As I navigate my new life in California, there is a question that echoes in my mind. There’s a subtle, almost reflexive sympathy that surfaces from California natives when I mention my home state of Arkansas. It’s a quiet acknowledgment, as if I’ve survived some hardship and finally reached a haven.

I can’t entirely knock this sentiment since California’s reputation as a beacon of progress and opportunity is largely earned. It is, by many metrics, one of the nation’s leading states. Yet, as a newcomer who has experienced a starkly different civic landscape, I’ve perceived a troubling undercurrent: A willingness among some Californians to dismantle the very structures that make this state exceptional.

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(10) comments

Rick Bonilla

Mr. Evans, thank you for sharing your optimistic and aspirational point of view regarding California. I was born and have lived here for more than seven decades. I have traveled and I believe that California is still the best place in the world to live. That said I continue to work every day to make it even better. Getting out and doing something positive to help people and make the place where you live better is a very uplifting thing that sustains me and propels me onto more. I highly recommend it.

Ray Fowler

Hello, DeAndre

I have some misgivings about your premise, “Californians should give their government more credit,” which has also appeared in the Mercury News, Bakersfield Californian, Ventura County Star, Cal Matters, and a handful of online media outlets. Does our single party, supermajority Democratic Party legislature deserve credit for 15 million Californians living near or below the poverty line? You acknowledge the litany of criticisms concerning the very real problems that affect most Californians, yet we hear no solutions for those problems.

You are a recent transplant from Arkansas, and you make some comparisons between Arkansas and California. OK… let’s run with that theme. Arkansas ranked 42nd last year in K-12 academic performance. Where did California rank? 41st. Who in California’s government should get credit for that accomplishment? BTW… California spent 36% more per K-12 pupil than Arkansas just so the Golden State could edge out the Natural State for that 41st ranking in K-12 academic performance.

California’s government deserves credit and the blame for doing the very same thing you allege other states do… sidestepping the implementation of solutions to the problems that Californians have identified in their litany of criticisms.

easygerd

Axios writes: "It's a national trend, data shows American public schools are growing more separate and unequal even though the country is more racially and ethnically diverse than ever. ... The resegregation of America's public schools coincides with the rise of charter schools and school choice options"

That is exactly what's been happening.

Certain elements within the American Right loves the "School Choice" scheme, which moves more money from rural areas to suburbs. Rural America hates this.

The affluent American Left on the other hand loves the "Choice School" scheme, which moves more money from poor neighborhoods to choice schools for the rich (aka Magnet Schools). Liberal California loves this. This allows a lot of 'virtue signaling' while doing exactly the opposite.

"Schools Choice" and "Choice Schools" always leads to School Segregation. But the Feds and the State are rewarding districts for having "underfunded" and "failing" schools. Districts get more money when they are segregated and have "failing" schools. It takes a certain kind of evil Board to do this, but its definitely an incentive to continue.

The poverty rate within the Belmont/Redwood Shores school district area is comparable to San Mateo/Foster City and Redwood City. And yet SMFCSD and RCSD get more funding per student and still have horrible results. All because they chose to reward affluent families by rerouting money from "failing schools" to Mandarin Immersion, Montessori, or "Parent Participation".

Ray Fowler

Interesting, but kind of a non sequitur... just saying.

Rick Bonilla

Billionaires should pay their taxes!!!

Rick Bonilla

Education in California costs more because teachers have to live here. The cost of living is high because some people don’t want to build enough housing for teachers or anybody else to live in. Go figure.

Dirk van Ulden

Rick - it would be nice if most of the funding were to go to teachers. You ought to know better. It goes to administrators, bond payments, and superfluous programs that our students do not need. I am glad that the federal funding is finally being curtailed. Based on the quality of cars that I see in the school parking lots for teachers and staff, I don't think they are hurting. Many are of two earning households and can live quite comfortably here. Ironically, many are enrolling their kids in private schools. Why is that?

Terence Y

Thanks for your guest perspective, Mr. Evans. It sounds like you’re a very recent transplant to California (one of the very few, since employers are moving their businesses out of California). One has to wonder whether you’re working for the State of California since government has accounted for over 90% of employment gains. Regardless, perhaps you missed headlines about Newsom allowing over $20 billion of EDD funds to be stolen by criminals. Perhaps you’ve missed the $billions already and continuing to be spent on the union giveaway known as the train-to-nowhere. Of course, we have the $24 billion given to the homeless industrial complex to, of all things, result in an increase in the homeless. And previously (although I’m not sure this is still the case in the new budget) the $billions already given to provide free healthcare and benefits to non-citizens in California.

Then we have Newsom releasing over 75,000 criminals back into the wild due to COVID, allowing biological men to compete against biological women, preserving the rights of invaders to our country more than California citizens, the Palisades fire debacle where Newsom is busier running his mouth than running to help rebuild the thousands of homes that burned to the ground thanks to his failure in fire and forest management. I could go on.

Please do not let externally crafted propaganda blind you to the issues that California politicians have foisted on California. The problems are real and the political will to address them continue to only include talking the talk but not walking the walk. Good luck to you in California, especially if you work for the state. If not, don’t be surprised if your employer moves out of California due to California being one of the worst, if not the worst, places to operate a company. A request – provide an update in six months.

Dirk van Ulden

He will be moving back to Arkansas once he starts paying California taxes, tries to fill up his car with gas and gets accosted by the bums on streets of San Diego. He presents a naive, almost childish perspective.

Souf

A great perspective, and one coming from personal experience.

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