Sign up for our newsletter
Home » News & Analysis » Commentary » Improving Education Is A Great Idea, But Prop. 82 Is Not (Peter H. Hanley)

Improving Education Is A Great Idea, But Prop. 82 Is Not (Peter H. Hanley)

Proposition 82 on the June ballot in California, like all things that are too good to be true, sounds great  until you really take a look at exactly what it will do and exactly who will benefit. The fact is Prop. 82 will do very little to help our struggling K-12 system or the kids most at risk.

California’s K-12 education system struggles with a 30% dropout rate and additional tens of thousands of students that cannot pass a basic skills exit exam geared to 8th and 9th grade curricula. Dismantling today’s public-private preschool system that works and gives parents choices in favor of duplicating our public education bureaucratic morass makes no sense.

The current preschool system already serves 62% of California four-year olds.  Under the most optimistic scenario for new enrollments the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst can devise, Prop. 82 will add 99,000 new four-year olds in 2010 when it takes full effect, raising those served to 80%.  The irony here is that the majority of kids that will be served by Prop. 82, including 76% of children from California families in the top one-third of incomes, are already being served by our current system.

So how much will the new preschool bureaucracy cost?  With $2.6 billion in new taxes the cost would be $6,753 per student for three hours of instruction—easily the most expensive program in the country and nearly as much as California taxpayers pay to fund a full day of instruction in the current K-12 system. But when you look at the costs for new enrollments—meaning kids who are not served by the current system—the astronomical cost is $26,262 for each of those new four-year olds!

Moreover, a significant percentage of this public money will flow to affluent families.  Only 8.4% of funding from the new tax will enroll “high risk” kids who otherwise would not have gone – those lower-income and minority children with achievement gaps. What possible public benefit flows from subsidizing affluent families in the face of California’s continuing structural deficit that limits funding of K-12, children’s health insurance, road and bridge maintenance, and affordable housing?

In all likelihood this program will cost much more than proponents are suggesting.  Quebec’s universal preschool program, projected to cost $235 million over five years, now runs $1.7 billion every year. California parents could be forced to pick up the tab because hidden in the fine print of this measure is a provision allowing the state to assess user fees for parents with kids in this preschool program.

Proposition 82 lights the fuse for cost explosions. First, the shift from community-based preschool to public schools will likely create a shortage as community schools close in the face of the law’s blatant bias towards public schools.  Second, this supposed “free” preschool will increase demand, most effectively exercised by affluent families. In Quebec, families from the top 30% of income occupy half the preschool seats.

Third, Prop. 82’s $2 billion in public school construction projects, intended largely to replace already existing capacity in community schools and consistently subject to cost overruns (think Bay Bridge!), will likely be insufficient. Fourth, all preschool teachers will be required to obtain both a B.A. and a yet-to-be-developed early childhood teaching certificate, despite no evidence that a B.A. improves teacher effectiveness at the preschool level over simply taking basic community college classes in early childhood development. Combined with California’s projected need to hire 100,000 K-12 teachers in the next decade and the introduction of mandatory collective bargaining into preschools, labor costs will soar.

Four-year-old preschool attendance nationwide grew from 16% in 1965 to 66% today.  By any measure U.S. academic performance is flat or has declined. While many factors are in play, if universal preschool were the panacea advocates claim, some evidence reflecting the billions of public and private preschool dollars spent should be discernible. RAND Corporation’s recent study did not support any significant academic benefit from preschool for middle class children. Other research shows preschool benefits for low-income kids dissipate by third grade.

Let’s better target the $3 billion California already spends on preschool and child care to kids at risk, not build a costly new public feeding trough premised on faulty assumptions.

Peter H. Hanley is executive director of California Parents for Educational Choice and an elected school board member in California’s San Mateo Union High School District.

Comments

  1. No comments at this time.

Join the conversation

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *