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Direct Democracy

California citizens can legislate through the initiative process. In the November election, they will consider these ten propositions, including a $10 billion education bond.

Carl J. Petersen
Dialogue & Discourse
10 min readOct 1, 2024

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Photo by Glen Carrie on Unsplash

This November ten propositions will be placed before the voters dealing with important subjects like school facility funding, the housing crisis, and how the state handles petty criminals. This is a summary of the initiatives and my reasoning for how I am voting:

Proposition 2

Authorizes Bonds for Public School and Community College Facilities. Legislative Statute.

Authorizes $10 billion in general obligation bonds for repair, upgrade, and construction of facilities at K–12 public schools (including charter schools), community colleges, and career technical education programs, including for improvement of health and safety conditions and classroom upgrades. Requires annual audits. Fiscal Impact: Increased state costs of about $500 million annually for 35 years to repay the bond.

Supporters: California Teachers Association; California School Nurses Organization; Community College League of California

Opponents: Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association

Approaching this issue from a Los Angeles viewpoint it is very tempting to vote against this bond measure. The LAUSD has been a poor steward of past bond funding, most notably under John Deasy where the district wasted funds for the $1 billion iPad program that “was beset by inadequate planning, a lack of transparency and a flawed bidding process”. Despite projections by its staff of an impending demographic shift that would result in fewer students, it engaged in a building boom. Schools are still plagued with drinking water laced with lead.

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Carl J. Petersen
Carl J. Petersen

Written by Carl J. Petersen

Parent, special education advocate and former LAUSD School Board candidate. Still fighting for the children. www.ChangeTheLAUSD.com

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