Mandatory Kindergarten Won't Be Coming to California
Citing costs, California Gov. Gavin Newsom struck a victory for parental choice in education.

Last week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed S.B. 70, a law passed by California's Legislature that would have made kindergarten mandatory for children in the state. In vetoing the law, Newsom cited the price, "Fund cost impacts of up to $268 million ongoing, which is not currently accounted for in the state's fiscal plan."
Mandatory kindergarten is a patchwork policy across the United States. With Newsom's veto, California remains one of the 30 states, including New York, New Jersey, and North Carolina, that do not compel kindergarten attendance.
Mandating kindergarten is not only a massive government expenditure, as Newsom pointed out, but also an encroachment on educational freedom. "The decision to send children to kindergarten should be made by parents, not the government forcing all children into a one-size-fits-all program," says Lance Izumi, senior director of the Center for Education at the Pacific Research Institute. "Parents are the ones who know the individual needs of their children. Politicians and bureaucrats do not."
S.B. 70's sponsor, Sen. Susan Rubio (D–Los Angeles), wrote in the bill's fact sheet that "Since kindergarten is not mandatory, students that do not attend miss fundamental instruction putting them at a disadvantage in a classroom setting as they enter first grade." Rubio also pushed for the bill by focusing on the impact it would have on low-income communities. "Kindergarten attendance is also an important aspect in reducing chronic absenteeism and closing the achievement gap."
However, sending children to school who are not ready for it also has consequences. Colleen Hroncich, a policy analyst at the Cato Institute's Center for Educational Freedom, shared with Reason that "A 2018 Harvard study found children who start school at a younger age are more likely to receive an ADHD diagnosis than their slightly older classmates. The lead researcher said the results suggest it's possible that many kids are being overdiagnosed and overtreated for ADHD. Black children and children in poverty are more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD, so mandating earlier school could lead to overdiagnosis among some of the populations Senator Rubio cited."
Compulsory kindergarten is also an invitation for unnecessary government intervention. As Rubio herself pointed out, "Pre-COVID, approximately 95% of eligible students attended kindergarten." Sen. Melissa Melendez (R–Lake Elsinore), who opposed the bill, told Reason that this illustrates why it wasn't necessary. "In 2014, Governor Brown vetoed a nearly identical measure," she wrote. Brown said at the time that "Most children already attend kindergarten and those that don't may be enrolled in other educational or developmental programs that are deemed more appropriate for them by their families. I would prefer to let parents determine what is best for their children, rather than mandate an entirely new grade level." Melendez noted that "these words are as true and thoughtful now as they were seven years ago."
Both Hroncich and Izumi agree that Newsom's veto is a step in the right direction for educational freedom. Hroncich stresses the need for education saving accounts (ESAs) and says that Newsom "could reduce the cost of education in California while better serving the students by working with the legislature to enact school choice policies" and that "the public would likely back him in this effort."
"Even in California, Morning Consult polling finds very strong support for a variety of school choice proposals. Among parents, more than 75% expressed support for ESAs, school vouchers, and charter schools," Hroncich noted.
Izumi also highlighted the importance of homeschooling. "For those who can do it, homeschooling offers parents the ability to control the education of their children—they decide what to teach and how to teach."
Newsom has achieved a small victory for parental choice in education.
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"Citing costs, California Gov. Gavin Newsom struck a victory for parental choice in education"
No he didn't. He merely said the state won't take control *right now* because he can't afford the cost.
Later, when he can, he will.
That's all good 'n fine, but where's Jackie, maaan?!
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It's only $200M. That makes me suspicious something else is going on. That puny an amount has never stopped politicians before.
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Reason praises a broken clock for being right twice a day…for all the wrong reasons. Any excuse to praise a shitlib for being “libertarian”…whatever.
Is it just me, or is the image of Newsom at the top just really freaking creepy?
governor by day, supervillain by night.
He's supervillain 24/7
Patrick Bateman.
>>Gavin Newsom struck a victory for parental choice in education.
um totes no, G doesn't cede control on anything
>>"which is not currently accounted for in the state's fiscal plan"
ah. "account for it in the fiscal plan and I'll sign."
Not because it's Orwellian, but because it costs too much. But as soon as we can afford it...
In vetoing the law, Newsom cited the price, “Fund cost impacts of up to $268 million ongoing, which is not currently accounted for in the state’s fiscal plan.”
So the guy that never saw a problem he couldn’t throw billions of dollars at is suddenly Mr. Fiscal Responsibility.
That should scare the piss out of Californians, and probably put the rest of the country on alert as well for some tough times coming.
Or it is just an excuse, and we will find out the real plan later. For instance, maybe this K requirement conflicts with a plan to mandate state daycare from age 1 up.
At least one libertarian publication is talking about Nordstream.
OPEC is cutting oil by 2 million barrels a day.
Glad we put a stop to domestic energy exploration and development.
both so you'll buy electric.
Reason needs better editorial direction.
Really nobody seen Jackie? Been commenting to see if somebody's seen her recently.
Is this yet another Reason commenter inside joke that I'm not getting?
Oh, this is what that's about.
Yeah, one has to go elsewhere to the news these days.
It's just sad. I can't even get my partisan juices flowing over it. Maybe because my own Nana is like this, and it's just sad.
he asked for it by being president. willing to bet Nana isn't a power-mad hair-sniffing child-showerer
No, but the human element is there. Apparently I'm not quite good enough yet at entirely turning Biden into a symbol. I just see a man suffering from dementia, and it's sad. It might have consequences politically, but it's also just sad.
Also, my Nana, kind of a bitch.
A friend's father has dementia. or maybe Alzheimer's, one of the bad ones.
He can be a right prick at times. Comes with the package when your brain goes old people wonky, I guess.
>> I just see a man suffering from dementia, and it’s sad.
I don't feel sorry for public figures, especially the actresses but especially the criminal pols. B can retire immediately I'll have nothing more to say.
Biden chose this. He didn't have to run. But it was more important to him than we were.
Fuck him.
Biden chose this. He didn’t have to run.
I'm not convinced of that either.
He's a traitorous child molester, I won't be shedding any tears
Biden's dementia doesn't get my partisan juices going either, because it's not his fault. It's literally everyone around him including but not limited to the national press corps who's to blame.
I'm curious if the legislature goes and finds money for it, will Gavin then approve it?
I think the amount is so puny that something else is going on which this bill would conflict with, or at least complicate. Like State daycare for all ages all day. One of the "problems" with current primary school is the short hours cutting short parents' work days. Wouldn't it be convenient if the State could expand school hours so parents could pick them up later? This would require new school employees, lots of them, and year round, not just on school days. Guess which unions would benefit?
I don't know. My only political instinct on it was that he wants to run for President and this came off to him as an easy way to push back on his own party so he can show that he is willing to do so down the line.
But, I don't know. At this point I choose not to care or think too much about political strategy. I just don't care about it.
#Newsom/Cheney2024
Tax corporate profits in addition to corporate taxes, capital gains, income taxes
Tax Financial transactions
Tax Land values
Tax HOAs
Abolish private transportation and fossil fuels
Rely on despots for all energy infrastructure
Subsidize housing (as a percentage of median income, like Obamacare) for anyone in the world who wants it
Trains Trains Trains
Abolish felony charges for murderers
On one hand, kindergarten is supposed to be the new first grade. If you child can't read yet they're not ready for first grade.
On the other hand, a masters degree is the new high school diploma. Meaning bachelor degrees are so useless that employers are not looking for master degrees for many starting positions.
Maybe it's time to get government OUT of education entirely, all the way from kindergarten to grad school. Yeah, that means public schools and charters too. If you can't run your "private" charter school without government assistance, go find another industry to work in.
School choice is a step in the right direction.
Mandatory kindergarten is an obscenity, an outrage, an attempt at early government indoctrination of children.
Kids should be raised by their parents, not by nose-ringed progressive college dropouts with weird sexual fetishes.
>Rubio also pushed for the bill by focusing on the impact it would have on low-income communities. "Kindergarten attendance is also an important aspect in reducing chronic absenteeism and closing the achievement gap."
This is the thing. They argue like it's an issue, as though the reason kids aren't always there is because ALL kids haven't been forced to go there.
There's no ban on kindergarten. Everyone can go. The low income communities are MOST likely to send their kids to school right away, they all work two jobs. At least around here they do. Kindergarten is state paid for babysitting and it gives their abuelita a break for a few hours a day.
Black children and children in poverty are more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD.
Ahem, I believe the correct term is upittyness
What this... A dust particle of hope from the Nazi-Fan club?
Maybe the USA can be saved after all...
The real reason Newshit vetoed it isn’t the lack of money (never stopped him before), but lack of kindergarten teachers. Unless they crowd 50 kids into each class, no way they can find enough.