Senate Standing Committee on Education
- Josh Newman
Person
The Senate Committee on Education will come to order. So, good morning, and first off, welcome to Julie from Missouri. In case you were wondering who that is, that's Amanda Ritchie's mom. She, too, tunes in from her home state to watch her daughter do her work.
- Josh Newman
Person
Happy birthday as well to April Johnson, who is lucky enough to be married to Ian. Ian asked for the day off today because it was his wife's birthday. I didn't fall for that. There are 30 bills on today's agenda. That's the bad news. The good news is 11 bills are on consent. They are as follows.
- Josh Newman
Person
Item number six. AB 1984. Item number eight. AB 2048. Item number 10. AB 2768. Item number 11, AB 2074. Item number 12, AB 20112. Item number 13, AB 2165. Item number 15, AB 2181. Item number 20, AB 2492. Item number 24, AB 3131. Item number 27, AB 2953.
- Josh Newman
Person
Item number 30, AB 3010. We actually do today have another Committee hearing scheduled for this room immediately following this hearing. So we're going to endeavor to move along as we go today. Witnesses are asked to limit their testimony to three minutes each to ensure the Committee is able to complete today's agenda in a timely fashion.
- Josh Newman
Person
Seeing no quorum quite yet, let's begin as a Subcommitee with the first author. And I see assemblymember Ta is here. Is Assemblymember Ting here? He's not yet. You're up. Please welcome and please proceed when ready.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Good morning, Chair, Member of the Committee. First, I'd like to thank the committee staff for their work on this bill. AB 1793 will ensure that dependents of active-duty military members stationed outside California but maintaining California residency will be eligible for Cal Grant and Middle-Class Scholarship Program.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Military service member who are California resident may sometime receive government order requiring them to relocate outside of the state for extended period. And their families often accompany them. Since the parents are still officially resident of California, the student qualifies for in-state tuition rate at our college and universities.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
However, under current law, students are ineligible for Cal Grant or the Middle-Class Scholarship Program if they temporarily reside out of state. AB 1793 would only apply to a very specific group of active-duty service members. This bill does not appropriate any additional fund for the Cal Grant program.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
It simply allows dependents of active-duty California military member to access the grant. I'd like to introduce you to Seth Reeb with Reeb Government Relation to testify in support AB 1793. I respectfully ask for your aye vote on AB 1793.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, sir. Mister Reeb, welcome. Good morning. Please proceed.
- Seth Reeb
Person
Good morning, honorable Chairman and Members. My name is Seth Reeb with Reeb Government Relations representing AMVETS Department of California, California Association of County Veterans Service Officers, California State Commander's Veterans Council, Military Officers Association of America California Council of Chapters. I'm here to express our strong support for AB 1793.
- Seth Reeb
Person
Which aims to extend Cal Grant and Middle-Class Scholarship Eligibility to dependents of California military members stationed outside the state. The nature of military life means frequent relocations. Often impacting the educational opportunities for service members' children. Despite maintaining California residency. These students face barriers to accessing state-sponsored educational grants due to their temporary out-of-state living situations.
- Seth Reeb
Person
AB 1793 rectifies this by ensuring that military dependents are not unfairly penalized for their parents' service. This legislation not only supports the educational aspirations of military families. But also upholds our values of fairness and equity. I urge you to pass AB 1793, standing firm in our commitment to those who serve and sacrifice for our nation.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you very much. Are there others in the hearing would like to testify and support the measure? If so, please come forward. Do we have opposition present today? Is there anybody who'd like to speak in opposition to the measure? Seeing none, come back to Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Yeah, great bill. Thank you for doing it. And I will move it when appropriate.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
I really appreciate that.
- Josh Newman
Person
For my part, glad to support it as well. I think you'll have no trouble securing enough votes to pass it. So, thank you. We'll leave it on hold until we establish a quorum. The.
- Scott Wilk
Person
You going to let him close?
- Josh Newman
Person
I think I'll let him close. Please close. Thanks, shadow chair.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you so much for your support. I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Sorry not to do that better. All right. Thank you very much. Next. Thank you, Senator Wilk, keeping me on track. Who is our next? Assembly Member Reyes, please. I'll make sure I give you an opportunity to close. So, whenever you're ready.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members, I thank you for the opportunity to present to you AB 2724. Voter registration is the law. It is an excellent tool to make it possible for 16 and 17-year-olds to pre-register to vote. So that upon their 18th birthday, they are automatically registered voters.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
This Bill will provide high school students in California. The opportunity and resources needed to pre-register to vote by the end of the 11th grade. Every election cycle, we discuss the low voter turnout from all across California. Unfortunately, millions of Californians pass up on the opportunity. To exercise their democratic right to vote at every election.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
One critical strategy we can employ to address this is by ensuring that young Californians who are eligible to vote are registered to do so. Currently, only 11% of 16 and 17 year olds in California are actually pre registered to vote.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
By focusing on our youth and bringing the resources to them at their high schools, we can ensure more Californians, especially young Californians, are voting and developing the habit of doing so at an earlier age.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Civic engagement is invaluable, which is why we need AB 2724 the High School Voter Registration Act, so more voices can be heard at the polls on election day. Here to testify and support is Ana-Victoria Chavez, a student organizer with Inland Congregations United for Change.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome Miss Chavez. Please proceed.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
Thank you Chair, Vice Chair, and Members of the Committee. My name is Ana-Victoria Chavez. I am a senior at San Bernardino High School in the City of San Bernardino and a leader with Inland Congregations United for Change ICUC. I'm here today. I'm here today to express my strong support for AB 2724.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
This school year, I took on the role of promoting voter registration at my school. When I approached students during lunch, many appeared disinterested, as if voting wasn't a serious or important matter to them. This made me reflect deeply because I have a different perspective on voting.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
Growing up, I was deeply involved in family discussions on who my parents planned to vote for and what they believed would benefit our country in the long run. These conversations taught me the importance of voting and educating ourselves on the matters of our country in order to make the best decision when voting.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
They made me feel enthusiastic and eager about turning 18 and voting, seeing it as a crucial responsibility as a citizen. Therefore, hearing that some of my peers seemed uninterested in voting shocked me.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
I've been reflecting on how fortunate I am to have parents that took the time to discuss voting and its importance to me, especially considering I live in a low income area with a large Hispanic population. Many of my friends are first generation American and have not had the privilege of having family Members who encourage them to vote.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
This is why AB 2724 is important, because it aims to empower youth like myself to become informed and engaged participants in our democracy. By teaching students that our voices matter and encouraging us to participate in elections, AB 2724 can create a more engaged electorate. By bringing these conversations to our schools.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
It will help us students feel involved and care for the future of our country. This Bill in front of you today has been garnering tremendous support both at the state and local level as it has made its way here.
- Ana-Victoria Chavez
Person
Just yesterday, board members from the San Bernardino City Unified School District unanimously passed a resolution in support of AB 2724. Help us continue moving this forward, and support us in giving every student in California the Education in order to have a voice. Thank you for your time.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you and well presented. I commend you for your advocacy. Are there any others here who'd like to testify in support of the measure? So please come forward. Forward. Please come. Microphone and.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Oh, she was one of our.
- Josh Newman
Person
Oh, you're a lead witness.
- Josh Newman
Person
Come on up. Take a seat. Sorry.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Yes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Ariete. Yes. A field fellow with Power California.
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good. Welcome. Have a seat.
- Maria Tolas
Person
Sorry, everybody. I was quite all right. I didn't anticipate all that traffic in the Capitol. I apologize.
- Josh Newman
Person
You have three minutes. Please proceed.
- Maria Tolas
Person
Sure. Thank you. My name is Maria Tolas. I live in Pittsburgh, California. I am represented, actually, by Senator Glazier, who I don't see, but for the past two months, I had the opportunity to work on a voter registration program, and I had the privilege to go back to my high school, my alma mater in Pittsburgh High School, to facilitate presentations on the importance of voting and getting students to register and pre register to vote.
- Maria Tolas
Person
My team and I were able to register and pre register 400 students. I was blown away by the attention and seriousness in which these students took the presentation and decided that they would register and pre register to vote. They show that young people are ready to listen and ready to exercise their voice.
- Maria Tolas
Person
All they need is the information to be able to commit. However, there was a high school in the district that did not allow. That did not allow me to do the presentations. Sorry.
- Maria Tolas
Person
AB 2747 ensures that all high schoolers get the information they need to strengthen their presentation in our government and that voter pre registration happens at all high schools in California. Furthermore, in high school, young voters are already learning about civics and government, which makes it a perfect opportunity for them to exercise real world civic participation.
- Maria Tolas
Person
Evidence shows that when young people vote in their first few consecutive elections, they become lifetime voters. From the last election cycles, we've seen more and more young people turn out to the polls to vote on issues that matter to them and their communities.
- Maria Tolas
Person
Being a DACA recipient, I cannot vote, so I do all that I can to encourage others to vote, especially young people. I urge you to support AB 2724 and give young folks the opportunity to surprise you. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you once again. Any others who'd like to testify and support your name, your organization, your position. Welcome.
- Lucy Carter
Person
Good morning. Lucy Salcido Carter, on behalf of the Alameda County Board of Education, in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Anybody else seeing none? Do we have anybody who'd like to testify in opposition to this measure? Unsurprisingly seeing none. Let's come back to the Deus comments questions, comments? Questions. So I will say glad to support the measure. Appreciate the work you're doing. Appreciate both the witnesses.
- Josh Newman
Person
I would argue there's an additional need, which is to better teach civics in school. That's a conversation for another day, another Bill. But with that, would you like to close?
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I respectfully ask for your aye vote at the appropriate time. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. We'll take a motion at the appropriate time, and we'll take a vote. Thank you very much. To the witnesses. Assemblymember Addis is here. Welcome. And the Bill number is.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Well, thank you, Honorable Chair, Members of the Committee, staff, my staff, our witnesses that are here today. A lot of effort has gone into bringing this before you, and it takes a team. And so I want to say thank you to that team. I'm here today to ask for your aye vote on AB 1971, the Student Privacy Protection Act.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
As public education and the Internet continue to become more and more intertwined, it is imperative that California takes the appropriate steps to ensure the safety of our students. An often overlooked aspect of student safety is around a student's personal data, which is increasingly at risk of misuse as the Internet and AI become integrated with different aspects of public education.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
The Student Privacy Online Personal Information Protection Act, or SOPIPA, was created in 2014 with the intent of providing substantial protections to personal student data in K-12 education. However, SOPIPA has a critical weakness that we can fix. The language defining K-12 purposes is ambiguous when it comes to the inclusion of standardized testing entities.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Therefore, this bill does one very narrow thing, but very important thing, which is simply to clarify that student data gathered via standardized testing platforms is covered by the privacy protections of SOPIPA. Standardized tests and the organizations responsible for them gather and use student data, and therefore student data privacy protection should be in place.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Standardized tests capture numerous types of sensitive data from students, including gender, gender identity, ethnicity, immigration status, nationality, religious affiliation, and more, which highlights the need for stringent data protections. By adding standardized tests explicitly into the definition of K-12 school purposes, students will be able to trust that their data stays out of the hands of third party vendors that truly have no business in public education.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
So with me today as witnesses in support are Annie Chou, Legislative Advocate for the California Teachers Association, and then Hayden Meyer, a Granite Bay High School rising senior who just completed AP US History as part of his course of study. So I'll turn it over to Annie.
- Josh Newman
Person
Who's first?
- Annie Chou
Person
I'll go first.
- Josh Newman
Person
All right. Ms. Chou, welcome. Good morning.
- Annie Chou
Person
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. I'm Annie Chou with the California Teachers Association, proud supporters of AB 1971. This bill seeks to better align SOPIPA with existing state and federal laws that protect consumer privacy and student privacy.
- Annie Chou
Person
Students are required to take various standardized tests to graduate from high school with a GED or be considered for college admissions and for financial aid for those institutions. While students' academic information is protected under FERPA, unfortunately, they are not always protected when they take their GED or make a decision to take tests in order to go to college.
- Annie Chou
Person
Vendors of standardized tests have the ability to collect and retain a great deal of information about students that use their products, and we must close gaps to ensure that information is appropriately protected as students take the leap towards adulthood. AB 1971 protects student privacy rights while allowing them to further their goals post high school. Thank you for your time. Urge your aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you for your testimony. Mr. Meyer, welcome.
- Hayden Meyer
Person
Chair and Members of the Senate Education Committee, thank you for allowing me to present testimony in support of AP 1971.
- Josh Newman
Person
If you can put the mic just a little closer. Good.
- Hayden Meyer
Person
My name is Hayden Meyer, and I am a senior at Granite Bay High School. Throughout my high school career, I had multiple interactions with standardized testing organizations, from the PSAT as a sophomore to the SAT and ACT as a junior. At my high school, all students were encouraged to take these tests, as they were seen as mandatory steps towards higher education. Even though some universities remove the requirement to support SAT scores, I know from personal experience that many students see these tests as an essential piece of their college applications.
- Hayden Meyer
Person
With over 1.9 million students taking the SAT every year, I know that this belief is not confined to my high school. Apart from standardized tests, another constant, today's K-12 education system is technology. From when I started kindergarten to my graduation from high school last May, the amount of technology students interact with on a daily basis has increased exponentially. With technology and the Internet becoming increasingly integrated within the classroom, it is more important than ever that students have adequate protections for their data.
- Hayden Meyer
Person
Students need to be able to trust their schools and the vendors their schools contract with to treat their sensitive personal data with the necessary protections. AB 1971 will ensure that students can maintain that trust in their schools, closing a loophole that allows standardized testing organizations to share student data without students expressed consent. As a recent graduate of one of California's high schools, I urge you to vote aye on AB 1971. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Well done. Do we have other witnesses in support of the measure? Please come forward.
- Becca Cramer Mowder
Person
Becca Cramer-Mowder on behalf of ACLU California Action in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Anybody else in support of the measure? Opposition? If you are, do we have lead witnesses in opposition? If so, please come to the table. Welcome. I see we have two. You have three minutes each. Whenever you're ready. Welcome.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Thank you. Mr. Chair and Members of the Committee, my name is Jennifer Smith. I serve as Associate General Counsel for Privacy for College Board. I have been in higher education for nearly my entire 20 year legal career, most recently joining College Board.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
College Board opposes AB 1971 as it appears before you today. This is an unfortunate situation of unintended consequences which will harm California students and families. This bill attempts to amend SOPIPA, as was aptly described by others, which does govern ed tech in the classroom.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
The restrictions on use and disclosure of student data by ed tech vendors in the classroom make great sense, with which we comply, including for the assessment spoken about the witnesses you've heard from already today. But by design, the bill before you will reach outside the classroom and govern what students and families do at home. The latest set of amendments shatters the framework of SOPIPA by adding to its scope the administration of standardized tests taken on a weekend, chosen by a student, paid for by their parent, completely at their own discretion.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
By applying SOPIPA to a consumer context, it will result in extraordinary consequences, including denying colleges diverse recruitment and hitting unrepresented students the hardest. Let me explain. When you register for the SAT weekend, you do so through the College Board website, and you create a personal account to which high schools do not and should not have access.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
You then, as a student, can use that SAT data to create a profile to access other college and career readiness programs, to share data with scholarship programs, and hear from post secondary opportunities. All of this is now being questioned under this bill because those activities are exactly the type restricted under SOPIPA when in a classroom.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Very importantly, students may not be able to participate in Student Search Service. Students who participate in Search are contacted by colleges and receive, on average, 29% more offers for admission. There are currently 828,000 California students participating in Search, 85 California colleges who rely on Search to have a diversity pipeline for their college admission and fill their classes.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Hispanic students found to participate in Search enroll in a four year college at a rate 8.3 points higher percent higher than similarly situated Hispanic students. Black and Hispanic students who receive Search enabled college outreach, the mail you probably all got when you were young or have family members or others in your life who get mail about college and University opportunities.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Hispanic and black students, 46 and 66% respectively, are more likely to apply for college than those similarly and identically situated black and Hispanic students who do not receive those mailings through through Search. And this might just be the beginning. Not only would this diversity pipeline for colleges and across the country be potentially blocked, the reach into SAT weekend by this bill could deny students the chance to learn about and apply for scholarships, apply for financial aid, lose control over their personal data through their personal account where they leverage their own college and career journey working directly with College Board.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Even the basic sending of their AP exam score could be jeopardized as this bill is written. To be clear, College Board has great respect for student privacy. We would be pleased to support ongoing protections for students and their families, as we do today through comprehensive privacy policies, fully compliant with SOPIPA for all in school assessments, and provide choice for students. Taking away the choice for students under the guise of privacy is untenable, and thus this bill must be rejected. I'd be happy to address questions.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next witness, please.
- Mary Laufey
Person
Good morning. Can you hear me?
- Josh Newman
Person
Yes.
- Mary Laufey
Person
Okay. My name is Mary Laufey, and I work for ACT. I work for a company that has, for the past 65 years, made it our mission to serve individuals of any age to achieve education and workplace success. That is our mission. I sit here as someone who for 15 years with that same organization has been a researcher and a policy analyst, and only for the past three years in government relations, tried to positively impact education and workforce policy.
- Mary Laufey
Person
Voting yes on AB 1971 could reduce the number of low income and minority students in California that are recruited by colleges. Since the Harvard UNC Supreme Court decision last year, legally, colleges cannot use race in admissions decisions, and instead they rely upon services like the one Jen described and those similar services that ACT provides in order to recruit a more diverse incoming class, helping students to connect with colleges that want to admit more diverse students, helping more minorities that have struggled, and admitting students who have overcome challenges could be a prohibited activity under AB 1971. I'm not a lawyer, but I do know good policy. I urge each Committee Member today to ask the question, how will this bill impact underserved students in California? And to respectfully consider our opposition to AB 1971. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other members of the public here who'd like to testify in opposition the measure? If so, please come forward. Seeing none, come back to the dais. Colleagues, questions, concerns about the bill? Let me start. So, privacy, protection of data, obviously an important thing for the state.
- Josh Newman
Person
On behalf of students and others, we've had two bills over the last decade that are expressly geared toward ensuring better handling of data and the protection of private information. My understanding, though, is that ACT and College Board have made a practice of selling user information, is that correct? Sure.
- Mary Laufey
Person
Okay, here we go. So we do not sell student data. We license it for a limited time and a limited purpose to universities to only use for recruitment.
- Josh Newman
Person
But it's still on a paid basis.
- Mary Laufey
Person
That is a service we do not provide for free. It is something that a student can opt into, and for us to provide the service to the colleges to connect with students, we do charge a licensing fee.
- Josh Newman
Person
And the provision of those records, is it limited to those records associated with students who have opted in expressly?
- Mary Laufey
Person
Yes, express opt in. And we are fully compliant with CCPA. We know that there was a perceived loophole with CCPA for nonprofits. As you may or may not have heard, ACT underwent a transition within the last couple of months. We are now a for profit public benefit education corporation and are fully under the jurisdiction of CCPA and are already fully compliant with that law.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay. And Ms. Smith, the College Board is still a nonprofit but still operates the same service, same practice, right? Licenses data on a per record payment.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
It is not on a per record payment. So excellent question. So the Student Search Service, one, is free to students, and two, the colleges and universities and nonprofit scholarship organizations that subscribe to our enrollment solutions pay a subscription fee. It's a flat fee. There is no per name fee.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
That was an historical practice of College Board that has since expired, and it's a lump sum subscription fee regardless of the volume of records. And most importantly, that program is not part of our in school testing experience. SOPIPA already prohibits the sale of student data.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
It already prohibits us, as an ed tech vendor when we are offering in school assessments inclusive of the PSAT and other assessments spoken to by others, we do not present that search opt in to students in their in school experience. We do not use the data at all collected through the in school experience for Search.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
That is entirely done if a student on their own were to choose to come to College Board and engage with us for their own programs and services, such as wanting to register for the SAT weekend or to create a College Board account to create what's called a Big Future Experience, where you could take college and career quizzes.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Through that experience, we present to students the Search program, but it's a robust notice with an affirmative open checkbox consent, with an opt out mechanism available at any time. And it's very clear, and even we tell students in that notice that we charge a fee to the colleges and universities to whom their data is disclosed to support our nonprofit organization to truly just feed right back into our mission. So while we charge a fee, it's not to the students.
- Josh Newman
Person
So to your point that you know there's making a distinction in school, down at school, I think Mr. Meyer made a very good point, which is to a student it's actually less clear. These are things that could safely or fairly be regarded as necessary steps, taking the SATs. Technically you're not doing that in school, but as a matter of course, if you want to proceed to higher education, you're going to do that, right?
- Josh Newman
Person
So I don't think a student makes the same distinction. But to either the author or Mr. Meyer, what's the issue, as you see it, with a student who has affirmatively opted in, checkbox, clear language, to receiving those kinds of offers or other information, it's clearly to the good if they've been properly apprised?
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
No, I appreciate the question. And I would say also 21 year educator standing here testifying, myself a mom of a high school senior, as well as someone who just graduated high school. So have the educator background as well as the parent background as well as the legislative background on this. We agree.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
We would like this data to be accessible for students to connect with universities. We think that's an important piece of this. And so we have proposed adding an explicit exemption to allow the sale or the licensing, what have you, of student data to colleges for the purpose of admission or access to financial aid.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And that's an author amendment that we are happy to take between this committee and the next. Due to the timeline on negotiations, we weren't able to get it done before this. Additionally, we have proposed another explicit exemption, which would exempt activities from SOPIPA's requirements if those activities do not meet the definition of K-12 school purposes.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
So this would ensure that services provided by the opposition that shouldn't be under SOPIPA would not be under SOPIPA. So we are in no way trying to stop access of low income people or people of color or any group from accessing colleges because that's why they're taking these tests.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
You enroll in AP classes, you enroll in AP tests, you enroll in the ACT, you enroll in the SAT explicitly because you want to go to college. And so that's not what we're trying to limit. What we're trying to limit is the, and let me just say, we have shared these amendments with opposition.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
They have not said yes to them. I think we're in ongoing conversations, and I'm absolutely personally optimistic. I don't think you heard that, but personally, I think we can get there. So what we want to limit, just to be a little more succinct, is this data going to other parties that really shouldn't have this data. And there is a history of that happening.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay, so notwithstanding that history, to the extent that public benefit corporation, nonprofit in the service of your broader mission, I assume you're open to those conversations.
- Mary Laufey
Person
Very much so.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
We have been. We have been actively engaged. And the complexity here about trying to introduce the SAT weekend and those other website activities when a student comes to College Board to engage personally and trying to pull apart only protecting that SAT weekend data is that it's all integrated. So when you come to the College Board website, you create a personal account, and you provide information about yourself, all optional. And College Board then creates a profile. That's explicitly prohibited by SOPIPA, creating of a profile.
- Josh Newman
Person
But I'm sorry to interrupt. But the author's willing to find a basis for making the appropriate exemption there, correct?
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Absolutely. If this is connected to university and scholarship admission, regardless of when the test, whether it's on the weekend or during school hours.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Understood. The point is that there is no segmentation. So when a student creates a College Board account and uses that to create for SAT weekend, that College Board account includes that personally identifiable information that they can then use, one, to register for the SAT weekend and or experience all those other suites of Big Future and college and career readiness tools like college career quizzes and whatnot.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
And so this proposed amendment to try to say only the part or portion of your website that's for SAT weekend is coming covered and all the others is not, is a factual fiction because you can't segment a one personal account where a student provides their personal information to access all of College Board's consumer programs and services and only segment the SAT weekend part versus college and career readiness quizzes versus applying for financial aid versus the whole suite of services.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
It's one College Board account. It's not walled off on one little part of the website. So the amendment is nonsensical. It's impossible to deploy because a profile is created. It's used to serve college and career readiness using that student data for all of those nonprofit education mission purposes.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Again, you can't just pull off what's done for SAT weekend registration because you first create a College Board account to then register for SAT weekend. So we already have the data for the account that's used for multiple purposes. And we can't allow the College Board account to be subject to SOPIPA. And that's where it becomes round hole square pegged to try to take all the provisions of SOPIPA that were written about ed tech in the classroom and put it on a consumer context just does not fit.
- Josh Newman
Person
But it does seem worth trying if the alternative is something that's fairly restrictive from your point of view. And it seems to me there's two issues, how data's handled and how an opt in is constructed. I would think that would be a solvable problem for some combination of your lawyers and your web folks.
- Josh Newman
Person
But if you say no, then I guess the choice for us is actually fairly binary here. So, I mean, I hope you'd be willing to do that, and I guess I'd be looking for a commitment to do that. But, you know, absent that commitment, we have a choice here either to protect students all in or to exceed here. And I think in ways that most of us would agree would be at the perspective to the detriment of student privacy, especially given existing laws. So I guess the question really is, for you folks, is that something you're willing to continue working on? Because I'm understanding from the author that you aren't.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
We absolutely are happy and agree. I mean, I don't come to the table dragging my feet. I absolutely understand the importance of sharing this data with universities and with scholarships. We want kids and we want families to know that when they go to take the SAT, when they go to take the AP test, there's a purpose for that. The expression purpose is to get into college and to get higher grades.
- Josh Newman
Person
Understood. You know, the real question here is for, I'm sure your processes are slightly different, but your concerns are the same. You know, how to construct a privacy policy, but also how to handle data such that the opt in includes the ability to circumscribe or otherwise subset data, which says, you know, I'd like only my information to be shared with colleges versus something else. I don't know. I'm not a web guy. I used to be, but I think that's a solvable problem if you're open to it, but particularly if it's necessary. So I guess my question to the opposition here is that something you want to work on?
- Mary Laufey
Person
Speaking for my organization, it is something that we are always willing to continue a conversation to try to improve the language. It is difficult for me to commit to a hypothetical set of words and a narrative that my lawyer hasn't looked at because... But yes, the commitment to continue. No, respectfully, Chair, yes.
- Josh Newman
Person
Because that's really what's at stake here. We're going to make, by definition, a binary vote. It's either yes or no. That yes could include the commitment on the shared sort of agreement between the parties that you're going to continue working on this. And if you're open to that, I'm willing to support that, but also, I'm also willing to bring it back if we don't make enough progress.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
If I may, Chair. I do believe opposition has seen these amendments.
- Josh Newman
Person
Not really. That's not really my concern right now. It's about, is this a workable scenario?
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Exactly.
- Josh Newman
Person
And so. And, you know, all I'm asking for is a good faith effort here to try and do that before the next legislative step.
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Absolutely. And we have proposed several alternative amendments to try to achieve the same goal and have expended extraordinary amount of hours with the staff and representatives to get to a reasonable solution. I just want to be clear that it is not just about the opt in opportunity to share this data with colleges and universities.
- Josh Newman
Person
It's about how you've constructed these programs and how they intersect. I understand. But again, I'd argue there may be benefit, in fact, necessary, to figure out how to decouple those things in a way that works to meet the goals of the legislation. And so, you know, we have a shared understanding here. Right, Assembly Member Addis? You're willing to continue working. I understand it's not a simple thing.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
We have. I mean, again, we have the two proposed amendments.
- Josh Newman
Person
Well, your amendments might be a starting point. Right. But as long as you're willing.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
We're willing to continue the conversation. Let's say that. Okay, we're willing to continue the conversation.
- Josh Newman
Person
Let us quickly, before we lose another Member. So let's establish a quorum. I see you've got your track shoes on. There's no excuses needed here. Go ahead, please establish a quorum.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
All right. A quorum is now present. Okay, so, question for the author. You're willing to continue conversations, you know, noting that this is... This could be technically, fairly challenging to the opposition. You're willing to continue. Okay, you know, I'm trying to be helpful here. But I will say very clearly, you know, I'm glad to learn more, particularly, Ms. Smith, about, you know, sort of the challenge, the inherent challenges that you described.
- Josh Newman
Person
If it turns out that they're not solvable, I would, you know, I'll respect that. It sounds to me like it should be, especially given sort of the nature of the effort here, which is to protect privacy of students, but also to maintain the ability for your services to share that data in ways that support those same students. So, last thoughts on that?
- Jennifer Smith
Person
Nope. Happy to continue to work on it.
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good question. Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Chair Newman, I just want to say I support your direction that you've indicated. The bill was introduced on January 30. I know the opposition came in late last week, which I think was out of the courtesy of the Chair. The hearing was deferred on the bill to provide a little more time. It seems like there is a need for some more time. It sounds like you'd prefer to move the bill along today with an understanding that they'll continue to work on it versus defer this to the next hearing, give them the next week. Is that right?
- Josh Newman
Person
Yeah. I mean, we don't have a ton of time left the legislative cycle for that, but I will say we should solve this problem to the satisfaction of both parties before the next legislative step. And that's my stipulation here for providing my vote. So, anything else?
- Steven Glazer
Person
No, I'd be happy to move the bill.
- Josh Newman
Person
Alright. Would you like to close?
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Well, I just want to say thank you so much to the Chair for working on this. Thank you to the opposition for their commitment to work together for the good of California students. And with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. We have a motion from Senator Glazer. Madam Consultant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item five, AB 1971, Addis. Motion is do pass as amended to the Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
The measure now has three votes. We'll leave it open for absent Members. Thank you very much.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
And Olgalilia.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome, sir. You will be presenting AB 1780. Thank you.
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. First, let me thank you, the Committee consultants. I know we've had a number of robust conversations on this Bill, so very much appreciate your attention. In your guidance, we are accepting the Committee amendments.
- Philip Ting
Person
AB 1780 would prohibit higher education institutions that receive public funding for financial aid purposes, to prohibit legacy and donor admissions, or to prohibit preferential treatment for children of legacies, as well as donors, and legacies are defined as former alumni. Legacy admissions is, again, the practice of offering the children of alumni a preferential treatment.
- Philip Ting
Person
Going back historically, one of the major concerns is that not everybody had traditional access to these institutions. If you go back to hearing people who are third-generation or fourth-generation legacies, the institutions that their grandparents went to looks very, very different than the institutions that exist today.
- Philip Ting
Person
There also been racial barriers, there have been religious barriers to some of these institutions. And so, again, we believe that this is a very good step for the state and right in line with our constitutional guidelines around equal opportunity and fair access.
- Philip Ting
Person
And just to provide a certain level of context, we have three institutions, primarily, that offer legacy admissions. According to their own data, as of 2022, between 13% to 14%. That's Stanford, USC, and the Santa Clara University.
- Philip Ting
Person
And to give you context, that's significantly, almost double the number of African Americans they admit, and almost as many as Latinos that they admit into their class. So this is a very significant portion of those three institutions in their incoming classes.
- Philip Ting
Person
We also looked at a report by Opportunity Insights that was cited last year that came out on the heels of the Supreme Court decision to ban the use of any kind of racial preferences in the admissions process.
- Philip Ting
Person
And what they found was actually fairly alarming, which was that looking at Ivy League plus schools, and that's considered Ivy League institutions, plus like minded schools like University of Chicago, Stanford, Duke, that children of families at the top 1%.
- Philip Ting
Person
And that's roughly people, families that make over $600,000, when all things were being equal, that they had twice as likely a chance to get admitted into those institutions as everybody else. And so the fact that we would think that somebody who had a summer job, someone whose families had to overcome opportunities, that that would be a compelling admissions case.
- Philip Ting
Person
Actually, the most compelling admissions case, unfortunately, at times, was potentially some family's ability to donate to the institution. And so, again, we believe that it is time to eliminate this preference for the wealthiest folks in our country, that there really isn't any reason to have a preference.
- Philip Ting
Person
Now, to state this, this does not ban the admission of legacy students or donor students, you can continue to admit students from those families. Absolutely. You just cannot offer them preference. So that's just the big distinction. So with that, I would ask for your support on AB 1780, we have two witnesses.
- Philip Ting
Person
We have Sarah Arce with the Campaign for College Opportunity and Ryan Cieslikowski, excuse me, lead organizer for Class Action. So thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome to both of the witnesses. Ms. Arce, please proceed.
- Sara Arce
Person
Thank you. Good morning, chair Newman and Members. Sara Arce on behalf of the Campaign for College Opportunity, we are an organization that's dedicated to ensuring all students, regardless of race, ethnicity, income, documentation, status, or the zip code that they were born into, can access a college education.
- Sara Arce
Person
With the Supreme Court's decision last summer to ban race-conscious admissions, it is crucial now more than ever to ensure that those who have been historically excluded and underserved by our colleges and universities have a real opportunity to go to college and succeed.
- Sara Arce
Person
We can do this by promoting evidence-based solutions and equity-advancing strategies in college preparation, access, and completion. One of these strategies is to prohibit preferential treatment at admissions based on legacy and donor status.
- Sara Arce
Person
Legacy and donor admissions perpetuate a cycle of privilege that fortifies inequity in higher education, where students from wealthy backgrounds are granted undue advantages in the admissions process.
- Sara Arce
Person
One study found that legacy applicants who are typically white and wealthy are 45% more likely to gain admission to selective colleges and universities compared to equally qualified nonlegacy candidates, further widening the gap in educational opportunities.
- Sara Arce
Person
The vast majority of California's college-age population are first-generation black, Latinx, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander students who do not benefit from legacy admissions but have the most to gain from a college education.
- Sara Arce
Person
The practice of legacy and donor preference in admissions is a barrier to social mobility for these students and a barrier to the economic competitiveness of the state.
- Sara Arce
Person
Some private colleges in California, like Occidental College in Los Angeles, have chosen to do away with legacy admissions on their own accord in the wake of the Supreme Court decision, and we applaud this decision and commend the college for their efforts to move toward more equitable admissions.
- Sara Arce
Person
AB 1780 provides a simple solution in alignment with the efforts of five other states pursuing similar policies prohibit preferential treatment and admissions based on legacy or donor status.
- Sara Arce
Person
We urge you to support AB 1780 and send a strong message that in California, we believe that power, influence, and money should not dictate who gets a seat at our esteemed colleges and universities. We believe all students deserve a fair shot at a college education, regardless of family background, income level, or color of their skin.
- Sara Arce
Person
And we believe a college education can interrupt racial and socioeconomic inequity. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Mr. Cieslikowski. Did I get that right? Thank you very much. Please proceed.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
Chair Newman and Members of the Committee, good morning. My name is Ryan Cieslikowski. I am a Californian and a recent graduate of Stanford University.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
I'm here today as the lead organizer for Class Action, which is a nonprofit of students and alumni working to ensure that so-called elite colleges prioritize the interests of all Americans, and not just the privileged few. For most people, legacy admissions isn't a controversial issue.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
75% of the American public, 89% of college admissions directors, and the vast majority of college students think that it's unfair. Among those students are the undergraduate and graduate Senators at Stanford University, who voted overwhelmingly to pass a resolution endorsing this Bill.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
In a powerful testament to the students discontent with legacy admissions, these elected leaders voted in favor of ending a policy which could benefit their future children. Today, I'd like to get across why students at Stanford and around the country are determined to end legacy. I'll make four brief points.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
One, they want to enter legacy admissions because their schools accept more students from the top 1% of the income distribution than the entire bottom 50%. And a recent study shows that legacy admissions is one of the leading reasons why.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
Two, on this Juneteenth, it's important to remember that legacy admissions was designed in the 1920s to save spots at elite colleges for protestant whites. And to this day, it disproportionately advantages wealthy white applicants. A reality which is all the more concerning after the fall of race-conscious admissions.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
Three students who attend elite institutions know that their schools are fast-tracks to the halls of power. And that as a nation, we shouldn't be selecting the next generation of leaders based on familial bloodline. This country should not be an aristocracy.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
Fourth, and finally, students want legacy gone because they don't want to be associated with a system that runs on nepotism, especially as trust in higher education is at an all-time low. Students want their schools to be avenues of access, and not country clubs where membership is reserved for those with connections.
- Ryan Cieslikowski
Person
Senators, AB 1780 is on the side of students. And I respectfully urge you to be as well. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Let us now hear from others in the audience who'd like to testify in support of the measure. Please come forward with your name, your organization, and your position.
- Sabrina Means
Person
Good morning. Sabrina Means, on behalf of the Institute for College Access and Success, in support. Thank you.
- Amy Brown
Person
Mr. Chair and Members. Amy Brown on behalf of the California Charter Schools Association in support
- Carol Gonzalez
Person
Hi, good morning. Carol Gonzalez on behalf of the Education Trust West in support, thank you.
- Kate Rodgers
Person
Good morning. Kate Rodgers on behalf of Generation Up, proud to co-sponsor also in support, thank you.
- Faith Lee
Person
Good morning. Faith Lee with Asian Americans Advancing Justice Southern California we're proud co sponsor. I'm also here to provide a me too for folks who can't be here. They're Kid City Hope Space, SoCal Can, Latino Latina Roundtable, NAACP, Pomona Value Branch, Council of Mexican Federations in North America, SF Rising, and the Institute for College Access and Success, TICAS. Thank you
- Josh Newman
Person
thank you.
- Anya Hooper
Person
Hi, Anya Hooper, a Stanford graduate of three days and former legacy student, also a class action organizer.
- Josh Newman
Person
I support thank you and congratulations. Next please.
- Natalie Steiner
Person
Natalie Steiner, Stanford Graduate I'm a Class Action Organizer and a California resident. Support thank you.
- Sophie Callcott
Person
Good morning. Sophie Callcott, California native, another Stanford graduate of three days and a legacy student and I'm a Class Action organizer and here in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
You should be in Cabo or somewhere, next week.
- Philip Ting
Person
We have beaches here in Sacramento.
- Katie Fee
Person
Hi Katie Fee, also recent Stanford graduate, legacy student and organizer with Students for Equitable Education at Stanford in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, next please.
- James Reed
Person
Hi James Reed, Stanford graduate, Californian, and Class Action organizer and support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, next please.
- David Ramirez
Person
Good morning. David Ramirez on behalf of the University of California Student Association in Support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, next please.
- Maria Morales
Person
Good morning. Maria Morales on behalf of Hispanas Organizers of Political Equality, HOPE, proud co-sponsor in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next please.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Thank you Mr. Chair and Members, Tristan Brown with CFT, Union of Educators and Classified Professionals, and a legacy student not of Stanford, here in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next please.
- Parshan Khosravi
Person
Parshan Khosravi, uAspire in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Let's now go to opposition. Lead witnesses in opposition please come forward. Mr. Graves, good morning.
- Alex Graves
Person
That makes sense. Good morning Chair and Members, Alex Graves, the Association of Independent California Colleges and Universities here in respectful opposition to the Bill in print, though would note that the amendments in the Committee analysis taken today do address a serious concern that we had had at this point coming to the Senate.
- Alex Graves
Person
We have historically maintained strong reservations as a sector about the state dictating admissions or academic practices at private colleges admittedly, but we also acknowledge the importance of the topic following last year's Supreme Court ruling banning affirmative action.
- Alex Graves
Person
We appreciate and welcome the discussion on how we can ensure students, families, and the public feel that all applicants receive a fair shot. And I do want to be sure to thank the Member, his staff, and the sponsors for taking time to have several meetings with us over the course of this process to discuss our concerns.
- Alex Graves
Person
Those discussions have helped us get agreement on several amendments, including language that aligns the implementation and reporting with the beginning of the 2025-26 academic year, and also clarifying that colleges can continue to get this information provided it is for purposes that are not considered in the review of their application for admission.
- Alex Graves
Person
As I noted, our biggest concern had been regarding the civil penalty, but again, we appreciate that that issue has been addressed here. I would just emphasize that our perspective and approach in these discussions has been on the goal of achieving what we would find to be a balanced proposal.
- Alex Graves
Person
We have urged balance because our schools are compliance-driven institutions who meet the requirements contained in numerous state laws passed each year, including that they have met the obligations outlined in AB 697 to report information on these practices the last four or five years.
- Alex Graves
Person
We also urge balance recognizing that the data contained in those reports shows that in four years, across the seven or eight institutions who have self-reported that nearly all students identified as legacy who were admitted met the same academic qualifications that applied to all applicants.
- Alex Graves
Person
And in those four years of reporting, there's only been about seven to 10 applicants who, by the institution's own admission, were offered admission who would otherwise not be academically qualified or meet the same qualifications.
- Alex Graves
Person
Just for context, last year in our last report, we had seven institutions who self-identified that they had offered admission to approximately 3300 applicants across those institutions who would be considered legacy. Of those about 1700 enrolled, but only one applicant who was offered admission was deemed to have been admitted under academic qualifications.
- Alex Graves
Person
It wouldn't be the same academic qualifications applied to other applicants. So, and lastly, we believe this balance is warranted because the undergraduate demographics of our institutions show that approximately two-thirds of our students identify as nonwhite.
- Alex Graves
Person
And even when you look at the seven or eight institutions who have self-reported legacy practices, you find that their undergraduate demographics are strikingly similar to what you would see at UC Berkeley or UCLA. Regarding donor admissions, I know we've talked mostly about legacy.
- Alex Graves
Person
I would just note that Stanford University, in their advancement office website, does have a very explicit policy stating that they do not, they make it very clear to donors, potential donors, that cannot influence an admissions decision.
- Alex Graves
Person
It makes very clear that admissions offices are separate from advancement offices and that policy is publicly available on their website if anyone wants to go read it. So again, we do still have some remaining concerns around some of the reporting language and data points that are requested in that.
- Alex Graves
Person
But again, want to reiterate that we think the discussions have been productive and that we're much closer to addressing those concerns.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any others here in opposition to the measure? If you'd like go forward. Seeing none, let's come back to the dais, colleagues questions? From my part. Thank you, Mr. Ting, for working with the Committee staff and with me. I believe we found a reasonably good balance.
- Josh Newman
Person
I do believe strongly, to the extent the state has taken a position as it relates to all of our public institutions, that we should be able to apply that same standard to private institutions that receive state funds. And I think that's what we've endeavored to do. I think we've done this successfully with the amendments.
- Josh Newman
Person
The amendments to which you referred to three basic things. Remove the civil penalties, adopt language that provide that independent colleges who forgo California grant funds can continue to apply the preferences as we've discussed. I'd argue there's a cost-benefit consideration there. The reputational benefit of colleges like Occidental.
- Josh Newman
Person
Mr. Graves is a proud graduate of Occidental, who've done that, and I think to their benefit versus the reputational damage for a school that would then opt out. And I believe that reputational damage would be sufficient to inhibit that choice.
- Josh Newman
Person
Lastly, glad to restore some of the reporting requirements so that over time, we've got a good basis for seeing what this measure actually does. And I think that's important.
- Josh Newman
Person
And I think it's equally important that over time, that we're willing to revisit this, if in fact, we don't see the kinds of changes that we've endeavored to prescribe here. So I appreciate, again, your willingness to do that. I do think we found a good balance. I'm glad to support the Bill in its amended form.
- Josh Newman
Person
Would you like to close?
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and again, thank you for the dialogue and the discussion, and for working with us. Very proud to put forward AB 1780, which will prohibit preferential treatment for legacies and children of donors or private institutions that accept state funds.
- Philip Ting
Person
I think it's a huge first step, and also a major, major win to even the playing field for many of these major institutions. And again, our colleges and universities aren't just organizations which take state funds. They have much more impact and much more influence than that.
- Philip Ting
Person
They really are seen by many people in their country as a way to make your life better, to get greater opportunity, to move classes, whether you're working class, moving into the middle class. That has been the long tradition that we've had.
- Philip Ting
Person
And I believe that our higher education institutions are probably the main reason we have the economy that we do in California. So we want to make sure that people of every walk of life are able to access those institutions and that their admissions are fair and equitable. With that respect for an aye vote on AB 1780.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Do I have a motion? You don't. You know, we can carry it over. You don't have to. Would you like you courtesy motion. We have a motion from Senator Glazer. Madam Consultant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item one, AB 1780 Ting, motion is do pass as amended to Senate Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure currently has one vote. We will leave it open for absent Members.
- Philip Ting
Person
Appreciate it. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Okay, next I see Assemblymember Jackson. Thank you for your patience. You'll be presenting AB 1818. Thank you to the witnesses.
- Josh Newman
Person
You may proceed when ready, sir. Do you have witnesses in support?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I do not.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay, please proceed.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister Chair and Members. First, I want to thank you, Mister Chair, and your committee staff for working with me on this Bill and gladly accepting the Committee's amendments to clarify and further make sure that we're clear on the restrictions of this pilot program.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Members, AB 1818 is a bill that requires the Community College Chancellor's Office and the California State University Chancellor's Office to establish a pilot program to create best practices to establish on how we can make sure that we are stabilizing our homeless students by allowing them to park overnight instead of in dangerous parts of wherever they may try to find another place to park, to sleep in their cars, while at the same time providing them with services to ensure that they are able to get out of those car vehicles and into stable housing.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
This does not allow for RVs. These are just standard vehicles. Also, this pilot program ensures that we follow some very simple social work principles. And that is you identify someone in need, you help to stabilize them and give them a sense of safety and consistency and predictability, and then you offer them services and get them connected.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
In this case would be their county's continuum of care and other housing vouchers if there's no emergency housing available on those selected campuses.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And then most importantly, allow for best practices to be developed that can then be shared system-wide so that we can make sure that we are dealing with what continues to be a top priority for the state. And this is simply saying that homelessness continues to be a state priority.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Therefore, we need all of our state institutions, wherever they are, whatever they do, to get in the game, to help to find ways to making sure that we deal with our homelessness issue throughout the state. And so, with that, for me, this is just a moral question.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Are we doing everything that we can to help our homeless students? And for me, this is making sure that this system, who in many cases, are one of the only ones to be able to identify who these folks are and what their needs are, identify them, stabilize them, get them on the course so that they can be able to thrive and focus on their higher education. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Members of the public here in support of the measure, please come forward with your name, your organization, your position.
- Kimberly Lewis
Person
Good morning. Kim Lewis, representing the California Coalition for Youth and support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next please.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Priscilla Quiroz here on behalf of the California Faculty Association in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Stephanie Goldman
Person
Stephanie Goldman, on behalf of the Student Senate for California Community Colleges in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- David Ramirez
Person
David Ramirez, on behalf of the University of California Student Association in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Tristan Brown with CFT in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any others seeing none. Opposition. Welcome to the opposition. Please come forward. Welcome to both of you.
- Elliot Stern
Person
Thank you so much. Good morning, Chair Newman, Senators, aides, and those assembled. I am Elliot Stern. I am President of Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. I am here to speak in opposition to AB 1818, which is a difficult task.
- Elliot Stern
Person
We all want to do something about the homelessness situation, and we certainly appreciate that there is within that bill a nod to and the expression of empathy for homeless students. I appreciate that empathy. There is expressed in this bill frustration with our homelessness situation and our inability to get on top of it. I share that frustration.
- Elliot Stern
Person
But the proponents often describe this bill as doing something, and something is better than nothing. I would posit to you that we are not doing nothing, and it is offensive to suggest we are.
- Elliot Stern
Person
Many of the things that Assembly Member Jackson has spoken to are already doing already happening at colleges across the state, at most, if not all colleges across the state.
- Elliot Stern
Person
And what AB 1818 would do would be to supplant those by virtue of its mandate and by virtue of pulling funds from things that we are already doing toward the needed policing that would happen under AB 1818 for less effective practices. Specifically, we follow high-impact practices that are suggested by experts in homelessness across the country.
- Elliot Stern
Person
These force us to focus on doing something immediately for students, rapid response, getting them rehoused as quickly as possible, trying to prevent lack of housing in the first place. If we can help somebody who's behind in their rent, if we can give somebody a security deposit to get a new place, those are the measures that happen.
- Elliot Stern
Person
Prevention, rapid response, and a holistic approach to treating our students, not allowing them to sleep in their cars, but rather getting out of their cars into our basic needs center so we can look at all of the needs that they have. These include food, transportation, wellness, technology. Al the things that students need, need to be addressed holistically.
- Elliot Stern
Person
And if they're stuck in their car in a parking lot, they're not coming in for those services. And the longer they delay in coming in for those services, the worse the prognosis for preventing or getting them out of homelessness in the first place. So, this can actually harm what we're trying to do in many ways.
- Elliot Stern
Person
We offer these basic needs centers that address these needs that I've spoken of very holistically with students, and specifically for unhoused students. We respond in three ways.
- Elliot Stern
Person
First, we offer students vouchers so the vouchers can be for a hotel, a youth hostel, or often we offer Airbnb vouchers to allow students to get a real roof over their head, not the roof of their car. We also offer students referrals to community agencies to help them with longer-term housing needs.
- Elliot Stern
Person
And finally, and most importantly, we offer emergency grants, as I said earlier, to prevent them from becoming homeless in the first place, or to get them in new housing as quickly as possible.
- Elliot Stern
Person
At Saddleback College, in addition to our basic needs center, which are throughout the state at every college, I can assure you at this point, we also offer. We also do a survey, a student needs survey, at the start of the term to actually find out what our students need. And among those questions are, are you couch surfing?
- Elliot Stern
Person
Have you been without a home for one or two days this year? And we go to them. We are proactive in going to them, in making sure that those needs are addressed acutely and quickly and not giving them time to become chronically homeless. AB 1818 would raise costs for me considerably. Here's why.
- Elliot Stern
Person
It's easy for Walmart or for the train station or for a strip mall to open their parking lot. They're not under Title IX. They're not under Clery Act. I have a higher mandate for a higher level of security. This means that I would have to have 24-hour policing and provide a safe space for students.
- Elliot Stern
Person
The cost of that has been estimated for my college, somewhere around $400,000. Other colleges make that estimate much higher. In any case, that $400,000 has to come from someplace. I mentioned to you that we're doing emergency grants. Those emergency grants cost us 500,000.
- Elliot Stern
Person
The 400,000 would need to come from the 500,000, so we would be supplanting an effective measure against homelessness with a less effective measure. This is a step backwards for the state and a step backwards for the good work that the colleges are already doing. Thank you so much.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Welcome.
- Ray Murillo
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. So, my name is Ray Murillo. I'm the Interim Assistant Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, Equity, and Belonging with the CSU Office of the Chancellor, and I'm here to speak in respectful opposition to AB 1818, which would require the CSU to create a pilot program to allow students to sleep in their personal vehicles.
- Ray Murillo
Person
The CSU recognizes severity of the students experiencing housing insecurity and shares the authors and the legislature's goals in supporting housing insecure students. With the legislature's ongoing support to address basic needs, every CSU university has an emergency housing program. These programs range from on campus short-term accommodations to hotel ventures to long-term solutions.
- Ray Murillo
Person
One such program is the Rapid Rehousing Program. In 2019, the Legislature created and funded a rapid rehousing program at the CSU at the CSU to support students experiencing housing insecurity. Eight CSU campuses currently have a rapid rehousing program that works in collaboration with community-based organizations to provide housing options for students.
- Ray Murillo
Person
A noteworthy point for 24-25 is the CSU will be increasing the number of campuses that participate in the Rapid Rehousing Program. When a student utilizes the University's housing emergency housing program, they also receive wraparound services through basic needs case manager, including mental health and meal support.
- Ray Murillo
Person
These state-funded programs have designed have been designed to address the student's basic needs with dignity. In 22-23 the CSU supported 14,000 students through various housing assistance programs and an additional 7,600 students received emergency funding.
- Ray Murillo
Person
With existing programs in place to address student housing and security, the CSU believes it would be a step backwards to fund a program that would allow students to sleep in their vehicles. Campuses have beds available for students experiencing housing insecurity.
- Ray Murillo
Person
It would be a disservice for our students to lower their standard of support and have the students sleep in their vehicles.
- Ray Murillo
Person
While the bill is designed to create a pathway for existing housing for existing emergency housing programs, the CSU feels it is imperative to have the students access existing programs that would provide a safe bed and not have them sleeping in a parking lot.
- Ray Murillo
Person
The CSU estimates that AB 1818 would create a cost to the system about $3.5 million to administer per year.
- Ray Murillo
Person
Financially, we would likely have to divert funds from the other basic needs and housing programs to operate this pilot. The CSU and the Legislature have invested in emergency housing programs that are designed to allow students to find long-term housing solutions while supporting them to be successful in the classroom.
- Ray Murillo
Person
Permitting students to live in their cars as a homelessness strategy would be a substantial change that moves the universities away from the successful programs that CSU and our universities operate to ensure a safe environment that fosters student success and well-being.
- Ray Murillo
Person
On behalf of the CSU and the 23 universities, I respectfully urge you to oppose this bill recognizing the importance of students and existing emergency housing programs. Thank you for your time and consideration.
- Josh Newman
Person
And thank you for your testimony. Are there others who would like to testify in opposition. Welcome.
- Ashley Walker
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. Ashley Walker with Nossaman on behalf of North Orange County Community College District, Citrus College and Mount San Antonio College in respectful opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next.
- Mark Mac Donald
Person
Thank you, Chair and Members. Mark Mac Donald. On behalf of the Antelope Valley, Kern, Foothill-De Anza, Peralta, Palo Verde, San Bernardino, San Diego and Contra Costa community college districts, all in opposition. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next.
- David Neben
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. David Neben, on behalf of Cerritos, Cuesta, and Allan Hancock College, in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Nune Garipian
Person
Good morning. Nune Garipian, on behalf of the community College League of California and the California, excuse me. And the Association of California Community College Administrators. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any others in opposition? Any tweeners? Not seeing any tweeners? Come back to the dais. Colleagues, questions, comments for the author? Senator Glazer, go ahead.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Well, I really appreciate the sentiment behind this bill. I share the author's concern for the problem easily identified by, you know, I've had the opportunity as the Chair of the Senate Committee on Student Success to travel around to state universities to hear about basic need problems.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Certainly, the problem that you've identified of students not having stable housing, it's a serious issue. We also know it's a serious issue community wide. It's not just for our universities as well.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And I think that part of the responsibility there is on us as a Legislature to provide adequate student housing at some of our universities, and certainly the community colleges have almost none. And that if we could be doing that better, I think it would help alleviate the problem that you've identified in your bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
But it's difficult to do, and for obvious reasons, it's expensive with limited funds that we do have. It takes away from other things, nevertheless.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I mean, quite frankly, the thing that has always bothered me when I engage with campus leaders about this problem is that to talk about the relationship between the county social service side of things and what happens on the campus, and the fact that in many communities, the campuses are almost seem like islands, that it's their problem and a county who has the social service assistance, that can be very valuable.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Somehow, it's just not their problem. And they don't connect to the student community the way they should. And it's a point of frustration, goes ways beyond your bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
But it's a part of the inquiry that I know that I have made, I guess, and I appreciate also the fact that you want to do this as a pilot, showing that we want to take some baby steps here in this space. And that's, I think, thoughtful in what you're trying to accomplish.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The thing that makes me pause today, despite the really good intentions that you have, is that we have, at least on the state university level, we've appointed people to be in charge.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And in the Senate, we get a chance to interview them and confirm them if they're qualified to run the state university system, the Board of Trustees. And I have heard, and you can confirm this, that you have not had the opportunity yet to go to the Board of Trustees and ask them specifically to engage in this.
- Steven Glazer
Person
What is an obvious issue of concern that you appropriately have raised? Have you had the chance to have it be agendized, engage the trustees on this to see if they could in their own way come up with a policy that helps advance the goals that you have properly identified?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I have not, and I'm not sure, you know, the appropriate way to go about that. I mean, I used to sit on the board of trustees for this issue, and that type of engagement is not usually something that actually happens.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I mean, of course, as a Member of the Senate, you have more engagement because of your appointment powers, but certainly I have not. It's just been the engagement with their offices, their Sacramento representative.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So, if the bill doesn't move forward, I'd be happy to help you with that, that is not difficult to get an item agendized on the agenda of the trustees and to have you come and present and share that concern appropriately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So, to see whether that board can make some decisions or give some guidance to the 23 campuses about how they'd like to see it handled, maybe even better than what you're suggesting, or at least certainly to get updated to understand how responsive they are to these problems that you have correctly identified.
- Steven Glazer
Person
More than just housing, basic needs is a broad term.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Absolutely. Yeah.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The bill may very well move forward today, but I'd be happy to work with you to help make sure that if you want to go on that course, that I can partner with you to encourage them to engage directly. I think that's a healthy thing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And by the way, this goes beyond your bill. This is a general philosophical view I have about a lot of efforts to come to the Legislature and try to establish statewide policy in a place where we do have appointing authority and we do have, there is responsibility that we hold governing boards accountable for.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So, this is just beyond your bill. This is my first time to kind of engage on it. That's where I have reluctance today on such a good and caring proposal.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
No, I appreciate that. I would just say a few things. Number one, what opposition stated, this is not to state that the preference is for them to sleep in parking lots. If they have programs already and robust enough to prevent that from happening in the first place, by all means, do it.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
But if you don't and a student finds themselves having to find some street, some alley, somewhere that is less safe, then we should provide them with that stability.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And it may be a situation where this also requires the student to apply for this special permit, which means now we know who they are, and that would be a perfect opportunity for them to say that, oh, did you know we have these other services available. The idea is how do we get them into that pipeline?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And certainly, what the data says is that we're not doing everything that we can, and this allows us to actually create a best practices by, for any reason this ends up having to be a last resort, not the preference, but the last resort. Resort.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And so, you know, in many cases, I've, those who have decided to meet with me, I have literally engaged very thoughtfully and made amendments to address those. There's many things that were said today that, number one, I've never had the chance to actually meet with them, but never had those other issues brought up to me.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And so, I'm trying to be very thoughtful for this, but also understanding that sometimes institutions have to continue to adapt to find out, to see what's going on the ground and their unwillingness to. I think it's just an issue. Now, I don't represent institutions. I represent the students who are homeless.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And I think that's just a difference from what I believe is my representation. Right? And so, you know, respectfully ask for your aye vote. But at the end of the day, you know, I just trying to continue to move the needle and still open to having those discussions and all those type of things, too.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
But I just think that, you know, many cases, these are some things you have to do, continue to push those issues forward so hopefully that they will continue to adapt to the changing environment we're finding ourselves in here.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Could I ask the CSU rep to come back to the table for a question?
- Josh Newman
Person
Certainly. He's right here. Come back to the table, Mister Murillo. I thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'd just like to ask, you know, there hasn't been an agenda item that I'm aware of, and you can familiar, on this issue in recent years, is that correct?
- Ray Murillo
Person
Correct. Yeah. We regularly report on basic needs to the board of trustees, which include students experiencing homelessness.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I think I'd like to ask you to take back these, this bill could very well move forward today. We'll see how it goes through the process.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'd like to request that they agendize this as a formal item so the Assemblymen could come and appear and speak to the concerns that he sees and give them, the trustees, the opportunity to respond. So, that'd be my request to you.
- Ray Murillo
Person
Sure, certainly hoping.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The chancellor.
- Ray Murillo
Person
We were already scheduled or planning to schedule a presentation for this fall for the Board of Trustees on basic needs, so it's in alignment with what we were planning to do.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair. Good morning, Doctor Jackson. Member Jackson.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, first of all, I just want to note that in the 23-24 the state invested $33.1 million into basic needs and rapid rehousing programs as a total in the state, which as we know, in the past two years, three years, we've funded unprecedented or geared unprecedented amounts of funding towards our schools.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I've also, in budget one, been a proponent of actually building housing on our campuses because of the burden that it poses on the communities surrounding this, these colleges, and how that impacts the cost of living.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I did not know, and I'm just sharing what I've learned since being on these committees is that, you know, we are, as a state, we require our universities, colleges to increase enrollment. And in that we don't always facilitate the housing to accommodate those students. And that has an impact on our communities and the cost of housing.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I know that there was a lot of proposals with regards to vouchers and give them vouchers to accommodate housing within the local communities. And I said, you know, that still has an impact on the housing inventory for our local community members, still impacting the cost of housing. So, it just goes right up, right?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
We don't have enough housing and it still goes up regardless of how many vouchers we give. That still does not address the root problem, which is actually housing itself. So, I've been a proponent of actually solving the issue at the root of the problem, which is making sure that we have housing available, period.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Building it on our campuses if we're going to require that. Having said that, I know from discussions in my district, and I'm not sure how that has been modeled or been practiced in other areas, but I know within my district there's been a lot of collaboration between K12 and junior colleges and colleges and counties actually to come together to the table and create systems in which once we know our students in K12 are qualify for a free lunch, they are automatically tagged and be able to share that information as they move to college, community colleges, or the local colleges and the county in order to carry that information, those demographics, to give them the services that they need.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, that is something that if we're not doing statewide, something that other districts could look to see how they could implement that collaboration of data so that they don't, the students, when they graduate from high school, don't have to apply for all those services, go through it. So, coming to identifying those students can continue moving forward.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, it's one way where we don't lose them to a system where they become homeless and without services and without resources around them. So, when there is an awareness and then there's a will, we can create those systems of communicating and following those students through, right?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
No, absolutely.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, there's really ways and means to be able to do that. The other question, the concern that I had was, as we implement the liability that happens when we allow our students to sleep in their cars. For the universities, that is one concern.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
The cost of diverting the funding from other programs are effective into trying to provide to accommodate this last resort. Now, the impact.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I do have a question, that was a concern, a question that I had was, do we have a number of students who are sleeping in their cars right now that are not being met through the colleges and the universities with the proper resources to accommodate them to where we would need to facilitate this particular program?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And I'm curious about that because I know it happens, but do we have the data as to how many kids we're missing? Because if we have that data, then as a college and a university, we have to make sure that we are meeting those.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I'm just worried that we're going to take away from routing those students towards the resources of having proper shelter, which I get. That's not the course, this is last resort. But in order to implement this, we'll be facilitating or trying to, or remove funding from those programs that are actually accessing those students. So, a lot.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I know I've said it quite a bit, I'm all over the place, but there's just so much already available to me, to the students, based on my experience these past three years and what we've been trying to accommodate, that I'm thinking of, why do we still need to consider such a bill at this time?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And so I'm reluctant to support it because I think in lieu of this, we have to maybe go back and reassess what we already are supposed to be doing and the funding that we're already allocated to these programs and try to see where we need to address the issue at the root of the problem, rather than expanding something that is not ideal or safe and more costly and diverting funding from other current programs.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Yeah.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Does that make sense?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
No, no. No, absolutely. Number one. A number in terms of statewide data, particularly to homeless students, each campus has their own data. Right? The data that's provided statewide, you know, is lagging, meaning it's not as current for me to say these are the exact numbers this year. Right?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
But there's no doubt even in, I have two community colleges in my district, and they all, they have basic, they have the basic needs program. Right? But there are still not enough places, or they don't have the additional resources to take them out of their vehicles.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
So, there's still right now hundreds of students throughout this state who will be getting their basic needs in terms of food pantries from their colleges, but they will be taking them to their vehicles and driving around trying to find a safe place to sleep. This is not intended to divert resources.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And I'm more than willing to do some upon appropriation language and those type of things to address that issue. Not a problem. Right? But the idea is what we're doing is not enough and we've got to still find different ways to do it. There is a safe way to allow people to park in their vehicles.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I know this from my own social worker background. There are models being used throughout this state right now that does that in a safe way. Not the ideal. Right? But there's a way to do it in terms of your liability question.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
We addressed it in the bill in terms of liability, and then we asked them for additional language for their own legal people to give us, and they decided not to give me additional language in terms of liability. And so, we have addressed all those issues here.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And I'm even willing to address the idea of trying to take away resources from one thing to do another. That's just, that doesn't make sense to me. And if that's not clear here, I'm more than willing to address that.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, let me do this, Senator Ochoa Bogh. So, I'm actually going to have to leave and come back. I have to go present Appropriations. And I don't mean to shortchange this conversation, but I want to make a couple of points before I leave.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, Assembly Member Jackson, you and I spoke, I think, last week, and if you recall, my reaction to this bill was, you know, oppositional to start. I mean, to President Stern's points, I was concerned, one at the prospective cost, two at the sort of what I thought perhaps was a duplicative feature here.
- Josh Newman
Person
And then third, you know, this question about impact on both schools and communities as related to public safety, and you've addressed one of those, and I appreciate your commitment for a language that makes clear that this would be upon appropriation so there's no adverse impact or squeezing out on the part of colleges.
- Josh Newman
Person
And you were also, I think, good enough to accept my suggested amendment of no RVs. Right? Because what we're not trying to do here.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
We're not trying to have no tailgate parties around here.
- Josh Newman
Person
Well, okay. But I think what gets lost here, and you made the point very well to me, was that this is a compliment to not a replacement for other programs.
- Josh Newman
Person
And I do appreciate the logic here that for those students that find themselves in that precarious position, that the opportunity for a very limited period, a respite, as it were, would come with the requirement to actually apply to get a permit on a limited duration basis, and with that, to use that as an integration and screening basis for causing them proactively to access existing services.
- Josh Newman
Person
And so, I think that's, there's promise in that concept as long as it's done in such a way to President Stern's point that it's not at the expense of other programs, that it's not being done in lieu of other programs.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, you've made that clear to me that that's the intent. And so, I would ask you also to consider a limited, a limitation on the duration. Right? So, you know, if somebody got a permit, I guess two limitations. One, there'd be a limited time period, couldn't go on open-endedly.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Correct.
- Josh Newman
Person
And two, that, you know, it's not all day. Right? So, I assume this would be, as a matter of course, that there would be hours. So, you don't need, to the President's point, 24-hour security around the program. But we've also.
- Josh Newman
Person
You've also accepted the amendments, I think, that we're going to circumscribe this to five CSUs maximum, and the 20 make it proportional across the systems. 20 community colleges with a sunset. Is that correct?
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay. And, you know, so with that, you still. There still is the larger question about fiscal impact. This will go from here to Judiciary. There may be some legal issues you can discuss, but at the end of the day, you know, it's about the cost. And, you know, this, as you know, is a challenging fiscal environment.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
That's correct.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, you'll have to get through that gate, and I think you'll also have to give the assurance that this won't cannibalize other programs that are equally needed at this time. And so, with that, you know, I'm going to leave because I have to go, ironically, go to Appropriations, make a bid for one of my own bills. But I'm going to give you.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I'll be there next.
- Josh Newman
Person
I get to beat you there. I know I'll beat you there. Oh, you're on the Committee?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
No. I'll be begging.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, I don't have to be nice to you. That's great. So, you know, I'm going to give you sort of a conditional yes vote here.
- Josh Newman
Person
But I do think it's important, and I appreciate all of the schools; concerns as well articulated by President Stern, that we have to make sure that this is a complement to and probably integrated with all of the other programs because there is an acknowledgement and I think an ongoing effort both at the CSU and the CCC's to make, you know, to address this really pressing need of.
- Josh Newman
Person
And very complicated. Yeah.
- Josh Newman
Person
And challenges economically.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Very complicated. Yeah.
- Josh Newman
Person
With that, I'm going to pass the gavel back to Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Can I ask a clarification before you leave? I know you're rushing out to get first in line, but.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm like, last in line. I'm about to lose my place. Go ahead.
- Steven Glazer
Person
You said subject to an appropriation, so I want to just be clear on that, that the author's agreed.
- Josh Newman
Person
That's his offer, and glad to take you up on that.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right.
- Josh Newman
Person
Yes.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Yep. Yeah.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And then for me, I'm just going to. Thank you. I'm just going to. I'm going to abstain on the bill today. I would like.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
What I think would be probably best moving forward, in my personal, humble opinion, is that perhaps doing a study of what we currently have across the state when addressing our students in needs and seeing what is working, what's not working, and what the loopholes would be in order to address it, because we are allocating a lot of funding, and we have so many programs available throughout the state on so many levels, whether it's county, whether it's at the college level, that if we're still missing some students in this process, that we should probably look into where we're failing and move forward on that in that perspective.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, I think if there's still a need, personally, I think a study would probably be best to ensure that we do have the programs or an audit to see, you know, how we're spending those, those fundings and those programs or the funding for programs in our state addressing our students in need.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, with that, I'm going to lay off because I still don't think that this issue, this bill is addressing the root cause of the problem. And so, I, you know, with the utmost respect, I will be laying off on the bill today. With that, oh, yes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Now, I'm going to move the bill under the conditions that have been set by the Chair to.
- Steven Glazer
Person
You have my word on that.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And that your heart is totally in the right place doing the right thing. And I would go back to the CSU and say, I know you're having an agenda on basic needs, but I want this specific proposal. If it doesn't move through this year, I want to make sure that it's clear that the specific proposal by the Assemblymen is one I hope will be part of that agenda so they can address specifically about parking on campus. Okay. I'm happy to
- Steven Glazer
Person
I appreciate it.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Member Jackson. Would you like to close?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I appreciate discussion. Very complicated issues, but there's nothing but complicated issues left. So, here we are. I appreciate it. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Member Jackson. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item three, AB 1818, Jackson. Motion is do pass, as amended, to the Senate Judiciary Committee. [Roll call]
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you. We have one vote registered for the for AB 1818. And we will put that on hold for our absent Members. Okay, we have Member Ward present. Item number, file number four, AB 1858 next.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Welcome.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Senators. Let me start by. I want to thank the Committee for their work. And I'm very happy to accept the Committee's amendments. They're clarifying in nature, but also aligned with the intent of what we're trying to achieve through this bill. In California schools, there are clear policies and procedures for earthquake and fire drills.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Unfortunately, this is not the case for active shooter drills. School shooter drills take many forms, from being as basic as modified lockdowns to extreme active shooter simulations with gunfire, fake blood, actors on campus. Students and staff not being made aware that a drill is taking place and causing significant trauma to all who are involved.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Nowhere else in our school system is there something so abrasive and unregulated. When we're doing a fire drill, you wouldn't fill the halls full of fake flames and turn up the temperature. And when you have an earthquake drill, you wouldn't start shaking the room.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
AB 1858 seeks to standardize school shooter drills by giving clear guidance to the California Department of Education so they can update their current requirements for school districts to use when conducting these drills. This guidance will focus on age appropriate drill procedures. Ban simulated shooting and violence. Provide local resources for students to reach out to address trauma.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Require students and staff be told when a drill is beginning. And notification of the drill the week of and following the drill the same day. So we understand that there's a drill coming. And it is not the real thing. I am testifying in support of AB 1858. Cassandra Whetstone from Mom's Demand Action.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Tristan Brown from the California Federation of Teachers. And when the time is appropriate, I would respectfully request your aye vote.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
Thank you. Member Ward, welcome. Thank you. Good morning. Vice Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Cassandra Whetstone. I'm a parent, I'm an educator, and I'm a volunteer with mom's demand action. I'm here today asking you to support AB 1858.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
This Bill will guide schools conducting active shooter drills to utilize a trauma informed approach, including advance notification of drills to staff and parents, limitations on drills with simulations, and availability of mental health resources. Active shooter drills come from a place of good intentions. Student safety.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
As an educator, I know that students learn best when they feel safe, confident and comfortable. But these drills have measurable negative impacts on the stress and anxiety levels of students.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
Research has found that drills involving children have not proven to be effective in preventing school gun violence, while simultaneously finding that these drills significantly negatively impact students mental health. AB 1858 will help to mitigate these stressors by including guidance for age appropriate drills and making sure these drills are trauma informed.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
With the well being of students taking priority. This bill is backed and guided by research, a report published by everytown for gun safety, the American Federation of Teachers, and the National Education Association.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
While we don't recommend active shooter drills for children, if they are happening, we believe that they need to be conducted in ways that will minimize the harmful impacts on our school communities. On behalf of Every Town for Gun Safety, Mom's Demand Action, and Students Demand Action. I respectfully ask for your aye vote on AB 1858.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members, Tristan Brown of CFT. We represent over 120,000 educators in this state, all of which are living in their constant fear that someday might be their day to unfortunately be a part of a tragedy at school. So we do take this policy area extremely seriously.
- Tristan Brown
Person
We know that our members have had to serve as shields for children in the past. And seen unspeakable tragedies in our campuses. Unfortunately, as these continue to grow in our communities year in and year out, we need to be prepared. But preparation does not require trauma to also accompany it.
- Tristan Brown
Person
We were excited to see that the author of this Bill put this policy forward to prevent unneeded trauma to both educators, classified staff, and students to have to live through a very serious and traumatic experience.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Anecdotally, we know that some campuses have tried to make a very authentic training happen where notice was not provided to students or staff in a way to make it as most realistic as possible. This does keep people up. This does create trauma that they have to live with. And we don't need to have to see the gore.
- Tristan Brown
Person
We don't have to live through the shots to understand what to do in case of an emergency, to vacate, to hide, to fight in some circumstances and whatever the best training methods are, we hope and send all positive energy that we never have to live through a day like this again.
- Tristan Brown
Person
But in that event, we're hopeful that we can do so being properly trained without the trauma associated with live fire, with fake fire, with gore, with any of those elements that will keep staff and pupils awake at night, reliving these traumatic moments and wondering when their day is coming.
- Tristan Brown
Person
We'd much rather have folks know to hide and to seek out law enforcement and to seek out safety, whatever the best practices are, but not needlessly send folks through a very traumatic experience. So the Federation of Teachers, both representing classified and certificated staff in our state, are happy to support this Bill and we urge your aye vote this morning.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you very much. And we'll continue with any witnesses in support of AB 1858.
- Yara Jidal
Person
Yara Jidal, Volunteer with Mom's Demand Action in support.
- Kimberly Manfredi
Person
Kimberly Manfredi, a volunteer with Mom's Demand Action in support.
- Clara Whetstone
Person
Clara Whetstone, a volunteer with Mom's Demand Action in support.
- Julie Chapman
Person
Julie Chapman, a volunteer with Mom's Demand Action in support.
- Jilian King
Person
Jillian King, volunteer, Mom's Demand Action and retired K12 administrator.
- Chris Myers
Person
Chris Myers with the California School Employees Association in strong support.
- Rebecca Marcus
Person
Rebecca Marcus, with the Brady Campaign in support.
- Pamela Gibbs
Person
Good morning, Madam Vice Chair and Senators, Pamela Gibbs, representing the Los Angeles County Office of Education in support.
- Sierra Cook
Person
Sierra Cook with the San Diego Unified School District in support.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Priscilla Quiroz here on behalf of the California Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in support.
- Lucy Carter
Person
Lucy Salcito Carter with the Alameda County Office of Education in support.
- Zarmude Kacherno
Person
Zarmude Kacherno, with Twin Rivers Unified School District in strong support.
- Wendy Bramble
Person
Wendy Bramble, just a normal citizen, in strong support.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you very much. Seeing no other witnesses in the report, we'll now move to any witnesses in opposition to AB 1858. See? None. We'll bring it back to the dais. Senator, welcome.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Well, you gotta acknowledge me. Why was this not on consent? Was not privy to those discussions. Well, I'd admonish the chair if he's here. In fact, I will admonish the chair because he's not here. This should have been on consent. So, back in those of you who heard the story before, I'm sorry.
- Scott Wilk
Person
So, back in 2019, I was out hiking. Early in the morning, I come back to the house. The TV's on, and it's an aerial view of a neighborhood. I go, that looks like my neighborhood. And it was because 20 minutes earlier, there was a shooting at the high school that my kids had gone to.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Anybody that you know of, who knows that area, would say, that would be the last school in America where that would happen. So it can happen anywhere. And the thing that was interesting about it, obviously, it went down the right of way.
- Scott Wilk
Person
First responders were so impressed by the way the students executed the game plan that they had learned, and they learned it without all the trauma and all that. So you can do it without that. That's one. And number two students, well, actually, three students died. The shooter, two others, and then two were wounded.
- Scott Wilk
Person
One of the wounded students, who actually was the target, she did not have the same feelings for the shooter as he had for her, a friend of ours. So that shot in her went through cleanly. So that was good. So we went to go visit her after she got out of the hospital. It was Sunday.
- Scott Wilk
Person
The Patriots game's on. We bring a gift. We go there like 20 minutes and have a great time. Another family comes, so we leave. And then it's interesting, my wife and I get in the car and we both start crying. And we're just triggered from that.
- Scott Wilk
Person
So I could see where you could get triggered from some of these extreme examples that I've seen about or heard about. So I think this is just a common sense. And again, I can't believe it's not on consent. But anyway, he's already moved the bill, but I'll vote for it. Thank you, Senator.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Well, just for the record, to protect the chair in his absence, a bill on consent typically gets there because there's agreement between the chair and the Vice Chair. That's how things appear on consent, just as I understand it. And by the way, it's okay to be sensitive. Senators are sensitive. And that's all right.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'm happy to move this bill. Thank you for bringing it to us. Thank you.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Senator Glazer. So now. Well, would you like to close?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, madam Vice Chair. No, I appreciate your consideration of this. I think it sets important guardrails in place where, of course, we want our schools to be safe spaces. We need to go through exercises that are going to be able to think about what to do in the tragic eventuality of a really difficult situation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
When we introduced this bill, it might not surprise you that we received a lot of communication statewide from students or former students that had lived through a drill that had induced trauma.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Some of them were still living for that years after the fact from, I remember calls from the peninsula, from the Central Valley that they just had an experience where they thought it was the real thing that, you know, I think just really, and, you know, they heard sounds or they heard activities that just really induced and triggered a real fear for them.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So let's, and I'll say for the record, too, that, you know, a lot of our school districts are using drills, but they're doing so responsibly.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And the fact that we just haven't had statewide guidance that is actually creating some conformity and some guardrails about best practices and what to do or not do is helpful to make sure that well intentioned or other districts that may be thinking about something designed that is just going too far.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
But for all their good intentions, we're preventing that. And so I'm looking forward to this guidance, being able to support schools so that they can continue to be, as we heard, the safe and thriving environments that we want and would respectfully request your aye vote.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Member Ward. Madam Secretary, please call the rule.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File Item four, AB 1858 award motion is do pass as amended, to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you. Three votes, and we'll put that on call for APPCN Members. Okay, so we have the wonderful presence of Member Kalra. You'll be presenting item 18 and 19. Would you like. Do you have a preference of which one would you like to.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We'll go in order. I think 2398 is the first.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So number, file item number 18, AB 2398.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. AB 2398 would require the California State University system to conduct an external audit of each of its campuses by January 1, 2028. It would also require all audits of the CSU system or its campuses to be made available to the public. Currently, the CSU system conducts an external, system wide audit each year.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
It also conducts smaller, irregular audits of various programs operated by individual campuses. However, it does not currently conduct standalone external audits of each of its 23 campuses. While existing audits contain some information regarding each campus's financial status and activities, they do not constitute the full inspection that would be offered by a complete campus level audit.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
For example, while these general overviews reference instructional expenses and payments to employees, they do not include any detailed information about faculty salaries. Just last year, the impact of this data deficit was illustrated by a turbulent collective bargaining process between the CSU system and the California Faculty Association.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
While CFA asked for a 12% raise, the CSU system said that it could only afford a 5% raise. However, an analysis by Independent Accounting Professor Dr. Howard Bunsis concluded that, in 2022, the CSU system had around 13.8. 13.8 billion in net assets and 8.1 billion in mostly unrestricted reserves.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Unfortunately, this difference in financial assessment was not immediately resolved, leading to a series of historic, system wide strikes across all 23 CSU campuses. Eventually, CFA and the CSU system came to an agreement that included an approximately 10% pay increase.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
AB 2398 will shed much needed light on the general financial health of one of our state's most crucial educational institutions. By requiring a complete audit of each of the 23 CSU campuses, this bill will help us make better financial decisions that will positively impact faculty, students, and the CSU system alike. With me to provide supporting testimony is Priscilla Quiroz, on behalf of the California Faculty Association.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome, Ms. Quiroz. You have three minutes.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Chair and Members. Priscilla Quiroz on behalf of the California Faculty Association, proud sponsors of AB 2398. Just want to thank the Assembly Member and his staff for all the work on this measure. AB 2398 is a crucial step towards enhancing transparency and accountability within the California State State University system by requiring external financial audits for each CSU campus by January 1, 2028.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
As the Assembly Member stated, earlier this year, the CSU system faced an unprecedented strike, the first of its kind in the nation, with all 23 campuses going on strike. The discrepancy in bargaining numbers underscore the need for accurate financial information. AB 2398 will complement the system wide annual audit by auditing individual campuses. This is essential for understanding how public funds are utilized effectively and appropriately. For these reasons, we respectfully ask for your aye vote today. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Are there any others here who'd like to testify in support of the measure? If so, please come forward. Seeing none, do we have opposition to the measure? Is anyone here in opposition to the measure? Again, seeing none. Come back to the committee. Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I will ask a question on this. You know, the bargaining that takes place is not a campus by campus agreement on salaries and benefits. It's a system wide agreement. So I'm trying to understand why this is really going to affect the bargaining aspects that you raised in your opening.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. The positive benefits of a campus by campus audit is not simply related to bargaining or will not only have benefits related to bargaining, however, it could shed light and create more transparency as to the funds that are available system wide if you're doing a campus by campus audit.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Because, since they don't do campus by campus audits, oftentimes funds are, it's not easily delineated where the funds are. And so by doing a campus by campus audit, oftentimes, or in many cases, there are, it could be, through the bargaining process, specific assets of specific campuses.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Or for example, right now, I've worked with sounds of San Jose State University, both in terms of housing issues as well as in terms of facilities upgrades. It'll be very helpful to know how they're dealing with their money before they come and ask for money from us through our budget process as well. So it's not specific, the benefits aren't specific just to bargaining.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
However, I think that if the numbers were more clear, and the campus by campus audits would have made the numbers more clear, it could have potentially prevented a strike. Because some of the funds that weren't as clearly identified would have been more clear on the campus by campus level. Oftentimes, money that you're looking at at a CSU level is actually being kept at a campus by campus level. And so I think there's opportunities not just for benefits to bargaining, but a much broader basis.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Because the law, what the CSU does today is they provide expenditures of 50,000 or more are posted. Right. So those kinds of... And an audit is determining whether the balance sheet is accurate. So I am trying to wrestle...
- Steven Glazer
Person
I know that, look, transparency is good. But I am wrestling with whether this is going to create an expense. This is now. I mean, audits are very expensive. They're very expensive. I chaired the Audit Committee at the CSU, so I know. And this is going to require 23 new audits, new hiring of new accounting firms to determine whether the balances are reported and reported correctly, despite the fact that they're already providing this detail at great, significant level. In fact, we had a bill a few weeks ago that brought it down to, does it bring that to $10,000?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Which is, I didn't support it. It's like, that's excessive to me. One final thing, and again, I know the intentions are good here, but a lot of the criticisms during that strike is, I understand it was about the reserve policy of the system and of the campuses. And I found that to be challenging to understand, because when you're talking about salaries that you have an obligation to pay every year, you don't pay it out of one time money, and the reserves are set aside for one time.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I understand why there could be criticism of it, of how much you have, but the idea that a reserve level could somehow compensate for an ongoing salary obligation was really difficult to follow. But I know the intentions are to try to create a Kumbaya moment between the faculty union and the system.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I know that's a positive thing to accomplish. I'm just not so sure that these additional expenses that this bill would force the system to incur... That means that that affects tuition, that affects money available for salaries and benefits. I mean, there is a cost here. But this isn't the Appropriations Committee, so we don't have to deal with that.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And, Senator, I think you're 100% correct. The intention certainly is not to increase tuition, what have you. To your point, a lot of the details are already kept. A lot of the information. They have, the information there that would be made available relatively easily for an external audit to occur.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
This would require audits of the campuses every three years, which means they wouldn't have to do all 23 every year. It would be seven or eight audits a year. Again, that's... And we delayed it to 2028 also to consider the cost, especially the ramp up, in order to reduce that ramp up cost.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And so these are issues that have been brought up over the course of this bill moving forward, and we're taking them as seriously as we can. We definitely don't want to see any impact on students. But I think that, given the fact that a lot of the details that would be required for audit are already kept, I think it would be a matter just make them available to an external auditing firm, which does have cost to it, obviously.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
But some of the information that's gleaned from the system wide audit can also be used as well. And so I think that we have to balance it. There's no doubt about it. In terms of what the costs are, what savings can be gleaned from the cost of an audit, and in terms of the reserves as well. I mean, I think there's a lot of ask for funding for infrastructure improvements on campuses and there's large reserves.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
You know, I think that should be considered when we're asked for state money to go to some of those costs, if there are reserves, as to why they aren't using some of those reserves for some of those infrastructure costs as well. Which they may have a good answer to, but I think those questions need to be asked.
- Josh Newman
Person
Let me ask kind of a follow on question then. With respect to the current audit process, is your concept, will the individual campus audits be separate and distinct from that, or can they be incorporated into the KPMG annual audits that are done?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
There's no reason why they couldn't also contract with that same firm, again, to reduce cost. I think it's easier to have a multi-audit contract with the firm that you're already using. So I think there are cost savings that could be made, particularly because that firm is going to have an understanding of the fiscal operations of the larger entity. And so there's absolutely opportunities for it, for efficiencies to be occurred. No doubt about it.
- Josh Newman
Person
So then what we're really, over a three year span, you're looking for sort of an audit plus, as it were, which is on an ongoing basis, seven, either seven or eight campuses for each of three years to be prospectively be included into KPMG audit. And that shouldn't be too onerous.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
It shouldn't be too onerous. But as Senator Glazer's point, there's obviously going to be a cost. It's not going to be unsubstantial, but I think it's absorbable within the CSU costs of their, you know, in their auditing processes. Also, in being made available to the public.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
They already have a website that post their audit publicly, so I don't think it'll be too onerous to include, you know, links to each of the campus audits once they're available as well. So the infrastructure is in place. And I think oftentimes that's the most expensive process, creating, kind of getting out of first gear, creating that infrastructure. That infrastructure is already in place. So I do think, to your point, Mr. Chair, that the cost won't be as much as it was from the ground up audit process.
- Josh Newman
Person
Right. But cost is always a factor. Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So would you be requiring the audits for the universities to be held every single year for every campus?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Every three years. All campuses every three years. That means each about seven or eight campuses a year. And so for each individual campus, it will be every three years.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Every three years. And this would only add to what is currently already in place. As far as the current audit, how does this all play in with regards to the bill that we saw last week that would lower the threshold of the audit components to be lowered to 10,000 versus 50,000? How does that all combine into...
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And I think that helps in terms of setting up this bill for success. Because now, if you're actually lowering the threshold, that means there's going to be even more data that's going to be readily available to an auditing team. And so I frankly think it makes it that much more cost effective if you're lowering that threshold. To Senator Glazer's point, I don't, that's pretty onerous to lower all the way down 10,000. But if that's happening for the purposes of this bill, I think it actually adds to the efficiencies.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Okay. And then I think the last comment that I have is, what's interesting is the bill that we saw last week had opposition, but on this one, it's my understanding that there is absolutely no registered opposition with regards to this bill. I find that very interesting, actually. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
It speaks to your point. I mean, on the one hand, transparency, to argue against transparency, in the other, there's probably an efficient way to do this. Any other questions, comments? Looking for a motion, give you a chance to close.
- Steven Glazer
Person
As a courtesy, I'd be happy to make the motion.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
I appreciate that. Thank you. Thank you so much, Senator Glazer. Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. Respectfully, good conversation. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Madam Consultant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File Item 18, AB 2398, Kalra. Motion is do pass to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure has two votes and we will leave it open. And we are now moving on to your second measure, AB 2640. Whenever you're ready.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair. I'd like to thank the Committee for their work on this bill and will be accepting the committee amendments. AB 2640 is the Compassionate Learning Advancement for Science Students Act, also known as the CLASS Act.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
This bill will require teachers in schools to provide students with a written notice informing them about the right to opt out of animal dissection assignments. In addition, students will be able to receive information about where the animal is sourced from and the chemicals they'll be exposed to. Under current law, students already have the right to opt-out.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
However, many students may not be aware of this right and feel obligated to participate in the animal dissection assignment, fearing it will impact their grades. The class act is a step in the right direction to strengthen students' ability to opt out while encouraging alternative methods to help increase student engagement and support their interests in learning about anatomy.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Anatomy and dissection are essential scientific pedagogy. However, with the advancements in educational technology, alternative methods have become more widely accessible and cost-effective. This was really shown during the pandemic when those alternatives had to be used for every student and every teacher.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
These alternative methods, such as a synthetic frog model or frogopedia, an application for mobile phones or tablets, offer a practical alternative method that allows students to still participate in the material.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
In addition, purchasing the animal specimens can be costly and may only serve as a one-time use, whereas alternative methods can be reused year after year, resulting in cost savings over time for our schools.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
By providing students with a written notice, AB 2640 empowers them to be informed, given the choice to opt out of animal dissection and instead receive an alternative comparable assignment.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
The bill has received bipartisan support in the Assembly, and I'm happy to have with us to testify and support Katherine Hampton, a student at Chapman University, and Samantha Crowe, Program Manager for TeachKind Science and a former professor of biology.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome, both of you. Please proceed whoever would like to go first would like to go first.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
Okay. Press this? Hi, my name is Katherine Hampton and I'm a student at Chapman University in Orange. I was born and raised in the Bay Area, and my family moved to El Dorado Hills when I was entering middle school.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
Throughout my time in middle and high school, I had growing concerns regarding lessons that regularly took place in my science classes. Because of this, I strongly support AB 2640. Year after year in grade school, I found myself forced to participate in the dissection of various animals, from worms to cats.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
During these lessons, I was presented with a previously living individual to cut open and observe their anatomy while being given information about bodily functions. I was exposed to the pungent smells of formaldehyde that overwhelmed my nose and made my eyes water.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
As a student who was born with a severe asthmatic condition, I took it upon myself to monitor my health extra carefully on dissection days. Moreover, as a student who prefers non-animal methods, I became panicked and anxious when I was told I needed to dissect a cat for a grade.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
When I asked for an alternative, I was told to quote, just do it, and even after repeating my concerns to my teacher, I was not offered an alternative.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
Several of my classmates who were also disturbed to be dissecting cats had to leave the room because they were so upset, and they told me they would have opted out if they knew that they could. Learning about anatomy and biology is essential.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
However, students like me are pressured to dissect animal cadavers, making it impossible to effectively absorb the information that we're supposed to learn. An alternative assignment will enable students to participate meaningfully in anatomy lessons rather than exiting the classroom and missing out on valuable learning opportunities due to exposure to harsh chemicals or ethical concerns.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
Or, let's face it, by simply being grossed out. The law in California is not currently protecting students as it was intended, and it must be changed. That's why AB 2640 is so important. Students should be provided with accurate information and empowered to make informed decisions regarding animal dissection.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
I encourage you to reflect carefully on the potential benefits that enacting AB 2640 could bring to students throughout California. As a student in this state, I appreciate your willingness to consider my perspective on animal dissection in the classroom.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Miss Hampton. And welcome.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
Honorable Chairman and Senators. Thank you for your time. I'm Samantha Crowe, Program Manager for PETA's Humane Science Education Division and a former professor of biology. AB 2640 is all about empowering students.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
The CLASS Act is a simple bill that strengthens current law by ensuring that students are aware of their right to opt-out and empower them to make an informed decision. Students will not be told to drop a class or accept a failing grade if they refuse to violate their ethical convictions.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
Animal dissection is not a magical way to get students excited about science. In fact, it disenfranchises compassionate students and can often turn them away from the sciences. Animal dissection is an antiquated instructional strategy that has not changed in a century.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
Animal dissection is not required or even mentioned in the NGSS, CTE, IB, or College Board AP classes and no medical schools use animal dissection, and experience with it is not expected or required of incoming students.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
In fact, the updated AAVMC, which is the American Association of Veterinary Colleges, in their new handbook for 2024 the use of animals in vet ed., highlights the need to make progress in incorporating humane non-animal methods into veterinary schools.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
Animal dissection is less effective than non-animal methods of teaching anatomy. According to a 2022 systematic review published in the American Biology Teacher Journal, comparing student learning outcomes shows that students at all educational levels, when comparing non-animal methods to animal dissection, performed as well as or better in 95% of the studies.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
This is a systematic review of the literature, and this happened when they were learning anatomy using non-animal methods. Non-animal methods prepare students better for higher ed than animal dissection with in-depth layering of anatomical parts, correct colorization, and simulations of body systems within a living organism.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
None of these things can be accomplished by using an animal cadaver. While TeachKind Science recognizes educators' professional judgment in selecting instructional materials as well as their responsibility to ensure those materials are safe, humane, cost-effective, inclusive, and aligned with the principles of social and emotional learning and trauma-sensitive instruction.
- Samantha Crowe
Person
Please help students become better scientists and help educators honor students' right by voting aye on AB 2640. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
And thank you. Are there others who wish to speak in support of the measure? Welcome.
- Nickolaus Sackett
Person
Hello, my name is Nick Sackett, on behalf of co-sponsors Social Compassion in Legislation, courtesy for Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine and Animal Legal Defense Fund in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Mason Melito
Person
Mason Melito, recent college graduate and resident of California in strong support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Hi. Priscilla Quiroz here on behalf of the Humane Society of the United States in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Wendy Bramble
Person
Wendy Bramble supporting this bill for PETA and also as a recent Master of Public Health graduate from Loma Linda University. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- April Joyce
Person
Hello Senators, I'm April Joyce, I live in Sacramento, California. I am a lifestyle and performance medicine coach. We are the newest branch of the American Medical Association. We treat, prevent, and reverse disease through lifestyle. I'm also a member of the Physicians Committee on Responsible Medicine and I'm an ACE-certified personal trainer. Just like the Bill we heard before us about school shootings.
- Josh Newman
Person
Your position please.
- April Joyce
Person
I vote strongly for this because I vote strongly for compassionate empathy. Thank you, Senator.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next please.
- Zarminika Churian
Person
Zarminika Churian with Zarminika Churian with Twin Rivers Unified School District. And as a parent and the 7th grader in me who had to take an F for refusing to dissect the frog who almost failed that class because of that situation, but in college succeeded the software application with the same project and received a B plus. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Zarminika Churian
Person
In strong support of AB.
- Josh Newman
Person
Appreciate that. Next please.
- Katherine Hampton
Person
Hi, I'm Rajeli Holstein. I'm a former teacher and I strongly support this bill.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Linda Middlesworth
Person
My name is Linda Middlesworth. I'm in support of this compassionate action and I work for Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you very much. Opposition. Do we have witnesses in opposition? Mister Wenger, welcome. You have three minutes. Please proceed when ready.
- John Wenger
Person
Mister Chair and Members, John Wenger here on behalf of the Hands-On Science Partnership. We're a consortium of businesses, educators, and other stakeholders invested in improving student achievement and science through hands-on learning. First, I'd like to thank the author, the staff, and the sponsors for robust dialogue. We've had good conversations with them.
- John Wenger
Person
Also, I'd like to thank the Chair and the Committee for all their hard work on the amendments. Certainly, appreciate the direction that this bill is going.
- John Wenger
Person
I think first and foremost, Hands-On Science Partnership does support a student's right to opt out of animal dissection, and we support ensuring those rights and ensuring that those rights are communicated to the student. I think our overarching concerns with the bill were sort of twofold.
- John Wenger
Person
One was the structure of the notice, which we thought from our perspective was actively discouraging students from participating in hands-on learning. And then the second component of the bill that was encouraging school districts to explore alternatives by 2028. I think the amendments do address some of our concerns around the notice provisions.
- John Wenger
Person
We still believe a written notice is a little bit overly burdensome to teachers and could take up valuable class time. But the changes to the notice do seem to be more neutral. So, we do appreciate that. We do appreciate the Committee removing the word strongly from section 32255.4 B.
- John Wenger
Person
But we do continue to object to that provision which encourages schools to explore alternatives to animal dissection. We continue to believe that that decision should remain at the local level with the school districts and with the teachers, and that the State Legislature shouldn't really be weighing into that decision from a state policy perspective.
- John Wenger
Person
Overall, we do believe hands-on dissection does serve an important purpose. We believe that it enhances students' understanding of anatomy and physiological concepts and that hands-on dissection provides additional sensory information and anatomical variation that many of the alternative models cannot provide.
- John Wenger
Person
So, we do have a opposed position on the bill currently, but we do appreciate the author's commitment to at least having a dialogue with us and we appreciate the Committee's work on this but are opposed today.
- Josh Newman
Person
Appreciate that other witnesses in opposition if any? Seeing none. You are an army of one Mister Wenger. Let's come back to the Committee. Questions, comments from Members? I actually have a quick question. It might be for you but it's starting with Miss Hampton. So, you were how old when you asked to dissect a cat?
- Katherine Hampton
Person
I was a senior in high school, so I was 17, 18.
- Josh Newman
Person
And I don't know if you know Mister Wenger, I'm more used to kind of frogs, etcetera. How common is it for schools to be using house pets for a dissection?
- John Wenger
Person
I would need to check with my client and ask them that. I'm not entirely sure. I think I believe those types of dissections typically happen in the more advanced anatomy and biology classes, but I could definitely follow up.
- Josh Newman
Person
That does seem sort of out of step with current sensibilities. I too had concerns about the notice and you know so we've tried to make that a little less onerous because I think you know we've had this conversation in different meetings.
- Josh Newman
Person
You know I have a little kid in school, and we get way too many notices about everything and I'll admit I don't read most of them, so you know the concern is. I'm a bad dad, I'll admit it, it's on the record. My kid would tell you if she was here, she'd tell you.
- Josh Newman
Person
I do my best. So, that is a concern about communication and making sure that a notice is properly distributed but in ways that aren't adverse to the broader the goals. I'm also sort of concerned, intrigued by enforcement. Right?
- Josh Newman
Person
And so, to your, to the witness point, you have every right under California existing statute to opt out of a life dissection. But you were told that, and I think one of the witnesses actually said that their child was told that they would take a failing grade.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, that's improper and I have real concerns about that, and extends well beyond this area. But how should we think about that Assembly Member?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Well Mister Chair, I think that the fact that we are now asking that a written that basically their right to opt-out is given to them in a written form, a standardized written form will now give the student the information that they do have the right to opt-out, regardless of what the teacher says.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
They now have to provide this form that expressly informs them that they can opt-out.
- Josh Newman
Person
Right. And so, you know, the concern there is, if it's a parent, like me, and it doesn't come back, that's an effective, that's a default opt-out, unless, you know, so is there a time limit there? I mean, how do we make sure that it's not inferred as an opt-out when in fact it's just not noticed? So, I don't know. Mister Wenger?
- John Wenger
Person
Yeah. We're still having, I think, discussions with the sponsors on how the mechanics of the, the parents.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And you're open? You're going to continue that conversation?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Well, yeah, I think the amendments that the Committee put forth were part of them, came through the conversations with the opposition. But I would just say, look, you know, we, yes, there are a lot of notices and what have you for our students, but that's on issues that are really important.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
These animal dissection kits already have notice on it. They're called Prop. 65 warnings. So, you know, we have to recognize that we are giving these chemically laden.
- Josh Newman
Person
No, I appreciate, but you know, it's already an obligation for the teacher to give some sort of.
- John Wenger
Person
Yeah. We've just heard anecdotally through the National Science Teachers Association that a lot of teachers are actually not aware of California current law. So, I think there's definitely some conversation to be had at the district level on ensuring that the teachers are aware and are giving the students those rights. We definitely support that.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay. Anything else from colleagues? And so, you make clear you're accepting the amendments?
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay. And with that, you know, glad to, glad to support the bill. Got a motion from Senator Glazer. Would you like to close Assembly Member?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Yes.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair. And I appreciate the dialogue on this. This is really just about informing students of a right that they already have that they may not be aware of, and the teachers may not be aware of. So, I appreciate the work by the Committee and respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Madam Consultant, we've a motion from Senator Glazer. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 19, AB 2640, Kalra. Motion is do pass as amended to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll call]
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good that has six votes, and we will leave it open for the one missing Member. But thank you. And thank you to the witnesses. And Assembly Member Fong, welcome back. I feel like I've seen your twin brother over at Appropriations.
- Vince Fong
Person
Yes.
- Josh Newman
Person
He's looking good today. You may proceed when ready.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
Good morning, Mister chair and Members. Thank you, Mister chair, for being a partner in our work on Assembly Bill 2047. Assembly Bill 2047 would establish a system wide office of Civil Rights at the CSU Chancellor's office and the UC Office of the President.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
The bill would also require each campus at a CSU and UC to designate a Title IX coordinator and a Title IX office to process sexual harassment complaints on campus.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
The system wide office will be tasked with monitoring each campus to ensure effective actions are taken adequately prevent and address sexual harassment on campus with the ultimate goal of preventing a recurrence. The Title IX offices will now have codified responsibilities to address and prevent the occurrences of sexual harassment.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
California is a pioneer for change in our country and its measure and the call to action bills build upon the federal Title IX regulations and are based on best practices established by the US Department of Justice and the US Department of Education Office of Civil Rights.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
Assembly Bill 2047 will provide the necessary structure for CSU and UC campuses to address sexual harassment in a manner that will restore educational equity and have positive impacts on the health and well being of our campuses. With me today to speak on the merits of the measure is Kay Rogers of Generation Up.
- Josh Newman
Person
Miss Rogers, welcome again. Please proceed.
- Kate Rogers
Person
Good morning, Chairman Newman, Members of the Committee. My name is Kate Rogers. I'm the Co Chief of Policy for generation up. I'm also a current UCLA junior. We're proud to co sponsor of 12 of the call to action bills, including AB 2047.
- Kate Rogers
Person
So, representing thousands of students across the state, it's Jennup's responsibility to advocate for legislation that will create safer campuses. So I want to thank Assembly Member Fong for supporting the call to action package and for introducing AB 2047. One in four undergraduate women will experience sexual violence while in college. One in four. That number is astronomical.
- Kate Rogers
Person
And I'll admit that I didn't fully grasp the magnitude of that statistic until I myself became a part of it. In my nearly three years at UCLA, I've heard many, many stories similar to my own. Stories where students were reached out to Title IX and were met with indifference, like me.
- Kate Rogers
Person
Stories where students felt too hopeless to even reach out at all. And I will say that I have yet to meet a student student survivor that actually has received justice by going through the Title IX process. But I've met probably dozens that have either not reached out or not received the help they needed.
- Kate Rogers
Person
So, like I said, when I was faced with my own decision to contact Title IX, I chose not to. And sexual violence feeds off of our silence. I, like many of my classmates, had completely lost faith in my school's ability and willingness to protect me.
- Kate Rogers
Person
So as long as our Title IX offices fail to protect students, we'll know it and we'll choose not to come forward, and then there'll be no progress made on this issue.
- Kate Rogers
Person
So AB 2047 and the call to action package as a whole really has given me hope for the first time in a long time, that things might actually change. So by establishing a consistent Title IX framework, this bill will ensure that UC and CSU systems have much more reliable access to, like, services for their students.
- Kate Rogers
Person
So through this bill, for the first time, I think every single student will have their rights respected and access to the resources that we really do need. So, on behalf of generation up, I respectfully request your aye vote today. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses here or individuals here like testifying support of the measure, please come forward.
- Maggie White
Person
Good morning. Maggie White with the California State University Office of the Chancellor here in support. Thank you so much.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next please.
- Wendy Brill-Wynkoop
Person
Hello, Wendy Brill-Wynkoop, President of the Faculty Association of California Community Colleges in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Genesis Gonzalez
Person
Good morning. Genesis Gonzalez on behalf of Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis, in support. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Mario Guerrero
Person
Mario Guerrero on behalf of the University of California, we don't have a position on this bill, but we really wanted to thank the author. Your staff has been amazing. I think we addressed a lot of the issues we had, and we're happy to consider the bill as it moves forward. Thank you so much.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you very much. Any other tweeners? No other witnesses? Let's come back to the Committee. Committee Members, any questions or concerns for the author? I've got a motion from Senator Glazer. You know, just to note very clearly, this bill addresses one of the report's recommendations from the recent hearings and the report that followed.
- Josh Newman
Person
So appreciate you bringing this measure forward. Glad to support it. I've got a motion from Senator Glazer. Would you like to close?
- Mike Fong
Legislator
Thank you so much. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. With that madam consultant, please call the room.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item seven, AB 2047, Mike Fong. The motion is due pass to the Senate Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good. That measure has six votes. We'll leave it open for the time being, but it will pass. Thank you very much. Thank you so much. Thank you, Miss Rogers. Welcome, Mister Mccarty. I see you have two bills. Whichever order you choose.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We'll go with the order in the file, so AB 2565.
- Josh Newman
Person
Please proceed when ready.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah. So this is a bill that I wish we didn't have to present in this day and age. It's about the impacts of horrific school shootings throughout our country and trying to protect our students and staff by making sure our schools are safer. The simple concept is, when schools a remodel on their school sites, this would focus on a requirement that they install interior locks while they undergo construction projects.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
After the tragic Sandy Hook shooting nearly a decade ago, this was a top recommendation and clearly found that not a single locked door has ever been breached during a school shooting. And one quarter of schools don't have interior locks. This is a common sense, bipartisan approach. And we do have a funding source that we identified in the Assembly side for the bill that passed last year. And so with that, respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Mr. Brown, welcome. Please proceed.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. Tristan Brown of CFT. This has been a long time coming. This has been a high priority of our membership for many, many years. We have made incremental progress towards obtaining interior door locks throughout our school system. I think hopefully this bill puts us across the finish line to make sure that this important safety measure is available to every student and staff member on campus.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Many of you just heard me testify on another bill about how our members are constantly worried that their day is coming to have a school shooting in their campus and prepared to be shields for their students. It is not a world that we want to live in, but unfortunately, here we are.
- Tristan Brown
Person
So we hope that we can finally make sure every classroom is equipped to have an internal door lock so that, if the worst does happen, our members can keep our students safe until such time that help arrives and the incident has passed. So with that, we do urge your aye vote this morning. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Any other witnesses in support? Seeing none. Any opposition to the measure, please come forward. Seeing none. Back to the dais. Got a motion from Senator Glazer. Very briefly, if you could. You mentioned you've identified a funding source. If you could just expand briefly.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah, there was a bill that passed this house last year. It's a surcharge or fee on gun and ammunition wholesale purchases throughout California. A part of that is for school safety in the measure that we pass assigned into law. And this adjusts the definition of school safety, focusing on interior locks.
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good. All right, we have a motion from Senator Glazer. Happy to support the bill. Madam Consultant, please call the... Well, I'm sorry. If you'd like to close, Assembly Member, unless that was your...
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Madam Consultant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File Item 22, AB 2565, McCarty. Motion is do pass to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good. That measure has six votes. We'll leave it up for the time being. And your next measure is AB 2927.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes, thank you. This next measure is, I think, a really exciting opportunity for California to push forward the issue with financial literacy. And our high school students, I know with two teenagers at home, they're all about money. And when we had them go to a course last year to learn about personal finance. They were intrigued.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
They didn't know the difference between a credit card and a debit card. And so many people go to college now, and they get a financial aid package, and you ask them, what does that mean? Is it a grant or a loan? I don't know. I got financial aid. So those are two big differences.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And, you know, when you go to college on those first days, you see more credit card tables than you do the library or where your classrooms are. So this would put California forward and get us in par with 17 other states that have a financial literacy requirement for high school students. For graduation.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
75% of students surveyed said that they would greatly benefit from this. And they learned so much of their information, unfortunately, from social media. You know, I asked my kids recently, I says, how much do air Jordans cost? And they're like, well, it depends. You know, who cares? Let's say, yeah, let's say $200.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
They said, and I said, what if you bought those Air Jordans on buy now, pay later, affirm, which when you boot on your phone, you use your apple pay your credit card or firm.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I said, what if you miss one payment and you go from the teaser rate and have your interest rate tripled and you pay minimum payments for the lifetime of those Air Jordans? You'd be paying $500 for those same pair of Air Jordans. And that's not fair. And so I think young people don't understand that.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And so what we're trying to do is focus on this from our high school graduation requirements. In the high school education, as you know, there is a ballot measure that's qualified. I think it's better to have the Legislature focus on our own solution. We can craft it and iron out some of these issues.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We think we have done so working with parties in removing the majority of the opposition. This is now an option for students to take this in lieu of economics.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And we think that's a choice that they can make and have similar type input that they would get as far as dollars and cents and monetary policy and personal finance. This has a multi year implementation, so it wouldn't start till the 2031 class.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We think that we've checked the boxes to push forward this issue to help our young people succeed in California, but also working with our educators and our school districts and our, and our, you know, people in the education field to make sure we focus on what's needed to put this issue forward. So thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Respectfully ask for your aye vote and ask for my witnesses to present now as well.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Welcome to the witnesses. Please introduce yourself. You have three minutes each.
- Colby Bell
Person
So I'll go first. I want to thank you all for your time. So, my name is Colby Bell and I am a father of three and I'm also an owner of a financial practice.
- Colby Bell
Person
When I was first made aware of AB 2927 by Assembly Member Kevin Mccarty, I was immediately interested and wanted to be a part of the process of doing whatever it takes to help move this bill forward.
- Colby Bell
Person
I would also love to share my financial knowledge and resources to help support the curriculum that will be needed to ensure that our youth are moved by the personal finance courses that will be implemented.
- Colby Bell
Person
One of the main components of my profession is sitting down with families and individuals in our community and having conversations regarding their personal finances.
- Colby Bell
Person
One of the pain points that I hear regularly from my clients is that they wish they would have been taught these key components like saving, budgeting and investing in their futures at a younger age. I believe that this Bill helps start that journey.
- Colby Bell
Person
If this Bill is approved and the right people are involved in helping move this Bill forward and rolling it out to our schools, I truly believe that this will be a huge introductory supplement to our community's financial Independence, economic prosperity and retirement planning for our future generations.
- Colby Bell
Person
For all these reasons, I stand behind AB 2927 and the impact it can have on our state. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister Banankhah. Welcome.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
All right, so thank you chair and Members of the Committee, for inviting me to share my perspective on this bill as a current high school student. My name is Kayvon Banankhah and I'm a rising junior at Modesto High School.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
So I'm going to take a wild guess and assume that most of you probably have never visited Modesto High School, or maybe even Modesto as a whole. I don't blame you. It's not exactly bahamas, so I'll paint a quick picture. Agriculture plays a huge role in our local economy.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
In fact, our baseball mascots are literally Al the almond and wally the walnut. And my school is located in the heart of downtown. Many of my peers have backgrounds in farming and agriculture and work long hours part time to support their family on top of their academic responsibilities.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
In fact, around 80% of students at my school are socioeconomically disadvantaged managed. However, despite how hard they work to rise up the socioeconomic ladder, a lot of that effort is wasted simply because of poor money management.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
For many of my peers, investing in stocks might as well be as complicated and convoluted as rocket science or calculus, in our case, and 401 ks sounds like a whole lot of money. But seriously, can you blame them? The reality is they're not being taught about this in school.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
And a lot of my peers don't even know what they're missing out on. What's worse is that it's often the students who need financial literacy the most that receive it the least. You see, parents of low income students are far less likely to be financially literate themselves. Which means they can't pass that knowledge down to their children.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
This not only causes pain in the short term, but also perpetuates generational poverty. And this problem doesn't just exist in Modesto. Around six in 10 California and K 12 students are low income and are likely facing these same challenges.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
I know it's easy to think about the impact of this as numbers on a page or read in the bank. But I'd argue that this is one of the biggest determinants, if not the biggest determinant of your quality of life.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
Your financial health dictates your housing, your healthcare, your access to education, the food you eat, and so much more. That's why I think AB 2927 is so important. By teaching our students critical skills. Like budgeting, credit scores, student loan management, and more, we can educate students on topics that play critical roles in their financial success.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
And give them a head start on healthy financial habits. I truly believe this bill is one of the most impactful and feasible ways we can combat wealth inequality. Our state. No one, not even the fastest runners, have ever run a race running in the wrong direction. Similarly, no one, not even the hardest working members of our society.
- Kayvon Banankhah
Person
Will achieve financial success if they don't understand the basics of money management. The personal finance classes offered under this bill. Will empower students to not only survive, but thrive. It is for these reasons that I respectfully urge an aye vote. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Well presented. Any other individuals here who'd like to testify in support of the measure, so please come forward. Your name? Your organization?
- Richard Maher
Person
Richard Maher, America First Policy Institute in support of this bill.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Obed Franco
Person
Good morning, Mister chair. Obed Franco on behalf of Fonseca, we have a supportive, amended position. And we want to thank the author for continuing to work with us.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next, please.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Thank you, Mister chair and Members, Tristan Brown with CFT and strong support. Thanks.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Diana Vu
Person
Good morning, chair Members. Diana Vu, on behalf of the Association of California School Administrators in support. Thank you.
- Missy Johnson
Person
Good morning, Mister chair Members. Missy Johnson here in support on behalf of the California Society of Certified Public Accountants. Thank you.
- Melanie Cuevas
Person
Good morning. Melanie Cuevas with the California Bankers Association also in strong support. Happy to echo the comments of the excellent primary witnesses.
- Josh Newman
Person
I know. Thank you.
- Emily Doe
Person
Good morning. Emily Doe with the California Credit Union League in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Bella Kern
Person
Good morning. Bella Kern on behalf of Junior Achievement in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you very much. Any witnesses in opposition, please come forward. We need to make a little space for you at the table.
- Josh Newman
Person
And good afternoon. Well, it's still morning. Hello. And each of you has three minutes each. Welcome.
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
Denise Gutierrez. I'm the President CEO for the California Council on Economic Education. I'm here speaking on behalf of a teacher who was not able to be here any longer. She had a doctor's appointment, so I'll be reading her statement. 'Good morning, Honored Members of the Senate Education Committee. My name is Janet Mann.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'I have just finished my 32nd year in education, predominantly teaching the high school economics course. I oppose AB 2927 as it is currently written. I have taught economics since my first year teaching. I graduated high school before ECON was a high school requirement. I didn't take an ECON course until I knew I wanted to be be an HSS teacher. I always tell students that if I had the course in high school, I would have been an economic major in college.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'ECON helps answer societal questions and leads students to robust use of benefit cost analysis, and my students tell me that they thought the class would be hard and boring, but we use the real life situations to understand their curriculum. The 2016 HSS framework suggests this in the statement.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'To get invested in the discipline, they can begin their study of economics by seeing their place in it, starting with personal budgeting. So in this course, most teachers use high interest--sorry. So in this course, most teachers use high interest resources to make ECON come alive.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'This includes budgeting, how to plan for an unpredictable economy, as well as use of benefit cost analysis to make financial decisions, to make financial decisions. Financial literacy is part of the high school economic course, but replacing economics completely is a huge mistake. Economics teaches students to make sound decisions, understand scarcity, competition, investment, and capitalism.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'It addresses what it means to be financially literate, as well as supports students to understand the global marketplace, study resource allocation, and use strong decision-making. Clearly, I recognize the importance of the value of students gaining financial literacy as I address it in my curriculum.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'However, I cannot support the language in the bill allowing students to opt out of ECON if they take the financial literacy course. By missing out on the ECON course, students miss out on being equipped with critical thinking skills essential to maintaining our democracy. Students deserve both.'
- Denise Gutierrez
Person
'I urge you to amend AB 2927 to remove the opt-out provision. The 2016 HSSI framework clearly calls for layering financial literacy into the ECON semester. I ask you to amend the bill to consider the integration of personal finance into the economics course and ensure strong training for teachers to ensure students have financial literacy before they graduate.' Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you and welcome.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
Good morning, Esteemed Members of the Senate Education Committee. My name is Joshua Mitton. Excuse me. I am the Chief Program Officer for the California Council on Economic Education and also an adjunct instructor. I've spent over a decade strengthening economics and personal finance education in California. I oppose AB 2927 as it is currently written.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
While we support the goal of providing personal finance education, this bill weakens that goal by sacrificing economics, being overly rigid, imposing additional burdens, and lacking sufficient funding. The bill allows students that take this personal finance course to forego the economics course. We find this alarming.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
Economics equips students with decision-making and analysis skills and a wider perspective of the world around them. Economics is a vital complement to the concepts of budgeting, risk management, credit use, investing, and more. Economics prepares students with additional skills that improve all decisions, not simply those that pertain to finance, and it is an integral part of social studies, helping prepare a literate and civically engaged electorate.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
It encourages us to think about our systems and address factors too large for any single individual to address, such as poverty, income inequality, innovation, and generational wealth. And on a personal note, I'll comment that on my in my own adult life, I've only seen the need for economic literacy grow as well.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
Additionally, the rigid statutory language specifying course topics is concerning as it may not adapt or be responsive enough to the fast changing financial environment. Today's financial world is vastly different from that of even a decade ago. A new requirement with an opt-out for an existing requirement weakens the overall meaning of requirements generally and creates new administrative burdens and potential unnecessary confusion for district schools and teachers. On the part of students and parents, graduation requirements are only the start, as they must also weigh requirements for UC, CSU, and other postsecondary education institutions.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
Additionally, students may not know what to value what they do not know, and so offering them the choice between the personal finance course or the economics course is not a fair judgment for them to make. Finally, there is no university level pipeline for personal finance teachers, unlike the established economics departments, and the bill's unspecified amount for teacher training seems inadequate.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
If the goal of this bill is to ensure students financial literacy, something we support, and to prepare them for the future success that we hope they find, we urge you to amend the bill and bring more stakeholders to the table. There are important synergies between personal finance and economics.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
There is a role for greater flexibility and implementation, and there is a need to ensure realistic and adequate funding to create meaningful change. In conclusion, I urge you to amend AB 2927 to either remove the either/or component with respect to the economics course, or to integrate personal finance with economics and provide necessary flexibility.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mr. Mitton. Thank you very much. Any other witnesses in opposition? Welcome.
- Fred Jones
Person
Good morning. Fred Jones, on behalf of two organizations: my long-term client, the social studies teachers, which is the California Council for Social Studies--
- Josh Newman
Person
Make sure your mic's on. Sorry. I need you a little closer to the mic. Yeah. There you go.
- Fred Jones
Person
Okay. Fred Jones with California Council for the Social Studies. Social studies teachers are concerned about the either/or proposition of this bill, and the California Association of School Economics Teachers. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Anybody else? Seeing none, let's come back to the committee. Questions? Comments? Senator Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to folks who gave witness today, and particularly Modesto's finest for your presentation. I wanted to know if the author could speak to some of the concerns raised by the opposition.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
You know, today's Juneteenth, and really, Juneteenth is looking at what was essentially a failed economic policy in terms of slavery and what it meant in terms of supply and demand, and I struggle with this because financial literacy is so necessary and needed, but also understanding these systems are also necessary and needed and just wanted to hear more about your thoughts on that.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
I want to support the bill today, but I hope we can get get to a both/and in terms of being able to ensure students are getting that individual knowledge that they need as a necessary life skill, but we also can understand economic policies and the impacts on communities in a more macro level. So if you could speak to that, I appreciate it.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah. This is a key issue that we grappled with, and the proponents of that ballot measure grappled with trying to get teacher groups who have removed their opposition and educator groups on the same page because speaking of Juneteenth, a couple years ago, we added ethnic studies as a high school requirement.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So just like any person at Thanksgiving, you can't put a new thing on the plate and expect it all to work. Sometimes you have to take something off the plate, right? So there's only so much time during the day, only so many electives, and so that's one of the trade-offs that we made.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We think it's better with this measure we have in front of us with the option than what it had in the ballot measure. So this, you know, a student could conceivably take economics and personal finance. They could because they could choose. It was one of their electives.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
But this would allow the option of that individual to using personal finance in lieu of economics. And, you know, I'd argue that some of the same elements and components for economics can be learned in personal finance and frankly, more relevant to kids these days.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I know when I talk to my 15-year-olds, they're all into personal finance and money issues, and learning about economics in that sense, I think, engages young people maybe differently than when I took economics and you did a couple decades ago. And then the other question, as far as having the workforce.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah, it's an issue, which is why this is 2024 and doesn't start until the 2031 class. So we have multiple years of implementation. We did repurpose money in the prior state budget to fund the workforce development needs. This approach will be much, much cheaper for the state budget than the ballot measure.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So, you know, our job is to make sometimes imperfect choices and make, you know, the best balanced approach, and I think this provides flexibility. It's not going to win that purity test here, but I think it answers the call that both would be available, personal finance and economics.
- Josh Newman
Person
Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. More of a comment than a question. I mean, I think right now, the tipping point for me in supporting the bill is my familiarity with the issue of homeless students out there that we have, are graduating about 15,000 a year, and we've heard testimony on the floor, we've heard it here in committee over, you know, a variety of drivers, if you will, socioeconomic drivers that are not only pushing that population up--sadly, my home city is the nation's leader in youth homelessness.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
But not only do those drivers push, some of those drivers push up that population, but they come rather suddenly, and, you know, it almost seems like a high school student that needs to be ready at any time to be fending for themselves these days. And I think for me, I understand the tension around curriculum, existing curriculum and so forth, and hopefully that all can be worked out, but I'm going to be an aye vote today, if for no other reason I think we're seeing the, some of the indirect effects of not having these kind of tools available at all times for students that really need them. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Yes, Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
When I think about my high school education, certainly a top three memory is the requirement that I create a budget group project--which I always hated group projects--create a budget, go out, look at apartments, go to the grocery store, and create a budget. Balance your checkbook. Those are real pragmatic lessons that have always remained with me. I still balance my checkbook, or people don't do that these days.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay, Boomer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
But, so in recognition of my great teacher--I think he was an economics teacher, Mr. Einsbar--I'm happy to move this bill. I think your point about what goes on the plate and what has to be taken off is an important one, but pragmatic skills in high school are really important. Understanding the world and yes, economics, but pragmatic skills, I think we've lost that. I'm not saying we bring back shop, but I think that these are healthy skills that we do want to have people graduate high school with to help them with their life.
- Josh Newman
Person
Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
A first year welder with a little overtime can make 90,000 a year. So don't dis shop.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I said we should bring back shop.
- Scott Wilk
Person
You said--you said we--you said the exact opposite. Roll back the tape.
- Josh Newman
Person
You said you were not--yeah, you did say that.
- Scott Wilk
Person
I'm the same with Senator Glazer, so in my sophomore year of high school, one semester was health--sex education--and the other semester, I don't know what they called it back then, but it was all these life skills that you need to have, and with the breakdown of the family and all these other challenges, we have to equip these young people. So I'm happy to support your bill today. I think it's a great idea and long overdue.
- Josh Newman
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I have a question. So if it's considered an elective, why does it have to replace economics? I mean, because you're saying either one or the other because there's not room of--right now, economics, I'm assuming, is required? Required. So why can't it just be added as an elective for the students to be able to take it without jeopardizing the ability to take economics?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And the only reason I say that is because in light of our current economic state of our state, and including at the federal level where we are, I think it's important to have those knowledge. As a matter of fact, I have to make a comment.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I was trying to reach my son, who just graduated from high school, and it was very interesting, his perspective as we were talking about California and the state of economics for the state. It was funny because he actually made a statement that said, well, it's kind of, he goes, 'the state is in this type of economic situation.'
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And I don't remember exactly what he said. He goes, 'and it should be pursuing something else' like, very, very well-articulated, and I thought, wait, you understand the state of economics for the state? And I was really actually very impressed and very pleasantly surprised.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So I thought it was very important for adults to know where we are and how we're handling our economics at the state level and federal. So I think I value that knowledge, but not in lieu of financial literacy. And as a matter of fact, I've been an absolute proponent of financial literacy.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Every bill that has come through with regards to including financial literacy for our students, including Senator Seyarto who just had a bill on financial literacy, I believe last year--I believe it was last year--we supported that bill and I think it died.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah. So good. So that's the key issue, and that goes back to the plate. And we thought about that. That was our option, is add this as required. But then I think the people that schedule classes, administrators, teachers, told us, rightfully so, with everything students have to do with their new--I think--I fully support ethnic studies--that there's just too much on that plate.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So we came with a compromise to allowing this to be utilized in lieu of economics. I may have misspoke. It can be an elective in that if a student elects to, they can graduate taking ECON and personal finance. They'd have to get rid of some other elective along their four years along the way, which they do have a few elective options. So they can do that. Maybe the Next Gen person could explain a bit more.
- Joe Lang
Person
Sure. Mr. Chairman and Members, Joe Lang, representing Next Generation Personal Finance. A critical part of the bill actually allows local school districts to revise their locally determined electives to make room to avoid this kind of collision between personal finance and economics. So we think what that tool, it actually will work in real life as sort of a compromise where they can work together.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Okay, because I do, and the reason being is that, quite frankly, K12 is pretty much mandatory. Higher education is not. And so if students do not opt, you know, do not opt in to pursuing higher education, they will never have an opportunity to get the, the understanding of education when it comes to economics.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And that as a populace, in order to be a civically engaged person, a well-educated, well-rounded, civic-engaged person, economics is imperative, at least the basic understanding of economics when it comes to--especially our country and the way that we are actually established.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So that's one of the reasons why I'm nervous about becoming an elective for high school because we want them to leave high school with basic, basic understandings of their world, and so when we take something as basic as economics, I think it's a detriment to our society, to our culture, to our state, and our nation as a whole. So that's a concern that I have, and that's why I would like to see it as, you know, included without one or the other.
- Joe Lang
Person
Senator, just to follow up on that, sort of like the plate we're talking about, that one provision in the bill that allows the local districts to adjust their electives to include both personal finance and economics, we think is kind of a tool that will be useful in real life to avoid that sort of conflict so that students will actually get both.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
Could I say just one follow-on in connection with that? I appreciate the spirit of it, but in practicality, I am concerned that given the fact, Assembly Member McCarty, your own children's interest in personal finance, I don't think that the students are at a lack of interest and will seek out personal finance if it's an option.
- Joshua Mitton
Person
Economics suffers a little bit of a branding problem, and so they're going to reach for the candy and skip the vegetables is our fear and concern. And the way that the bill is written, the optionality is one directional, where the personal finance becomes a requirement and the economics course is at the expense. If there's some way to mediate that, we'd be happy to support.
- Josh Newman
Person
So on that note, let me weigh in. Let me say really clearly, I'm a huge admirer of the work that CCEE does, and I appreciate this tension that they pointed to between economics as a foundational discipline and personal finance, which clearly there's a need. There's a backdrop to this that I'd like you to speak to, Assembly Member, and that's the ballot initiative. And I think it's important here. How should we consider your bill in light of the perspective about an issue that would force this into the curriculum?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
It's a compromise, simple as that. The proponent has been working with our bill for two years as well. We removed opposition from the ed coalition organizations. We realize there's some educators here who don't support it, but teachers groups, CTA, CFT are neutral, ACCESS, ESBA, all the others, we've worked on the issue and we've reduced the cost tremendously by having multiple outyears of implementation. So I think, as I'm sure you appreciate too, the Legislature does a better job in crafting policy and working out the issues than sometimes the voters on--
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm not sure that's true, but it is objectively true that it's much harder to modify a ballot proposition, instigated change to any policy. And I think that is truly important here. And that is the context by the way, you know, which we're having this conversation, which is, you know, should this pass at the ballot, it's so much harder at that point to make modifications or amendments to that than it is to do if we do it legislatively. So--
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I think the goal here is if this bill passes--
- Josh Newman
Person
Understood.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
It can speed it up in the next nine days.
- Josh Newman
Person
I just want to make that explicit.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
There's the opportunity to pull it off the ballot by, as we know, the 27th.
- Josh Newman
Person
Appreciate that, but I do think that conversation about how to find space in the day and sort of priorities within our budget and curriculum for economics, in addition to personal finance, these two things are not only not mutually exclusive, they're symbiotic.
- Josh Newman
Person
And, you know, again, I think that the work that the California Council on Economic Education proves that in some really impressive ways. So thank you for being here. I'm glad to support the bill today. Do we have a motion? With the caveat that Senator Glazer does like shop, he makes the motion, and I want to, I want you to be--I mean, it's sort of inferred here, but you did accept the amendments?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay. Appreciate that. And we have a motion from the handyman, Senator Glazer. Madam Consultant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File Item 23: AB 2927: McCarty. The motion is: do pass as amended to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call].
- Josh Newman
Person
All right. That measure currently has six votes, and we will leave it open for the missing member. Thank you to all the witnesses, especially the CCE folks. Good to see you. All right, so we are going to go--and Assembly Member Carrillo, I'm really sorry; I know you've been waiting a long time--but Assembly Member Berman is actually ahead in file order and has a couple of obligations. My apologies, sir, but we're at noon. I want to remind everybody that we have a hard stop no later than one.
- Josh Newman
Person
We actually should get done sooner than that to allow for it. Change over here. For those of you who listen to your podcast faster than normal, let's do these bills in the same spirit.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair, as it will be very quick. I regret letting Assemblymember McCarty go in front of me. AB 2057 would build upon my previous transfer legislation, AB 928, which established the associate degree for transfer intersegmental Implementation Committee to facilitate greater coordination between our higher education segments.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
This past December, the Committee, which includes student, institutional and faculty representatives, released a report with numerous recommendations. This bill would enact five low cost and high impact recommendations from the Committee report. These recommendations would set goals for increasing transfer rates and would improve transfer for high unit STEM majors.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
AB 2057 would also extend to the Committee by two years to continue student centered efforts to improve transfer. Respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
And to your witnesses, Mister Ramirez, or go ahead. Any order? I'm good.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
I will kick us off and I think I have the pleasure of being the first to say good afternoon instead of good morning. Don't remind us. I will move us along.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you so much.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
Good afternoon, chair Newman and Members of the Committee. My name is Josh Hagen and I'm the Director of policy and advocacy for the Campaign for College Opportunity, a policy, research, and advocacy organization dedicated to ensuring that all Californians have an equal opportunity to attend and succeed in college.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
I'll keep my remarks brief, noting that these recommendations in this bill were unanimously approved by the AB 928 Intersegmental Committee and just briefly highlight the STEM unit threshold component of this bill.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
For the first time in the nearly 15 year history of the associate degree for transfer, or ADT, AB 2057 provides an opportunity to broaden this proven transfer pathway to better accommodate high unit STEM majors. Aligning streamlined pathways to transfer to meet California's evolving workforce demands.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
This reasonable adjustment to the ADT for high unit STEM majors of up to six additional units, validated with sufficient supporting evidence, is a particularly timely intervention in the wake of last summer's US Supreme Court decision to curtail the use of race conscious college admissions.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
In the aftermath of Proposition 209 being enacted, which limited California's ability to enact race conscious policy, our higher education institutions saw the enrollment of Black and Latinx students plummet dramatically, particularly in STEM pathways.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
As we anticipate a similar chilling effect in the wake of this Supreme Court decision, AB 2057 provides a timely and salient set of interventions to ensure access to stem pathways and establishes clear goals to ensure the continued progress in our efforts to close racial and ethnic equity gaps in transfer.
- Joshua Hagen
Person
Thank you, and we respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next, please.
- David Ramirez
Person
Good afternoon, Chairman and Senators. My name is David Amares. I serve as the Government relations chair for the UC Student Association, and I also serve as the governor's a student appointed Member on the AB 928 Intersegmental Implementation Committee, which this bill intends to extend by two years.
- David Ramirez
Person
This Committee has created a forum for the three public higher education segments and the private institutions to discuss what it would mean to implement the singular guaranteed transfer pathway.
- David Ramirez
Person
Albeit difficult at times, the work of this Committee has produced the final report of recommendations that we believe would result in an equitable and timely transfer pathway, including shortening historically lengthy STEM pathways.
- David Ramirez
Person
The final report was approved by the Committee membership, creating consensus for the first time among the four segments of higher education, including the independent nonprofit colleges, on a majority of the tangible recommendations set forth in the final report to improve our transfer pathways.
- David Ramirez
Person
Recognizing the historical gap in intersegmental coordination, to this day, the Committee continues to be the only place where all four segments can convene in a publicly accessible forum to discuss and coordinate improvements in our transfer pathways.
- David Ramirez
Person
Just last week, we convened at UCLA to continue the work of developing the communications plan that will be transmitted to our practitioners, counselors, and student facing professionals about how to convey the benefits of the associate degree for transfer for all kinds of students.
- David Ramirez
Person
We heard from a panel of students who were formerly incarcerated, undocumented parenting, and were nontraditional in age. The feedback of Committee Members was consistently this that student experiences need to inform and drive our work.
- David Ramirez
Person
We need committees like this to continue to remind the system leaders about what it means to create a system that is truly centered, student centered. And with that, I respectfully urge your aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses? Support? I see at least one. Please come forward.
- Parshan Khosravi
Person
Good afternoon, Mister chair Members. Parshan Khosravi with You Aspire in strong support. And to my friend David Goldbrewings.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Carol Gonzalez
Person
Hi, Carol Gonzalez on behalf of Hope Hispanas Organized for Political Equality and the Education Trust West in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Genesis Gonzalez
Person
Good afternoon. Genesis Gonzalez. On behalf of Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kunalakis as a proud co sponsor in support. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any opposition here today in response to this measure? Not seeing any. It's that good. That's your close. Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
As a quick aside, I love you rocking the Michael Jackson look. So that's good. So I'm moving the bill. Love the bill. You know, 64 years ago is when we adopted California's master plan for higher education.
- Scott Wilk
Person
And if you go back and you read that, I haven't read it in a long time, but I've read it a couple times. They were talking about the challenges of transferring from. Back then it was junior college to UC or CSU. And thank you for continuing to work on this.
- Scott Wilk
Person
And you think after 64 years we could get it right, but we will one day.
- Josh Newman
Person
We will. Appreciate that. Anyway, appreciate you. Someday the Assembly Member will be 64 years old. That's a long way off. That's your motion? Anybody else? We do have motion. Would you like to close?
- Marc Berman
Legislator
I appreciate the conversation. Appreciate my witnesses respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
We have a motion. Senator Wilk, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File Item nine, AB 2057. Berman motion is due past a Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure has five votes. Currently has five. We'll leave it open. Thank you to the witnesses and thank you to Assemblymember Carrillo for being so patient. I'm sorry we kept you waiting. I saw you earlier, and then I didn't see you again. And you came so close to getting in so early.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, this is like going to DMV. Once in a while it works out. Sometimes it doesn't. I'm sorry. So, at your leisure, here.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair and Committee Members. Thanks for letting me be here in front of you to present Assembly Bill 2245. Career technical education is an asset to people from all walks of life. What my bill will do is provide the teachers permanent status for Senator Glazer's shop class, as he talks a lot about shop class.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
People may take CTE classes to get their foot in the door of a specific vocation or improve an existing skill set. This is especially important for rural districts like mine, where building a local workforce is imperative to job creation and economic growth in the region.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Given the life changing opportunities that CTE can provide, retaining this workforce is especially important. Unfortunately, there remain 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.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
When employees are able to be permanent, this means they are no longer employed at will and can receive due process. Permanency allows for basic labor rights, such as a notice of discipline or layoff, and procedures for appeal. It does not mean that the teacher cannot be terminated for cost or if their program is canceled or reduced.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Though this may seem like very basic protections, CTE teachers who work at regional occupational centers and programs do not have them. This creates a situation where these teachers have uncertainty about their employment, are difficult to retain, and reluctant to begin and stay working.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
To be clear, nothing in this bill does 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
When we talk about the importance of CTE programs, we must start by retaining and protecting the CTE workforce, who is the sole foundation of driving the driving force of keeping these programs available for students. We need to remind ourselves that without teachers, our students aren't able to thrive and access hands-on training programs.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Some might say that this bill will reduce CTE programs, which is not true and anecdotal. 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'll risk losing these programs altogether.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Joining me to testify in support of AB 2245 are Katie Hardeman, Legislative Advocate for the California Teachers Association, and Michael Peterson, graphic design teacher from Canyon Hills High School in the San Diego Unified School District. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Welcome, sir.
- Michael Peterson
Person
Hi, my name is Michael Peterson. I'm a graphic design teacher at San Diego Canyon Hills High School in San Diego Unified. I just completed my 22nd year teaching at that same school, teaching the same subjects, and I'm excited to advocate for this bill.
- Michael Peterson
Person
The hundreds of CTE teachers like me and my district are treated as second-class citizens. Despite many of us having decades of teaching and industry experience, we're on a year-to-year contract and live in uncertainty that other teachers do not face. Will we have health insurance for our families?
- Michael Peterson
Person
Will we have a job in the following summer? After the summer? This is not equitable. We provide students industry knowledge for high-demand jobs as well as college credit for our courses. Students in classes like biomed, culinary arts, engineering, digital media, and even auto shop greatly benefit from our industry experience and expertise as well as instructional knowledge.
- Michael Peterson
Person
Yet we have no opportunity for permanent status like all other teachers on our campus. How is this equitable? In 2012, I was our district's high school teacher of the year runner-up and the woman who won first place. We were both CTE teachers.
- Michael Peterson
Person
At our awards ceremony, we talked about how ironic it was to receive such accolades when we also received a letter a month earlier thanking us for our temporary service. At that point in time, we'd been teaching for over a decade. This inequity not only affects us teachers, but it impacts our students as well.
- Michael Peterson
Person
Most of us are part of a career pathway where students take two to three classes in one industry sector. Teaching these students for multiple years allows me to individualize my instruction and truly build trust and connections with students. This is the most amazing part of my entire job.
- Michael Peterson
Person
These powerful relationships and valuable instructional insights are at risk every year because of our inability to earn permanent status even after teaching for two to three decades. This lack of continuity clearly has adverse effects on students, both academically and emotionally.
- Michael Peterson
Person
On behalf of our students and my CTE colleagues, I ask that you vote yes on this Bill that will ensure equitable treatment of all teachers and provide consistency for our students that deserve this. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Miss Hardeman. Welcome.
- Katie Hardeman
Person
Good afternoon, Mister Chair and Committee Members. Katie Hardeman with the California Teachers Association. CTA is a proud co-sponsor of this bill along with CFT. And I want to thank Assembly Member Carillo for bringing this forward and our witness for coming up from San Diego, and he's very passionate about this issue.
- Katie Hardeman
Person
As you know, most teachers are provided the opportunity to obtain permanent status after they complete their probationary period. That means that they are provided with certain job protections and due process if disagreements arise. However, we've heard from many teachers across the state that these protections are not provided to all educators.
- Katie Hardeman
Person
Certain teachers are excluded, including career technical education teachers in regional occupational centers. This bill will change that to provide those employees with the same opportunity as other teachers in obtaining permanent status. CTA believes all teachers should be treated as professionals and afforded due process rights regardless of what subject they teach.
- Katie Hardeman
Person
As the Assembly Member mentioned, this bill does not prevent school districts from laying off staff or eliminating programs due to changing industry needs. There is a process in place for that. We are just, you know, asking that they simply, teachers are treated fairly and professionally in that process.
- Katie Hardeman
Person
As you know, many of our school districts are experiencing unprecedented teacher and staffing shortages, especially in the CTE areas. And this bill will provide more stability for our teacher workforce, which we know is better for students. So, ask for your support. Thanks.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Other Members of the public in support? Welcome.
- Tristan Brown
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. Tristan Brown, of CFT, a proud co-sponsor of this bill, asking for your aye vote this morning.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Anybody else? Opposition? Is there anybody here would like to speak in opposition to the measure? Please come forward.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome to both of you. You each have three minutes. Please proceed.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
Good afternoon, Chairman Newman and Senate Education Committee. My name is Fabrizio Lofaro and I'm the Superintendent for Valley Regional Occupational Program and we serve 9000 students in Fresno, Tulare and Kings counties. I've been with Valley ROP for 22 years.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
I started my career there as a teacher and I remain with Valley ROP want to express my concern about AB 2245. The California Legislature established ROP programs back in the seventies to create a flexible and adaptable program for students serving multiple students with maximum flexibility. The labor market changes all the time. Our success is evident.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
Our programs are flourishing and the most relevant due to the ability to evolve with the job market. ROP programs are essential and have been remarkably successful in preparing students for the future workforce.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
Additionally, ROP's regional occupational programs operate in an environment of economic uncertainties, relying heavily on competitive grants that are awarded year by year since the implementation of the local control formula LCFF. No direct state funding has been allocated to ROP since 2011.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
Guaranteeing permanency for ROP teachers under these conditions is counterproductive or counterintuitive because of the increase of financial commitment without ensuring the resources to support them. School district supported by guarantee LCFF have a more predictable and stable funding model and allow district to plan and implement permanency policies with greater confidence.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
In conclusion, the intent of AB 2245 to support teachers is commendable. It overlooks the unique needs of CTE program and ROP programs to continue to provide flexible quality pathways for students without direct funding. Permanent status alone will not enhance the quality or sustainability of these programs for the students.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
Additionally, the new state plan calls for a new dynamic and approach to CTE and we must ensure that the policies reflect that. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Welcome.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Julie Duncan and I'm Superintendent of Tri Valley ROP, which is one of the ROPs that serves in the Alameda County District. County I'm not here to oppose our teachers having access to due process. I want to make that really clear in the layoff process.
- Julie Duncan
Person
In fact, we believe our teachers are more part of our annual master scheduling process than most of our traditional districts. And listening to Mister Peterson, first of all, thank you. I'm very confused.
- Julie Duncan
Person
This Bill is about ROPs and ROP centers and he is a district, so I am confused as to why a district would not be putting them into the permanency piece. So this bill is specific to ROPs and with that, the word regional is the key that you need to hear here because we are regional.
- Julie Duncan
Person
We work in partnership with our school districts, and for some of us, like Fabrizio, we're talking 10 different school districts and 40 different school sites with various bell schedules ranging from 1 hour courses of six periods to other school sites that have a modified block where they have three classes a day and maybe alternating every other day.
- Julie Duncan
Person
In my case, with my high school districts I serve. I have different bell schedules and calendars for every single district and high school. The districts provide us the enrollment numbers when they sign up for our classes. We do not receive those numbers till way past the March 15 and May 15 deadlines, not because they don't want to.
- Julie Duncan
Person
It is because it takes that long for those processes to actually happen and get to us, because we're very specific on what kids sign up for is the class they actually receive. And then we then have to put that all together and develop a master schedule where teachers and students travel between the sites. Very, very complex.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I love it, but it's very, very complex. With the regional approach and leveraging of the resources, many of these pathway options would not exist as districts cannot afford these programs solely on their own. It's a really big point.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I believe this bill is trying to create a solution, which I heard here today, to alleviate stress and get that sense of security. However, we in the ROP world will actually think it will do the opposite because my teachers know I'm here today. I've had versions of this bill for many years that I have come to testify.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I don't want to lose them due to the March 15 deadlines, you may say, why is she saying that? If this bill passes, I literally will not have my numbers by March 15 or May 15 to make decisions. It isn't like what credential they have. What's specific. I will have to blanket pink slip all of them.
- Julie Duncan
Person
These folks come from industry. What message does that send? That's what I'm talking about. With the opposite effect, this anxiety that would be created that wasn't there before. It isn't a matter of deciphering credentials. Who's more qualified? We literally don't have our numbers due to this factor. It's integral that we involve our instructors in positioning.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I work with all my teachers. We're very, very close. All of our different ROPs. In fact, the timeframe, the time, employment, or to maintain their level of whatever percentage of FTE they were. So we work on that.
- Julie Duncan
Person
For example, school studies will provide me with registrations during the month of May and on paper there may be a full time.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm going to have to ask you to wrap up.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Okay. There might be a full time job, but that person physically can't get to two to three different sites. So I will have to. I'll try to find something for that teacher. So that full time assignment. I might have to add an extra section for another teacher because we're regional. This doesn't work for ROP programs.
- Julie Duncan
Person
And I would ask you if you have any questions you'd like to ask for breezy ornate on some clarification on the Committee Bill. I would love to answer them. Thank you for your time.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other opposition like to weigh in? Seeing none, let's come back to the dais, colleagues. Oh, welcome.
- Andrea Ball
Person
Sorry for the delay. Thank you, Mister chair. Members. Andrea Ball, on behalf of two organizations in opposition, the Central Valley Education Coalition and the Orange County Department of Education. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next, please.
- Bella Kern
Person
Bella Kern, on behalf of Small Schools District Association, in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Stella Johnson
Person
Stella Johnson on behalf of the School Employers Association of California, in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Lucy Carter
Person
Lucy Salcito Carter with the Alameda County Office of Education in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Ron Froese
Person
Ron Froese, Board Member, Dinuba Unified, Tulare County, in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Lee Reid
Person
Good afternoon, Members. Lee Angela reid, on behalf of Krop, the career, the Association of Career and College Readiness Organizations, AXA, the Association of California School Administrators, and the California School Boards Association, all in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Next, please.
- Leilani Aguinaldo
Person
Good afternoon. Leilani Aguinaldo, on behalf of the CTE JPA coalition. Our coalition includes Metro Ed, North Orange County Regional Occupational program, as well as the Colton Redlands Regional occupational program. In addition, I'm also testifying in opposition on behalf of coastline, ROP college and career advantage, Eden area, Mission Valley and Tri Cities regional occupational programs. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Next, please.
- Brianna Solis
Person
Good afternoon. Brianna Solis, on behalf of the Office of the Riverside County Superintendent of Schools, in opposition.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Leticia Garcia
Person
Leticia Garcia, on behalf of the 23 Riverside County School District Superintendent.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Let's come back to the Committee. Questions, comments? I want to note, you know, more opposition than I think we were led to believe did not get letters or other formal opposition from much of these folks. A little bit surprised.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Can I? If you wouldn't mind, chair. We did send it to the Assembly. Since there was no amendments made. We thought those letters were going to be transferred over. So I do know that our capital advisors and school services were led to believe that. So that is why you did not receive.
- Josh Newman
Person
I appreciate that they knew is a little bit surprising. I think we would have had a number of conversations prior to this hearing, but that being the case. Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So we've seen similar bills like this coming in every single year since I've been in education, and I haven't been able to support the bills moving forward. Just, we have a lot of opposition from my personal district because we have very successful, very engaged ROP programs, which I visit.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I've spoken to the teachers, I've spoken to the students, toured the schools and so forth.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And I understand the complexities of having the implementation be able to put everything together, and especially with regards to the teachers, who are, many are industry based instructors who come in and have to meet, you know, the assessment of what is regionally needed and come in at that time, seek them out and so forth.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So that's one of the reasons why I haven't supported, I don't support the bill. I haven't supported the intent of the bill within the scope of ROP because they are regional, they are technical, they are industry led, which fluctuates with time. There is no permanent component to it because it's continuously changing.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
But what intrigued me today was your testimony and your comment with regards to why his capacity is different in comparison to someone, a different type of instructor.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So I was hoping that ye, if you wouldn't mind, through the chair, with his permission, of course, if you wouldn't mind explaining the difference as to why he would be in a different category than a different ROP teacher.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Thank you for that question. So first, I came from industry. All ROP instructors come from industry. CTE instructors come from industry. They have to have that background in order to even receive the credentials. So just for that piece first, once they're in. I started with Pleasanton Unified. I was a CTE teacher. I was part of the union.
- Julie Duncan
Person
I'm part of their bargaining. You are hired within a district that way because the district has control over their own funds. They are directly funded by the State of California, and they know their budgets and they know what their operation looks like. It's all going to be on that campus.
- Julie Duncan
Person
A regional occupational program has a CTE credential as well. However, those teachers, they too come from industry. But we offer classes our students come from. I'll give my example. I have students that go to Livermore for auto from Dublin and Pleasanton, and I don't get all three of those numbers. I don't get all the district's numbers.
- Julie Duncan
Person
We don't get those enrollment numbers way past March 15. And we also are regionally doing programs that go to our labor market. So when those needs come up, we address those right away. We're able to do that very, very quickly. I hope that answers it just a little bit. What the differences are.
- Julie Duncan
Person
We don't physically, we can't adhere to March 15 because we don't know, we don't have any funding at that point. Our districts are part of our districts. Their budgets aren't even passed with El Capitol May and June. We don't even know what that's going to look like. We don't even know what our money is going to be.
- Julie Duncan
Person
We don't even have the enrollment numbers from our districts for that time. So regional occupational programs, because of the flexibility of that, how the budgets are going, we always, our decisions are always made into June and going into the summertime. So those are the differences. That's the main difference.
- Julie Duncan
Person
So a CTE teacher within a district is within that district because they're not having to deal with 40 different school districts and bell schedules and all that. Hopefully that answers your question a little bit. Fabrizio can add to it. He's got a lot more districts than I do.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
If I could add on to that. Actually, the exemption in existing law is for different types of ROCP programs. So district run programs, county office run programs, and JPA run programs. I think you're talking about a county run or JPA operated program, but we have district run programs as well, which is what Mister Patterson is.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So I wanted to also say, I think that dates back to before we had LCFF, where we had a categorical fund for ROP programs back in 2013, that money was rolled into the LCFF.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So you get the money through the LCFF versus the categorical program, and then to the point around the March 15 deadline, all leas face that same sort of timing issue, right? They have to do pink slips at March 15 when they don't get, they don't have the state budget until end of June sometimes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So we recognize there is a timing issue, but that exists sort of for all leas.
- Julie Duncan
Person
And may I go to that point because it's really important point that was in the Bill, if you allow me, Mister Chairman, if that's okay. I just wanted to talk about that particular deal, not the March 15 in brief. So I have been, I've been an administrator on the district side as well as Rop.
- Julie Duncan
Person
When a district knows they're going to have to make cuts, 4 million, let's say they do that by. The first thing we look at is we look at all temporary teachers, right? That is. That's what happens. Then we look at what programs they're not looking. What do kids sign up for?
- Julie Duncan
Person
Because they still don't have that type of information. They're looking at the budget in totality. That's why they're able to do that. By March 15, they're going off of a big number. They're taking each high school and saying, you get 100 sections, you figure that out.
- Julie Duncan
Person
Whether that's 30 kids or 20 kids, it is not the same for us. And if Fabrizio wanted to add to that at all.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
Just one thing about the lcs. So when the LCFF rolling, when the funding rolled into a LCFF that went to the districts, not to the ropes, we are not funded anymore. We are funded only by the grace of the districts that like our programs.
- Fabrizio Lofaro
Person
So we used to be funded with Ada, just like all the other districts as well, and we're not anymore. So that direct funding that now has been rolled over, the district can do what they want to with the funds to spend it.
- Josh Newman
Person
I would agree that's a structural problem, but I mean, clearly that's not a problem we'll solve here today. Any other questions? Senator Chubbuck and sophomore?
- Josh Newman
Person
But I want to make clear I have sympathy for the problem that I think we're trying to solve here, which Mister Peterson represents that problem, which is decades of service as a separate class of educator. And that's fundamentally unfair.
- Josh Newman
Person
And so first order business, I think, is to address that and then to address the follow on complications that arise out of that. I think the Legislature does have an obligation to do that for lots of reasons, not least, which is to let folks make plans and Fund programs as necessary.
- Josh Newman
Person
To Miss Hardeman's point, there are provisions for making staffing changes right as needed. And so, any other comments from Committee Members? You know, again, I think these things wind up being in a sequence. We solve for a particular problem, then we address the other issues around that. This problem, I do believe, needs solving.
- Josh Newman
Person
I think these educators are as deserving as anybody of the respect and security that should come with being a dedicated teacher. And I respect that's what you're trying to do here. And I want to then stipulate that we then have to figure out in so many other ways how to make California's education system work.
- Josh Newman
Person
And it is hugely complex. LCFF and other kind of Prop 98 driven issues have made it in some cases more complex rather than less, as we've aspired toward equity and a bunch of other goals. And I'm always impressed that parents say to me, why is it so complicated?
- Josh Newman
Person
And as it relates to technical education, it shouldn't be, especially given the needs of the economy. And so I respect what all the rfps do. I have an equal measure of respect for the teachers who participate within that.
- Josh Newman
Person
And I think this Bill is about recognizing that value, and then it is our obligation to solve for those other problems from there. Any other questions? Comments?
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Happy to move the Bill.
- Josh Newman
Person
I've got a motion from Senator Smallwood-Cuevas. And with that, madam... please close.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
I'm sorry, but thank you for the discussion. And you know, I do see a shift in the interest in vocational careers now, the way that our workforce is moving on to retirement throughout different professions and careers. I see the benefit of supporting the vocational careers because we've invested in that.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
We've invested in CTE programs and we don't support the teachers that are doing this. I think that we are going to be setting for failure in not preparing the workforce that is needed. Now with that, I just respectfully ask for your. I vote. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
And Madam, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure has three votes. We'll leave it open for the absence and thank you to other ways. This conversation will be continued in lots of different ways. Senator Bains, welcome. Thank you for your patience. You may proceed when ready.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Thank you so much. Thank you, Chairman. I'd like to start by accepting the Committee's suggested amendments to allow the Legislature to appropriate funding from the endowment fund to the UC for the purpose of conducting a feasibility study.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
AB 2357 creates an endowment fund within the state treasury as a foundational first step towards establishing a University of California Medical School in Kern County. A medical school will provide the catalyst we need to improve healthcare access for one of California's most medically underserved areas by training for the next generation of medical professionals.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Rooted right in the San Joaquin Valley in its research, the University of California itself identified the valley as the state's fastest growing, most impoverished, and least healthy region in the entire State of California. The valley has the lowest ratio of licensed MDs, DOs, NP's, RNS, marriage and family therapists, counselors and social workers.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
The situation on the ground is expected to get even worse. The Association of American Medical colleges has highlighted that many rural physicians are nearing retirement age, with nearly 25% expected to retire by 2030.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
At the same time, the number of medical students from rural backgrounds who are the most likely to practice medicine in rural areas declined by 28% over the last 15 years. Currently, the number of medical students from rural backgrounds is just 4.5%. 3%. Let me state that again.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Currently, the number of medical students from rural backgrounds is just 4.3%. The number of medical students hailing from a rural area who are also part of an underrepresented racial or ethnic group is 0.5% of all medical students. Let me put this another way.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Black and brown kids from rural areas account for less than one half of 1% of all medical students. By recruiting, educating, and training the next generation of physicians locally, the southern San Joaquin Valley can begin to erode the inequity of a decades long Doctor shortage that has contributed to the poor health outcome of our residents.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
I see it every single day as a physician, and those percentages are me. I am one of those percentage points. As a brown kid growing up in Delano, I am a physician working right across the street from my old preschool, even currently as an Assembly Member.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
And when I look around to people that I went to school with growing up in Delano, I see nobody else standing with me but me. This Bill is an essential step in expanding healthcare access. No, it is not premature. It is late.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
We are late to the table of establishing a medical school in Kern, county, enhancing our local economy, and improving career paths in the valley. With me today to testify in support, I have Dennis Cuevas Romero with the California Primary Care Association Advocates.
- Josh Newman
Person
Romero, welcome.
- Dennis Cuevas Romero
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair, Members. Dennis Cuevas Romero with the California Primary Care Association Advocates. We represent health centers across the state, 1300 health centers that provide care to 7.8 million patients. This Bill is really critical. As Doctor Bains mentioned, you know, we're in the midst of a physician shortage. The American.
- Dennis Cuevas Romero
Person
According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, it projects that the United States could see an estimated shortage of 124,000 physicians by 2034, the majority of those shortages in primary and specialty care. It's been noted that the physician shortage is particularly acute in the Sierras, in the San Joaquin Valley, and this would be a step to address those issues. In Kern County in particular, the population is about 55% that identify as Hispanic.
- Dennis Cuevas Romero
Person
As Doctor Bains mentioned, there's historic underrepresentation of Latino and Hispanic positions, and increasing the number of medical schools is incredibly critical. Last thing I'll say, there's a statistic about. It's about 77% of medical students that train in California remain in California. So the need to increase medical schools and residencies, particularly the Central Valley in Kern, county, is critical. So I ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses report, please come forward.
- Cher Gonzalez
Person
Cher Gonzalez on behalf of California Life Sciences in strong support, thank you.
- Dylan Elliott
Person
Dylan Elliott. On behalf of Kern County in support. Thank you to the author.
- Ron Bridigo
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon Chair, Members of the Committee, Ron Bridigo here on behalf of Kaiser Permanente, in support. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in opposition. Any witnesses like to speak in opposition? Welcome.
- Jen Chase
Person
Good afternoon Chair and Members. Jen Chase on behalf of the University of California, we have opposed unless amended position on the Bill. We really appreciate the Assembly Member taking the Committee amendment and. But we remain opposed due to the other concerns opposed unless amended due to our other concerns in the Bill. Thank you, appreciate that.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thanks Mister Chase. Questions? Comments from my colleagues. I'll be supporting the Bill today. Assemblymember Doctor, would you like to close?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Just grateful for this Bill. I am really and I agree with you, I think it's delayed in time. As a matter of fact, I think in all of California we have speaking about the Inland Empire, we are great shortage of the healthcare workforce in, in California. Anything that we can do to help promote and encourage our students be great.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
But one of the things that I do want to put within that scope of our future healthcare workforce, especially doctors, is the importance of our STEM prepared teachers that are well prepared as well as opportunities for our students to be able to have access to the coursework, including doing the math bills that I did this year.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Actually currently with great concern about preparing our students with the right knowledge and skill sets to be able to pursue the STEM or healthcare workforce. Because we understand that when they're not prepared with the academic rigor, then as they take these classes moving forward without the support systems in place or the confidence because of the lack of skills, they're deterred from pursuing those healthcare workforce.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I have so many, I've known so many students within my class when I was growing up with my, and then with my, with my children's classmates who were not prepared and wanted to become doctors, got to the college courses, took the math classes or the science classes and decided way too hard, I'm going to fail. I'm not going to take and deferred to other majors in the social sciences in order not to take anything that required math or science.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So with that, that's the concern that I have moving forward is that we really have to look at the preparation at the lower grades in order to ensure that they have the confidence and the skillsets to take those classes with that type of rigor and continue on their journey to becoming doctors, especially for black and brown community members because they are at the biggest disadvantage in gaining that knowledge and that skill set. So with that, I'm happy to support the Bill. Thank you for moving it forward.
- Josh Newman
Person
Any other comments? Would you like to close Doctor Bains?
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Yeah. I spent four years as a chair of the California Healthcare Workforce Policy Commission. This is something I've worked on for a very long, long time. No, this is not premature. It's actually offensive to call something like this premature.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
And anybody that does not support a medical school in Kern, county, take a step back and listen to a story that I'm just about to tell you. Going throughout the district in Kern, County, I would ask students, raise your hand if you want to be a Doctor. I would have maybe one. Sometimes nobody raised their hand.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Now, just because I introduced a Bill, I go into fifth grade classes and I ask, who wants to be a Doctor? I have the majority of the class raising their hand. That is the power of just having the idea of having a medical school in Kern County.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Having this school is going to bring a much, much bigger impact. And anybody that does not support a Bill like this, I asked them. The number of medical students from rural backgrounds is just 4.3%. What have you done on that?
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
And the number of medical students hailing from a rural area who are also part of an underrepresented racial or ethnic group is 0.5% of all medical students. And you should feel ashamed of yourselves to oppose a Bill like this that brings higher educational opportunities to an area that needs it most.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Glad to support the Bill. Madam consultant, please. We have a motion from Senator Ochoa Bogh, is that correct? Yes. Sure, sure. Please call the roll file.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item 17, AB 2357. Baines motion is do passed as amended to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
All right, that measure has four votes. We'll leave it open for remaining Members. Thank you, Doctor Bains. Let's see, next we have Assemblymember Rivas, I think. Is that correct? I'm sorry. No, I spoke too soon. Assemblymember Erwin. File order. Got your hopes up. Really sorry. Your Bill is double referred. Important to get to it. And if just 1 second though, please let me. Can I take your second? Yeah.
- Josh Newman
Person
No, the integrity of the process is still important, so we're just, we're going to run out of time because there's another Committee coming in here trying to make sure that the double referred bills are properly accounted for here. But you are one of those bills, so please proceed.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I'll talk fast.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Okay. I'm pleased to present AB 2723 which provides some updates to the Cradle-to-Career Data System referred to as C2C. I've been involved with C2C since its inception in the state budget and currently serve as the Assembly Member on the governing board.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I want to highlight for the Committee the importance of having longitudinal, a longitudinal data system linking existing educational, workforce, financial aid, and social service information. This system will allow California to answer key questions about equity while allowing us to address disparities and opportunity and improve outcomes for all Californians.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Unfortunately, in this space, California has not been a leader, but one of the last states to stand up a longitudinal data system, meaning we are catching up, but by no means breaking ground.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thankfully, C2C celebrated its first round of data submissions from data providers last fall and anticipates making its first analytical tools data dashboards available this year. As with any maturing state entity, there are aspects of its governing statute that would benefit from refinement, which is what this bill seeks to do.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
This bill will clarify the role that C2C holds in relation to the data they maintain on behalf of the data providers, and reinforces how C2C works within the Information Practices Act. When the data system was created, the structure was thoughtfully crafted to ensure data providers would willingly participate.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
This importantly meant that data providers would retain ownership and control over their source data. It also meant that C2C was not granted any authority to direct or demand any action by data providers.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
These structural limitations provide a barrier to C2C in honoring the important rights provided by the Californians to Californians by the Information Practices Act. This makes directing Californians to data providers who do not face the same barriers an appropriate solution to honor these rights.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I have two witnesses with me today, Eric Flores, the Deputy Director for Legislative Affairs of the Office of Cradle-to-Career, and Sara Arce, Vice President of Policy and Advocacy for the Campaign for College Opportunity.
- Josh Newman
Person
And who's first? Mister Flores or Miss Arce? Mister Flores, please proceed.
- Eric Flores
Person
Briefly, Mister Chair and Members, Eric Flores with Cradle-to-Career. Really appreciate the opportunity to answer any technical questions on this bill. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Well presented. Miss Arce.
- Sara Arce
Person
Chair Newman, Members of the Committee, thank you. I will be short. Just in the interest of time, California's ability to address persistent racial equity gaps in educational success and meet future workforce demands rests on our ability to access complete and disaggregated data about students' pathways from K12 education to the workforce.
- Sara Arce
Person
The tools that the data system will ultimately provide are vital for policymakers, researchers, and practitioners in crafting targeted policy interventions across the education-to-workforce pipeline. Importantly, want to note that since the data system launched, collaboration, transparency, and engagement of the public have been a cornerstone of the effort.
- Sara Arce
Person
Since its inception, the data system has collaboratively and transparently engaged the public to ensure that the right data is aggregated across multiple system and agency partners with over 100 public meetings, more than 200 people from 15 state agencies, and many educational and research and policy organizations included in that process.
- Sara Arce
Person
The commitment to a public transparent process in shaping a complete data narrative that is responsibly managed is essential to creating stronger data-driven policy, and for that reason, we support AB 2723. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support? Please come forward.
- Raquel Morales Urbina
Person
Raquel Morales on behalf of Ed. Trust West in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Anybody else? Seeing none, any witnesses in opposition? Welcome.
- Leah Jones
Person
Good afternoon. Leah Jones on behalf of A Voice for Choice Advocacy, oppose unless amend. We want, we are requesting actually, that the opt out option suggested by C2C's legal subcommittee be reinstated.
- Leah Jones
Person
We think it's overburdensome for students and parents to have to go to 12 different entities, at least to find out what data is being tracked on their student, on the student, or a parent's child. And also, there's an equity issue in that public schools, this is a public-school dynamic, but private schools are completely, they're not involved.
- Leah Jones
Person
So, if you can afford to send your kid to private school, then you don't have to worry about the data tracking and trying to find out what's being uploaded about yourself or your student. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any other opposition? Any questions or comments from my colleagues? Seeing none. You have the advantage of being late in the process here, so I will just this is an important initiative and it's important that we move forward with all due haste.
- Josh Newman
Person
To your point, California is not ahead of the rest of the country and this data is essential if we're going to make smart choices and priorities as we move forward. So, I'm glad it's worth the bill. I do appreciate some of the concerns that are raised.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm sure that you're open to them, that you're going to work, particularly protect privacy as we do this. Any other comments? Would you like to close?
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I just respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Do we have a motion? Motion from Senator Wilk. Madam Consultant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 21, AB 2723, Irwin. Motion is do pass to Senate Judiciary Committee. [Roll call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure currently has four votes. We will leave it open for absent Members, thank you. Thank you to the witnesses. And next up we have. Coming in hot, coming in hot. Assembly Member Rivas. Let's be fast, but let's be safe. So, welcome and please proceed when ready.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mister chair and Senators. Today I'm presenting AB 29, 2595 the California summer caregiver meal pilot. And I have two witnesses to provide testimony. Itzul Gutierrez, senior policy advocate of the California Association of Food Banks, and Jim McGowan, Vice President of the YMCA of the Silicon Valley.
- Josh Newman
Person
Welcome to both witnesses. Please proceed.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Hi. Thank you. Yes, as mentioned, my name is Isul Gutierrez at the California Association of Food Banks, where we represent our 41 food banks, leading the collective effort to end hunger in California. No child should go hungry. Yet California's high cost of living leads many families to struggle to make ends meet.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Current data shows that over one in three households with children in California are food insecure, with deep disparities for Latin and black households. Thanks to the tremendous leadership by the Legislator and Administration, in 2021, California became the first state to pass statewide universal meals program for school children.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Now we look to addressing hunger during the summer months when schools are closed, which not only affects children, but the whole family. Prior to joining CAFB, I worked at the Redwood Empire Food Bank. One of the hardest parts of the programs was serving meals to children, knowing the parents were hungry themselves too.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Federal USDA rules prohibit caregivers from receiving meals along with their children. But one summer, we were fortunate to receive temporary grant funding to pilot providing caregiver meals. We achieved remarkable success in addressing hunger for entire families, including parents and grandparents, while fostering a positive atmosphere for for children throughout the summer months.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Here's a quote from Maria Fuentes at the Rowan Empire Food bank. We would be very thankful for the Bill to pass, as we know that several guardians and families are also facing food insecurity and have trouble at times bringing their children to sites. And what a better opportunity for both parent and child to get a healthy meal.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
And from the Sonoma county library who they partner with.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
We would be thrilled if this Bill passed because we see so many families where the parents and caregivers are as in need of a healthy lunch as their child not only is there a hunger issue here, but for adults to model healthy eating habits for their kids, critical to lifelong healthy eating habits for children.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
So regardless of whether kids live in blue or red districts or how a parent votes, hunger is experienced equally and is why we appreciate a bipartisan support for children and families. And California has worked on making hunger a not partisan issue and worked hard on these bills to end hunger.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
So, for children experiencing hunger, part of the trauma is watching their parents struggle with hunger. And children remember very strongly that their parents didn't eat. AB 2595 ensures that caregivers can sit down and have a meal with their children at the summer meal sites at public libraries during the hungriest time of the year in the summer.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Thank you for the opportunity to speak and respect request for an aye vote thank you for your testimony. Mister McGowan, welcome.
- Jim McGowen
Person
Thank you Mister chair Members. My name is Jim McGowan. I'm the Vice President of government relations for the YMCA of Silicon Valley.
- Jim McGowen
Person
As part of a year-round effort to address child hunger across the country, YMCAs around the country have engaged in summer food programs that have served over 100 million meals since 2011, including hundreds of thousands of USDA. USDA funded summer meals that the YMCA of Silicon Valley has sponsored to both children and caregivers.
- Jim McGowen
Person
Many of the sites we've sponsored include public libraries. The Y loves meals at libraries because in addition to providing children and youth with meals, they also offer an environment for kids and families to engage in social connection, exploration and learning activities in a safe, welcoming environment.
- Jim McGowen
Person
We feel strongly that welcoming caregivers through the table is an important, affirming aspect of this experience. I'd like to share with you some insights from Cassandra Wong, community librarian at the Gilroy Library, on the impact of no longer being able to offer caregiver meals in summer food programs.
- Jim McGowen
Person
She says that in the 11 and a half years we've had the program, we've given out almost 30,000 meals. This is the first time we have had to ask adults not to participate. Providing adult meals decreases the stigma resulting from food insecurity and creates community by sharing a common meal.
- Jim McGowen
Person
We know that not all adults ostensibly need or desire a meal, but the fact that we were offering them to all family Members means adults who may be feeling the anxiety and difficulty of having enough meals to satisfy their hunger feel more comfortable in accepting a meal. Food insecurity is oftentimes not an all or nothing situation.
- Jim McGowen
Person
To be able to provide meals for adults makes the whole family feel supported, nurtured and free from stigma. It feels inviting as opposed to purely being a food distribution. We also support this type of environment by asking all families to join us, not just those who are referred from an assistance program, CBO, or et cetera.
- Jim McGowen
Person
This difference again allows for families to feel welcomed by the library and ready to learn after a nutritious hot meal that they can share with family and community Members. Community building is the tenant of our profession. Food insecurity can be an isolating issue in order to create community connection. There is nothing more communal than sharing a meal.
- Jim McGowen
Person
Shared meals lead to a welcoming environment where we can literally reach across the table to get to know our neighbors in divisive times. Creating common experiences and shared joy are important ways to establish long term connection with one another.
- Jim McGowen
Person
Community supports itself and we can be the catalyst for the support by providing enrichment through family meals and educational opportunities. We urge you to support this opportunity to help more families participate and for us to more fully meet the needs of the families we serve. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Thanks for your testimony. Witnesses in support, please come forward. Name organization.
- Lizzie Kutzona
Person
Good afternoon. Lizzie Kutzona here on behalf of the office of Kat Taylor in support. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Leilani Aguinaldo
Person
Leilani Aguinaldo on behalf of President, Unified School district, in support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you.
- Keely O'Brien
Person
Hi, Keeley O'Brien with Western center on Law and poverty. Proud to be in strong support.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Richard Maher with America First Policy Institute in support. Thank you. Do we have any witnesses here in opposition? Does anybody here like to speak in opposition measures? Seeing none. Let's come back to the dais, colleagues. Questions, comments, motions. Appreciate that. We have a motion for Senator Smallwood-Cuevas. Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So if I recall correctly, the Bill last year that you proposed put a cap on one adult for reimbursement purposes for the meals. Is that correct? Is that what I understood that I read here?
- Luz Rivas
Person
One guardian per child. What's that? Do you mean one guardian per child?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
One guardian per child. This one does not partake, does not have a cap on how many adults are going to be served or reimbursed for.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I believe it does.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So last year, AB 1170 included a provision for embarrassment that was limited to one guardian per eligible pupil. And this Bill does not actually have a definition of who the guardian will be, which is fine, not a big deal. Whoever takes the child can partake at the same time. But this Bill is just kind of open ended.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So it doesn't specify one adult. It just anyone and everyone that could cope with that child could stay. Clarification. That's I'm, I'm going to assume that's the case. Yes, it is open ended.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Yeah. It's available so that if both parents were there, they could have it and something. Both parents.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
But it could be more than, you know, it could be open to any number of adults that accompany the child because at this point it doesn't cap, you know, say two parents or two guardians or one guardian, whatever it may be. There is no cap. So it's open ended.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So it could be any number of individuals coming with the child. Could be.
- Josh Newman
Person
There is, there is. Sorry. I mean, there's a definition of guardian in the Bill, so there's sort of a reasonable definition.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I don't believe they can bring, you know, their neighbors and other adults. Right. It's.
- Josh Newman
Person
Right. Parent, step parent, grandparent, guardian or other family Member, caretaker. So there's some level, there's a common sense aspect, I assume, to this. You can't bring.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
The definition is irrelevant. I'm just, I just want to, for clarification purposes, there is no number of individuals that are allowed to accompany the child that will receive a meal if the child comes in with, you Know34 adults.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
All those 34 adults could qualify for that free meal as well because there is no specification in the Bill that stipulates how many individuals can be considered guardians for that child.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Because, and I'm comparing it to the Bill last year, which capped it at one guardian, this particular Bill just says open ended Guardian, which is fine, but no cap as to how many adults per child could qualify for this. So it's open ended. The other component.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
For the record, I just wanted to make sure, as we talk about, you know, individuals who are suffering from hunger in the State of California, I just want to make sure that we also recognize the fact that we have calfresh that's available. We have summer.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So I'm also been privy to the fact that we have summer EBT programs that provides families whose children are eligible for free and reduced prize school meals with grocery benefits and a debit type card during the summer months.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So I just want to make sure that we have on record that the state has been very, very cognizant of the needs in ensuring that we have programs throughout, whether it's through the state or through food banks in our local communities, through nonprofit service organizations that are continuously very cognizant of the needs of our communities and ensuring that there's food provided all throughout our communities per se.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I am kind of curious, and I don't know this, so maybe the Committee consultants could answer the following question. I know since I've been elected, we've had summer programs through the local school districts that provide free meals, unlimited number through any household.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
How many ever you come in through with your car and say you need these many meals, you'll give them meals. Are we still providing that moving forward? Because I don't know if we are not.
- Josh Newman
Person
It was only during COVID That was.
- Luz Rivas
Person
During COVID Maybe you came in during COVID I'm not sure when you started in the Senate, but in 2020. That was unique to the pandemic. When do we. It's not something that the state has done.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
Yeah, that, that ended. Sorry. No, go ahead. Go ahead. That ended in 2022 is when it was the last summer that it was available. There was a waiver that was extended, but it came later and it was only for the remainder of the summer.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
And so these sites were not able to start up to do that ability to do bulk meals or grab and gos, which at this point is not available except for rural non congregate sites. They do have the ability to have those missiles, but those are just for kids.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
So there wasn't additional food that was being given out to caregivers. That's only been pilots like at Santa Clara County where they've had them, but there hasn't been an actual.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
That's right.
- Luz Rivas
Person
So this Bill is about providing the meal to the Guardian. And the other programs that we have are about children provide at the school sites.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
At the school site that you just mentioned, those are meals for children except for the EBT program that provides the summer EBT program, which provides families whose children are eligible for free and reduced bright school meals with grocery benefits and a debit card during the summer months.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
If I can. Yeah, you're talking about the summer EBT sunbucks. Very exciting because it's the first time in a generation that we have this program rolling thanks to the Federal Government.
- Itzúl Gutierrez
Person
And that program is actually was designed to complement the summer meal food service program so that children can get a hot meal and can also get the EBT card to spend at their grocery store. It's $120. So as you can imagine, $120 goes by real fast. So they definitely are both needed and they complement each other.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Okay. So make sure that we have on record those programs that we do have in place accommodating our children during the summer. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Any other questions or comments from my colleagues? I think we have a motion from Senator Smallwood cueves. I'm glad to support this Bill. Would you like to close?
- Luz Rivas
Person
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Madam consultant, please call the roll file.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item 25, AB 2595 luz Rivas. Motion is do pass to Senate Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure has five votes, and it is out. Thank you very much. Next, we have assemblymember Friedman. Welcome. And I'm saying this not to rush you. We're gonna come up on a time constraint. Do not rush. But they're sort of the heads up on this, and we'll deal with it when we get to that.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members, happy Juneteenth. In the aftermath of the Hamas terror attack on October 7, Jewish and pro-Israel students are feeling pressure to hide their identities on campus because many of them feel unsafe.
- Laura Friedman
Person
According to the anti defamation leak, there have been a 2000% increase in anti semitic incidents on California college campuses following October 7 compared to a year ago. Our communities are asking us what is being done to assure that Jewish students can attend class and exist in the academic setting free from discrimination.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We are answering this difficult question through AB 2925 which requires college campuses to include training to combat and address discrimination against the five most targeted groups in the state as part of any anti discrimination training or diversity equity and inclusion training that is already offered by the institution. And to be clear, this Bill does not target anti semitism. It includes anti semitism because it is in the top five of those groups.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We think it's incredibly important that any group that's being targeted for discrimination and hatred be included in DEI trainings to make sure that if a member of those groups faces discrimination, they have people who are culturally competent to understand the scope of that discrimination and to understand how to react.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We also think it's really important that Dei people, the people who are tasked with working on an inclusive climate and a diverse climate on universities, understand the challenges faced by the different groups that are experiencing discrimination in the state. And what we have discovered is that is not always the case.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I have had a Professor come to me about issues on his campus and feeling unsafe, and I asked him if he had gone to the DEI trainers at his school, and he said that there was no Jewish voice represented in the DEI program at his college at all.
- Laura Friedman
Person
There was nobody who understood anti semitism, was trained in it, and knew and understood what his concerns were. About anti semitic activities on campus. Current law says that all students have the right to participate fully in the educational process, free from discrimination and harassment. But no one can focus on their education if they don't feel safe.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We need to make sure that our schools are protective. Unfortunately, there is no standard for DEI training across our college campuses. It's really up to the individual universities as to what they want to focus on.
- Laura Friedman
Person
If current law says that California's colleges have an affirmative obligation to combat racism, sexism and other forms of bias, then let's ensure that hateful acts and discriminations against targeted communities like the Jewish community, is not left out in those trainings if it's already being done on the campus.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Testifying in support this afternoon is Cliff Berg with the Jewish with the Jewish Public Affairs Committee of California. I'd like to point out that this Bill has received wide bipartisan support. It is also one of the, I believe, only three priorities for the Jewish caucus priority bills. So I would appreciate your thoughtful consideration of this Bill and requestfully request. And aye vote on AB 2925.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Welcome, Mister Chairman Cliff Berg on behalf of the Jewish Public Affairs Committee of California, which is the largest single state coalition of Jewish organizations in the nation, which is pleased to be able to sponsor this Bill along with the Jewish Caucus, this Bill would require that college campuses include training to combat and address antisemitism as part of any anti discrimination training or diversity equity and inclusion training that is offered by the institutional.
- Josh Newman
Person
Mister Berg.
- Cliff Berg
Person
I want to be clear on behalf of JPAC, that our priority and our concern that we see on college campuses at this moment in time is an extremely high level of violence and harassment focused on Jewish students.
- Cliff Berg
Person
But we have been careful in drafting this Bill to ensure that this Bill is not just about antisemitism, but is about discrimination and harassment of students, whether they be based on religion, nationality, and just to quote the Bill, I would point out that the Bill says no person shall be subjected to discrimination on the basis of disability, gender, gender identity, gender expression, nationality, race or ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or any characteristic listed as defined in Section 1135 of the Government Code.
- Cliff Berg
Person
I would also want to point out that the Bill clearly states that it is the intent of the Legislature that each post secondary educational institution undertake educational activities to counter discriminatory incidents on campus and within constitutional balance to minimize and eliminate a hostile environment on campus that impairs the access of students to equal educational opportunity.
- Cliff Berg
Person
In the five months following the Hamas terror attacks on October 7, the ADL reported a 2000% increase of incidence of antisemitism on college campuses across the state. This Bill is needed. It is timely, and we would urge your support. I have been somewhat brief in respect to the Committee's timeline here, but urge your support of this legislation is very much needed.
- Josh Newman
Person
Appreciate your testimony. Other witnesses in support of the measure.
- Jessica Duong
Person
Jessica Duong with the University of California. We have a supportive, amended position, and we're happy to move our position to support in the next Committee once the amendments have been crossed. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Appreciate that. Witnesses in opposition, please come forward.
- Josh Newman
Person
You can come to the table if you like, sir. Welcome. Thank you.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Good afternoon. Chair Newman and Senate Education Committee. My name is Omar Altamimi. I'm a senior policy coordinator with the Council of American Islamic Relations in California. I'm here on behalf of CAIR California to respectfully express our opposition until amended to AB 2925 for the following reasons.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Despite the bill's original intent to address the drastic rise of Islamophobia and anti Semitism occurring on college campuses as a result of October 7, no Muslim organizations or leaders, including CAIR, the largest Muslim civil rights organization in the country, were consulted in the drafting of this Bill. As a result of recent amendments, anti discrimination trainings on Islamophobia.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Sorry, anti-discrimination trainings on Islamophobia are no longer required to be included in higher education institutions. Anti-discrimination and DEI trainings, despite the original intent of the Bill seeking to address antisemitism and Islamophobia and the drastic rise in Islamophobia across the state and the country these past few months.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Lastly, we're concerned that the Bill could be used to conflate First Amendment protected speech, such as criticism of a foreign country, with discrimination or harassment on the basis of nationality or religion.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
As a result of the bill's over broadening the definition of nationality, we've spoken to the author's office regarding these concerns, and we suggested the following amendments to address these concerns.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
First, requiring universities to include trainings to address discrimination not only against the top five most, or not only for the top five most targeted groups in California, but to also include the top three most targeted religious groups.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
This amendment or similar amendments would ensure the bill's intent to address Islamophobia and anti Semitism is met and in a way that is still neutral, still content neutral, and also bolster the number of groups represented by the Bill. Adopting language directly from the US Department of Education. Second.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Sorry, adopting language directly from the US Department of Education Office of Civil Rights that clarifies that speech expressing views regarding a particular country's policies or practices is protected by the First Amendment and does not necessarily implicate federal civil rights laws or other anti discrimination laws covered by this Bill.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
The Department of Education has provided such clarifying language regarding the First Amendment, and there is strong precedent to include such language in this Bill. With respect, you know the intent of the Bill and the author's work on the Bill, they decided not to move with our proposed amendments.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Unfortunately, we're disappointed that the Bill continues to ignore the Muslim perspective, but we're willing to try and get faith to propose reasonable amendments and work with the author's office to accomplish that.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
While we appreciate the author's intent, again, to address Islamophobia and anti Semitism, there's a clear gap in the bill's intent in the execution or the implementation of the Bill, and it fails to substantively include Muslims or address the rise of Islamophobia in any meaningful way. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Any of the witnesses in opposition? Seeing none come back to the dais. Colleagues questions, comments? Go ahead, Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Just a question for the opposition witness. In reading the analysis on the Bill, what is listed as paragraph 12 of the portion of the analysis that describes the Bill itself, it talks about. Well, it's just one sentence, so I'm going to go ahead and read it, if that's all right.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Says expands the definition of religion to also define, quote, discrimination on the basis of religion, end quote, to include but not be limited to anti Semitism and Islamophobia. So it seems to me on its face that the Bill is certainly balanced, at least as to those two issues.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
What I'm not, I also have received kind of a late, late for me anyway letter, you know, indicating what your opposition is based on. I'm trying to better understand the finer points of your opposition because it seems like you are making some relatively technical issues. I'm an attorney. I understand the first amendment.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You want that to stand on its own. You don't want the Bill. You want, it sounds like you want to make it clear in the Bill that First Amendment rights are not compromised or trampled by any references in the Bill to federal civil rights law or something along those lines. Maybe you can clarify that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
But the other issue is on training. I've seen reference to your desire for specific language that Islamophobia would be included in training, or at least that's in the notes provided by my staff. Is that it? Is that what's needed in terms of amendments? Because I want to, at a point here, I want to go back to the author and ask for the author's response to that.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Absolutely. On that first point, I think we'd agree on the concern for the First Amendment. I think that anything in there just stipulating nationality would separate. It would be a separation between identity and speech that was critical of a nation. And I think that's really where the concern stems from.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
And with regards to the second point, I believe if we go to the attorney general's kind of documentation of the yearly report that's presented, there are different categories based on national origin, ethnicity, and religion. And those are two separate kind of factors and determinants.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
And so Islamophobia, which is more so recognized as religious discrimination and not ethnic discrimination, would be left out. But we see that as a sore oversight, considering the drastic rise in Islamophobia this past year.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
As you're saying, it's left out on the training side. Clearly, it's not left out of the Bill. I mean, the Bill is evidently, at least based on our Committee's analysis, putting anti Semitism and Islamophobia side by side in terms of level of concern. I don't see any disparity and the concern level in the Bill. So I understand.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I want to put words in your mouth. It looked like maybe your concern was, is the training going to be equally situated between those two issues? Correct. And I believe the Bill, if you were wrong, just tell me what it is.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
I believe the Bill actually dropped the language on anti semitism, Islamophobia, and kind of just made it broadly defined to discrimination. And we welcomed both versions.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
But, yeah, we don't necessarily have a problem of it not being equally footed or equally misrepresented in that sense, but rather, when this data is taken, the question, and from our end, it's the logistical question of implementation for these trainings is, as this is published from year to year, how do we assess what those five groups are going to be, and how do we make sure that students on college campuses are represented?
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Well, if we're limiting it to five groups in terms of this kind of a discrimination training, and we feel that if we were to keep the five or the five groups based on nation or identity, as well as include three more groups from religious backgrounds, it would create or even expand the five to a larger number.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
It would create a more representative kind of training for student body on campuses.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Great. Okay, thanks. I don't want to dive anymore into the weeds for a couple of reasons here. One is just in consideration of time constraints, but I would, through the chair, like to just ask the author.
- Josh Newman
Person
Sure.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
That's still being considered or worked on. It's really, for me as a Member here, it's the first I've heard of those specific concerns today. That's why I wanted to ask questions about them.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I want to be really clear. The original version of the Bill called out antisemitism and islamophobia. The reason it was taken out is at the insistence of the committees on the Assembly side, judiciary and higher education, that did not want to start naming groups that need to be included.
- Laura Friedman
Person
What we pivoted to instead was to say, you can teach as many groups as you want. Nothing limits a University from teaching, from training on 10 groups, on 20 groups.
- Laura Friedman
Person
What we said is we want you to at least include the group at that moment, in that year, whoever is in the top five, because that list can change. Right now, maybe antisemitism and islamophobia is a problem.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Several years ago, anti Asian hate was a big problem, and I didn't look at the statistics, but sometimes groups move up, unfortunately, into the groups that are being most targeted at that moment.
- Laura Friedman
Person
So we left it to where universities are free to have trainings on whatever groups they want, but we want them to at least include the groups, the top five groups experiencing the most discrimination. Now in that list, there are groups that are religions and there are groups that are ethnicities.
- Laura Friedman
Person
So sometimes you'll see a group that maybe it's an Islamic, for instance, where Muslims might move up into that group. It's not just about racial groups. That list is groups whit large. So that was removed at the insistence on the committees on the other side of the house for a variety of legal reasons and other reasons.
- Laura Friedman
Person
They wanted to not start calling out specific groups. So we cannot go back and go back to the original version of the Bill. And there were very valid reasons that they had for not doing it that way. But this is not limited to five groups.
- Laura Friedman
Person
There's nothing in the Bill that tells the University, you can only teach these five groups. This is additive. What we saw was that they are teaching several of these groups, but many of them are not including groups like, let's say, Islamic students or they're not, you know, they don't provide training on anti semitism. We wanted to make sure that if a group is experiencing discrimination and hatred, that they are being included in DEI training.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So what is, what I'm trying to understand is what informs the necessity for the training. Is it frequency or data?
- Laura Friedman
Person
No, there is data about the groups that are being discriminated against in California. So that sets your standard for the five groups that have to be included.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Most discriminated against.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Most discriminated against.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Right. If I'm sitting in the back of a classroom and a Professor refers to Italian Americans as wops without papers, this is a slur. Would you say the faculty ought to be trained not to do that? Or does that depend on how many times those professors. We don't require any DEI. Sure.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So, okay, let me, let me take a step back from another group. Let me use my group as an example.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Right. I appreciate that. This has nothing to do with their responsibility in terms of a complaint that might be made in your case with the slur. This has to do with schools that are already giving DEI training. So we're not setting up any new training. This is not requiring any new training.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Many of our college campuses, including the UC's, already provide DEi training, sometimes to students, often to faculty. Sometimes they have a DEI Department that looks at their policies. All we say is, if you already are doing diversity, inclusion and equity training, we want you to include, to have these five groups included.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We don't want you off just teaching groups that you feel that you want to teach and ignoring groups that are facing discrimination. So we're not requiring any new training. If you're a private University and you don't do Dei, we don't force you to do it. So we're not creating new programs.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We're saying if you already have a DEI program, which, where there is no standard for, in the State of California, there are many. All the schools that have Dei have come up with them pretty much on their own. They go out and they hire someone who's a DEI expert, or they create their own DEI program.
- Laura Friedman
Person
So this is a relatively new phenomena of these DEI programs. There's no state standard, as far as I know, as to what's taught or how or by whom. So it's becoming more and more common across the state, but it's by no means universal at our higher education institutions. Just wanted to clarify for your question.
- Cliff Berg
Person
The Bill refers to the attorney general's report on incidences of hate. So the five are what are determined by the attorney general's data compilation as being the five groups that are the most targeted of hate in California. But as the assemblywoman said, the schools are not limited from including any others that they want to include. And we certainly would encourage, and the Bill calls out, as you mentioned, islamophobia as being something particularly of concern. So.
- Josh Newman
Person
And to be clear, is that an annual report or what's the data set for what interview? I believe it's annual. Okay. So, you know, fairly dynamic. It's going to change on an annual basis.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Yeah. And that's why they didn't want us to start naming particular groups, because hopefully we have peace in the Middle East soon, and this is less of an issue going forward.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Right. Well, if I may, I would also say the harm in leaving specific groups is if even one student is discriminated against or the recipient of hate crime as defined, regardless of whether they're in a top five or not. It's my opinion that that should be addressed.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
If we're going to do legislation, we ought to be making sure that, in effect, you know, nobody is standing alone, nobody's left alone to fight for themselves and the necessary training occurs. I was just trying to figure out whether or not an individual occasion would trigger, would trigger training. And it sounds like that's up to the University, based on what you're saying. Not prescribed by law, right?
- Laura Friedman
Person
It's not prescribed by law. It's not prescribed by law. Now they don't have to have DEI programs at all. They don't have to, they have to address discrimination under federal law. So they already have to do that, but they don't have to respond by having a DEI program.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And I would think that in certain parts of the state, their DEI programs might have different groups because they may have a high concentration of a group that's not seen in other parts of the state, for instance.
- Josh Newman
Person
Appreciate that. Thank you. Any other questions or comments for the Assembly Member? Go ahead, Senator Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair, and thank you for this discussion. And my question had to do with the nationality piece of this in understanding how important title VII is and what protected classes are underneath that. The analysis seems to show too, that this would also sort of be putting nationality under a protected class.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And I'm concerned about tampering with what are protected classes and what isn't a protected class, what is included in the DEI and what we're adding, particularly where it comes from the standpoint of nationality. I understand the intention of this and I appreciate it, and I'm always about expanding anti discrimination protections, but I am a bit.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
This question of nationality is one that's sticking with me because I'm unclear if we are pulling that into this sort of frame of our protected class and what the implications of that are, because right now that is now falling under the discrimination umbrella, which for me is a title VII framework, and I'm trying to make sure understanding how this might affect that.
- Laura Friedman
Person
It's not my understanding that the Bill is redefining what is under title VII or redefining discrimination and changing nationality. It is simply going by, it is saying that in DEI programs you have to include the top five groups that the AG determines as the target of discrimination and hate incidences across the state. It might be a nationality.
- Laura Friedman
Person
It's possible that a group from a certain nationality becomes a target of discrimination. I don't know if that's the case right now on that list. I don't think it is, actually.
- Laura Friedman
Person
But if for some reason, a particular ethnicity, particular nationality of a group was being targeted, I would think that we would want that group represented in DEI training.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We're not changing any definitions of what discrimination is, or this Bill is not so expansive as to be changing any of those definitions, simply as saying that if you have a DEI program you need to include, you can expand, hopefully they expand what they're already doing, to include groups that we know are experiencing discrimination and hatred in the state.
- Laura Friedman
Person
We want our DEI programs to actually be responsive to the experiences of students and to the experiences of communities, not to be off teaching something that's not germane to the discrimination that's happening on their campuses and happening in communities.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And this just guarantees that they recognize that that list changes, that there are groups out there that are experiencing sometimes rapid increases in discrimination, and they should be training their professors to recognize that when it happens under their noses on college. And that's what this is seeking to do.
- Laura Friedman
Person
It's not changing any of the definitions of what discrimination means or anything like that. We're going by the list that the AG keeps of hate crimes and discrimination. Sure.
- Josh Newman
Person
Any other questions? Comments? Do we have a motion? Senator Wilk makes the motion. Assembly Member, would you like to close?
- Laura Friedman
Person
I appreciate the robust discussion, and I think that we are all doing our best to try to make sure that our college campuses are safe for our students and that we celebrate and recognize diversity for everybody.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. With that Madam Consultant, please call the roll file item 28.
- Committee Secretary
Person
AB 2925. Friedman. Motion is do pass to Senate Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure currently has five votes. We will leave it open for the absent Member. Thank you. I said thank you, Mister Connolly, a very patient man with your double referred Bill. Glad to have you here. Sorry about the long wait, and we will proceed whenever you're ready.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Thank you. Chair and Members, I'd like to begin by thanking the Committee staff for their work on this Bill, and I will be accepting the Committee's amendments.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
AB 2968 will require all schools within a high or very high risk fire hazard severity zone to follow defensible space safety standards and establish a plan for evacuating students, staff, and faculty in the event of a wildfire. Defensible space and evacuation protocols safeguard lives, reduce property damage, and ensure the safety of responding firefighters. Many schools believe they will have adequate time to notify parents and have them pick up their children before a wildfire moves through a school.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
However, the campfire in 2018, as an example, prove that a fire may move through a school more quickly than parents can pick up their children, and the congestion of pickup can pose a disruption to responding emergency resources. The Campfire moved through the town of Paradise so quickly that some schools never even received an evacuation notice.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Adequate defensible space acts as a barrier to slow or halt the progress of a fire, allowing more time for evacuation and helping to ensure the safety of responding firefighters.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
By improving our defensible space standards in schools and creating a comprehensive wildfire evacuation plan, AB 2968 will ensure that our schools are able to effectively facilitate an evacuation in the event of a wildfire. This Bill has bipartisan support and no opposition on file.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
I will now pass it off to two witnesses, Mark Brown, the Executive Director of Marin Wildfire Prevention Authority, and Kim Giuliacci, Division Chief and fire marshal for Woodside Fire. Welcome, both of you.
- Mark Brown
Person
Good afternoon, chair Newman, Committee Members, my name is Mark Brown, Executive officer for Marin Wildfire Prevention Authority. Prior to being with Marin Wildfire, I was the deputy fire chief for Marin County Fire, served there for 30 years.
- Mark Brown
Person
As part of my role there, I was also a Member of a CAL FIRE incident management team for 15 years as operations section chief and was in a command role of some of the state's most disastrous fires, including the campfire that Assembly Member Connolly mentioned.
- Mark Brown
Person
Marin Wildfire definitely supports AB 2968 and I'd like to give you a couple examples why I'm not going to talk about the campfire. Actually, I'm going to talk about in 2014, a fire called the Bulls Fire in weed. Fast moving fire happened right next to a school that was a K through eight school.
- Mark Brown
Person
They had never thought about sheltering in place at that location, even though that location, if you look at it in the after fact, is an awesome spot to shelter children in place. However, they evacuated the children under hostile fire conditions, had to keep the children safe with numerous fire engines while they evacuated to another school.
- Mark Brown
Person
A personal experience is the glass fire burn through my neighborhood and my sister lives in the neighborhood and she was calling me, well, what should I do if I can't evacuate in time? I said, go to the school. And fortunately, she was able to evacuate in time. However, the school was completely safe.
- Mark Brown
Person
Not a single bit of suppression effort for that school. While that happened at night, if it was during the day, it would have been a tremendously safe place for children to shelter in place.
- Mark Brown
Person
The last example I want to give is the extensive evacuation modeling that we've done in Marin, and we've actually modeled what it looks like if parents are coming back to get the students compared to if we shelter the students in place. And we have, the modeling is showing up to an hour decrease in evacuating the community if we shelter the students in place.
- Mark Brown
Person
So this Assembly Bill will allow for the planning, the hardening of the schools, the defensible space requirements, creating plans for shelter in place, educating the parents, because trying to keep the parents from going to get their children is going to be a very steep educational curve, but also allows us to establish reunification plans because in reality, we're talking hours, not days. And with that we support. 2968 thank you and welcome.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. I think my colleague here pretty much said everything that needed to be said. But as a jurisdiction, also in a wildland urban interface jurisdiction, we have now adopted a new ordinance that applies to our entire district. That ordinance requires a defensible space that goes across all different zones.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
Whether you're high, very high, moderate, it doesn't matter because fire doesn't have any boundaries. And so with this Bill, we were pleased to support and see it moving forward. The importance of defensible space is not just within the homes. It's not just people's houses.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
It's also the schools where the children are, where students are, and it's protecting that structure. Through the defensible space, we'd be able to create not just an area that would increase the survivability of the schools, but it also gives us a location for firefighters to offer structure protection in instances where shelter in place is recommended.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
Sometimes sheltering in place is the best solution, given the movement and how quickly fires move. Especially we're in a heavy vegetative area.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
And even though it's hard for parents to comprehend that this is sometimes the best safety measure to put in place to protect our children, which is why the defensible space is crucial, as well as the hardening of the structure, which would be in compliance with the current building chapter a, Chapter seven a requirements.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
The other reason why we'd like to support this Bill is we think it's important that the schools and the fire Department continue to work together and with emergency management to prevent any of these catastrophic events because they're going to happen. But we need to be prepared.
- Kim Giuliacci
Person
So with that, I know, sake of time, I just want to say we support this Bill. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
I appreciate that. Thank you for your testimony. Is there anybody else here who would like to testify in support of this measure? Seeing none, is there any opposition? Oh, please, go ahead. Welcome, sir.
- David Shapiro
Person
Good to see you, sir. Mister Chairman, Members of the Committee is David Shapiro, California School Employees Association, in support of the Bill. Thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Got a motion. Got multiple motions and no opposition. Bring it back to the deus. Anybody want to wax eloquent for half hour? So it's a good. Thank you. We have a motion. Would you like to close? Sir, respectfully, ask for an aye vote. Appreciate that. Madam Consultant, please call the roll file.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure has seven votes, and it is out. Thank you very much. Thank you to our witnesses. Thank you for being here. Assembly Member Alvarez. We're gonna do this. Are you here for your Bill? For this? We're gonna do this in a. It's point well taken. We're going to do this in a sprint. Welcome.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you very much. I appreciate the opportunity. The analysis covers the history of the Bill, the facts of the Bill. Just want to remind you that this is about allowing CSUs to offer joint degree programs with international partners, particularly folks like me, who represent border regions where partnerships with Mexican institutions, in our case here in California, are critical.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
This would give the authority for CSUs to offer these kind of degrees, joint bachelor's and also joint graduate level degrees, and respectfully request your. I vote when appropriate. We have a little bit of testimony if you can indulge us in the significance and importance of this.
- Josh Newman
Person
Professor Vazquez-Ramos is very much welcome and appreciate your waiting. You can appreciate our clock ticking here, so please proceed.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
oh, yeah, no, I will be very direct and brief statement. It's a pleasure to be here with you. Chair and Members of the education Committee, my name is Armando Vazquez-Ramos. I'm a retired Professor from Cal State Long Beach. I have over 30 years of doing study abroad programs.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
I wanted to also mention that on behalf of our California Mexico Studies center, which I have done now independent University for over 12 years, I'm honored to testify in support of AB 2633 which would allow the California State University system to award joint undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees with international universities.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
Collaborative joint degree initiatives offer students an invaluable opportunity to access new intellectual resources, innovative ideas and novel perspectives, thereby enriching the students academic and social experience and to prepare them for success in a globalized economy.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
Binational joint degree programs are rapidly gaining prominence as colleges and universities worldwide recognize the personal and academic benefits of cross border collaboration and learning.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
This model is long overdue in the US, while the European Union forged from from its inception paradigms to facilitate academic collaboration and institutional partnerships to promote academic mobility and enhance the higher education socialization process.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
This type of collaboration is being led in California primarily through collaborations with institutions such as Universia Nacional Autonoma, the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the Autonomous University metropolitana in Mexico City, also and Instituto Technological Autonomo by the CMC De California, Mexico Studies Center, San Diego State University, and UC San Diego, which have successfully promoted academic mobility and the importance of educational institutions facilitating international exchange.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
But the CSU system has lagged for decades due to a lack of vision and resources. Assembling David Alvarez's AB 2633 reflects the value of international partnerships and could empower CSU students to pursue study abroad opportunities and scholarly exchange.
- Armando Vazquez-Ramos
Person
As a sponsor, we respectfully ask for your vote to approve AD 2633 to facilitate a brighter future of academic excellence and global engagement within the cause system. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you very much for your.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you for your testimony. Any other witnesses in support? Seeing none. Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. I have a motion from Senator Ochoa Bogh. Assemblymember. To be clear, you've accepted. Have you accepted the Committee amendments? Thank you. I appreciate that. With that, would you like to close? Thank you. She closed. It's an awesomely succinct close with that, Madam Consultant, call the roll .
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item 26, AB 2633. Alvarez motion is due. Passes. Amended to Senate Appropriations Committee. Newman Aye. Newman I. Otoebogue. Otoebog I. Cortezy. Cortezy I. Glazer. Glazer I. Gonzalez. Gonzalez I is Smallwood-Cuevas. Smallwood-Cuevas I.
- Josh Newman
Person
Wilkie. All right, that measure's out. Seven votes to zero. Thank you very much. Thank you, Professor. Let us now move to the consent calendar, Madam Consultant, we have a motion for the consent counter. Senator. What moves the consent calendar? Madam Consultant? Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
All right, moving now to open items starting with item number one, AB 1780, from. Assembly Member Ting.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure is out four votes to zero. To be clear, the consent calendar was out unanimously. Next up is AB 1793. Item number two from Assemblymember Ta. Motion from Wilk. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures out seven votes to zero. Item number three, AB 1818 from Assembly Member Jackson. I don't know. They had a quorum then. Do we have a motion? Yeah, we did. We did. Senator Glazer moved the Bill. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
All right, that measures out five votes to zero. Next item number four, AB 1858, from Assemblymember Ward
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures that. Seven votes to zero. Next is AB 1971. Item number five, from Assemblymember Addis.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures out six votes to zero. Item number seven, AB 2047, from Assembly. oh, that's right, yes. Assemblymember Fong.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures out seven votes to zero. Item number nine, AB 2057 from Assemblymember Berman.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures out seven votes to zero. Item number 14, AB 2724 from Assemblymember Reyes.
- Committee Secretary
Person
We need a motion.
- Josh Newman
Person
I did not have a motion. I did not. So moved from Senator Glazer.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures out five votes to zero. Next item number 16, AB 2245 from Assemblymember Juan Carrillo.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
The measure is out seven votes to zero. Item number 21, AB 2723 from Assemblymember Irwin.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
The measure is at six votes zero. Next is item number 22, AB 2565 from Assemblyman McCarty.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures out seven votes to zero. Next item number 23, AB 2927 from Assemblymember McCarty.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measures at six votes to zero. Item number 25, AB 2595 we've done that. Sorry. Item number 2828 AB 2925 from Assemblymember Friedman, motion is do pass to Senate Judiciary Committee
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Josh Newman
Person
That measure is at six votes to zero and that completes the roll. So thank you to everybody, especially folks watching on TV. That let us finish. Very grateful. Thank you staff with this Committee is adjourned.