[personal profile] drscott
I usually do a post on how I intend to vote. This election would have occurred for us in any case because we have several local races, so I don't mind having propositions as well. The propaganda level of the advertising for these has been very high, with outright lies or garden-variety distortions more evident than usual.

I've read the voter information guide and newspaper stories about each proposition. With the exception of Prop 74, the teacher tenure changes, I agree with the Mercury News editorial page on all of them.

Prop 73: Parental notification. Superficially plausible (it's good for parents to know when their child needs an abortion!) but actually a stalking horse for the antiabortion types. Weasel-wording sets up precedent to define a fetus as a legal human being. Makes it likely children will seek black-market abortions. NO

Prop 74: Teacher tenure. Extends from 2 to 5 years period when public school teachers can be dismissed without complex procedural safeguards. Makes it slightly easier to dismiss a tenured teacher for cause. The Merc says no, but despite misgivings I've heard too may stories about bad teachers being impossible to fire. Tenure in a research university allows freedom of thought; tenure at the grade school level only makes the world safe for mediocrity or worse. Fails to address more serious public school problems (lack of accountability due to statewide funding schemes, lack of competition, political interference with curricula), but YES.

Prop 75: Requires public employee unions to get permission for political expenditures. Being fought by, among other things, an extra $60 assessment on all public school teachers, in an example of the abuse intended to be addressed. There is a special problem when public employees (and companies that supply state services) can interfere with the machinery of democracy by funding political campaigns to support candidates that will in turn feather their nests; the Governor says he will support a provision controlling campaign expenditures by corporations if this one passes, so with that proviso, YES.

Prop 76: Budget reform. Allows the executive to exert more authority over budget items when deficits get out of control; adds a rainy day fund for excess revenues during good times (as were spent instead during the boom years, leading to the current fiscal crisis.) The system is terribly broken now, and this is a bandaid that will help. A little. YES.

Prop 77: Establishes redistricting commission to end legislative gerrymandering. A good-government reform, long overdue, that will start to add competition to legislative races. YES.

Prop 78: Drug plan #2, financed by drug companies. This was put on the ballot to avert Prop 79, and sounds good while doing little and costing, perhaps, a lot. NO.

Prop 79: Drug plan that purports to provide discounted drugs to the poor at the drug companies' expense. If it works at all, it will have unintended negative consequences; and the drug price problem needs to be addressed on a nationwide basis. NO.

Prop 80: Wrongheaded utility re-regulation proposal that would entrench old-line utilities as the only providers of power. Would leave little incentive for investment in new power transmission lines or innovative plants. NO.

Date: 2005-11-02 11:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orange-groves.livejournal.com
Unfortunately, it has already been proven that private schools don't necessarily warrant a better education than public. Republicans push for this for the religious schools.

Date: 2005-11-02 11:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
The world has more than two poles.

Date: 2005-11-02 11:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orange-groves.livejournal.com
Yup.

But having seen it all while living in Southern California, my experience is that the voucher push is for private unaccredited schools. For children of fundamentalist parents that don't want to expose their children to things like, say, Homosexuals.

Date: 2005-11-02 11:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
So because of this strawman argument you've foreclosed all possibility of freeing poor inner-city kids from costly schools that resemble prisons.

Date: 2005-11-02 11:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orange-groves.livejournal.com
The voucher system wasn't designed for inner-city youth.

I can't disagree on the state of public schools. I've been very frustrated with all the idiocy especially in San Francisco. School Bond money gets wasted. Bills don't get paid promptly.

But vouchers aren't the answer, just as School Bonds aren't either. The system needs to be overhauled. No one wants to take the task on. And unfortunately teachers, being only human too, can't survive on low wages where they can't afford to live.

My aunt is a teacher, as is a good friend of mine. Both are hard working, and have repeatedly paid out of their own pocket for extras for their kids that the school district can't afford. I think you would find that more teachers are like that than the bad ones.

Date: 2005-11-02 11:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
I agree with you that the average teacher is a good, hardworking soul that does their best for the kids. Which is beside the point -- the problem is systemic. CA spends a lot on schools (though not as much as some states like NY), and gets very poor results. Education is not a natural monopoly except perhaps in rural regions where it is impractical to have multiple schools. The problem is very poor management, and that in turn is the result of a poor incentive structure. Good schools happen when people on the scene have the power to make changes and spend their budgets as they see fit; our political/labor controlled public schools do not allow that.

And you apparently have no idea that the strongest supporters of voucher systems that have been proposed and put in place are inner-city parents.

Date: 2005-11-03 12:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orange-groves.livejournal.com
Nope, I hadn't heard that about the IC parents being supporters.

California really doesn't spend much on public schools anymore, and Governor Arnold took millions of dollars from the schools without repaying them back. California has gone from a leader in education to in the bottom 10, in part because of budget cuts from Proposition 13.

I don't agree with the idea of the labor controlled schools. But I do advocate that many governmental positions dealing with schools are needless and could be eliminated. Part of that comes from other unions, or even the programs themselves.

On the other hand, without Prop 13, only the wealthy could afford to own property!

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