors have to know that they can go back to school and not face the perpetrator day after day after day after day. They often need a break.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And that's the new and different piece of this that I see, is that we can now say that we could now say to survivors if we pass, and I absolutely agree with the Assembly Member on narrowing this, I do think there's things in here that are too broad. But it's important for survivors to have a break from that kind of abuse. So that's where I'm coming from on that piece. But thank you for, I want to thank you because I learn a lot from you every time.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, Mr. Alvarez.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I want to ask a hypothetical in hopes of trying to understand what would happen. So the bill the way it's written is it is optional for districts to participate. So if my district ops, and I don't know how it, what exactly the district would have to action they'd have to take to opt in or not. But let's say my district decides not to opt in and my child is experiencing, you know, that type of activity. This bill passes. Will then, would a school district then, if they decided to not opt in, not be able to use that behavior as a way to correct the behavior? What would happen in that circumstance?
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you for your question, Assembly Member. There is no opt in or opt out component to this bill. It is clarifying the law. There's an interpretation that's taking place by each district throughout the state right now of the law as it's written. And there are many districts that are today opting in, to use your phrase, their interpretation, and they're doing this right now. And then there are others, and their interpretations are very different. And so what this is simply doing is clarifying law so that they don't have to make those types of interpretations.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So, for more clarity, so then districts would now be required?
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
No, there's no requirement. There's no requirement right now for them to address this, even on campus. It is a case by case basis.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So not requiring them. So then if it does happen...
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
There's no requirement.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
At a district where they are not, I know I use the phrase opting in and that's not the right phrase, but essentially not participating, or not... What would happened in that circumstance to that family? Would the district just continue to say, sorry, we don't follow that state law?
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
If I may. Thank you. So as a school board member, unless we have an affirmative clarification that says we definitely have the ability to do this, we may be encouraged not to do that for liability's sake. So I think that would be one way of looking at this. And there's probably quite a few districts out there that would be more hesitant to engage in some sort of discipline after hours than not. But I do know that there are some that do to that, having spoken to some of them at the California School Boards Association.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I just think... I'll end with this, Mr. Chair, and I appreciate the opportunity to speak a second time. I think especially now in the role that you serve on that Committee with me of actions the state has taken and programs and implementation, and implementation is really important. And I just, there's a lot of, some of my hesitancy is on that, on the clarification of what exactly is being implemented.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
It's clear that there's some behavior that is definitely, I agree with Ms. Bonta, is not appropriate to be reviewing that kind of behavior. There's other behavior that very clearly is. And so I think that's sort of where I fall on this today. I can read the tea leaves. You have enough votes to get out of this Committee, so you don't need an additional vote. But I do think I'd like to learn more to be able to help you in your mission, which is to provide a safer environment for our students.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Assembly Member. And, you know, my commitment to you is to work with you, if you'll have it, on clarifying these aspects of the specific activities, as well as Assembly Member Banta, if you're interested in providing that input should this pass through Committee today.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. I'd like to try to wrap this up with Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I'll be brief. I just, in reading the bill, on page seven, you know, I do want to acknowledge Assembly Member Bonta's comments that did list all of the things that are in the Committee analysis. But on page seven, it does make it clear, and I don't know if, I assume this was intentional, that it must be sufficiently severe or pervasive to have the actual and reasonably expected effect of materially disrupting classwork, creating substantial disorder, essentially creating a hostile educational environment.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so there is a standard still, I think, in this bill where it's not going to be so broad that it can be overused and abused by school staff. And so I think for those reasons, I'm definitely comfortable supporting it today.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I'd like to acknowledge that, in the interest of time, I'd also like to reaffirm what the Assembly Member had pointed out is worthy of working on the bill even further. Committed to do that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. All right, so my two bits. First of all, thank you to everyone for this very engaged discussion, probably the most substantial discussion we've had on any bill today thus far. I want to give respect to Ms. Bonta for her appropriate comment, comments that we don't want to go back to policies that further reinforce any school to prison pipeline. I know, Mr. Lowenthal, you are equally committed to that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Last year, this Committee and I supported a bill to eliminate willful defiance as an inappropriately vague justification to suspend or expel students. And so I think it's in line with Ms. Bonta's comments about perhaps we can continue to work to tighten up the language so that there aren't any inappropriately vague provisions of this bill that could be subject to bias.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All that being said, I think we talked about not wanting to have the school to prison pipeline, but we also talked about the importance, the importance of making sure that every student have a safe learning environment. And it's an option. It's a tool. You know, the bill authorizes a student to be suspended or recommended for expulsion only under, after existing code requires that a suspension can be imposed when other means of correction fail to bring about proper conduct. And so I think this definitely merits further discussion. But it is offering an option, a tool, not a mandate, not any requirement for districts to opt in.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And I think not only for the sake of making sure that we are not reinforcing any school to prison pipeline, but that we are also trying to strike a balance to protect all students, to provide a safe and learning environment for all students, that this gives a tool that we want to make sure we design appropriately so that we ensure that administrators carry out this incredible responsibility in a responsible manner. So for those reasons, I will be supporting the bill. You have the last word.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Very briefly, I just want to thank Mr. Chair and the Committee Members for the very thoughtful discussion. This is what we need. We need discussion. We need to be able to talk about this. And we need to be caring about all of our children. Those that are perpetrating this, those that are the victims, all of them are worthy and deserved of a safe learning environment. This does come from a place of considering the victims. And just hearing these stories, there's just too many of them.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
It's overwhelming. It's in every community of all colors, of all socioeconomic backgrounds. It's everywhere. And the truth of the matter is is that our landscape has changed. It has. The way we coalesce is different. The hours that we operate are different. What we're requiring our kids and the way for them to do projects together is different. It's different. So I hope that we can continue to work on this together.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I would really like to have that opportunity. And I really appreciate the comments of the ACLU and the work that you do and hope that we can work with you as well on this bill. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
With that, Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 14, AB 2351. The motion is do pass as amended to the Judiciary. [Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Four to one abstention. The Bill is out. All right. Waiting patiently. Mr Carrillo, file item number 11. AB 2245. Yes. Please go forward.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr Chair and members. First of all, thank you for allowing me to present Assembly Bill 2245. The correct clinical education, or CTE, is beneficial to people from all walks of life. People may take CT classes to get their foot in the door of a specific vocation or build upon an existing skillset. People may take CTE classes to do that purpose in their education and up to their choice in some times. At some events.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
This is especially important for districts like mine, which are outside of the city centers, where building a local workforce is imperative to job creation and economic growth in the region. Given the life changing opportunities that can be provided via CTE, retaining this workforce is especially important. Unfortunately, there remains gaps in the rights afforded to these CTE teachers. Currently, only older traditional CTE teachers employed by a school district may be granted permanent status when employers.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
When employees are able to be granted a classification of permanent, this means they are no longer employed at will and are no longer at their initial probation and able to receive due process. Permanency allows for basic labor rights such as notice of discipline or layoff in their procedures for appeal. It does not mean that teacher cannot be terminated for cost or if their program is canceled or reduced. Though this may seem like very basic protections, something all employees should be afforded.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
CTE instructors could teach at regional occupational centers and programs do not have them. This creates a situation where these teachers, having no certainty about their employment, are difficult to retain and reluctant to begin or stay working. To be clear, this Bill does not prevent employers from laying off employees due to changes in funding or student needs. It simply requires them to follow the process when they do so.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Additionally, while existing law requires more unit permanent employees to be laid off first, there are several exceptions to this seniority rule. These exceptions ensure positions can be filled by the teachers with the most appropriate qualifications when a lay senior employee has specific qualifications or competencies necessary to teach a specific class. When we talk about the importance of maintaining CTE programs, it starts with retaining and protecting the CTE workforce, who is the sole foundation of the driving force to how we keep these programs available for students.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
We need to remind ourselves that without teachers, our students are unable to thrive and access hand on training programs. Some might say that this Bill would reduce CTE programs, which is not the true and anecdotal. It's only just a true anecdotal statement. This programming will eventually become unappealing if we don't ensure more teachers can join the profession and have the opportunity to invest and stay. In that case, we're resolution these programs altogether.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Joining me to testify in support of AB 2245 are Tristan Brown, Legislative Director of California Federation of Teachers, and Dave Rowcliffe, CTE teacher at Montclair High School, Chaffee Joint Union High School District.
- Dave Rowcliffe
Person
I apologize in advance for the lack of eye contact. I'm gonna try to go as fast as I can. Good afternoon. I'm Dave Rowcliffe. I teach automotive at Montclair High School in Montclair, California. I have three CTE credentials, a bachelor's in automotive, a master's in teaching automotive, and the classroom equivalent of two PHDs in curriculum instruction. I have permanence with a CTE credential solely due to the unique vision of the district I work for. I've been a teacher for 35 years and mechanic for 45.
- Dave Rowcliffe
Person
I'm here to address an issue that is fundamentally an equity and teacher quality issue. I believe that the present ed code is in this regard, effectively singles out CTE credential holders for discrimination, which severely negatively impacts the ability of schools to optimally recruit the highest quality teachers that they otherwise could. But most importantly, this significantly negatively impacts student achievement and outcomes, particularly in our population of traditionally most challenging and underserved student groups, including and especially students of color.
- Dave Rowcliffe
Person
This carve out in the ED code is an artifact of the ancient way that CTE classes and programs used to be funded. The funding was largely transitory and thus there was a perceived need to treat CTE teachers differently. Funding today for the most part for CTE is stabilized and thus the need to treat the CTE teacher effectively as an educational day laborer no longer exists. The day labor analogy is apt.
- Dave Rowcliffe
Person
The typical CTE teacher, after 30 years of successful teaching, has less job security than a janitor who works in in this building for six months. The ED code makes CTE credential holders at will employees every day of their career.
- Dave Rowcliffe
Person
The highly skilled teachers that this state claims to want for its children, for the most part, will not be willing to leave the job security of their present position in an industry to take their chances in the insecurity of never knowing whether they'll still have their teaching position tomorrow at will is at whim.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Could I ask you to wrap up please?
- Dave Rowcliffe
Person
Yeah, I'm sorry. Consider the cost savings of a district getting rid of hundreds of teachers within three years of vesting their retirement. I saw it happen at one of the major districts opposing this bill. All of the negative possibilities, the current status permits are actually happening to CTE teachers in this state today. I look forward to answering any questions you might have. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Thank you Mr Chair and members. Tristan Brown of CFT, Union of Educators and classified professionals. This has been a long time coming. We have actually had this policy passed through this body multiple times as part of other legislation that had other components which the breaks of the Appropriations Committee were applied. So we've broken up our policies into separate bills and this is now the standalone one to provide permanency for CTE educators who teach at regional occupational centers and programs. Permanency is a term that might confuse many.
- Tristan Brown
Person
It does not mean you cannot lay off individuals. It does not mean you can't terminate individuals. It simply means that there are due process rights that then turn on after their two year probationary status.
- Tristan Brown
Person
These are the types of things that make it worth investing in this career, because currently these educators have no idea if they'll have a job from one day to the next and know if they'll be able to count on going through all the steps to have their five year clear credential earned after they have their initial three year industry subject matter credential time lapse.
- Tristan Brown
Person
If they're going to invest all of that into this job, we need to invest in them and make sure that they know that there are these rights that stay with them. This is really about having heads up when the program does change, to be able to have a few months or weeks notice of when your layoff is coming, because you do need to pivot to whatever the new labor market is. We're not trying to keep VCR repairmen in business.
- Tristan Brown
Person
We do want rops to be agile, and we do believe current law allows them to do that. You can obtain enrollment data earlier than we do now, which would solve a lot of problems. And the funding is wrapped into the LCFF, and we know what those funds are year after year. So planning is possible under these constraints, and we hope we can count on your support. And I ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. I, unfortunately, have been summoned by the speaker for a meeting, and so I would like to recess this committee for 10 minutes. So we'll be back. Yeah. So actually, to be safe, 4:45. We will be reconvening at 4:45.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Okay, thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
We're going to reestablish a quorum and we're going to keep education moving. So, Mr. Carrilo, I think we were at witnesses in support. Correct? You just finished up? So name and organization, please. File item 11, AB-2245. Seeing none. Any witnesses in opposition?
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Witnesses in opposition to file item 11. 2245. Two minutes apiece. Go ahead.
- Janet Sloan
Person
Okay. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Mr. Vice Chair, and Members of the Committee. My name is Janet Sloan, representing KROP, a statewide membership network of regional occupational centers and programs. As an organization, KROP has concerns with AB-2245 for what we believe are unintended consequences for our students, our programs, and our industry partners.
- Janet Sloan
Person
While we fully support and value our CTE Instructors, we believe that AB-2245 provision in computing service towards classification for permanency status would hinder ROP programs ability to remain flexible and reactive to student interest and local and state workforce needs. I want to reiterate that ROP funding has not been direct funded since 2011, so we do have to rely on competitive grants. CTE teachers hold designated subject credentials in industry sectors and must have occupational training and experience to qualify for the credentials.
- Janet Sloan
Person
The broad nature of these industry sectors necessitates flexibility in hiring practices and this is where this is important. New CTE teachers concurrently teach while being enrolled in a credential program. They have three years to clear that credential, which exceeds the amount of time a decision must be made for permanency.
- Janet Sloan
Person
Unlike single subject or multiple subject credential teachers, CTE teachers are granted their preliminary credential based upon their industry work experience and they do not have any previous teaching coursework nor do they have a student teaching experience in that three year period. A partnership between the credential program and the hiring entity provides support and training to those professionals to ensure their industry knowledge is delivered through coherent, standards based curriculum in a safe and well managed environment.
- Janet Sloan
Person
By March 15 of the teachers complete consecutive second year, notices must be given with the intent to re-elect or not reelect, for the next succeeding school year. With AB-2445 we will be forced to make premature decisions prior to the process of clearing the CTE credential.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. If you can wrap up your thought. Perfect. Next witness, please.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Chair, Vice Chair, and Members, my name is Julie Duncan and I'm the Superintendent of Tri-Valley ROP representing the ROCP and the CTE JPA Coalition Members. Current statute allows rops to adapt so that our CTE pathways always stay current and relevant to local and state economies. Industry changes affect which courses are offered and not offered every year based on local workforce needs. Our teachers come from industry. This is at least their second career. They understand when they are hired how ROPs operate.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Most often than not, they can be industry partners we've worked with for years who decide to give back to their industry. I am one of those people. I have been in education for over 20 years as a teacher and administrator. Coming from industry. Credentialing is different, as Janet stated, but our teachers do move step and column every year with a cleared credential. We count their years of experience in industry with our salary schedules.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I currently have 50% of my staff with over 10 years of service, and some are close to 20 years. I am not here to oppose teachers having access to due process in the layoff process. In fact, we believe our teachers are more part of our annual master scheduling process than most of our traditional districts. Because we are regional, that's important.
- Julie Duncan
Person
We work in partnership with districts which for some of us can be up to 10 districts in 40 different high school sites with various bell schedules that range from 1-hour courses of six periods per day or two-hour blocks for three courses that rotate every day or two block courses two times a day.
- Julie Duncan
Person
The districts provide us enrollment registration information far beyond March 15 and the May 15 timeframe, and we then do our best to create a master schedule that works for both the region and the teachers at either the center or at a high school site that meets our students' interests. Without the regional approach and leveraging resources, many of these pathways wouldn't even exist. That's the point of the region.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I believe this Bill is trying to create a solution to alleviate stress and give rop instructors a sense of security.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. If you could just finish up your thought.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Yes. The March 15 deadline is the issue. We do not have our numbers. In order to. We'll have to pink slip absolutely everybody, every single year. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Any other witnesses in opposition, name and organization, please.
- Leilani Yee
Person
Leilani Aguinaldo, on behalf of the Riverside County Office of Education as well as the California Association of School Business Officials. In opposition. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Lee Reid
Person
Lee Angela Reid. On behalf of the Small School Districts Association. In opposition. We're very concerned about the inconsistent funding and the timelines. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. I know we had a couple more witnesses in support. Come on up.
- Katie Hardeman
Person
Thank you. Katie Hardwin, with the California Teachers Association. A proud co-sponsor of the Bill, and in strong support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone else in support? I know that people were just trying to get back in. Okay, seeing none. Bring it back to the Committee. Any questions from the Committee? Mister Alvarez?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Sticking to the, first of all, thank you to the author and to all the witnesses. Sticking to the theme of which this Committee will hear quite often, me, on implementation, because I think that's we need to spend more time as a body on understanding what this would actually, what our ideas that we all think are great ideas will actually do to our implementers back in our home districts.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And I think I completely understand the author's perspective from the district, which is different than mine, much more urban district, where perhaps it might be easier for us to identify the prepared workforce in order to maintain the programs as robust as those who implement the programs aim to do so. But we had a hearing. I know Miss Bonta was there, our Chair was there not long ago, maybe four weeks ago, on CTE.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And one of the very consistent themes that I heard and that I learned was that funding is always an unknown for ROP programs, for CTE programs. And one, it was the making of our own. The Legislature and previous administrations have created multiple programs where those who are the providers have to go and seek grants in order to implement these programs. And it's something we need to address, probably not for this discussion, but I want to acknowledge that that's a very real thing.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
So we do not have, as we did before, when we had categorical programs, steady funding set aside for CTE ROP.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And so what I just want to be very clear about is that, if we decide to do this, I believe, and I'd like to hear from the proponents, if you don't think this is correct, but the last statement that was made by the opposition, there would have to be notices for the March 15 deadline, because a school's budget, very likely, most school districts that I know, will not be approved by then, which means ROP programs don't know how much funding they have, which means they can't appropriately plan.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And again, we heard that time and time again from folks throughout the entire state at our hearing. And so I just like for the supporters sponsors to provide some feedback or acknowledge that that is what's in fact what's going to happen, just so that we all know what we're getting ourselves into as we move forward.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you, Assemblymember. Yes, I mean, we recognize that the timelines for the current layoff process don't always align with when things like the CTEIG Dollars arrive to areas. However, the ROCP programs they were all rolled into LCFF. And then when you have a JPA or county office of ED and all the other, well, those are the two main styles of the ROP programs with this issue. You have many districts that are contributing their funding into this pool. Right?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Right.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
This is something that happens every year. This is something that it passes prologue. There are ways that you can see trends. We understand that the whole point of this program is to adapt to the new labor flavors of the month. Making a joke earlier about VCR repair and now cyber security would be a hot topic in some areas, things like that. And we understand that. I think that you can, with some more flexibility with these districts, obtain data earlier.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There's nothing that requires the data to go this late. But we're also open to hearing other ideas from these managerial groups as to how we could meet them in the middle on this topic.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
But it's not really data. It's an appropriation that the local school district makes in their budget allocation, which doesn't happen until typically it's May, sometimes, maybe April. But when I've all our local school districts is typically in May. Yeah, you could have data, maybe how many students are still enrolled and growth and all mainly declining at this point. But I mean, I did hear that very consistently from providers that they're at the whims and well, yes, you're absolutely right.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
The intent was for LCFF to capture this and we should. Right? We don't do it enough. I think you're definitely great advocates that we need to do more of that, and I agree with that. But this Bill doesn't do that. It doesn't guarantee that funding to these programs, which again, I'm one who thinks we should make it more consistent because it's done on a district-by-district basis. So I just want to, again, be very forthcoming about implementation.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And maybe your last comment was maybe there's a different way forward to how to implement this in a way that's, because some of the worst stories I've heard from people who enter the profession, educators, and you know them better than I, is the idea that you get pink-slipped and you don't know whether or not you have a job the next year. And that's like, we always want to avoid that. Right?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And so if we're going to get ourselves in a situation where the only thing legally just to be able to do this forward is to issue pink slips, I'm not sure that that's also like, sends a good message that this is the profession you want to be in because you never know whether you have a job or not. So give you a chance to respond.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah, I would say to that currently every day, they don't know if they'll have a job or not. We did ask our members if this led to you getting pink-slipped every season. You know, should we modify this? They said no. The due process rights on balance are worth going through a struggle at first to clear, then gain clarity later on and move forward. And again, if we can, we're happy to entertain ideas, to relax that, and figure out new methods.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
But, you know, we have just done this with adult education implementation without any issues, and we heard a lot of the same feedback from that. I don't want to say these are completely both apples to apples, but in terms of implementation, it was a lot of the same.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Can I ask the, maybe to both? You are been doing this for 35 years, I think you said in your testimony. Thank you for sharing that. What happens on an annual basis to you now.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Nothing
- David Alvarez
Legislator
You don't receive a notification of a pink slip because you're not a. You're a temporary employee. Is that what you're classified as?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
No. In my district, they had the unique vision of realizing that if they wanted to keep a highly qualified teacher like me, they would have to give me permanent.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Is that the case for every one of your CET teachers or just some.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
No, that's only the case in my district. I was gonna say there's a similar situation with final enrollment numbers at a high school. If we don't know what the final enrollment numbers are, we don't know how many math teachers will take. So if the enrollment is down, some math teacher is going to get cut or they're going to get reassigned. And his example about VCR, you know, I've got a construction credential. I'm an electrician.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
But if they don't want to teach electrician anymore or say there's no more electrical, they can make me teach concrete, they can make me teach framing. And if I refuse or say I just don't know how to do it.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
With all due respect, with you will always know more than I do on, you know, another trade. Isn't though, the intent of CTE of people like you that you bring in the most qualified to do that. So if you're not doing electrical, for whatever reason, moving you just to do construction, the spirit of people who do CET, who I have talked to, they all believe it should be people who are either have been practitioners and are moving into the classroom.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And so again, you probably would be qualified, but that's not the case in every instance, I think.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, sure, but the problem is you got a whole bunch of mechanics. I know a bunch of mechanics that work at municipalities. They've been there 20 years. They have job seniority. Why would they. They're terrified to leave that job where they have job security to come into the teaching profession where they would be brilliant superstars. But now they're day laborers. They aren't going to do that. And as a result, the quality of instructor you get is probably going to way worse.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And to my point earlier, I'm just wondering if giving them a pink slip, because this is really what this leads to, I think from what I've heard, no matter what. Does that make them feel like it's a job security?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It wouldn't really work that way. For instance, how many automotive teachers do you have? Four or five. The new rules would give seniority to the older ones. So the only ones that would get pink slips would be the earliest, the latest hired.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
To the folks who run the programs. I don't know if you want to provide any response to any of the comments or questions that I've made.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Yes. Well, first, thank you for bringing up the dedicated funding. That was part of what I was going to say. We do not have dedicated funding. When LCFF came about, a lot of the CT and RCP programs around the state had to close because districts locally, as they were entitled to, made other decisions. And so with the ROPs that are around, we're a big group in the State of California. We still don't have that direct funding. The districts make the decision.
- Julie Duncan
Person
We are basically flat-funded from what they received. And then we rely on CTEIG and strong workforce grants that are competitive to keep our programs going. So I really appreciate you bringing that point up. And as to the point about districts being able to get our numbers earlier, there's just, again, you're working with multiple districts up to 10-40 different high schools. Their registration process timelines are from January to March.
- Julie Duncan
Person
And then once you get all those numbers, then you have to figure out, can my one teacher go from Dublin High School to Livermore High school? Because that's what's going to get that teacher their full time job. They may have the numbers for it, but they physically can't get there. It is a really big puzzle that is never going to be done before March 15 and May 15. But we're working with that teacher all along, letting them know where they're at.
- Julie Duncan
Person
And with this competitive funding, we still don't know to that. Also that point, we applied for some of the dual enrollment grants that have just been put out, and they were due last Friday. We won't even know until April if we get those. And so a teacher that I have, I have an example right now where he's a 1.0, but he might be a 0.80 because he physically can't get to the other high school with the numbers that I have.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I've already, we've been talking, and he would love to work on that dual enrollment project, but I won't know that until I get that grant so I can give that teacher that release period. In my 13 years as a Superintendent, I have never laid off a teacher after March 15 and their full assignment due to the lack of the numbers, I have partially done a section and tried to fill it with a teacher on special assignment.
- Julie Duncan
Person
And I have talked to my colleagues before I made that statement today and asked them, out of all the superintendents I spoke with, very few who have actually done that. And in talking to my teachers on March 15, pink slip, a lot of them said, why? That just gives me more stress. Why wouldn't I just go back to industry? They feel permanent right now because they, they've been there 20-15 years. Thank you.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you. Well, I have full confidence after the hearing that the Chair organized and our Subcommittee participated in that. Our ROP folks, the leadership, are just tremendous. I mean, they make magic happen with not a lot of resource, as a lot of educators do, but definitely these programs with no real consistency, complicated processes. I feel strongly that they will figure this out. I do encourage and ask that, as was stated by the sponsors, that this might require further thinking through the implementation process.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Again, we have good intentions in our policy, but when it gets implemented, it gets a little bit more complicated. And I like to explain. I don't know what that would be, you know, whether it's looking at a different date, maybe for these programs, March 15 maybe is not adequate. Maybe we shouldn't do March 15 at all. Some people have an opinion on that. Maybe it's focusing on getting more consistent funding to the CET program so that they can actually do this.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
That's probably the best thing we could do, and we should probably talk about accomplishing that with this policy goal. Those would be my suggested, my suggested approach as this moves forward. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. I see some hands going up, but I'm going to exercise my prerogative to jump the line here. And first of all, thank you very much to the Committee Members for your patience. The reason why I wanted to be here for this discussion, because I've been spending a lot of time with staff discussing this. Very complicated. This is more complicated than it appears.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And I appreciate the Chair of our Budget Subcommittee, after our hearing on career technical education, that you fully appreciate the complexity of, of the situation. This is much more than just, you know. Well, let me start off by saying that I'm 100% labor. I just got one of those bobbleheads a few weeks ago for being 100% labor.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But this Bill is really tearing me apart because, you know, I'm really concer ned about, it's not just a matter of giving due process rights to all teachers, which of course I want to support as a matter of principle. Every teacher deserves to have due process rights. But if it risks the existence of these regional career technical education programs, then I had a chance to talk with Mr. Carillo. The Author.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
His intent is to support more CTE programs, such as in Palmdale, to support more sheet metal workers, to support his aerospace industry. But this, I am concerned as a former Board Member of a regional occupational center, that this may undermine the viability of these programs. Precisely because, you know, I was on the Board of the ROCP. So I know that it doesn't receive direct funding, it relies on the Member Districts giving their funding to the regional program.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
You know, where the normal inclination is that the Member Districts would want to keep the money for themselves, and then on top of that they rely on these grants. And so the funding is already more complicated than adult Ed programs. And the essence of our CTE programs is that flexibility to be able to adjust the programs to the local workforce needs of the community.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
So, you know, if a ROCP in Palmdale, you know, was not able to reclassify a class from auto mechanics to sheet metal, you know, that is not meeting the goal of the CTE program. So, I just wanted the Committee to appreciate that. I'm hoping I set this Bill for a hearing because I didn't want to kill the Bill. I wanted the conversations to go forward. But I'm hoping that. Mr. Brown, you said you don't want to kill the goose.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
No one has an interest in killing these ROCP programs. Maybe the goose is the wrong example or wrong metaphor, but we want, the goal should be to provide due process protections for all teachers, while at the same time not threatening or undermining the viability of these regional CTE programs. And that is why I have a none recommendation for this Bill. And I plan on abstaining so I wanted to share that with the Committee, for whatever it's worth.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I saw Miss Addis, I saw Mr. Flora and Mister Hoover. Okay, Miss Addis.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Did he move the Bill?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Mr. Flora moved the Bill. And I think you seconded.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I already seconded. No, I'll just say the reason I support the Bill, when I look at this, just to super simplify it, school districts value these teachers, children value these programs, and yet these teachers don't have a pathway to permanency. And so at its core, people need to feel like they have a pathway to permanency.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
That's what I've heard over and over across my career, is that folks like yourself who have these special skills want to know that they're going to have some security as they've had out in the private sector, simply because of their skills. But the system hasn't allowed them to have that. So that's why I'm supporting it.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. Really appreciate bringing the Bill forward. I'm not going to be able to support it today. I think, you know, I really remain concerned about the impact that it's going to have on teachers themselves, and particularly new teachers. I know my time on a school board, March 15 was the hardest time of the year, because you have to make so many difficult decisions as an administrator.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so because of California's two-year deadline as a new teacher, you really only have 18 months to prove yourself in your district. And if funding is not secured, if funding is not sure, districts often have to make the hard decision of letting these teachers go, even if they maybe want to keep them. And so I just remain concerned that this is going to continue and really exacerbate some of those challenges. And so for those reasons, I'm going to have to oppose the Bill today.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Any further comments? Okay, I think I've stated my position. So, Mr. Carillo, you have the last word.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
You know, it is something that could be the gateway to open the conversations about potentially looking at the funding dates. I believe that the Legislature has realized the importance of investing in CTE. And if we don't have staff that feel comfortable, that have the certainty that they will have a job next year, I think that we're setting the CTE programs for failure. I appreciate the conversation, but I think that this will be open, will open the conversation to having those discussions about the deadlines.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
And again, with the big push that the Legislature has made to provide more CTE programs throughout the state, not only in my district, throughout the state. I think that we are setting ourselves to failure by not providing teachers that, again, feel comfortable, feel that that's the profession that they want to be in, like what we have here. Even with not having that certainty. Investing in CTE is something that we talked about all the time lately.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
But again, without really supporting, showing the support for the trained staff, trained teachers to be able to provide options to students that don't want to go to college because it's expensive, because they just don't want to go to college. The workforce that are in the trades are about to retire, a lot of them, and we don't really invest in the CTE qualified and protected staff.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
I think that it will be a challenge for us to prepare good, quality teachers to be able to teach the new generation in the trades. I heard of great programs during high school, but the ones that you do, mechanics, carpentry, different things that provide kids an opportunity, an option to get into the trades that we desperately need. I just wanted to make that comment just to make sure that we talk about providing options through CTE.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
But again, realizing the deadline's concern, maybe this will be the time to start those discussions so that we can truly support the CTE programs that we talk all the time about being the future of the workforce that we need. With that, I respect, we ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Secretary, please call the file item.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 11, AB-2245. The motion is to do-pass to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, 4-0. The Bill is out.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
4-1. The Bill is out. All right, next we have file item 23, AB-3088 by Mr. Oseley. Okay. All right. Very gentlemanly of you. Okay.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
She promised.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Mister Essayli. This is, Miss Wilson has been waiting all day. So this is file item 10, AB 2229 by Miss Wilson. Welcome. Motion's been made.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I do have. Thank you. And I have a group of youth who are here today and who actually have been waiting all day and watching you all work, and you have given them a lesson and how we do committee. So thank you for being an excellent example to all of them in the back.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Oh, they're your witnesses.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yeah, they're my witnesses, and they're here. All right. Thank you for the early motion and second. Thank you, chair and members, I'm pleased to present AB 2229 a bill developed out of our. There ought to be a law process this fall. We saw hundreds of submissions, almost 300 to be exact, and after a thorough vetting process, we landed on the bill before you today.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Before I begin, I would like to thank the committee staff for their work on this Bill and would like to accept the committee amendments. AB 2229 would alter the current health curriculum by adding information that is relevant to the menstrual cycle. In 2016, the California Healthy Young act was enacted to require middle and high school students to receive comprehensive sexual health education, emphasizing topics like HIV prevention, abstinence, and healthy relationships while encouraging communication with parents.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Currently, it does not state explicitly state that menstruation health is a part of comprehensive sexual health education. The lack of education perpetuates societal stigmas and taboos surrounding menstruation, leading to shame, embarrassment, and poorer health outcomes. Menstrual education is important because it will help pupils understand the naturally occurring role it plays in a healthy body and break the stigma surrounding menstruation.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I would like to now introduce my witnesses Sriya excuse me Srinivasan, student trustee for Solano Community College and the founder and president of the Solano Community College Reproductive Health club. And please note, although it says college, she is an early child early college student. So in high school attending college. Lily Stukas, a student leader for the Fairfield Suisun Unified School District thank you.
- Sriya Srinivasan
Person
Good evening chair Muratsuchi and esteemed members of the education committee. My name is Sriya Srinivasan and I'm a high school student from Fairfield, California. I'm testifying in support of AB 2229 legislation that would ensure students receive education on vital menstrual health topics, including the menstrual cycle, premenstrual syndrome, pain management, menstrual disorders, addressing the taboos and stigmas of surrounding menstruation. The absence of mandated menstrual education leaves many students uninformed about essential aspects of their health, from managing cramps to recognizing disorders and accessing hygiene products.
- Sriya Srinivasan
Person
This lack of period education endangers students physical and mental well being and also impacts our academic performance. A 2023 survey showing that 3/4 of students are more likely to say they learn more in school about the anatomy of a frog than the anatomy of a menstruating body. Despite receiving sex education in 5th, 7th, and 9th grade, I lacked knowledge about menstruation. When I was 12 years old, I lost my period for three years without understanding why.
- Sriya Srinivasan
Person
Seeking answers online, I encountered a deluge of misinformation, leaving me overwhelmed and frightened. My personal journey underscores the critical need for legislation like AB 2229, through our grassroots efforts over the past six months, we've garnered support from over 1000 youth across California. We've engaged in meaningful discussions with students, highlighting the necessity for every student in California to receive comprehensive menstrual education. My period should have never been shrouded in mystery, nor should I have suffered in silence due to misinformation and shame.
- Sriya Srinivasan
Person
By passing AB 2229, we have the opportunity to provide relief and empowerment to thousands of students. Please vote yes on AB 2229, a crucial step towards comprehensive menstrual health education. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Liliana Stukas
Person
Good afternoon, chair Muratsuchi and esteemed members of the education committee. My name is Lily Stukas. I am 16 years old and a student at Early College High School in Solano County. I am speaking in support of AB 2229. In elementary and middle school, I was taught virtually nothing regarding menstrual health. I thought PMS is what people called you when you were being difficult. I was told that tampons make you lose your virginity.
- Liliana Stukas
Person
And it took me almost a year to realize that you could pull the plastic off of a pad to make it stick. Not until this year, when beginning to conceptualize AB 2229, did I learn the facts about any of these things. I was never taught anything more than anatomy. When I got my period, I was scared and confused and felt utterly unprepared. I guarantee I would not have felt this way if I had been given the comprehensive menstrual education I needed.
- Liliana Stukas
Person
This is why AB 2229 is so important. I don't want my little sister to feel the same shame, embarrassment and confusion that I felt when I got my period. I believe that California students deserve better. All students in California, regardless of gender, need to know about the menstrual irregularities and syndromes, the phases of the menstrual cycle, hygiene management, local resource centers, and especially how to destigmatize menstruation.
- Liliana Stukas
Person
The lack of menstrual education in California directly impacts the lives of young people like me, like my little sister, like your children and grandchildren. Increased access to comprehensive, stigma free, medically accurate and culturally responsive menstrual education would improve the lives and health of current and future students. California students need you. I implore you to vote yes on AB 229. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Public comments in support of the bill.
- Lucy Carter
Person
Lucy Salcido Carter with the Alameda County Office of Education in support.
- Karen Stout
Person
Good evening, chair and members Karen Stout here on behalf of Reproductive Freedom for All California, we're in strong support. We thank the author.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Mister chair and members Tristan Brown, CFT, here in support.
- Quinn Aftab
Person
Quinn Aftab of Early College High school in support.
- Marion Salmon
Person
Good evening. Marion Salmon, the secretary on behalf of the Reproductive Health Club, we want your respectful support for AB to 2229. Thank you.
- Kaylee Fulcher
Person
My name is Kaylee Fulcher. I'm a student at Solano Community College and I am in support of AB 229. Thank you.
- Nico Cardenas
Person
Hello. My name is Nico Cardenas and I'm in support of AB 2229.
- Aarti Sharma
Person
My name is Aarti Sharma and I'm officially representing the global nonprofit, Period. Respectfully in support of AB 2229.
- Abhishek Gaur
Person
My name is Abhishek Gaur. I support the bill for AP 2229.
- Ana Petero
Person
Ana Petero, Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District governing Board trustee area six. I'm here in support of my bosses, in support of this bill. Thank you very much.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
My name is Prabha, and having personally suffered through lack of knowledge, I respectfully support this bill. Thank you.
- Srinivasan Aramugam
Person
Good evening, chair and members. My name is Srinivasan Aramugam and I represent like Nath Bay Tamil School. I'm a board member and principal of the school and I respectfully support like AB 2229.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. All right, any witnesses in opposition to the bill? Any public comments in opposition to the bill? Bringing it back to the committee? Any questions? Comments? Seeing none. Ms Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I was busy recording this very important moment, but I wanted to thank the author and the sponsor for bringing forward this from your lived experience and understanding what it means to have, period, equality and menstrual awareness at this level. And thank you for sharing the very personal stories for everybody to be able to hear and enduring a very long opportunity for us to be able to review this legislation.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
But it's really important and I'm very proud to be able to support this bill and thank you for your work.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, motion's been made and seconded. Okay. Ms Wilson. Yes. Thank you for listening to the voices of your, the youth in your community. Thank you to both of you for your excellent testimony. You're making a difference by speaking out in the legislative process, working with your Assembly Member. And so I want to congratulate you for an excellent job done. Happy to support the bill. Would you like to close?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yes. Thank you. And thank you, members, for your support. Thank you to my witnesses in support, as well as my sponsor. And even the last person that spoke up in me too, was her father, who is an excellent driver and made her sure that she got here safely. And to all those that signed on as me too, the young people, what's really neat about this is that there ought to be a law program.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Extremely important, I think, as legislators, to listen to are another way to engage with our constituents. But what I love about this particular story and why it rose to the top was because, as Assemblymember Bonta noted, their lived experience at their age, being able to engage their government and petition their government in saying something should change and then being able to be here today and testifying as such. And we look forward to getting this across the finish line, and I respectfully ask for your vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, thank you. Motion's been made and seconded. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File tem 10, AB 2229. The motion is do pass as amended, to appropriations.[Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
6-0. The bill is out. Congratulations.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you, Mr Essayli.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, looks like Mr Essayli might have scored some points with that move, but thank you for your patience. This is file item 23, AB 3088. Oh, I'm sorry, it's 3038. All right.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Thank you, Mr Chair. Good afternoon, committee. I'm here to present Assembly Bill 3038, which will require specially trained police officers, known as school resource officers, or SROs, on every K through 12 campus, serving more than 50 students by 2027. Since the early two thousands, the United States has experienced an epidemic of school shootings as incidents have rapidly risen in the number and how lethal they are.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
According to the most recent data available from the National Center for Education Statistics, there were 188 school shootings with at least one casualty during the 2021 to 2022 school year. From 2018 to 2023, California alone experienced 96 school shooting incidences. Beyond school shootings, general public safety issues have increased in the aftermath of COVID-19 and the return to in person schooling. Nationally, 38% of schools surveyed reported an increase in physical attacks or fights between students on school, and 45% reported increased threats of physical attacks or fights.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
While some schools maintain their own police department, like Los Angeles Unified or contract with outside police departments to station school resource officers on campus, more than a dozen major California school districts have moved to cut such programs.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Other school districts who initially cut the SRO programs reversed course shortly after, including Pomona Unified, which voted unanimously to bring back sros after a shooting near Pomona High School, only 14% of school districts in the western us have reported having at least one full time school resource officer in 2022. But 87% of schools with an SRO reported that these officers have had a positive impact on their schools and community.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Nothing should be more important than the safety of our schools, and no student should have to worry that they will be a victim of a school shooting or another violent incident while on campus. Sros, when used and trained properly, are not only a safety measure against violent incidences, but also act as a resource for students building community policing principles into school campuses. I now would like to introduce my witnesses here to testify and support the bill.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
I have Jason Muck, President of the Los Angeles Police Management Association, and Gil Gamez, President of the Los Angeles School Police Officers Association.
- Jason Muck
Person
Committee members. Good afternoon. Good afternoon, Mister chair. I've been with the Los Angeles Unified School District for the last 31 years as a police officer working on and off school campuses. In that time, I've seen a lot of different incidents. I've been assigned to different school campuses. I've been assigned to patrol. We're really there to advocate for these kids when we're on campus. We got defunded back in 2020 and pulled off campuses.
- Jason Muck
Person
And since that time, we've seen a 200% spike in crime on campuses in LA Unified. And these are robberies, drug offenses, weapons on campus. I've seen more edge weapon attacks than I've seen in the last five years in my 31 year career. And assaults on staff are way up. This has to stop. We have to come. There needs to be some sort of conversation about school safety, and that's what this Bill does.
- Jason Muck
Person
It brings a conversation about school safety of the State of California and keeping our kids safe. When I walked in here today, I passed no more than six armed officers and had to walk through a metal detector. Why are we not providing the same services for our kids? We need to protect them. The things that we do on campus, we provide. We have pals and PAMS programs for these kids that we provide. We provide an explorers program. We serve as role models.
- Jason Muck
Person
I can't tell you how many kids throughout the last 31 years that I've mentored on campus and that still keep in contact with me today. It's not prison to pipeline. Officers on campus are not that we're there to protect students, staff, parents, and the community at large. Thank you.
- Gilbert Gamez
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Gil Gamez. I'm the President of the LA School Police Officers Association. Like my partner said, we were defunded a third of our budget. $25 million was taken from our budget and given to another program in the school district. And after an analysis of everything, the biggest issue was not removing the police officers from campus because the police officers were preying on students and staff trying to arrest them. The biggest issue was staff.
- Gilbert Gamez
Person
Administrators and deans and teachers had problems they could not and were not trained to handle. Problems like victims reporting that they were the victims of robberies, of victims reporting they were the victims of domestic violence, victims reporting they were the victims of many violent crimes. Teachers did not sign up to deal with children who chase other children around schools with loaded guns. This was a 13 year old little girl who had a host of issues, and our officers responded extremely appropriately.
- Gilbert Gamez
Person
Once we had the young lady, we brought her food. We got a female counselor in there and we pleaded for her. And after about an hour, she told us where the gun that she had was found. She was chasing another student around campus with this loaded gun. Because she had her own issues, she got the psychological help that she needed, and Department of Family Services stepped in and helped her and her family.
- Gilbert Gamez
Person
This is a picture of a middle school where there was an adult male trying to lure young little girls over to his car. It's an AK 47, a weapon of war. A shotgun with a pistol grip, a non California compliant shotgun, handguns, multiple magazines and equipment to carry hundreds of ammunition. And the magazines were even taped together, so once 30 rounds of the bullets were shot, they could flip it over and shoot another 30 rounds.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Gonna ask you to try to wrap up.
- Gilbert Gamez
Person
I'll wrap it up now. We were removed from campus and the edge weapons attacks are ridiculous. Our officers are responding to multiple stabbings on campus, and they're not even there as a deterrent anymore. They're there to put on multiple tourniquets and help trip the victims. I'm coming with hat in hand. I do not know what to do. I don't know how to solve this.
- Gilbert Gamez
Person
The school district's answer was to hire nonprofit organizations that hire ex convicts, formerly incarcerated individuals of 20 years to replace us on campus. I don't know what to do. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Public comments in support of the bill, please come forward.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Thank you, Mr Chair and members. Ryan Sherman with Riverside Sheriff's Association in support, as well as support of Monterey County Deputy Sheriff's Association, Placer county deputy sheriffs and police officer associations of Arcadia, Burbank, Claremont, Corona, Culver City, Fullerton, Murrieta, Newport Beach, Nevada, Pomona, Riverside, Santa Ana, Upland, and the California Coalition of School Safety Professionals. All these POAs, they all represent and work with school resource officers. Thank you very much.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses, any witnesses in opposition to the Bill, please come forward.
- Jeffrey Freitas
Person
Jeff Freitas, President of CFT, a union of educators and classified professionals. I'm here in opposition to AB 3038. Just a little bit of background about me. I grew up in the Central Valley, Los Banas, where I obtained my hunting license through training and certification. Later attended West Point. I've had more training in firearms and weapons than most educators, most people in our schools other than SROs. My point is that I've grown up and have this experience, and I have the proper understanding and use and purpose of firearms and weapons of war.
- Jeffrey Freitas
Person
I'm also a high school math teacher and basketball coach by trade. I was in the classroom in California, mind you, when Columbine happened. Every year after, on the anniversary, we had anxiety about what might occur. We would hope that April 20 would be on a weekend. But I know adding guns to our. Schools does not create a safe and welcoming environment for anyone, whether they're an educator or a student or a parent.
- Jeffrey Freitas
Person
That's why we oppose this bill and requiring armed SROs or security guards. They don't build the environment that we need for all students. Students that come from communities that have historically been targeted by armed police officers. Black and brown students, LGBTQ students, and other students that have a historical background. That have been targeted. During the growth of this country, of armed officers in our schools, we have seen a growth of shooting in our schools. Let me just point out that there was an SRO on campus in Parkland when 17 people died. There were armed officers for over an hour at Uvalde when students continued to be shot and killed.
- Jeffrey Freitas
Person
There was, in fact, in Santa Fe High school in Texas, where they praised the bravery of armed SROs that stopped us shooting after eight students and two staff members were killed. It did not stop the shooting.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Can I ask you to try to wrap up?
- Jeffrey Freitas
Person
Sure. What we need in our schools are nurses and counselors. We don't need guns. This is not the direction that we need to do. We need common gun sense laws. That's what we need to vote on. I ask you to vote no on this bill. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Malaika Parker
Person
Hello. My name is Malaika Parker. I'm from the Black Organizing Project, and I just want to start by saying, just because I'm nervous, and I don't want to forget to say this, that the accounting that we heard here about the relationship between young people and police on site is not in connection with the actual lived experience of most black and brown children who experience in their communities over policing a deep, deep sense of criminalization and just a lack of respect for children behavior.
- Malaika Parker
Person
Yes, children fight sometimes, and it is a responsibility of the adults to de-escalate and to help resolve and get us to a place where young people are in greater community. That does not mean that they need to have deeper interactions with police policing. That does not mean that they need to be fearful that everything that they do as children will be treated as a criminal behavior. So I want to start there.
- Malaika Parker
Person
I'm here today on behalf of the Black Organizing Project and representing black students, parents and community members who just. Who, excuse me, just three short years ago won the elimination of the Oakland Unified School District Police Department. This one was a step in the direction of creating true safety in schools. Through our collective labor, we have worked to identify practices, policies and ways of being with children that are focused on holistic, preventative practices.
- Malaika Parker
Person
We understand that not only do more police not keep children safe, it also results in more harm. It creates disconnection for young people who already experience policing in their communities. We also know that black and brown children and neurodivergent children are at risk of greater policing when police are on site. We also know that school resource officers are not appropriately trained to engage with young people.
- Malaika Parker
Person
Part of our push is to ensure that there are appropriate training mechanisms for the adults that are on site and for greater budgeting for more robust resources for training of staff, for more wellness practitioners and for violence prevention services.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Can I ask you to wrap up?
- Malaika Parker
Person
Sure. This bill and others of its kind threaten to treat our children as fodder for an unjust and uneven criminal justice system. I stand with black and brown communities across the nation asking you to do what is in your purview today and every day, not to move forward with legislation that offers harmful practices and that really treats our children, black and brown children and children living in poverty, as a sideline for making some people feel safe.
- Malaika Parker
Person
We want you all to look at legislation that actually encompasses full wholeness and wellness in schools, that engages everyone, that doesn't jeopardize some children at the benefit of others. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Public comments in opposition to the bill please come forward.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
Hello, chair and members. Rachel Bhagwat from ACLU California Action in opposition to this bill. There's a large number of organizations opposing this, but with respect, I'll add the opposition of Disability Rights California, Public Advocates, Youth Justice Education Clinic at Loyola Law School, Dolores Huerta Foundation, the Collective for Liberatory Lawyering, Students Deserve Los Angeles, Cancel the Contract, Antelope Valley, Civil Rights Education and Enforcement Center, Indigenous Justice, Fresno Barrios Unidos, San Jose Unified Equity Coalition, California Alliance for Youth and Community Justice and the Alliance for Boys of Men, Alliance for Boys and Men of Color. Thank you.
- Chris Reefe
Person
Good evening. Chris Reefe, on behalf of California School Boards Association in opposition.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no further public comments in opposition, let me bring it back to the committee. Mister Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thanks for bringing this forward. You know, I want to start, I guess, with my concerns with the bill and then finish up with some of the things I like about the bill. You know, I think one of the. I think, points the CSBA makes in their letter is the funding issue. And so the way I really look. At this is, I think this is a great aspiration. I think it'd be great to do, I think. But unless the state's ready to pour a lot of money into funding this program, which I don't know if we are or if we have the capability to do that, that's where my concern lies. I think it has to be kept at the local level simply because, you know, these are really expensive programs.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And, you know, I think there's now only 19 school police departments in the state. Generally speaking, those are in larger school districts. My former school district is a strong supporter of SROs, and we still only have the budget for about four in our school district, and we could use many more, granted, but we just don't have the dollars to do that. So I think that would be the one thing that I would flag. That being said, I think this body and this state needs to do more to support our law enforcement officers on our campuses that are keeping our students safe.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
In my former district, when we polled parents on this issue, over 70% of parents strongly support SROs on our campuses. You know, it's interesting to see some of the opposition here, to be honest with you, because teachers and administrators in. Those districts overwhelmingly support having SROs. There are nearly 400 incidents of violence every year on the campus or on the in the school district where I came from, and that puts students and teachers at risk.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
You know, we can talk about other approaches, but at the end of the day, when something violent is happening, we need someone to respond, and it shouldn't be a teacher and it shouldn't be an administrator. And, you know, the other point I always try to make is what happens when we get rid of SROs and then violence occurs?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
What does the school district do or what does the administrator do? They call law enforcement and they respond from outside of that school district. Why would we not instead want someone that is building a relationship with these students to be responding to these incidents, rather. Than a law enforcement official that has no relationship with these students?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so I always, you know, pose that question to the opposition when it's talked about is what happens when violence actually occurs. If you get rid of SROs, what is actually going to happen? I personally believe that having SROs on our campuses is a really critical way to build positive relationships with law enforcement.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Something that we don't get enough of, and that is the opportunity to do it. And I've seen our SROs in my community at work. They love these kids. They're there to support these kids. And yes, they're there to keep them safe as well. And so I will be supporting the bill today. And yeah, just wanted to say those things. Thanks.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any other comments from the committee, Mister Alvarez?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I'd make some comments. First of all, thank you for bringing the topic. I think there are a lot of. I too hear from teachers and administrators. We have to acknowledge the fact that there's, if you are a parent or you ever talk to people who have kids in schools, there are incidents that are increasing. That has to be acknowledged. But I don't know that every incident requires someone with a weapon to be on campus. But I also am not someone who believes there should be nobody available, because there are incidents when you do need to have people who are appropriately trained and who can respond appropriately.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And so I think that, I'm not sure that this bill actually analyzes that. What I would like to see, especially from a budgetary perspective, that's always a perspective I have to look at, given my role here in the Assembly, is what is the right number? You work at a city, there are standards for how many officers per capita. In order to enforce the laws and make sure that you're, your city has the right personnel. And I think it would be worthy of understanding what that is in the school setting.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I think that that is information that I would find of interest and that perhaps that information can help me make a much better decision on this. But given sort of just this blanket, every school with more than 50 kids, that just doesn't seem like it's been well researched. And in terms of understanding, what is that? At what number do you have enough people available? So I hear really two different perspectives from the two sides. It's like we need them everywhere and we don't need them anywhere.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And that's not where I'm at. We need some, we need to know where they need to go. And I don't think the bill actually responds to that need. And so I won't be supportive, but am interested in hearing how do we get to the right number? And I would be able to engage in that conversation and support something along those lines. Thank you.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I think thank you to the committee for your very apt analysis and I would point to several of the evidentiary components that you offer to be able to disavow us of the belief that children are safer when we have school resource officers on campus. Here on page six, reviews of the literature have suggested that there is insufficient evidence for drawing a definitive conclusion about the overall effectiveness of school based law enforcement programs.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And there is no conclusive evidence that the presence of school based law enforcement has a positive effect on student perceptions of safety in their classrooms. Goes on to say that the study, a different study, also reports that SROs intensify the use of suspensions, expulsions, police referrals, and the arrest of students. And certainly we all know it to be true that there's a disproportionate impact on black and brown students when there are police officers causing a higher level of police engagement and interaction with children.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
That is, for me, something that we have spent a lot of time in this legislature actually fighting against at this time. This legislation, for me, is a step backwards, not a step forward in any regard. And I would look to have us focus on legislation that actually increases our opportunity to make students feel safer by doing things like making sure that the prevalence of guns is reduced. So with that, I will not be supporting this bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Miss Addis.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
First, I want to thank our witness. I'm sorry, I didn't catch your name, but it takes a lot of bravery to come and speak, and I don't think we can have this conversation without acknowledging what some of these interactions do to black and brown communities. And I want to appreciate you. I appreciate assemblymember Bonta for being consistent and reminding us of that piece. On a personal level, I have interacted with school resource officers, and I also want to say thank you to you.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I have had a very different experience, and I don't say this to undermine what's been said in other communities, but I just want to say I know there are positive interactions. I don't believe more guns on school campuses is going to help us, though. I'm sensitive to the predicament that you just said. You came hat in hand.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And I really relate to the frustration of feeling like funds are cut and then schools are going to other sources to do a job that, that you were already doing. I think those are all of this valid. At its core though, this is blanket legislation and I don't think we have a blanket problem. I think there are issues where possibly school resource officers are needed. In my situation, armed officers weren't needed, but having an officer was very beneficial.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
So I relate to what assemblymember Alvarez said, said that we need to really look at this with a much finer point instead of having every school, every district, every community, it's just not the case. I don't think the data shows it's the case and I don't think the data shows that guns on school campuses make kids safe.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And we need to have that deeper conversation that the legislature has dug into before my time of what has happened in black and brown communities is very detrimental and very different. So it's solely for those reasons that I can't support this but want to really thank you for your service and appreciate, you know, there are officers on campuses that do a good job and I don't want to undermine that in not supporting this bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any other comments from the committee? Seeing none. Thank you very much Mister Essayli, for bringing this conversation to the legislature. I would agree with Miss Addis that, you know, I am aware of positive experiences with school resource officers.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
The school resource officer at my daughter's public high school makes efforts to get to know the students develop relationships. A true example of what I would consider community based policing, preventing problems before they get out of hand. And so I think there is a role and a place for school resource officers.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
You know, at the same time, I think we've had a consistent theme, Mister Essayli, that, you know, I would cite the often, you know, the principle often attributed to conservatives that we should have local control on this, that it should be up to local school districts to decide, you know, whether they want school armed school district officers are not school resource officers or not. And so for that reason, I will not be voting for your bill. But you have the final word.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Thank you mister chair. With all due respect, I think the safety of our children is a national issue. It's not a local issue. And the reason I proposed this bill and proposed that an officer would be present on every campus is because I've given this a lot of thought.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
When there's another school shooting, I'm not going to be the one who just. Offers thoughts and prayers. I'm someone who's going to have offered. A solution that will at least given these kids a chance to survive. When I look at the shooting, for example, in Nashville, where armed gunperson came in and started shooting, it took the police 11 minutes to get there.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Six people died in that time. As soon as the police got there, they were able to engage and kill the shooter, preventing them from killing other students. This is the reality that we live in. Guns are never going away. We have the second amendment in the. United States and we're never getting rid of guns. What are we going to do to give our kids a chance to survive when an outside threat comes on campus?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And I would say if there's no evidence that armed officers provide any form of safety, why do we have armed sergeants in the Capitol? Why don't you guys vote to get rid of our armed sergeants? It's just not. I'm sorry, but I don't believe it's a very genuine argument. Police officers who are trained, especially SROs, who are specifically trained to interact with students, are the safest people to have on campus.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And they're the only people who have the ability to engage and stop a deadly threat that faces a teacher, administrator or student. That's why I introduced this bill. And to the opposition who says that these officers create a dangerous or harmful environment for students.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I said guns did, not the officers.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Okay, well, the officers with the guns. I would say, is this a better environment for a student? So I just, I don't, I don't think that, you know, the concerns about black and brown kids. You should be worried about the black and brown kids who are getting hurt on campus, not just the ones offending. I care deeply about all kids. So for that, mister chair, I hope the committee will reconsider and do something about gun violence in school shootings. What's the committee's solution? I've been offered no amendments and there's been no engagement. So with that, I respectfully request that the committee vote aye on this bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. We need a motion in a second. Okay. Madam Secretary, please call the roll file.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item 23 AB 33038. The motion is do pass to the Public Safety Committee. [Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Two to four, the measure fails.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Mister Hoover. Mister Hoover.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Oh, I'm sorry. Yes. Mister Gabriel has been sitting.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gabriel. File item 13, AB-2316. All right, Mr. Gabriel, the floor is yours.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and colleagues. I gather it's been a long afternoon for all of you, so I'm going to be relatively brief, but happy to answer any questions or engage on any. Of the subjects in which you'd like more information. And let me just start by accepting the Committee's proposed amendments. I want to thank you, Mr. Chair and the staff for the thoughtful feedback and amendments, and compliments to the staff on the excellent analysis. I really appreciate it.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
I am pleased today to present AB-2316 which would prohibit public schools from serving foods containing several harmful chemicals that have been linked to serious harms, including cancer, hyperactivity, and neurobehavioral problems in children.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
We know these chemicals are unsafe because of research done by the State of California. In 2021, a California-commissioned research released by the California Environmental Protection Agency that concluded consumption of synthetic food dyes can result in hyperactivity and other neurobehavioral problems in children.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
The report noted the dramatic increase in ADHD in American children and noted that the FDA approval for these dyes was based on studies that were 35 to 70 years old and not even designed to detect these issues in children. That's why the European Union and many other countries have banned, restricted, or required these coloring agents to meet strict labeling requirements. Likewise, titanium dioxide, a coloring agent often found in sunscreens, cosmetics, paints, and plastics.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
And that is probably on the paint on this wall, has been banned in the European Union since 2022 from all foods, not just foods in schools because of studies showing its harm to the immune system, DNA, and chromosomes. Likewise, the EU severely restricts or specifically requires synthetic dyes to carry a warning label on a product, noting that they can cause harm to hurt kids. On a personal level, as a parent and as someone who struggled with ADHD. And as a father of a child who has struggled with ADHD.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
I find it unacceptable that we allow our schools to serve foods with additives that we know are causing harm to our children and we know will interfere with their ability to learn. And I will say for those of us that have ever watched a child struggle, that is a difficult thing to do.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
We spend significant time and resources on interventions to help our kids succeed. It is then self-defeating to provide them with support and therapy in the morning and then at lunch, expose them to chemicals that are going to make their challenges harder. We know that if one kid in a class struggles with behavioral issues, it can impact the learning environment for all students in that classroom.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Let me be clear. This Bill will not result in a ban. It's not going to result in any products or foods coming off the shelf. We are hoping that one of two things will happen. Either these companies are going to make minor modifications to their recipes, by the way, the same modifications that they've already made to their products in Europe and so many other countries around the world.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Or school districts will have the option to switch to an alternative product. That may be switching from one brand of applesauce to another. That may be switching from something like Cheetos to Lay's potato chips. But we know that there are many, many alternatives out there.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
I'm proud that this Bill is supported by a broad coalition of labor, consumer protection, environmental, and cancer prevention organizations. And I'm very pleased today to have with me to testify in support of the Bill. Scott Faber, the Senior Vice President for Government Affairs at the Environmental Working Group.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
And Kristin Zellhart, the Senior Manager for K-12 nutrition standards at Eat Real. Thank you and respectfully request an aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Please proceed.
- Scott Faber
Person
Great. Thank you Mr. Chairman. We strongly support AB-2316. These dyes were last approved by the FDA 40 to 50 years ago, long before studies could detect their effects on behavior. The overwhelming evidence now shows that these dyes are making it harder for some of our kids to learn, especially our kids with ADHD.
- Scott Faber
Person
CalEPAs unprecedented study looked at human studies of what happens to kids when they eat dyes, and animal studies of what happens to their brains. And California's state scientists conclusively determined that some kids suffer from behavioral effects, including hyperactivity, and that these dyes change the structure of their brains and how the chemicals in their brains transmit signals. Even the FDA, relying on outdated science from the 1950s, acknowledged in 2011 that some kids could be impacted by these dyes.
- Scott Faber
Person
The bad news is the FDA has not flagged these chemicals for reconsideration and has not asked Congress for any additional money to conduct these reviews. The good news is that we know these companies can produce foods without these dyes. After other countries passed laws to require warnings on warnings on foods with these dyes, companies quickly replaced the synthetic dyes.
- Scott Faber
Person
In products like these fruit loops made in the United States with natural colors. These fruit loops made for consumption in Canada, the same company, the same product. One has synthetic colors linked to hyperactivity, one does not.
- Scott Faber
Person
But the even better news is that we don't need to reformulate school foods to offer our kids foods without dyes. The vast, vast majority of foods offered in our schools do not have these colors. Of the more than 10,000 foods offered through the lunch line, only about 400 or so have one or more of these colors.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
We're going to ask you to wrap up.
- Scott Faber
Person
Yes, sir. Of the 1600 foods offered through the LA carte line, only about 40 or so have these colors. Prior to joining EWG, I worked for the Grocery Manufacturers Association. I was their head of government affairs. We all know what the industry will tell you. That the FDA will cover this, that there's not enough science that our school food professionals can't do this. There's a mountain of evidence that these dyes are harming our kids. The FDA has exited the field and no one will work harder to protect our kids than our school food professionals.Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kristin Zellhart
Person
Good evening, Assemblymembers. My name is Kristin Zellhart, and I'm the Senior Manager of K-12 nutrition and standards for a nonprofit health organization, Eat Real. I am also a mom of a three-year-old who's soon going to be in public schools. So I'm very passionate about this issue. I have over 10 years of experience working with school food professionals here in California who are tirelessly working to ensure all students have access to meals that support the health and their ability to learn.
- Kristin Zellhart
Person
I'm here today in strong support of AB 2316 as I see this legislation, a vital step towards protecting the health of our children and their ability to thrive. School districts are already removing these dyes on their own volition, and they're doing this without major challenges. I have witnessed this firsthand with the 14 school districts that are working with Eat Real, our nonprofit, and I've actually seen positive effects on these programs as they move to remove these food diets from their meal programs.
- Kristin Zellhart
Person
This Bill would only impact a small subset of products currently being sold, and as stated, districts have alternatives that they can choose from to meet the federal school meal requirements. There is also ample evidence that the food manufacturers can reformulate these products to remove the dyes, as demonstrated from the food manufacturers. Pardon me. That food manufacturers can remove these dyes, as demonstrated by the example today, and also by consumer demand in the private sector. So we know that it's possible.
- Kristin Zellhart
Person
I see this as an opportunity for innovation and building transparency in the food that we serve in public schools. Finally, parents and caregivers support this Bill as they understand the direct impact, the behavioral challenges have on the ability for children to learn and thrive. This Bill will ensure that the meals that are served to students during the school day will nourish them without the risk for harmful side effects.
- Kristin Zellhart
Person
As a nutrition professional and as a mom, I believe prioritizing student health is paramount while focusing on real food ingredients that are critical for the growth and development of our children. The only colors that I want to see on my children's plates are the real vibrant colors of real whole foods. Let's prioritize student health and pass this Bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kristin Zellhart
Person
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Public comments in support of the Bill, please come forward.
- Matt Lege
Person
Matt Leger on behalf of STIU California. In support.
- Susan Little
Person
Susan Little here representing not only EWG, but also Consumer Reports, California Nurses for Environmental Health and Justice, Families Advocating for Chemical and Toxic Safety, Friends Committee on Legislation, San Francisco Bay Physicians for Social Responsibility, Center for Environmental Health, and a host of other health and environmental and public interest organizations. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any witnesses in opposition to the Bill, please come forward.
- Lee Reid
Person
So Lee Angela Reed, on behalf of the California School of Nutrition Association. These are the 2,700 food service directors across the state. And we have some, while we appreciate the intent of the Bill, have some concerns, one of which is addressed in the analysis with regard to exempting the USDA, which is who regulates us, the USDA Commodities Food. So if you're taking that a minute, we really appreciate it. Second though, is the timeline. While we appreciate what the analysis lays out, our districts are buying and ordering their food right now for next year. So the timeline's a little short. We look forward to working with you, author.
- Lee Reid
Person
Your staff has been fantastic. We look forward to continuing to do that. Current timeline is a big problem. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Albioni.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
Hi, Dennis Albioni. On behalf of the Consumer Brands Association and the American Beverage Association, I think there's a couple issues that should be addressed with this Bill. The folks talked primarily and only about the school nutrition program. So that's one area of conversation, and we could talk about that. Obviously, FDA has approved these dyes as well as titanium dioxide and is reviewing them, and numerous entities across the world have continued to review them and deem them safe. And that's a standard that has been established.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
What in the school nutrition program? So part of the Bill and all the testimony was about school nutrition program. But if you read section one of the Bill, it says notwithstanding any other section of law, this is not only about the school nutrition program, it's also about friday night football games, it's about food sold and done anytime after school, on school grounds, fundraisers, all those issues.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
So I think those are issues that need to be addressed is. What is the Bill, what's the attention of the author? We've talked to staff, and be frank, they weren't clear what the attention was. So I think it'd be good before this Bill moves out of this Committee to understand what we're trying to do here and what we're focused on. If it's a school nutrition program, that's one element, and we could talk through that and go on that.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
If it's beyond the school nutrition program and it's you know, popsicles and things served after the 30 minutes after school and those areas. And then if it's about, you know, snack bars at football games, that's a much different Bill than what was testified on here. And if that's the issue, then it's interesting. Then we're just trying to figure out why I was drafted with Section One's even in the Bill, because Sections Two through Five talk about the school nutrition program.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
So we could get clarity on that and understand how the bills, what, you know, what the intention is. Well, I'll continue. So they've been deemed safe, the Bill, the school nutrition program, it is clear that this will reduce the amount. I'm not an alarmist to say nobody's going to reformulate in those areas, but it will reduce choice. Clearly, and we discussed this with the consultant, if there's six products that a school nutritionist can select from right now, some companies will not reformulate.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
They may leave the California market, and then you've got four or three, so you have less choice for the school nutritionist. Second, what that leads to is less competition. Less competition likely means higher prices for the school programs as well. So, as well as the cost of reformulating. So that's going to be some cost pressure on the programs as you have less choice. I think that's well established in the market economics.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
The next part is, as we clarify, I don't want to go too much in if we don't understand. If it's just about the school nutrition program, then I'll leave those other comments that we discussed with the consultant off at this point. So with that all.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Gabriel, do you want to address the. It's my understanding that you have accepted the amendment clarifying that the existing exemption for fundraising events shall apply to this measure.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
That's correct.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
What about after school? So does that include at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, a snack bar that they have, or any of those kind of things?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Yeah, I mean, you know, I will say, and I'm looking for the language right here, but it was specifically to address the concern that you all raised about that. So the point here is to apply to breakfast and lunch that are served to kids at school. The football game on friday night, a couple hours after school has ended. This will not apply.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
Okay, thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any public comments in opposition to the Bill, please come forward.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Mr. Chairman. Randy on behalf of the American Tenancy Council, our concern as outlined by Mister Albioni.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dean Talley
Person
Chair and Members. Dean Talley with the California Manufacturers and Technology Associations. Opposed from the comments from my colleague. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Margie Lie
Person
Margie Lie. Samson Advisors. On behalf of the California League of Food Producers. In respectful opposition.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Okay. Seeing no further public comments in opposition, bringing back to the Committee. Mister Alvarez.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you. I like to get a sample of the fruit loops to make sure that they taste the same.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
We'll do a blind taste test after Committee.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
That's a good experiment. I would just say I think we cleared up the opposition which appreciate the testimony. That's why we have Committee. So I believe that's been addressed. So those concerns are addressed. I don't need to tell the Chairman of the Budget Committee that there are cost pressures on our food programs. We've had this conversation at our Subcommittee. That's the only concern. I know I've expressed that to you. So we just want to as we go forward identify what those cost pressures could be.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And really the conversation that that Subcommitee was we need to do a better job as Californians of getting more resources from the Federal Government in terms of match. So that's the only concern that I have as we are trying to address collectively our budget shortfall. But otherwise given the response to the opposition, be supportive. Thank you.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Miss Bonta. I'm sorry Vice Chair Flora. Then Miss Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just have a question about the timing, the implementation timing raised by the opposition comment. Very fair. The school districts need to be able to plan, particularly in these particular times. So have you considered changing the time?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
We have and I just want to appreciate the comments of the tweener about the timing and also about the other is the commodities issues. We are very interested in having those conversations with them. We want to get to a Bill that's ultimately workable for everybody. We're not trying to put people in an impossible situation. So we will definitely have those conversations with them.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
I think as some of you remember when we did the California Food Safety Act last year. We ended up at the end of the process with a really strong Bill, but also one that had bipartisan support, that removed huge, huge amounts of opposition. And that's our intention to do with this. You know, it's our first Committee so we haven't had a chance to have all those conversations.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
But I can promise you we will work on all of those to make sure that folks feel good about those issues.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Vice Chair Flora.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. I just want to say thank you for bringing us forward and this is not a Bill that I actually thought I was going to support. It just isn't. I think you had the Skittle Bill last year, and I'm not sure I was with you on that one, but it is interesting, and when I thought about it more yesterday when we talked, I do have a daughter that has some learning disabilities, and to this day we haven't exactly pinpointed why.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Right? And I am sure as heck not saying it's this, I'm just saying we don't know. And so I think there's a conversation that needs to be had. And so I look forward to you. I mean, working through the committees, getting this Bill to the floor, and the amendments that you, I'm sure, will probably work through, but we'll take another look on the floor. But I am, I'm happy to support it today, even though my ruffles, I just checked, are no longer good.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Now I'm freaking out about the ruffles, but we'll sort through that later. But I do appreciate the concept and the thought. And like I said, there's a lot of learning disabilities out there that cannot be traced to something, and I think that's something we need to take a look at.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Yeah.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. I just want to thank the author for bringing this forward. I am going to see this in ESTM, and so I'm going to withhold my vote today. I'm going to lay off, but I think you've done a lot of, I really appreciate you taking the amendments you've already taken. I would like to see this timing issue get addressed as well for the nutrition programs. I think that's a really important thing for me.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
But you know, I do think I would say if my wife was sitting there, she'd probably be like, hey, vote for this. But I think you're really, you're getting at something important, and if we can get to a place where, you know, it's as workable as we can get, it definitely would be happy to support it in the future. So thanks.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Gabriel. Will you commit to working with the Committee staff on the implementation timeline concerns raise?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. And if we learn that federal commodity foods contain these additives, will you commit to excluding commodity foods as the Bill moves forward?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Yeah, we're absolutely happy to have that conversation.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. Otherwise, we'll need to see you again in the Committee. Thank you. With that, I'm happy to support the Bill for today. Thank you. Would you like to close?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and I just want to appreciate all the thoughtful comments from colleagues. Let me just say Assemblymember Alvarez, you and I probably share the concerns about cost and any type of cost pressures. Similarly, we will not let this Bill increase costs. I think we have a lot of reasons that we think, actually that it's not going to is starting with the fact that more than 95% of the foods served in schools don't contain these chemicals.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
And I also think that there's a world in which this could potentially be revenue positive to the state. So I think about all of the money that we expend, and I look at this through the perspective of my son with an IEP.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
All of the money that we expend on children. Right? Whether it's occupational therapy, in-classroom support, pull-out support, and unfortunately for some number of those children, what is likely going on is that they're getting all that therapy and support, and then they're eating something at lunch that they don't, and they and their families don't understand is making all of their challenges much harder. And I had this discussion the other day with a friend of mine from college, and he also has a son with ADHD.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
And we were talking about the challenges of raising a child with ADHD. And he said, you know, they were lucky. They figured out that blue food dye, blue food coloring is one of the things that is a trigger for their child. And so I've been able to eliminate that from the diet. And the improvement that they have seen in their child has been tremendous. So you have my commitment, we will work on that. And I'm not gonna let this become something that creates cost pressure.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Mr. Flora, I just want to thank you. I really appreciate your support today. As you know, I feel very, very strongly that issues of food safety should not be partisan issues.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
And we have a legacy of that in California, you know, under Governor Schwarzenegger, moving forward to move ahead of some of the federal standards here for food that's served in our schools, to make sure that our kids not only are getting safe and healthy food, but at a minimum are not getting food that is dangerous for them. Right?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
This is not necessarily about healthy eating. This is about chemicals that we know from research are causing harm to our children. So I just want to thank you for the vote. I want to thank you for the conversation. You as well, Assemblymember Hoover, for your open mind. And with that, I would respectfully request your aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Motion's made and seconded. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 13, AB 2316. The motion is do-pass as amended to Environmental Safety. [Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Five votes. The Bill is out.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. I have a bill to present to accommodate a witness who needs to catch a flight. Thank you very much, Mr. Hoover. I normally would go to the end, and so that is file item number 12, AB 2268. And I would like to turn the gavel over to our Vice Chair.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Ready when you are.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. This bill I'm presenting, Assembly Bill 2268 which seeks to exempt students in the transitional kindergarten from being administered the English language Proficiency assessments for California shorthand ELPAC.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
You'll hear from educators on why this test, as we're rapidly ramping up for universal transitional kindergarten, we need to make sure that we are properly identifying our English language learners. This current test is not developmentally appropriate for four year olds.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And I'll turn it over to our educators to explain why this the TK students should be exempted from the ELPAC. With me in support are Patricia Lozano, Executive Director of Early Edge California, and Katryn Bermudez, a literacy coach at Amesti Elementary in Pajaro Valley Joint Unified School District.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. First witness, two minutes, bipartisan. First and second, have been made.
- Patricia Lozano
Person
Thank you so much for the opportunity to testify today. My name is Patricia Lozano. I am the executive director of Early Edge California. I have been a champion for 25 years working with little kids. And as an English learner myself, know the complexities of learning more than one language.
- Patricia Lozano
Person
So what we want to really emphasize is that we want to find an assessment that is appropriate for four year olds. What happens with the ELPAC is that it was not designed for young four year olds.
- Patricia Lozano
Person
So, you know, as a teacher myself and as a researcher, I know the importance of finding the right tool because we believe that we still need the support, we still need the funding, but the ELPAC is not appropriate.
- Patricia Lozano
Person
So now this bill, what is trying to find the solution? We want to find the right assessment. We want to understand how four year olds are learning languages, so we don't want to classify too many kids as English learners when they are not.
- Patricia Lozano
Person
So this is why we are asking you for your support, to find the solution. Thank you very much.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Next witness, please.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
Hello. Thank you for the opportunity to testify. I'm Katryn Bermudez. A teacher at a Amesti Elementary School in Watsonville. I've been a teacher for 13 years, and I've had the opportunity myself to administer the ELPAC for four years to students in fifth grade, including the individually administered speaking section.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
Universal transitional kindergarten has been amazing in getting younger children into classrooms, including my son Gael, who is an English language learner. I urge you to support AB 2268. This issue is about first impressions and fair shots.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
Every day of TK is a relatively giant percentage of young students perception of what school is and who they are. One day, Gael's teacher showed him how to make a magnifying glass with his fingers and squint with one eye, and she told him, you are a letter detective.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
And that stuck with him for the rest of the year. When we walked around the store, he was a letter detective. Do you see how powerful that is as a parent?
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
It felt amazing, like a great first impression and a fair shot. Early that spring, he took the ELPAC. He was meeting all the TK standards on his winter report card. He was still learning to hold a pencil and form letters. And now I am sure that no one exploded explicitly told him, you are not a writer. But that's what stuck with him for the rest of the year.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
Because when my four year old took the kindergarten ELPAC, a tester who he'd never met before, asked him to write a story, and he knew enough about being a letter detective to know that he failed.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
He couldn't write the messing sound, and he definitely couldn't write an entire word in English, and that was his narrative for the rest of the year. He's not a writer. Do you see how powerful that is?
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
I'm telling you as clearly as I can that the results of this inappropriate and invalid test did not serve me as a parent. Gael getting an overall one made me a teacher panic for no reasons.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
I have a master's degree in the pedagogy of second language acquisition, and I still felt like I failed to prepare my son when in reality the testing infrastructure had failed him. Raising strong bilingual children will keep California an economic powerhouse and a cultural lighthouse.
- Katryn Bermudez
Person
Starting the ELPAC in kindergarten, not transitional kindergarten, is a crucial step I urge you to take today. Thank you for your time, and I encourage your support of AB 2268.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
You must be a teacher. That was right on time. Well done. Witnesses in support.
- Cristina Salazar
Person
Cristina Salazar with Californians Together proud co-sponsor.
- Jennifer Baker
Person
Good evening. Jennifer Baker with the California Association for Bilingual Education, one of the bill's co-sponsors as well proudly in support.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Mitch Steiger with CFT, also in support.
- Patti Herrera
Person
Good evening. Patti Herrera on behalf of the Association of California School Administrators and the Fresno Unified School District in support.
- Pamela Gibbs
Person
Pamela Gibbs, representing the Los Angeles County Office of Education in support of the bill. And also authorized to speak for the Office of Riverside County Superintendent of Schools in support of the bill.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anyone in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to the Committee. Any questions from the Committee, Mr. Alvarez?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
No questions. Just thank you for the work. As a English learner myself, and a father of two English learners who are now biliterate, I really appreciate the focus on this. And testing at that level is just. It's just hard to imagine with a kid who is barely, like you said, learning to pick up a pencil sometimes. So appreciate the thoughtfulness and from the coalition and from the author, thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Ms. Addis.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I'll just add on briefly. Right bill, right time for our kiddos. And normally I would want more information rather than less, but I don't think this is the appropriate way to get this information from these children at that age. So I appreciate you bringing it forward before TK is widely available or required.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any other questions from the Committee? Seeing none. Mr. Chair, would you like to close?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 12, AB 2268. The motion is due. You pass to the floor.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Bill's out with 5-0. Mr. Hoover, I think you're up next.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, Mr. Hoover, you have two bills. Do you have a preference on which one?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I'd like to do 3140 first because I have a witness that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, so that is file item 25.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
How to get them out of here. She wants her cell phone number. After this.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Yeah, I have to call his wife and apologize after this.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. AB 3140, Mr. Hoover, the floor is yours.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Mr. Chair and Members appreciate the opportunity to present AB 3140. I want to start by accepting the Committee Amendments and want to thank Committee staff for working closely with my office on this.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
This is a district bill that would streamline the process for local school district reorganizations by requiring the State Board of Education to approve a petition of reorganization within 24 months.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
A study was recently funded in my district by City of Folsom, Rancho Cordova and the Folsom Cordova Unified School District regarding a potential reorganization for FCUSD that would give both cities their own school district.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
There's a lot of reasons why this is being pushed at the local level, but at the end of the day, since the district was established in 1949, FCUSD has undergone considerable growth and the changing needs in each city have made it harder to serve its diverse student population.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Under current law, proposal for reorganization must first go to the County Committee on school district organization. Within statute, they are required to approve or deny the proposal within 120 days of the first public hearing and then expeditially transfer transmit the petition to SBE with its recommendation.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Unfortunately, while the county has a specified number of days in the process in the statute to act, no such timeline exists for SBE.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
So sometimes the state process can take many years to complete, which can delay a reorganization process that is needed in the community. I want to be clear that nothing in my bill requires or moves forward any sort of reorganization.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
This is a local decision that will follow a local process. However, in the event that local leaders, including the folks with me tonight, do decide to move this proposal forward, AB 3140 will simply require SBE to take action within a certain timeframe.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I also wanted to mention that while I did agree to remove some other portions that I had in the bill, which sought to address some of the other issues that we're having locally. I do look forward to continuing conversations with the Committee as well as SBE that we're going to be having the next few weeks to see if we can address those in the future.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
With that, I have Rancho Cordova City Council Member Garrett Gatewood with me, as well as FCUSD Board Member Jen Laret to share their perspective from the local level.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
Honorable Members of the Assembly, I address you here today as the democratic city councilman of the City of Rancho Cordova is renowned for its blue collar ethos and community solidarity. Yet beneath our pride, we are confronted with an educational crisis marked by disparity between the city and Folsom.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
We cannot be overlooked. Our resolve, however, remains unshaken, evidenced by the collective rancho Folsom and the Cordova school district as the change that this Assembly Bill embodies.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
Consider the symbol of a youth's pride, the number on his baseball uniform falling off as he rounds second base due to the fact that it was connected with duct tape or our rate room, where we were promised new equipment unveiled hand me downs from the Folsom school to the Rancho Cordova school until the community and an amazing citizen group was able to put $200,000 together to rebuild the weight room.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
Challenges extend further than just the classroom, lacking heat, compelling our teachers to distribute clothing to our poor students to warm them because heat hadn't been returned to our school, the entire school, for five months.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
These are mere stories. These are reality underscoring the urgency of the reorganization of the school district. Assembly Bill 3140 offers a path enabling the creation of two school districts, the Rancho Cordova and Folsom, aligned for the municipality boundaries.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
Legislation represents not just an administrative shift to its commitment ensuring the every changing ranch Cordova school forms. By supporting this bill, we advocate the future of our schools mirrors the resilience and diversity of my city, where the educational equity is realized and where Rancho Cordova directly addresses the nature and nurtures the school's needs.
- Garrett Gatewood
Person
I urge you to support Bill 3140 and bridge the divide that fosters educational environment, where every student, regardless of zip code, has a chance to excel. Thank you for considering the future of the children of Rancho Cordova and our community. Together, we can redefine educational excellence in my city. Thank you.
- Jen Laret
Person
Honorable Members of the Assembly. I'm here before you today as both a trustee for Folsom Cordova Unified School District and a parent of four students who attend Rancho Cordova schools.
- Jen Laret
Person
I bring to you the forefront not just the numbers, but the stories and the futures they represent. In our district, we house 2985 students. Stark disparities shadow our achievements with 7742 of these bright minds in Rancho Cordova, where a quarter are mastering a new language and an overwhelming 71% come from low income families. The contrast to Folsom success stories is stark and unsettling.
- Jen Laret
Person
Consider the disparity in Folsom, a town flourishing with new educational infrastructures like a $60 million elementary school with over 90% of students at some of our elementary schools excelling in our math standards.
- Jen Laret
Person
Contrast this with Rancho Cordova, where about only 30% of our students are meeting those same standards, where students shiver through lessons in a school lacking basic heat due to outdated facilities.
- Jen Laret
Person
And majority of our schools have been built in the 1960s and 70s with little remodeling done to those facilities. Our plea is not just for equity, but it's for the tangible. It's for the hope and the opportunity that every child deserves, regardless of their zip code.
- Jen Laret
Person
Rancho Cordova's youth based barriers that no child should seek in seeking quality education barriers of geography, of resources, and of access during our process of the study, we were told that, well, our students need to be able to have access to great educational opportunities, which would require them to drive to Folsom, which is 20 minutes away.
- Jen Laret
Person
So how do we tell a single parent who's working multiple jobs that in order for them to access quality education that they have to drive 20 minutes away?
- Jen Laret
Person
Why are those not same opportunities offered at their local school and their neighborhood school? Assembly Bill 3140 isn't just legislation. It's a beacon of hope. It promises the creation of a separate district, a change that could unlock a crucial funding and resources, tailoring support to where it's most needed.
- Jen Laret
Person
This isn't just about logistics. It's about leveling the playing field for every student.
- Jen Laret
Person
As a Rancho Cordova student at 70%, we would be able to access the concentration grant funding by being with the City of Folsom and those students there. We only have 20%, and we cannot get that additional access to the funding that we so desperately need to support our underserved students.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Can I ask you to wrap up, please?
- Jen Laret
Person
We've seen the studies and we know the challenges. Yet the idea that Rancho Cordova's children must traverse distances for opportunities readily available to their wholesome peers is a glaring injustice.
- Jen Laret
Person
Our current structure fails to serve all of its students inequitably, and evident in the heartbreaking choice that some families must make between education and sustenance. I urge you, honorable Members, to support AB 3140.
- Jen Laret
Person
Let us together turn the page towards a chapter where every student at Folsom-Cordova Unified has access to the excellent education they rightfully deserve.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any public comments in support of the bill, please come forward. Seeing none. Any witnesses in opposition to the bill? Please come forward. Seeing none. Any public comments in opposition to the bill? Please come forward. Seeing none, bring it back to the Committee. Any questions, comments?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Can either Chair or author, can you just clarify what the amendments do?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
So the Amendments I'm accepting today pretty much take most of the current content out of the bill as it relates to the actual process for approving a petition. And it would simply be basically one line and require the State Board of Education to respond to make a decision on a petition within two years.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
So right now, there's no timeline in statute for the state board, and it takes 3-4 sometimes even five years to make a decision. This bill just allows our community, should they decide to move forward with a more streamlined timeline on that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, seeing no further comments or questions. Mr. Hoover, happy to support your bill. Would you like to close?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Sure. Just really quickly to put a little context on this. This is a very unique situation because our district is made up of two cities. Because of the California Voting Rights act, when we went to districts, it actually made Rancho Cordova a permanent two board representation on our school board and three for Folsom.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
So they're underrepresented in its current makeup. And they also are one of the only districts in the entire county that doesn't get concentration grant dollars, as Jen mentioned.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so this change would give them the resources they need to really improve outcomes for their students, and so would really appreciate this bill to keep that conversation moving forward.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, do we have a motion? Motion and second. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 25, AB 3140. The motion is do passes amended to Appropriations.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, 7-0. The bill is out. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Next we have file item 26, AB 3216.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
All right, thank you. I will cut my comments down a bit. Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. Appreciate the opportunity to present this Bill. I want to thank the Chair for all the work that you've done in the past on this issue and for your joint authorship. AB 3216 builds on legislation from 2019 by requiring school districts in California to adopt a policy no later than July 1st, 2026 that limits or prohibits the use of smartphones by students during the school day.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Under current law, school districts are authorized to do this, and many have done so with resounding success. One of those districts is the Folsom Cordova Unified School District, where I served prior to coming to the Assembly. The policy we've adopted there, administrators have reported increased social interaction among peers, decreased instances of bullying on campus, and improvements in academic outcomes.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I could go on and on about the benefits that this Bill would provide and the harms that are currently being created by smartphones and social media when it comes to minors, but I will save all of that for today. And simply, I want to clarify that this Bill does not prescribe any particular policy that a district must pass.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
It does require action be taken, but it allows local flexibility for each district to choose the approach that works best in their community for limiting the use of smartphones. It also includes a number of exemptions that are already in current law and would greatly appreciate your support on this measure. Jen was already here with us, and so I wanted her to share briefly about the experience we've had at the local level. Thank you.
- Jen Laret
Person
So last year, we were finding that we had students that were engaging in fights specifically for videotaping them and then posting them on social media to get likes. We also found that there was severe damage to our schools by TikTok challenges that were happening. And so we decided that we needed to take action on that. And we instituted a policy where we had no cell phone policy in our middle schools.
- Jen Laret
Person
So we did not implement that in our high schools because we wanted to get some data for this school year to see how it would kind of roll out. So we started last year before the school year ended, letting the parents know that this was what the new policy was going to be. We invested in Yondr bags, and at the start of the school year, the middle school students locked their phones up.
- Jen Laret
Person
And within two weeks, you know, we did have parents and administrators that were very concerned about the implementation and what that implementation was going to be, putting on a burden on administrators. But when we had the Yondr bags, we found that pretty immediately we saw results. We were getting emails from parents that said that their children were more engaged at home, that they were going past the school and seeing kids playing on the playground, that we were finding less damage, less bullying incidents.
- Jen Laret
Person
And we just finished up our first round of data, and we found that the teachers were actually saying that they actually had more time to teach their students because they were spending less time trying to monitor cell phone use. And so they were actually having to revamp some of their educational programming in order to fill up more time for educational things instead of disciplinary action on phones.
- Jen Laret
Person
So we've had resounding success for it, and now we are looking to our high schools to implement maybe possibly something with that. Because, again, we are now finding that we have pages like the Cordova paparazzi page and different pages like that, where we have kids who are videotaping during the middle of class time, in the bathrooms, in the locker rooms. And so we must take action at our high school levels as well.
- Jen Laret
Person
But we wanted to get the data on the middle schools first prior to rolling that out of the high school.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any public comments in support of the Bill? Seeing none. Any witnesses in opposition to the Bill? Seeing none. Any public comments in opposition to the Bill? Bring it back to the Committee. Any questions, Committee? Miss Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thanks. I did have a couple of questions, concerns about this Bill. So I want to kind of differentiate between the existence of a policy, the impact of that policy, and the practice of that policy within the school setting. So the likelihood in reality, you know, we can, as adults, want to wish them away, but the likelihood of students conforming to not bringing their cell phones onto campus, whether or not there's a policy, is slim to none.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
It's just the reality, which will mean that there will be an increase in the fact of students bringing their cell phones on campus, and then having to be engaged with by teaching staff and administrative staff based on the policy. So have concerns about that. I liken it to dress codes that have been in existence for a while in our school district.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
We actually had a dress code that limited, well, had a bunch of different ways in which particularly girls had to not have x length of spaghetti strap or whatever. And the impact of that was that youth were, and particularly girls were found not in classroom. They were getting sent to the principal's office left and right.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I'm trying to understand what this legislation will do that will actually support an environment that will keep students in the classroom, as opposed to keeping administrators and teachers trying to take the phones out of the kids' hands and creating reduction of instructional minutes for those students.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Yeah, absolutely. And I think those concerns are very valid. Those were some of the very same concerns that were expressed when we started going after this in Folsom Cordova Unified. Folsom Cordova Unified is just one of many school districts that have done this in recent years with resounding success. San Mateo was one of the first to do this. I believe Fresno Unified is now doing it. There are school districts in Los Angeles that are doing it.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so what I would say is that's kind of why I crafted the Bill in the way that I did, where we're not trying to overly prescribe what this policy has to look like. We want school districts to have that discussion in their local community.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
If they do not believe that they want to deal with potential enforcement at the high school level, for example, they could simply pass a policy where they prohibit them or limit them in elementary school, or middle school, or whatever they choose to do. Essentially, we want these discussions to happen at the local level. We had some teachers and administrators with those same concerns.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And interestingly, since they have been put in place, we have gotten nothing but positive reviews from administrators, from principals, and from teachers that this has improved their school climate and improved academic outcomes at the same time. And so I think those are very valid questions to ask, and I want those questions to be asked and addressed at the local level. I don't think this Bill over prescribes what districts have to do.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And if they choose to allow them in different educational settings, they are able to do that.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Isn't there already an AR to provide guidelines from the CDE on the use of cell phones on campuses?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I'm not sure the answer to that question. I think what this Bill, all this Bill essentially does is in the Bill that we passed in 2019, or Assemblymember Marisuchi's Bill in 2019, we took that may and we just changed it to a shall. Essentially, school districts shall have this conversation at the local level on how to move forward. A policy to limit cell phone use at the local level, smartphone use, that's all that the Bill does.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so I don't know directly what you're referring to, but I think that this would simply work in coordination with that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Any other questions or comments, Mr. McCarty.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes. Thank you. I'm in full support of this. And in 2019, I remember the Chair's Bill. I didn't have high school kids then and now, yeah, freshmen. There's no chance in hell they're watching this hearing right now. So I can say stuff. But yeah, this is a big problem in schools with our own kids. And I just got an email from our high school two nights ago saying they're going to adopt a policy in their school.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Wow.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Because it had so much of an impact on distracted kids and so forth. So we've asked them, hey, put it away from their backpack. And now the school's saying, we've had enough. So some schools are doing it. And they sent us this big report that came out in the Atlantic recently, may have seen it, talked about this issue. And it has real impacts on student achievement and it's always hard being a young person. I'm sure it was hard when you were younger.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
You're 20 years younger than me. And when I was in high school, it's always challenges, but I can't imagine it now with social media and pressure, what's happening. And just this, it's this addiction, like a drug. And so I think that, you know, we started this conversation a few years ago, and it's only gotten worse in the last few years since we passed a Bill in 2019. So this doesn't mandate what the policy is. I think maybe we should talk about that still.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
But I think this pushes the envelope to have people address this issue and get kids more focused when they're in school. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Any other questions? Comments? All right, Mr. Hoover, great Bill. When I introduced the Bill in 2019, as Mr. McCarty indicated, I mean, there was growing evidence, and there's only more evidence that excessive smartphone use has growing evidence that it may be causing, if not, you know, more than just been correlated with the spikes in teenage anxiety and depression, as well as lower academic achievement.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And there was a recent New York Times study or a New York Times article that cited a study that talked about the impact of excessive smartphone use having a disproportionate impact on low income Black and brown kids. And so I know we've had a lot of conversations today about the disproportionate impacts on Black and brown kids, but I don't have that study at hand, but I know it's out there. And so I support the Bill and give you the last word.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. I appreciate all the comments and the concerns that were raised. I actually did read that Atlantic article the other day, and it actually highlighted a number of the harms that come from smartphone use in schools, including suffering grades, rising rates of anxiety, depression, and suicide. I think this has really only been an issue since 2010. It's something that is relatively new in terms of what we're dealing with at the local level with kids and smartphones.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And I just think it's imperative for us as a state to act as quickly as possible before this becomes something that gets out of control. My high schooler hates this Bill, probably. My high schooler attends a high school where they're not allowed to use phones during the school day. It has to be off and in your backpack. But they enforce that policy, and they've created a culture at that school where everyone follows those rules.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And so I think when everyone's using a phone, everyone's gonna want a phone, everyone's gonna use a phone. But when we have the backing of Administration and the school district to actually implement this policy, I do think you can successfully create that culture. I would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right. Thank you very much. I am here to present Assembly Bill 2134 which would require a school district, County Office of Education, or charter school to accept the transfer of sick leave days for a certificated or classified employee at any time during their employment.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Do we have a motion? A second. Okay. All right. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item 26 AB 3216. The motion is do pass to appropriations. [Roll call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
The Bill is out.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, last two bills of the day are mine. I'll turn the gavel over.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
I'll second both of them. Mister Chair, we'll start with file item 6, 2134.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Yes, please.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
I'll second it.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Under existing law, there have been problems with employer... or local educational agencies not properly giving credit to certificated and classified employees when they try to. To move from one district to another. They absolutely should be able to exercise this right that exists in current law.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But this Bill will clarify the existing law. And so with me today to further explain the importance of this Bill is Mark Vest, a high school special education English teacher from Fontana Unified School District, and Ricky Nunn, middle school English and history teacher from San Juan Unified School District.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. First witness, two minutes apiece.
- Mark Vest
Person
Good evening, Mister Chair.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
You know what? Tomato, tomato.
- Mark Vest
Person
Distinguished Members, thank you so much for this opportunity. Again, I'm Mark Vest, high school special education teacher from Fontana Unified. It's an honor and a privilege to speak before you. Thank you in advance for allowing me to share my story, which is asking a lot at this time of night. So thank you very much. And again, I just want to bring attention to the injustice of our current law.
- Mark Vest
Person
After spending 31 years in the classroom, I've decided this year to retire where I have a little bit of sanity left. As you know, if you've taught before, teaching is not a job. It's a calling. And I feel very blessed that I was able to be in a position to fulfill that calling. I love every bit of it. So lately, I started the process of planning for my retirement. I discovered that I had accumulated over 100 sick days during the course of my career which I'm pretty excited about.
- Mark Vest
Person
All of which could be converted into retirement credit. However, I also discovered, unfortunately for reasons, unbeknownst to me, that 98 of those days did not transfer with me when I moved to my new district. So I approached my new district, thought it wouldn't be an issue at all, and asked them and told them the situation and asked them to accept the transfer of these days. And I was shocked when they refused.
- Mark Vest
Person
They cited that, no, we can't accept the transfer these days because you've been employed with us more than one year. At which time I researched the statute, as you mentioned, Mister Chair, and I could not figure out how they were able to put a time restraint based on the way the statute is written, but they did. So at this point in time. Again, these are days I've earned over decades of public service.
- Mark Vest
Person
So it's just completely unsettling and unacceptable to me, unjustified, that they're able to do this. It happened to too many teachers in the State of California at this point. You guys are in a unique opportunity right now to do something about this injustice. I'm being denied a portion of my well-deserved retirement benefit because of this.
- Mark Vest
Person
For me, it equates to about 120 a month, which doesn't sound like much, but I am taking care of my family, which includes my three grandchildren, twin nine-year-old son, boys, grandsons, and a little two-year-old, which can be very expensive. So I don't want to see this unjustifiable injustice occur to anybody else. In 2020, as you're probably no doubt aware, the Governor signed a Bill correcting this issue at the community college level, the same exact issue.
- Mark Vest
Person
So at this point today, you have an opportunity to do the same for all public school teachers. That's why I'm asking you. Please support AB 2134. Thank you for your time and attention, and thank you for all the long hours you put in hard work to improve our educational system. Today, I was really impressed watching you at work. I really appreciate as a teacher.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Next witness, please.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
All right. Thank you, Chair, for bringing up this Bill to the Committee. Committee Members, thank you so much for hearing our story. I'm going to try to stick to the script really fast to be on point in time for everybody since it's gotten kind of late. So hello, my name is Ricky Nunn. I'm urging your vote for this matter. I'm a current English history teacher at the San Juan Unified School District. I left Woodland Unified School District as a high school teacher in 2020 during the COVID pandemic.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
I went to a mortgage company doing remote work for two years since teaching hiring was non-existent in our area. When I returned to the classroom in August of 2022, when in-person instruction resumed, I went to the transfer process to get my sick leave from my previous district. When I left Woodland, I was told by my representative that they would be waiting for me there and when I came back to teaching, I would be able to transfer them.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
During an internal audit at my current district, they informed me that my previous district did not and send any of my previous sick leave. When I asked them why they did not send them, I was told that I was outside of teaching for more than one year. They would be keeping my unused sick days until retirement, and then my 38 unused sick days that I had earned would then be reported to STRS. We have since heard that that has not been the case across the state.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
There are three truths here. First, the State of California grants me 10 sick days every year as a public school teacher. Second, if I do not use them, they roll over to the following year. Finally, if I change from one public school employer to another, my unused sick leave should follow me. The injustice for me was that my 38 days of earned leave, 20 of which came from other districts, were taken away from me.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
When I reflect on my other professions and my own experience when leaving my mortgage company, all of my sick and vacation time was paid out instantly. Woodland is holding onto my unused sick leave, ironed, and it feels like I am being penalized for not taking days off and being a dedicated employee. I love my job. I look forward to teaching and being in the classroom with my students.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
I take care of myself mentally and physically to ensure that I am present for my kids who otherwise do not have a constant presence in their life.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much for that. Time is up.
- Ricky Nunn
Person
Thank you for hearing me out and I urge your support in amending the language to live up to the intent of the law, which is that educators should be able to use the sick leave that they have earned. And forgive me for looking tired. I have a four-week-old at home.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Love it. Well, congratulations. Witnesses in support. Name and organization, please.
- Seth Bramble
Person
Seth Bramble here for the California Teachers Association. Seth Bramble, we are in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jennifer Baker
Person
Good evening. Jennifer Baker with the California Retired Teachers Association reminding 70% of CalSTRS members are women. Many retirees have already retired and have not gotten their sick leave, so it's a major issue. We're glad to support and apologize for the late opposition or the late support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
As long as it's support.
- Joanne Kopp
Person
I'm Joanne Kopp. I'm a retired teacher in California Retired Teachers Association and I stand in favor of this Bill. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Martha Diaz
Person
Martha Zaragoza-Diaz, representing the Delta Kappa Gamma California in support of the Bill, and a letter of support will be forwarded. We just had a late Bill review of our organization and wasn't able to bring a support letter in time, but one will be sent. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you. It happens.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Mitch Steiger with CFT, also in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Chris Myers
Person
Chris Myers with the California Schools Employees Association in support.
- George Parampathu
Person
George Parampathu with the California Labor Federation in support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support? Seeing none. Witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. Bring it back to the Committee. Any questions from the Committee? Seeing none. Mister chair, would you like to close?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Respectfully ask.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Oh, hold on. I lied. Mister Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I messed everything up. We were rolling there. Just. Quick question. I know there's some concerns from a charter group here on, you know, kind of the transferability when it comes to a teacher, maybe moving from a school district to a charter school, given the differences that they may offer and benefits. So I was just curious, is that an issue you're willing to kind of look at moving forward? I certainly support the Bill and prepare to support it today. I just want to see if that's something that you'd be willing to look at moving forward.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
We always would be willing to talk with stakeholders. I would just note that we're just trying to ensure parity. You know, charter schools, as we all know, are funded with public taxpayer dollars. And so, you know, they have a choice of hiring employees who to hire, and so if they hire public servants, public employees that have accumulated sick leave, that sick leave should be honored. It's a simple principle.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any other questions from Committee? Seeing none. Mister chair, it's gonna get real awkward if you don't accept your Committee's amendments.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I accept the wonderful and thoughtful Committee amendments.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. For that matter, Secretary, please call it. Call the roll.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item six, AB 2134. The motion is do pass as amended to PERS Committee. [Roll call]
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Bills out with 7-0.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Really appreciate.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, sir.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Next up is file item 16, AB 2652.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. This Bill would require the Superintendent of Public Instruction, in consultation with the State Board of Education, to convene a working group for the purpose of exploring how artificial intelligence and other forms of similarly advanced technology are currently being used in education. This work would assess how AI is currently being used in education.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Two, it would identify how it may be used in the future and three, develop best practices to ensure that those technologies advance rather than harm our students, as well as our teachers and our classified employees. Here to testify in support of the Bill is Mitch Steiger with the California Federation of Teachers.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members and staff. Mitch Steiger with CFT, a union of educators and classified professionals proud to sponsor this Bill for all the reasons stated so ably by the author. We do think it's a really important measure because what we're talking about here, even though it's one of a variety of AI bills that are going to be coming through the Legislature this year, we would argue this is definitely one of the most impactful because it is education that's at issue.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
This is where we all learn to read and write and express ourselves, debate, all of these different functions that now can largely be performed by AI. And if we are not careful, if we get this wrong, it's entirely possible that we'll start to lose those skills. And because of that, we think it's really important to pause and take a step back and create this Committee, put the right people on it to make sure that it's doing what it needs to do.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
I know it's late, so just two quick examples of how this AI is currently being used and part of why we think this work group is so important, one of which is ChatGPT, generative AI programs that we're all pretty familiar with now. But it's important to note there are schools in California that are right now allowing students to use ChatGPT to write papers. You can just hand in a paper that ChatGPT wrote.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
There are other schools, and I know this because I got in a pretty big argument with one of these schools about a month ago, and their argument was that this technology is out there, kids need to learn how to use it, so let's just let them use it. There are some schools that allow you to use it, but you have to cite it. There are other schools that ban it entirely and everything in between.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
And so we think that's a pretty clear example of the fact that there needs to be some sort of coordination. There needs to be some pretty clear, some sort of guidance from some sort of central entity at the state level to encourage folks to put some thought into how this can best be used. Another example that's important to mention is that there are, as we speak right now, AI counselors being used in place of human counselors. There are AI tutors that are being developed.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
I saw a presentation on one where they cited wage increases won by UC tutors as the reason for developing this program. So there are some who are very much developing this technology to replace our members. Take the human element out of this process entirely. And so while there are definitely some benefits to AI, if it's done right, we can do things to take some tasks off the table of educators and classified workers and allow them to spend more time with students.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
If we do it wrong, a whole lot of very critical things are at risk. And so we think the Bill is a very important step in that direction. It puts the right people on a committee. We've had very productive conversations with Committee staff to get the language right, and we urge your support for the Bill at the appropriate time. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any other witnesses and support? Name and organization, please.
- Chris Myers
Person
Chris Myers with the California School Employees Association in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good evening. My colleague from the California Association of School Business Officials asked me to register their support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Pamela Gibbs
Person
Pamela Gibbs, representing the Los Angeles County Office of Education, and we support the Bill. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- George Parampathu
Person
George Parampathu, on behalf of the California Labor Federation, in support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to the Committee. Any questions from the Committee? Seeing none, Mr. Chair, would you like to accept the amendments?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I just want to thank everyone for sticking around till the end. Respectfully ask for your vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
And amendments?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And I, of course, accept the wonderful, thoughtful amendments. Thank the Committee for their hard work on this Bill.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Madam Chair, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 16, AB 2652. The motion is do pass as amended to privacy Committee. [Roll call]
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Bill's out with 7-0. Thank you.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Last stretch. Okay, so we have one Bill on call. That's file item 24. Assembly Bill 3074. Madam Secretary, please call the roll file.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. Thank you very much. Meeting is adjourned. It.
Committee Action:Passed
Next bill discussion: April 23, 2024
Speakers
Advocate
Legislator