Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A silver lining in the Golden State’s school shutdowns
A silver lining in the Golden State’s school shutdowns
Jan 14, 2026 12:40 AM

What happens in California doesn’t tend to stay in California – and that’s usually bad for America. For instance, “55% of all public school students, including those in charter schools, were at home, in distance learning, as of April 30, according to an EdSource analysis of new data released by the state.” However, a new and growing parental rights movement in the state is making headlines, creating change, and forging a national push for the nation’s still-shuttered schools to reopen over union opposition.

During the early stages of the reopening, opposition to lockdowns and shutdown due to COVID-19 were almost exclusively associated with Republican-leaning states. But even though California’s parents want to distance themselves from reflexive opposition to school closures, they are also demanding that teachers’ unions and their political officials stop opposing the science which shows that schools can safely reopen.

Their pleas have often been met with contempt. An entire district school board was forced to resign after a leaked recording showed board members insulting parents during a meeting. One member told critical parents, “I’m gonna f— you up!” The board president then suggested that parents “want to pick on us, because they want their babysitters back.” The head of a local teachers’ union was caught sending his daughter to a private preschool, even while he fought against reopening public schools. And a school board member in San Diego County claimed that setting a timeline for reopening schools was “a very white supremacist ideology” paring reopening requirements to “slavery.”

In the meantime, California’s parents are paying the taxes which fund $6.6 billion in extra funding for in-school instruction – which, again, the scientific evidence suggests should have started a long time ago.

As the Acton Institute has already reported, it’s quite clear that opponents of reopening schools have run out of excuses and are merely doing the politically expedient bidding of catering to teachers’ unions. The center-left Brookings Institution found that “politics, far more than science, shaped school district decision-making.” In fact, Brookings confirmed that “there is no relationship” between reopening decisions and COVID-19 cases.

The connection between school closings and children’s well-being is clear: Keeping kids home does little to reduce their likelihood of catching COVID-19, but extended shutdowns can cause or exacerbate mental health issues among young people.

California’s parents have had enough, and they’ve been voicing their anger to Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state officials. But it’s not clear that state officials are willing to put their foot down and get kids back to school. The law that includes the $6.6 billion handout to the school system did not actually require school districts to resume in-person instruction. It also did not specify how many days a week students must be in the classroom for schools to receive this extra funding; they could easily “reopen” for just one or two days a week, keeping students at home and glued to their screens the rest of the time, an qualify. At least one district adopted this half-measure.

The National Education Association is the nation’s largest union, and it is one of two powerful teachers’ unions. However, it looks like union officials have overplayed their hand in California: Even dependably liberal voters are starting to realize that teachers’ unions do not necessarily have their children’s interests in mind. This could provoke a shift in attitudes that empowers American families and deals a blow to big-government, protectionist, special interests.

Before taking office, President Joe Biden promised that most schools would be open by the end of his first 100 days in office. But then the administration scaled its plans back to include only K-8 schools. Then White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki lowered moved the goalposts again to having most schools open “at least one day a week” – and Biden later chalked up even that low standard to a “mistake in munication.” In February, Psaki waffled on whether CDC Director Rochelle Walensky was speaking in her “personal” or professional capacity when Walensky said school reopenings could take place without widespread vaccinations.

If unions continue to prefer their members’ interest in staying at home at the expense of students’ interests in being in the classroom, parents will sour on teachers’ unions. And if the parents keep up the pressure on elected officials, those officials will have to make a choice: ignore their voters, or risk losing the support of these public-sector unions, and their large and influential membership base. Either way, Californians might start to rethink their support for unions and the status quo in public education. The best thing that e out of this situation would be if overreaching teachers’ unions push parents to support school choice and individual liberty over unresponsive bureaucrats thaat put special interests ahead of their state’s children.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Pete Seeger, 1919-2014
Pete Seeger performing the Woodie Guthrie song “This Land is Your Land” at President Obama’s “We Are One” Inaugural Concert, January 19, 2009. Environmentalist, agent provocateur, leftist activist, recovering Communist and ardent redistributionist – all apply to the folksinger who died Monday in New York at the age of 94. Pete Seeger, for better or worse, answered to all of the above adjectives but it’s his legacy as a songwriter and performer for which this writer prefers to remember him....
Acton University 2014 Speaker Spotlight: Ross Douthat
The core economic challenge facing the American experiment is not e inequality per se, but rather stratification and stagnation —weak mobility from the bottom of the e ladder and wage stagnation for the middle class. These challenges are bound up in a growing social crisis— a retreat from marriage, a weakening of religious munal ties, a decline in workforce participation— that cannot be solved in Washington D.C. But economic and social policy can make a difference nonetheless, making family life...
‘The Monuments Men:’ Art Matters
Robert M. Edsel’s The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History is a terrific book regarding a part of World War II history that few are aware of. One of Hitler’s goals was to amass great art for his personal collection, and to build a museum and a cathedral in Linz, Austria. What Edsel calls a “backwater of factories and smoke” would e, in Hitler’s vision, a cultural center to rival anything Europe had...
Why is the State of the Union Always ‘Strong’?
I have a can’t miss prediction: tonight, when President Obama gives his sixth State of the Union address, he will describe the state of the union as “strong.” Admittedly, predicting that the state of our union will be described as “strong” is about as safe a bet as you can make when es to politics. Over the last hundred years presidents have described the State of the Union (SOTU) in various ways — Good (Truman), Sound (Carter), Not Good (Ford)....
Evaluating Net Neutrality via Walter Eucken
On January 14, as Brad Chacos so perfectly put it for PC World, “a Washington appeals court ruled that the FCC’s net neutrality rules are invalid in an 81-page document that included talk about cat videos on YouTube.” Reactions have been varied. Joe Carter recently surveyed various arguments in his latest explainer. For my part, I mend the German, ordoliberal economist Walter Eucken as a guide for evaluating net neutrality, which as Joe Carter put it, “[a]t its simplest …...
Poverty, Development, and the Idealist
In the latest EconTalk podcast, Nina Munk, journalist and author of The Idealist: Jeffrey Sachs and the Quest to End Poverty, talks about how she spent six years following Jeffrey Sachs and the evolution of the Millennium Villages Project — an attempt to jumpstart a set of African villages in hopes of discovering a new template for development. Munk details the great optimism at the beginning of the project and the discouraging results after six years of high levels of...
Economic Facts: More Gut-Wrenching Than ‘Fun’
gives us a list of “fun” facts about the economy. Of course, “fun” is used in an ironic way, which e clear when you look at just how dreary these facts are: $1.8 Trillion: Cost Of ObamaCare’s Coverage Provisions From 2014 To 2023 (CBO, 7/30/13)$1 Trillion: The Total Student Debt Held By Americans. (Josh Mitchell, “Student-Loan Debt Slows Recovery,” The Wall Street Journal’s Real Time Economics, 12/30/13) $174 Billion:Federal Budget Deficit For The First Three Months Of FY2014. (U.S. Treasury...
A Challenge to ‘Work-Life Balance’
Upon the recent birth of our third child, I took a brief “vacation” from “work” (quotes intended). The time spent with family was special, joyous, and fulfilling, yet given the extreme lack of sleep, the sudden rush of behavioral backlash from Toddler Siblings 1 and 2, and a host of new scarcities and constraints, it was also a whole heap of work. Needless to say, when I arrived back at the office just a week later, I felt like I...
Actually, We Won the War on Poverty
“Why, if we have made such great strides reducing poverty,” asks Scott Winship, “is there such widespread belief that, to quote Ronald Reagan, ‘We fought a war on poverty, and poverty won’?” We won the War on Poverty in the sense that the prevalence of material hardship has declined. According to Meyer and Sullivan, just 8 percent of Americans live at the low standard of living endured by a third of Americans in 1963. But it was a limited and...
Presuming the Best
Kierkegaard once wrote, “The majority of men are subjective toward themselves and objective toward all others, terribly objective sometimes–but the real task is in fact to be objective toward one’s self and subjective toward all others.” In this week’s Acton Commentary, “Discounting the Unseen,” I explore our responsibility to presume the best of others, particularly with regards to what remains unknown or assumed about them. This is a significant task given our natural propensity to excuse ourselves and to condemn...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved