Voter's Edge California Voter Guide
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Tuesday November 8, 2022 — California General Election
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State of California
Proposition 28 — Funding Arts and Music Education Initiative Statute - Majority Approval Required

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Election Results

Passed

6,924,618 votes yes (64.4%)

3,827,971 votes no (35.6%)

100% of precincts reporting (25,554/25,554).

PROVIDES ADDITIONAL FUNDING FOR ARTS AND MUSIC EDUCATION IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS.

Provides additional funding from state General Fund for arts and music education in all K+12 public schools (including charter schools).

Fiscal Impact: Increased state costs of about $1 billion annually, beginning next year, for arts education in public schools.

Put on the Ballot by Petition Signatures.

What is this proposal?

Easy Voter Guide — Summary for new and busy voters

Information provided by The League of Women Voters of California Education Fund

The way it is now

Every year the state must set aside about 40 percent of its income (revenue) to fund public schools. But the state doesn’t have another annual source of funding for arts and music education in public schools.

What if it passes?

  • The state must set aside some of its revenue to fund arts and music education in K-12 public schools.
  • All schools would receive some funding for each student. Schools serving many low-income students would receive a bit more money. Funding would allow schools to hire new staff and pay for training and supplies.

Budget effect

Arts and music education would cost approximately $1 billion each year.

People FOR say

  • Arts and music education can improve a student’s personal and academic life.
  • Only one in five schools have a dedicated teacher for arts programs.

People AGAINST say

  • Prop 28 would limit the state funds available for other spending.

Pros & Cons — Unbiased explanation with arguments for and against

Information provided by League of Women Voters of California Education Fund

The Question

Should the State provide specific funding for arts and music education in public schools, an amount higher than the existing constitutional minimum amount required for public education?

The Situation

Because Prop 98 passed in 1988, the California Constitution requires a minimum percentage of the state budget to be spent on K-14 education (kindergarten through two-year community college). This minimum guarantee is calculated annually.

There is currently no guaranteed source of annual funding in the state budget for arts and music education in K-12 public schools. State law requires schools to provide arts and music instruction to all students in grades 1 through 6. In order to graduate, high school students must complete a year in one of three courses of study, one of which being arts and music education. Beyond these requirements, other specifics such as the amount of instruction or when courses are offered is determined by the local governing board.

The Proposal

Prop 28 would require the state to set aside a portion of the State’s General Fund to pay for arts and music education in K-12 public schools. This funding would be in addition to the funding already guaranteed by Prop 98. Prop 28 would require the funding for arts and music education to be at least 1% of the funding received by schools the prior year under Prop 98.

To address equity issues, Prop 28 would allocate more funding to schools serving many low-income students. Schools would be required to report how funding was used to directly benefit students. Larger schools would be required to spend 80% of the funding to employ new staff and 20% on training and supplies.

Fiscal effect

Prop 28 would increase State expenditures by about $1 billion per year, over and above existing constitutional requirements.

Supporters say

  • Arts and music education can improve a student’s personal and academic life.
  • Only one in five schools have a dedicated teacher for arts and music programs.
  • Prop 28 does not raise taxes.

 

FOR MORE INFORMATION
Supporters:

Yes On 28 - Californians for Arts and Music in Schools
voteyeson28.org/

 

Opponents say

At press time there is no organized campaign committee

 

Details — Official information

YES vote means

  • The state would provide additional funding specifically for arts education in public schools.

This amount would be above the constitutionally required amount of funding for public schools and community colleges.

NO vote means

  • Funding for arts education in public schools would continue to depend on state and local budget decisions.

Summary

Attorney General (pp. 28-29 of the Official Voter Information Guide)

  • Provides additional funding for arts and music education in all K–12 public schools (including charter schools) by annually allocating from state General Fund an amount equal to 1% of required state and local funding for public schools.
  • Allocates greater proportion of the additional funds to schools serving more economically disadvantaged students.
  • Schools with 500 or more students must spend at least 80% of the funding to employ teachers and remainder on training, supplies, and education partnerships.
  • Requires audits and limits administrative costs to 1% of the funding.

 

Background

Prepared by the Legislative Analyst (p. 28 of the Official Voter Information Guide)

State’s Public School System. California’s public schools currently have about 6 million students from kindergarten through grade 12. Roughly 60 percent of public school students are from low-income families. These are students eligible to receive free or reducedprice school meals under a federal nutrition program. The state also provides public preschool to some three- and four-year olds from low-income families. However, the amount of state funding is currently not enough to serve all eligible children. Public schools are operated primarily by school districts and charter schools, under the control of local governing boards.

Annual Required Education Spending. The California Constitution requires the state to set aside a minimum amount of state General Fund and local property tax revenue each year (annually) for public schools and community colleges. (The General Fund is the state’s main operating account, which pays for education, prisons, health care, and other public services.) In most years, the state must provide about 40 percent of General Fund revenue to meet this requirement. The state’s current budget includes $110 billion to meet this requirement. Of this amount, $95.5 billion is specifically for public schools. Most school funding is distributed to schools through a per-student formula. The formula also gives schools more funding based on the share of their students who are low income, English learners, or in foster care. With a two-thirds vote of each house of the Legislature, the state could provide less funding for schools and community colleges than required for that year.

Arts Education in Elementary and Middle Schools. State law requires schools to provide instruction in visual and performing arts (including music) to all students in grades 1 through 6. State law also requires schools to offer such courses in grades 7 and 8 as electives. The specific courses and amount of instruction are determined by each local governing board. Schools may also offer arts education through before/after school and summer programs. The state funds two after school programs currently totaling almost $5 billion each year. These programs require an academic component (such as tutoring) and an enrichment component (such as arts programs or physical fitness).

Arts Education in High Schools. Students must complete specific courses before they can graduate from high school. The state requires students to complete certain core academic subjects, such as English, history/social science, mathematics, and science. The state also requires students complete one year of either (1) visual or performing arts, (2) a foreign language, or (3) career technical education (CTE). Local governing boards can add other requirements for high school graduation. A 2017 survey found that about half of the state’s school districts set their minimum graduation requirements to match the course requirements for admission to the state’s public universities. Under these requirements, students must take one year of visual and performing arts, which cannot be fulfilled with foreign language or CTE coursework. In the most recent school year for which data are available, high schools in California offered about 150,000 arts education courses. High schools may also provide after school arts programs.

Impartial analysis / Proposal

Prepared by the Legislative Analyst (p. 29 of the Official Voter Information Guide)

PROPOSAL

Provides Additional Funding for Arts Education in Public Schools. Beginning next year, Proposition 28 requires the state to provide additional funding to increase arts instruction and/or arts programs in public schools. The amount required each year would equal 1 percent of the constitutionally required state and local funding that public schools received the year before. This funding would be considered a payment above the constitutionally required amount of funding for public schools and community colleges. The proposition allows the Legislature to reduce funding provided by this proposition for arts education in a year when the Legislature provides less than the constitutional spending requirement. In this case, the reduction in funding for arts education could not be more than the percentage reduction in total funding to public schools and community colleges.

Distributes Funding Based on a Formula. Proposition 28 distributes the additional funding to public schools based on enrollment in preschool and K–12. Of the total amount, 70 percent would go to schools based on their share of statewide enrollment. The remaining 30 percent would go to schools based on their share of low-income students enrolled statewide. Local governing boards may use up to 1 percent of this new funding for administrative expenses. The remainder of the funding must be distributed to all school sites based on their student enrollment.

Requires Funding Be Used Primarily to Hire New Arts Staff. Proposition 28 requires funding be used for arts education programs and requires schools to certify that these funds were spent in addition to existing funding for arts education programs. This may include a variety of subjects, including dance, media arts, music, theater, and various types of visual arts (including photography, craft arts, computer coding, and graphic design). The proposition also requires at least 80 percent of the additional funding be used to hire staff. (School districts and charter schools with fewer than 500 students would not have to meet this requirement.) The remaining funding could be used for training, supplies and materials, and for arts educational partnership programs. The California Department of Education (CDE) may approve requests from schools to spend less on staff. Schools will have three years to spend the funds they receive each year. CDE would reallocate any unspent funds to all schools in the following year.

Allows School Principals to Determine How Funds Are Spent. Proposition 28 requires the principal of a school site (or the program director of a preschool) to develop a plan for spending the funding they receive. The principal or program director would determine how to expand a site’s arts instruction and/or programs.

Requires Annual Data Reporting. Proposition 28 requires local governing boards to certify each year that the funding their schools received was spent on arts education. Additionally, local governing boards must post on their website a report on how funds were spent. The report must include the type of arts education programs funded, the number of staff employed, the number of students served, and the number of school sites providing arts education with the funding received. This report must also be submitted to CDE and made public on the department’s website.

Financial effect

Prepared by the Legislative Analyst (p. 28 of the Official Voter Information Guide)

Beginning next year, Proposition 28 would increase state costs by about $1 billion annually. This amount is less than one-half of 1 percent of the state’s total General Fund budget. The additional funding would be considered a payment above the constitutionally required amount of funding for public schools and community colleges.

Published Arguments — Arguments for and against

Arguments FOR

Barely one in five California public schools have a full-time arts or music program. Prop. 28 provides additional funding to ensure every student in PK–12 public school has access to arts and music education— without raising taxes.

  • Protects existing education funding.
  • Includes strict accountability, transparency.

Parents, teachers and children support.

— p. 6 of the Official Voter Information Guide

Arguments FOR

Arguments are the opinions of the authors and have not been checked for accuracy by any official agency. 

ARGUMENT IN FAVOR OF PROPOSITION 28

YES ON 28: ENSURE ACCESS TO ARTS AND MUSIC EDUCATION IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS WITHOUT RAISING TAXES

Arts and music education plays a critical role in helping children learn, develop and achieve in school and later in life. With arts and music education, students:

  • Do better in math, reading, and other subjects.
  • Learn to think creatively and critically.
  • Have better attendance, self-confidence and mental health.

But in California’s public schools, arts and music programs have often been the first to get cut. So that now, barely 1 in 5 public schools has a full-time arts or music teacher, which means millions of students don’t have an opportunity to participate.

This deprives California students of a well-rounded science, technology, engineering, arts and math (STEAM) curriculum—and means it’s harder to prepare them for well-paying jobs in California’s economy.

Our kids deserve better.

ADDITIONAL FUNDING FOR ARTS AND MUSIC EDUCATION WITHOUT RAISING TAXES

Prop. 28, the Arts and Music in Public Schools measure, dedicates nearly $1 billion a year in additional funding for arts and music education in Pre-K–12 public schools—without raising taxes. Under Prop. 28:

  • Every public school in every school district will receive increased funding for arts and music education—so every student benefits.
  • Schools serving children in low-income communities are allocated additional needed funding.
  • Funding must be spent on arts and music education—on teachers, supplies, arts partnerships, training and materials.

The measure includes funding for traditional arts and music classes like theater, dance, band, painting and drawing, and for contemporary arts like graphic design, computer graphics, and film and video.

Prop. 28 protects existing education funding—and does not raise taxes.

STRICT ACCOUNTABILITY AND TRANSPARENCY PROVISIONS

Prop. 28 contains important safeguards to ensure the funds are spent as intended:

  • Prohibits the Legislature or school districts from using the funds for other purposes.
  • Requires annual audits of the funding.
  • Requires schools to publish annual reports on how they spend funds, including the specific programs and how students benefited.

ARTS AND MUSIC EDUCATION IMPROVES MENTAL HEALTH AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT

Research has shown that arts and music education benefit children’s mental health and social development. Ensuring all children have access to arts and music education is especially important emerging from the pandemic, which isolated many children without access to social interaction.

HELPS PREPARE STUDENTS FOR GOOD JOBS IN CALIFORNIA’S ECONOMY

California’s creative economy employs nearly 3 million people in movies, music, art, animation, TV, theater and more. Ensuring access to arts and music education provides children with critical skills they need to succeed and provides our economy with the well-trained workforce California needs to remain a world leader.

“By investing in arts and music education for our children, we can create the well-rounded, diverse workforce of tomorrow.” —Tracy Hernandez, CEO of LA County Business Federation

A BRIGHTER FUTURE FOR OUR CHILDREN

Please join teachers, parents, education and child development experts, mental health professionals, entrepreneurs and community leaders across the state and Vote Yes on 28.

VoteYesonProp28.org

Austin Beutner, Chairman
Californians for Arts and Music in Public Schools

E. Toby Boyd, President
California Teachers Association

Carol Green, President
California State PTA

Arguments AGAINST

No argument against Proposition 28 was submitted.

— p. 6 of the Official Voter Information Guide

Arguments AGAINST

No argument against Proposition 28 was submitted.

Who gave money?

Contributions

Yes on Proposition 28

Total money raised: $11,816,208
Bar graph showing total amount relative to total amount for this entire campaign.

No on Proposition 28

No data currently available.
Bar graph showing total amount relative to total amount for this entire campaign.

Below are the top 10 contributors that gave money to committees supporting or opposing the ballot measures.

Yes on Proposition 28

1
Beutner, Austin
$4,266,000
2
California Teachers Association
$2,573,069
3
Steven A. Ballmer and affiliated entities
$1,500,000
4
Fender Musical Instruments Corp.
$1,225,761
5
Rosenthal, Monica H.
$1,000,000
6
California Community Foundation (CCF)
$250,000
7
California Federation of Teachers
$100,000
7
Comcast Corporation and Affiliated Entities including NBCUniversal Media LLC(Kathy Banuelos)
$100,000
7
Kohl, Jerry
$100,000
7
Penske Media Corporation
$100,000

No on Proposition 28

More information about contributions

Yes on Proposition 28

By State:

California 86.41%
Washington 12.70%
District of Columbia 0.42%
Oregon 0.25%
Other 0.22%
86.41%12.70%

By Size:

Large contributions (99.99%)
Small contributions (0.01%)
99.99%

By Type:

From organizations (52.44%)
From individuals (47.56%)
52.44%47.56%

No on Proposition 28

More information

Videos (2)

Prop. 28 would require California to set aside a share of its revenue for arts and education classes. CalMatters reporter Joe Hong explains Prop. 28 in 1 minute. *The 2022 CalMatters Voter Guide is sponsored by the California State Library.
— September 29, 2022 League of Women Voters of California
This video explains Proposition 28. ------------------ LWVCEF Video Series Explaining the 2022 Statewide Ballot Measures | cavotes.org

Contact Info

Yes on Proposition 28
Yes on 28—Californians for Arts and Music in Schools
Email info@voteyeson28.org
No on Proposition 28
Not available.
Use tabs to select your choice. Use return to create a choice. You can access your choices by navigating to 'My Choices'.

Who supports or opposes this measure?

Yes on Proposition 28

Organizations (76)

No on Proposition 28

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