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 11, 2026 8:49 PM

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
Radio Free Acton: Lela Gilbert on Saturday People, Sunday People, and the Threats They Both Face
On this edition of Radio Free Acton, we talk with Lela Gilbert – author, journalist, and Adjunct Fellow at the Hudson Institute – about her book Saturday People, Sunday People: Israel Through The Eyes of a Christian Sojourner, which details her experiences living as a resident in Israel; we also discussed the very real threat posed to both Christians and Jews in the Middle East by radical Islam. The podcast is available via the audio player below. ...
Video: Os Guinness On The Power Of The Gospel However Dark The Times
Author and social critic Os Guinness joined us here at the Acton Building on April 28 (an event that had to be rescheduled due to an earlier encounter with the glorious mess that is Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport) to discuss his most recent book, Renaissance: The Power of the Gospel However Dark the Times. Many Christians today are discouraged by current events, and left wondering if the best days of the Christian faith are behind us. Guinness answers with a...
EcoLinks 06.02.15
Cardinal Turkson: together for stewardship of creation Cardinal Peter K.A. Turkson, Vatican Radio Despite the generation of great wealth, we find starkly rising disparities – vast numbers of people excluded and discarded, their dignity trampled upon. As global society increasingly defines itself by consumerist and monetary values, the privileged in turn e increasingly numb to the cries of the poor. Pope Francis endorses climate action petition Brian Roewe, National Catholic Reporter “He was very supportive,” Tomás Insua, a Buenos Aires,...
EcoLinks 06.03.15
Podcast: U.N. Secretary General Wants to “Join Forces” With Catholic Church? Chris Manion, Population Research Institute Ban Ki Moon, Secreatary General of the United Nations, wants to “join forces” with the Catholic Church to save the planet. Does Mr. Ban actually believe that Pope Francis will endorse the UN’s forced abortion and sterilization programs around the world? Ban Ki-moon urges governments to invest in low carbon energy Damian Carrington, The Guardian Ban also said, with a papal encyclical on climate...
How an Ex-Convict Learned to Worship Through His Work
Alfonso was looking for a “fast life,” and as a result, he got mixed up in illegal drugs and landed in prison. For many, that kind of thingmight signal the beginning of a patternor slowlydefineand distort one’s identity or destiny. But for Alfonso, it was a wake-up call. While in prison, he began to realize who he really was, and more importantly, whose he really was. He began to understand that God created him to be a gift-giver, and that...
Are Catholic priests mainly Republicans and Protestant pastors mostly Democrats?
Farmers tend to be conservative—at least until they retire, when the skew liberal. Those who serve in the Marines and Air Force tend to be Republicans while soldiers and sailors lean toward the Democrats. Golfers are the most conservative sports players while poker players at the most liberal. Those are some of the intriguing findings from a series of interactive charts by Verdant Labs that show the average political affiliations of various professions. To determine the political leanings, Verdant used...
Kishore Jayabalan: Will Upcoming Encyclical ‘Squander’ Papal Authority?
In anticipation of the new papal encyclical on the environment (reportedly due out this month, and titledLaudato si’[Praised Be You]), the press is seeking a way to make sense out of information “floating around” concerning the contents of the encyclical. At this point, no one really knows what the encyclical will say, although there are educated guesses. (See Fr. Robert Sirico’s discussion on the encyclical here.) Peter Smith at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette did a “round-up” of various Vatican watchers, officials...
Now Available: ‘The Mosaic Polity’ by Franciscus Junius
CLP Academic has now releasedThe Mosaic Polity, the first-ever English translation of Franciscus Junius’ De Politiae Mosis Observatione, a treatise on Mosaic law and contemporary political application. The release is part of the growing series from Acton:Sources in Early Modern Economics, Ethics, and Law. Junius (1545–1602) was a Reformed scholar and theologian at the Universities of Heidelberg and Leiden, and is known for producing a popular Latin translation of the Bible and De theologia vera, which became “a standard textbook...
Christian Stewardship or UN Sustainability?
“’Sustainability’ has e big business, especially at universities,” says Kishore Jayabalan in this week’s Acton Commentary. “If there ever was an elitist/populist wedge issue, this is it, with Pope Francis and the Holy See on the wrong side of it.” So what exactly is meant by “sustainability”? The term originates in 1987 with the World Commission on Environment and Development’s report entitled Our Common Future: “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present promising the ability of...
What Would The Founders Do About Welfare?
es to mind when you think of poverty policies prior to FDR’s New Deal? For many people, the idea of pre-1940s welfare is likely to resemble something out of a Charles Dickens’ novel: destitute adults in the poorhouse and hungry children (usually orphans) eating a bowl of gruel. That impression is likely what we have about welfare in America during the era of the Founding Fathers. But is it accurate? “The left often claims the Founders were indifferent to the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved