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In last week’s State of the Union address, President Obama proposed something radical, that dropping out of high school no longer be allowed. But that might be complicated. Every school district has tried numerous solutions to the dropout dilemma without success. The problem prompted Russell Rumberger to write a book called Dropping Out: Why Students Drop Out of High School and What Can Be Done About It.
Rumberger is director of the California Dropout Research Project, and he currently serves as provost in the Office of the President at the University of California. He recently talked about his theory that high schools need to promote alternatives to college – and that some people might be better served not getting a higher education at all. KALW's Ben Trefny sat down with Youth Radio’s Robyn Gee to discuss this idea of education.
This story was produced by Youth Radio with support from the New Options Project and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
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Reporter Kelly Chau has taken a long look at California's budget crisis, a story she knows all too well as a student of San Francisco State University, and has put together this series of interviews and reports on how the Golden State managed to loose it's luster... and what it might take to win it back.
The (Not So) Secret Origin of the California Budget Crisis
In 1978, a measure called Proposition 13 was passed by California voters in a landslide. The purpose of this proposition was (and still is), to limit the taxation on property. Since the passing of this initiative, funding for public education and other public-funded services has decreased over the decades. Many in the state point ot Prop 13 as the source of California's budget problems. Despite this the law retains its reputation as the "electric third rail" of California politics. Read more about Prop 13's impact.
Ultimate Do-Over: Pushing for a Constitutional Convention in California
We spoke with John Grubb a spokesman for Repair California, the political group whose members and employees are currently out collecting signatures for a pair of ballot measures that could change California politics forever. In this interview, he describes how the organization came to be and what its plans are. Repair California was founded as a movement to help push for a constitutional convention in California in an effort to reform the State from poor governing.
Inside the University System
Last but not least, NPR's Madeleine Brand visited her alma mater of UCLA to report on growing class sizes and the difficulties students are having paying for their tuition. This report looks at the whole ecosystem of the university, from students who are juggling class fees and food budgets to professors who have watched time they could have spent teaching students get turned into time spent telling students why they can't fit into their already overcrowded classes. It's powerful reporting that brings the human impact of the budget crisis to the fore.
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In 1978, a measure called Proposition 13 was passed by California voters in a landslide. The purpose of this proposition was (and still is), to limit the taxation on property. In '78 this meant property owners were voting themselves a 57% tax cut. Since the passing of this initiative, funding for public education and other public-funded services has decreased over the decades, since these services were traditionally funded through property taxes. The funding for the University of California system for this school year (2009-10) was cut back by $553.8 million.
Before the late 1970's, local property taxes went straight to the local school system, which were under local control. All this changed after the California State Supreme Court made landmark rulings in three cases collectivity known as Serrano v. Priest. With the way school money was handled declared unconstitutional, the legislature gained the "power of the purse" over education funds. Their solution was to limit the amount each district could get from its own local property taxes and spread the surplus around to the districts that did not have as strong a tax base.
Meanwhile property values in the 70's were soaring in California, and as the values went up so did the taxes. The red hot market led to fears that people, especially the elderly, would wind up priced out of their homes thanks to out-of-control tax bills. A growing sense of the tax code being unfair gripped the state, sowing the seeds for a taxpayer revolt.
Enter Proposition 13-- the primary backer of this measure was the late Howard Jarvis. Jarvis, a lobbyist for the Los Angeles Apartment Owners Association, led the fight for the initiative to appear on the ballot by garnering tens of thousands of signatures.
Proposition 13 continues to be the scapegoat of the deep fiscal crisis California is facing, yet it has yet to be seriously challenged. During our recent interview State Senator Loni Hancock (D-CA), identifies Prop 13 root cause of the fiscal chaos and lack of funding for public services we are currently dealing with:
Well, we got to this point really in many ways through Proposition 13 in 1977...during the 50s and 60s, California built new campuses of CSU and UC. It passed this great master plan which was a vision of the opportunity for education for every young person -- older person too in California for that matter -- all of that stopped in 1977 with prop 13 -- the state money was capped, local governments and schools just about collapsed. Schools used to be funded primarily through local property tax. Proposition 13 basically took away the ability of local government to tax so the state bailed out education and now the state pays 80% of the cost of education and that meant it stopped investing in new campuses -- it stopped expanding.
But there are those who have argued otherwise; Joel Fox, who served as the president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association (1986-1998), argues in this LA Times opinion post that Proposition 13 isn't the problem, it's a State legislature that's addicted to spending.
Either way, it is inevitable that public colleges and universities across the State are going through a budget nightmare.
WEB EXCLUSIVE
SACRAMENTO-- California colleges and universities have been hit hard by state budget cuts cuts. Fewer classes are being offered, pay cuts for staff and faculty have been handed down, and classes sizes are blooming. In response to all this, protesters against these drastic cuts have held numerous demonstrations across the state at various college campuses.
We spoke with California State Senator Loni Hancock, a member of the State Senate's Education Committee about the budget cuts. Senator Hancock discusses the root of the budget crisis and what steps are being undertaken in Sacramento to address the budget shortfall.
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University of California leaders decided to move forward to cut 4-10 percent of employees’ salaries and to take 11 to 26 furlough days.
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