California School Boards Association
2022 Year in Review
Introduction
Introduction
Mastering the three “Rs”: Resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention
Dear CSBA Members,
For as long as anyone can remember, students have been tasked with learning the “three Rs” — reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic (or at least that’s how they used to say it). Yet, the context in which students are expected to master these skills is more challenging than ever. Although we’re through the worst of COVID-19, the cloud from the pandemic still hovers over most aspects of public education. And as school trustees work to facilitate learning recovery and student well-being, they are being tested on their own “three Rs” — resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention.
It’s clear that as we emerge from the triage stage of the pandemic, California schools are not content to resume business as normal. While the policy work required to reinvent schools may go unnoticed by the general public, it hasn’t escaped our attention at CSBA. To highlight the resourcefulness that school boards have demonstrated during a time of great change and uncertainty, CSBA unveiled its 2022 School Boards in Action campaign. The School Boards in Action initiative sought to humanize school trustees, create a better understanding of the work school boards perform, and elevate the steps you’ve taken to support students. The campaign used video storytelling, Q&As, feature articles, blog posts, interviews and advertising to show how school district and county office of education trustees have transformed the disruption caused by COVID-19 into an opportunity to strengthen schools, increase services and expand programs for students.
Vernon M. Billy, CEO & Executive Director
For as long as anyone can remember, students have been tasked with learning the “three Rs” — reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic (or at least that’s how they used to say it). Yet, the context in which students are expected to master these skills is more challenging than ever. Although we’re through the worst of COVID-19, the cloud from the pandemic still hovers over most aspects of public education. And as school trustees work to facilitate learning recovery and student well-being, they are being tested on their own “three Rs” — resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention.
It’s clear that as we emerge from the triage stage of the pandemic, California schools are not content to resume business as normal. While the policy work required to reinvent schools may go unnoticed by the general public, it hasn’t escaped our attention at CSBA. To highlight the resourcefulness that school boards have demonstrated during a time of great change and uncertainty, CSBA unveiled its 2022 School Boards in Action campaign. The School Boards in Action initiative sought to humanize school trustees, create a better understanding of the work school boards perform, and elevate the steps you’ve taken to support students. The campaign used video storytelling, Q&As, feature articles, blog posts, interviews and advertising to show how school district and county office of education trustees have transformed the disruption caused by COVID-19 into an opportunity to strengthen schools, increase services and expand programs for students.
At CSBA, we have tried to match the urgency and creativity we see exhibited by school district and county boards of education throughout the state. In 2022, we flexed our muscles through legislative and legal advocacy, enhanced our member training and business services offerings, raised our profile in the media and public arenas and expanded our research on critical state and federal policy issues, including the publication of two reports on COVID relief funding. Through this research, CSBA illustrated how local educational agencies have used state and federal COVID relief funds to invest in before- and after-school programs, summer learning, expanded instructional days, high-dose tutoring, academic support, mental health interventions and other critical services.
Our increased emphasis on federal support for California schools extended beyond research reports and culminated in the inaugural CSBA and Association of California School Administrators (ACSA) Coast2Coast Federal Advocacy Trip. This three-day event brought school trustees and superintendents from across California to Washington, D.C., to communicate directly with their representatives in the nation’s capital, learn from some of the country’s top federal policymakers and engage with well-known political experts and pundits.
Back home in California, CSBA recorded a host of legislative achievements highlighted by a historic agreement to increase home-to-school transportation funding. Because of CSBA’s persistent pressure on this issue, the state will — after 40 years of substandard funding — pay 60 percent of home-to-school transportation costs for all LEAs. That’s double the current average of 30 percent and equal to $637 million dollars in 2022–23, with an annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) in years to come.
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
—architect, investor
and philosopher
R. Buckminster Fuller
School busing was just one of the marquee items on a long list of 2022 triumphs. The final budget recognized CSBA’s push for additional ongoing revenue to implement the universal school meals mandate with a $612 million allocation. It also included a CSBA-ACSA proposal to help schools grapple with declining enrollment and lower attendance. The COVID-ADA relief plan lets LEAs count attendance data from 2019–20, the last pre-pandemic year, when calculating the three-year average for state funding — saving schools $2.8 billion and creating a softer landing after the pandemic.
In 2022, school staffing shortages and the housing crisis also generated plenty of headlines and angst for CSBA members. In response, CSBA collaborated with cityLAB at the University of California, Los Angeles; the Center for Cities + Schools at UC Berkeley; the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley; and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative on Education Workforce Housing in California: Developing the 21st-Century Campus, the definitive report on education workforce housing in the state. We also co-sponsored AB 2295, a bill that addresses two crucial issues — affordable housing and teacher recruitment and retention. Authored by Assemblymember Richard Bloom, AB 2295 allows LEAs to develop affordable housing for staff more quickly and efficiently.
In 2022, CSBA achieved concrete victories that will support LEAs in the areas of academic achievement, student conditions, funding and finance, and good governance. Yet, even after a successful season of advocacy, we can’t afford to rest on our laurels, and neither can the state. In 2023, CSBA will urge the Legislature and Governor to augment ongoing resources that aid in learning recovery, provide increased mental health supports, address staffing shortages, strengthen cybersecurity and internet infrastructure, pay down employer pension contributions and allocate the resources needed to effectively implement transitional kindergarten.
We accomplished so much together in 2022 and more victories await in 2023 if we continue to exhibit the capacity for resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention that served us so well in 2022.
Introduction
Introduction
Mastering the three “Rs”: Resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention
Dear CSBA Members,
For as long as anyone can remember, students have been tasked with learning the “three Rs” — reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic (or at least that’s how they used to say it). Yet, the context in which students are expected to master these skills is more challenging than ever. Although we’re through the worst of COVID-19, the cloud from the pandemic still hovers over most aspects of public education. And as school trustees work to facilitate learning recovery and student well-being, they are being tested on their own “three Rs” — resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention.
It’s clear that as we emerge from the triage stage of the pandemic, California schools are not content to resume business as normal. While the policy work required to reinvent schools may go unnoticed by the general public, it hasn’t escaped our attention at CSBA. To highlight the resourcefulness that school boards have demonstrated during a time of great change and uncertainty, CSBA unveiled its 2022 School Boards in Action campaign. The School Boards in Action initiative sought to humanize school trustees, create a better understanding of the work school boards perform, and elevate the steps you’ve taken to support students. The campaign used video storytelling, Q&As, feature articles, blog posts, interviews and advertising to show how school district and county office of education trustees have transformed the disruption caused by COVID-19 into an opportunity to strengthen schools, increase services and expand programs for students.
Vernon M. Billy, CEO & Executive Director
For as long as anyone can remember, students have been tasked with learning the “three Rs” — reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic (or at least that’s how they used to say it). Yet, the context in which students are expected to master these skills is more challenging than ever. Although we’re through the worst of COVID-19, the cloud from the pandemic still hovers over most aspects of public education. And as school trustees work to facilitate learning recovery and student well-being, they are being tested on their own “three Rs” — resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention.
It’s clear that as we emerge from the triage stage of the pandemic, California schools are not content to resume business as normal. While the policy work required to reinvent schools may go unnoticed by the general public, it hasn’t escaped our attention at CSBA. To highlight the resourcefulness that school boards have demonstrated during a time of great change and uncertainty, CSBA unveiled its 2022 School Boards in Action campaign. The School Boards in Action initiative sought to humanize school trustees, create a better understanding of the work school boards perform, and elevate the steps you’ve taken to support students. The campaign used video storytelling, Q&As, feature articles, blog posts, interviews and advertising to show how school district and county office of education trustees have transformed the disruption caused by COVID-19 into an opportunity to strengthen schools, increase services and expand programs for students.
At CSBA, we have tried to match the urgency and creativity we see exhibited by school district and county boards of education throughout the state. In 2022, we flexed our muscles through legislative and legal advocacy, enhanced our member training and business services offerings, raised our profile in the media and public arenas and expanded our research on critical state and federal policy issues, including the publication of two reports on COVID relief funding. Through this research, CSBA illustrated how local educational agencies have used state and federal COVID relief funds to invest in before- and after-school programs, summer learning, expanded instructional days, high-dose tutoring, academic support, mental health interventions and other critical services.
Our increased emphasis on federal support for California schools extended beyond research reports and culminated in the inaugural CSBA and Association of California School Administrators (ACSA) Coast2Coast Federal Advocacy Trip. This three-day event brought school trustees and superintendents from across California to Washington, D.C., to communicate directly with their representatives in the nation’s capital, learn from some of the country’s top federal policymakers and engage with well-known political experts and pundits.
Back home in California, CSBA recorded a host of legislative achievements highlighted by a historic agreement to increase home-to-school transportation funding. Because of CSBA’s persistent pressure on this issue, the state will — after 40 years of substandard funding — pay 60 percent of home-to-school transportation costs for all LEAs. That’s double the current average of 30 percent and equal to $637 million dollars in 2022–23, with an annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) in years to come.
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
—architect, investor
and philosopher
R. Buckminster Fuller
School busing was just one of the marquee items on a long list of 2022 triumphs. The final budget recognized CSBA’s push for additional ongoing revenue to implement the universal school meals mandate with a $612 million allocation. It also included a CSBA-ACSA proposal to help schools grapple with declining enrollment and lower attendance. The COVID-ADA relief plan lets LEAs count attendance data from 2019–20, the last pre-pandemic year, when calculating the three-year average for state funding — saving schools $2.8 billion and creating a softer landing after the pandemic.
In 2022, school staffing shortages and the housing crisis also generated plenty of headlines and angst for CSBA members. In response, CSBA collaborated with cityLAB at the University of California, Los Angeles; the Center for Cities + Schools at UC Berkeley; the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley; and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative on Education Workforce Housing in California: Developing the 21st-Century Campus, the definitive report on education workforce housing in the state. We also co-sponsored AB 2295, a bill that addresses two crucial issues — affordable housing and teacher recruitment and retention. Authored by Assemblymember Richard Bloom, AB 2295 allows LEAs to develop affordable housing for staff more quickly and efficiently.
In 2022, CSBA achieved concrete victories that will support LEAs in the areas of academic achievement, student conditions, funding and finance, and good governance. Yet, even after a successful season of advocacy, we can’t afford to rest on our laurels, and neither can the state. In 2023, CSBA will urge the Legislature and Governor to augment ongoing resources that aid in learning recovery, provide increased mental health supports, address staffing shortages, strengthen cybersecurity and internet infrastructure, pay down employer pension contributions and allocate the resources needed to effectively implement transitional kindergarten.
We accomplished so much together in 2022 and more victories await in 2023 if we continue to exhibit the capacity for resilience, resourcefulness and reinvention that served us so well in 2022.
2022 Executive Committee
Board of Directors
Frank Magarino, Region 1
Del Norte County USD
Sherry Crawford, Region 2
Siskiyou COE
Tony Ubalde, Region 3
Vallejo City USD
Renee Nash, Region 4
Eureka Union SD
Alisa MacAvoy, Region 5
Redwood City ESD
Darrel Woo, Region 6
Sacramento City USD
James Aguilar, Region 7
San Leandro USD
Paul Wallace, Region 8
Newman-Crows Landing USD
Tami Gunther, Region 9
Atascadero USD
Kathy Spate, Region 10
Caruthers USD
Sabrena Rodriguez, Region 11
Ventura USD
William Farris, Region 12
Sierra Sands USD
Susan Henry, Region 15
Huntington Beach Union HSD
Karen Gray, Region 16
Silver Valley USD
Debra Schade, Region 17
Solana Beach SD
Elizabeth Marroquin, Region 18
Corona-Norco USD
Devon Conley, Region 20
Mountain View Whisman SD
Tanya Ortiz Franklin, Region 21
Los Angeles USD
Nancy Smith, Region 22
Palmdale SD
Helen Hall, Region 23
Walnut Valley USD
Leighton Anderson, Region 24
Whittier Union HSD
Bettye Lusk, Director-at Large, African American
Monterey Peninsula USD
Crystal Martinez-Alire, Director-at-Large, American Indian
Elk Grove USD
Amy Koo, Director-at-Large, Asian/Pacific Islander
Belmont-Redwood Shores SD
Bruce Dennis, Director-at-Large, County
Riverside COE
Joaquin Rivera, Director-at-Large, Hispanic
Alameda COE
Joe Ross, CCBE President
San Mateo COE