Friday, July 10, 2026

CALIFORNIA EDUCATION: PLANNED DESTRUCTION IN THE 4TH LARGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD


CALIFORNIA EDUCATION: PLANNED DESTRUCTION IN THE 4TH LARGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD

Welcome to California, where the gross domestic product rivals Germany, tech titans build autonomous vehicles, and the local public school district is currently holding a bake sale to afford copier paper.

Just this week (July 2026), the Los Angeles County Office of Education (LACOE) officially slapped the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) with a "Lack of Going Concern" determination. That is bureaucratic code for: “We think you are going broke, and you have 45 days to fix it before we take the keys.” LAUSD is facing a $231 million plunge into the red by late 2027. Meanwhile, San Francisco Unified is cannibalizing its reserves, and Sacramento City Unified is staring down a terrifying February 2027 cash-zero cliff after laying off over 500 workers.

If you ask any everyday Californian if they want world-class public schools, the answer is an enthusiastic, unanimous yes. But Sacramento doesn’t listen to parents, teachers, or neighborhood school boards. It listens to a highly coordinated, deep-pocketed billionaire oligarchy whose own children are securely ensconced in pristine, five-figure-a-year private schools. For decades, this elite class has masqueraded as "education reformers," while financing a political apparatus engineered to intentionally starve, destabilize, and ultimately dismantle democratic public education.

The Two-Tiered Caste System: Basic Aid Exploitation

The most damning evidence that California's school funding crisis is an act of political will—rather than economic necessity—is that the system is meticulously designed to ensure a select few districts never suffer.

While LAUSD and Sacramento City Unified drown in structural deficits, roughly 10% of California’s wealthiest enclaves are entirely insulated from the chaos. These are the "Basic Aid" or "Community-Funded" districts.

MetricThe Starved Majority (LAUSD, Sacramento City)The Basic Aid Elite (Carmel, Palo Alto, Beverly Hills)
Primary IncomeState general fund (Prop 98)Local property taxes
Vulnerability to CutsHigh. When Sacramento bleeds, these districts crater.Zero. Completely detached from state budget deficits.
Attendance PenaltySevere. Lose a student for a flu day, lose funding.None. Property taxes clear regardless of empty seats.
Per-Pupil WealthCapped at state base targets (~$14,000–$20,000).Uncapped. Reaches $30,000 to over $45,000 per student.

This structural anomaly is the legacy of a historical evasion. In the 1971–1976 Serrano v. Priest decisions, the California Supreme Court ruled that making a child’s education dependent on local property wealth violated the State Constitution. The state was ordered to equalize spending. But when the dust settled from Proposition 13 in 1978, a constitutional loophole was preserved: property-rich enclaves were allowed to keep 100% of their excess property tax revenues if they exceeded state targets.

The result? A modern plutocracy. According to data from Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE), these property-rich districts pocket over $1.15 billion in excess revenue beyond what the state deems "equal." While working-class districts issue pink slips, Basic Aid districts use their real estate windfalls to fund state-of-the-art labs, small class sizes, and competitive teacher salaries that easily outpace the cost of living.

The Playbook: Starve, Blame, and Privatize

This regional inequality isn’t an accident; it’s a feature of a broader strategy. The structural pressures squeezing urban districts are treated by Sacramento as organic tragedies, but they are policy choices protected by the billionaire propaganda machine.

Take the Average Daily Attendance (ADA) funding formula. California is one of a tiny handful of states that penalizes schools when an enrolled student is absent. If a child in an under-resourced neighborhood misses school due to chronic asthma, lack of transportation, or housing instability, the district is docked fifty to seventy dollars for that day. The Nonpartisan California Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO) confirmed that switching from an ADA model to an active enrollment model would instantly inject $6.5 billion annually into K-12 classrooms.

Yet, the state refuses to switch. Why? Because the ADA model keeps urban districts perpetually destabilized. LAUSD—which fights massive absenteeism stemming from systemic poverty—loses hundreds of millions of dollars every year to this delta.

Add to this the state's accounting shell games. When Sacramento faces its own capital-gains-driven deficits, it routinely squeezes the Proposition 98 funding rollercoaster or uses "deferrals"—delaying promised payments to local schools to balance the state’s books, forcing districts to drain reserves just to meet payroll. Furthermore, the state sets retirement benefit rules for CalSTRS and CalPERS but mandates that local districts shoulder the skyrocketing costs of bailing out those pension funds, siphoning up to 20% of local payrolls straight out of the classroom.

When these compounding, state-inflicted mandates predictably push a district like LAUSD to the edge of insolvency under state law AB 1200, the billionaire-funded "reform" ecosystem activates its propaganda machine.


The narrative is entirely predictable: “Public school boards are fiscally incompetent, unions are greedy, and the system is unsalvageable.” They weaponize a manufactured fiscal crisis to justify the ultimate goal: stripping power from democratically elected school boards, fracturing union protections, and expanding corporate-managed charter school networks that treat students like data points and public infrastructure like real estate portfolios.

The Unspoken Fixes and the Oligarchic Wall

Everyone in Sacramento knows exactly how to fix this. The blueprints for a return to California's golden age of education—when its public schools were the undisputed envy of the world—are sitting on every lawmaker's desk. The solutions are mathematically clean and entirely viable:

  • Implement a Commercial Split Roll: Reform Prop 13 to separate residential homeowners from multi-billion-dollar commercial empires. Keep grandma protected, but assess corporate office towers, tech campuses, and industrial complexes at current market value. This single correction would generate an estimated $6.5 billion to $11.5 billion every single year for local schools and communities.

  • Enact Enrollment-Based Funding: Abolish the predatory ADA metric. Fund schools based on the number of children they are actually responsible for educating, equipping, and staffing, matching California with the rest of the nation.

  • State Assumption of Pension Debt: Stop forcing local classrooms to pay for historical state-level pension mismanagement. Erase the legacy pension debt using the state’s multi-billion dollar general fund or revenue surpluses, immediately freeing up thousands of dollars per classroom for competitive teacher wages.

  • Establish Local Reserve Smoothing: Insulate Prop 98 from volatile capital gains spikes by mandating robust, local stabilization funds that prevent devastating fiscal cliffs when the tech market dips.

So, why are these common-sense reforms dead on arrival?

Because the billionaire propaganda machine has wired the political landscape with catastrophic threats. The moment a split roll is mentioned, corporate front groups launch multi-million dollar ad campaigns warning that taxing a commercial skyscraper at its actual value will somehow cause the cost of groceries to skyrocket, destroy small businesses, and trigger a corporate exodus. They scream about "fiscal responsibility" while funding dark-money PACs designed to elect puppet politicians who promise to protect corporate property tax shelters at all costs.

California’s public school crisis is not an organic failure of public administration, nor is it a symptom of a poor state. It is a highly calculated distribution of wealth and power. The fourth largest economy in the world can easily afford to educate every single child within its borders. It simply chooses to prioritize the tax shelters of its billionaire class over the democratic rights of its students. Until California decides to listen to the parents organizing bake sales rather than the oligarchs funding private foundations, the planned destruction of its public schools will continue right on schedule.



Here is the verified list of policy documents, legislative analysis, and legal history records backing the analysis of California's school finance crisis:

1. LAUSD's "Lack of Going Concern" Determination & Deficits

  • Los Angeles Unified Official Response (July 2026): Los Angeles Unified Responds to LACOE Fiscal Oversight Determination, Reaffirms Commitment to Long-Term Fiscal Stability. This is the district's formal acknowledgment of the statutory "Lack of Going Concern" designation issued by the Los Angeles County Office of Education (LACOE) due to insolvency warnings for fiscal years 2027–28 and 2028–29.

  • Los Angeles Times Investigative Coverage (July 2026): LAUSD faces ‘severe’ signs of insolvency; county warns it could take control of budget. Details the $231 million cash shortfall projected by county education authorities by late 2027 and the triggering of the 45-day budget stabilization window.

2. State Financial Impact: Shifting from ADA to Enrollment

  • Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) Special Report: Assessing a Shift to Enrollment-Based School Funding (Senate Bill 98 / Chapter 442 of 2024). This comprehensive evaluation maps out the systemic $6.5 billion fiscal gap between funding schools via active enrollment versus the current Average Daily Attendance (ADA) methodology.

  • LAO K-12 Budget Analysis: The 2026–27 Budget: Update on Local Control Funding Formula Costs. This fiscal review documents structural multi-year projections, including post-pandemic enrollment drop statistics (down 7.8% statewide since 2016–17) and the current 94.5% ADA attendance baseline stabilization limits.

3. Basic Aid / "Community-Funded" Property Wealth Distortions

4. Legal & Constitutional History (Serrano & Proposition 13)

  • Serrano v. Priest (1971, 1976, 1977): Serrano v. Priest, 5 Cal. 3d 584. The foundational judicial series where the California Supreme Court ruled that a school finance system heavily reliant on local property taxes structurally violated the Equal Protection Clause of the state constitution, initiating the legislative mandate for funding equalization bands.

  • Proposition 13 (1978): California Constitution, Article XIII A. The landmark constitutional tax initiative that permanently centralized property tax allocations in Sacramento, capped ad valorem property taxes at 1%, and set into motion the structural revenue protections that today partition community-funded districts from the general Proposition 98 school fund pool.



TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 10, 2026

TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS

JULY 10, 2026

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER

Here is a breakdown of the top news stories for July 10, 2026 (reflecting late-breaking developments from the evening of July 9).

U.S. NEWS

  • Extreme Heat Waves Strain Regional Power Grids: Sweltering summer temperatures across the American West and South have pushed energy grids to near-capacity, prompting conservation warnings in several states.

  • National Wildfire Response Mobilizes: As peak fire season intensifies, federal agencies are shifting extra resources to active containment zones across California and the Pacific Northwest.

  • U.S. News Names "Best Companies to Work For": The annual workspace standards list has dropped, evaluating public and private organizations on pay equity, physical/psychological comfort, and professional growth opportunities.

  • Supply Chain Adjustments on Domestic Manufacturing: Federal manufacturing programs are seeing a mid-summer push to shore up local logistics and assembly infrastructure, aiming to buffer consumer goods from international transport bottlenecks.

POLITICS

  • White House Targets Aviation Imports: The Trump administration issued a series of presidential proclamations and fact sheets detailing new regulatory adjustments on foreign commercial aircraft, jet engines, and engine parts entering the U.S.

  • Permitting Innovators Expo Announced: The White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) unveiled the specific technology solutions selected to showcase at its upcoming expo focused on fast-tracking infrastructure projects.

  • NATO Defense Commitments Take Center Stage: Following diplomatic briefings, the executive branch heavily messaged a series of historic defense investment commitments secured from NATO allies, framing it as a win for domestic industrial energy.

  • Clashes Over Legislative Packages: High-stakes messaging battles continue on Capitol Hill regarding the ongoing implementation and rollout of provisions tucked inside the sweeping "One Big Beautiful Bill Act."

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • U.S. and Iran Trade Strikes Near Strait of Hormuz: Following the collapse of preliminary peace talks, the U.S. military and Iranian forces traded overnight airstrikes, with targets hitting the Iranian coast and U.S. bases in Bahrain and Kuwait.

  • Congo Healthcare Workers Strike Over Pay: Frontline doctors and nurses responding to Ebola outbreaks in the Democratic Republic of Congo have initiated a work stoppage after going months without receiving compensation.

  • Diplomatic Pressure Mounts on Belarus: International intelligence tracking shows increased geopolitical friction as Moscow pressures Belarus for deeper involvement in regional conflict frameworks while Ukraine issues defensive warnings.

  • Global Supply Routes Face Renewed Vulnerabilities: Escalating Middle East tensions have forced international shipping lines to reconsider maritime routing, renewing concerns over commodity price volatility.

EDUCATION

ECONOMY

  • IMF Releases July World Economic Outlook: The International Monetary Fund projects global growth at 3.0% for 2026. The economic outlook is highly uneven, showing that war shocks are dragging down energy-importing nations.

  • AI Hardware Boom Injects Growth: The IMF highlighted that countries deeply integrated into the technology value chain (like South Korea and Taiwan) are experiencing massive growth surges driven by global demand for semiconductors and AI-related hardware.

  • Global Disinflation Stalls: Financial markets are pricing in higher nominal policy rates as inflationary pressures reappear, raising long-term sovereign yields across major global economies.

  • U.S. Growth Holding Steady: Despite global crosscurrents, domestic U.S. economic growth forecasts remain stable, tracking at a projected 2.3% for the year.

TECHNOLOGY

  • Apple Announces Massive $30B U.S. Chip Deal: In its largest American Manufacturing Program commitment to date, Apple announced a multi-year deal with Broadcom to produce advanced wireless components, including a $1.5 billion expansion of manufacturing facilities in Fort Collins, Colorado.

  • End-to-End Domestic Silicon Supply Chain Gains Ground: Tech sector analysts note that massive domestic capital investments are accelerating the timeline for a fully U.S.-based semiconductor supply network.

  • Data Centers Confront Environmental Metrics: Amid the global high-tech manufacturing boom, major tech companies face increased scrutiny over the resource footprints and energy grids required to power expanding infrastructure.

  • Next-Gen Software Platforms Ready for Deployment: Major operating systems across mobile, desktop, and spatial computing environments are entering their mid-summer developer cycles ahead of major fall hardware releases.

HEALTH

SPORTS

  • 2026 World Cup Quarterfinals Kick Off: The quarterfinal round of the FIFA Men's World Cup opened in Boston with a highly anticipated matchup between Kylian Mbappé’s dominant France squad and tournament-sensation Morocco.

  • Golden Boot Race Intenisifies: Football fans are locked into a tight individual race as Lionel Messi (8 goals) and Kylian Mbappé (7 goals) spearhead the leaderboard deeper into the World Cup knockout rounds.

  • Tournament Power Rankings Reshuffled: Following a scheduled rest day that paused play between the Round of 16 and the final eight teams, analysts have re-evaluated the field, identifying the remaining European and South American favorites.

  • Mid-Summer Training Camps Loom: Outside of international soccer, major domestic leagues are finalizing off-season trades and adjusting rosters ahead of late-summer training camp openings.






Sign Up for Network for Public Education Conference, September 26-27 https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/09/sign-up-for-network-for-public-education-conference-september-26-27/ via @dianeravitch 













Time for Democrats to Plan Expansion of Supreme Court https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/09/time-for-democrats-to-plan-expansion-of-supreme-court/ via @dianeravitch 






Florida Scores Dead Last in Supporting Its Public Schools https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/09/florida-scores-dead-last-in-supporting-its-schools/ via @dianeravitch 









Big Education Ape: SCHOOLS STARVE SO INSURANCE COMPANIES CAN FEAST: THE CASE FOR MEDICARE FOR ALL https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/schools-starve-so-insurance-companies.html 





Big Education Ape: THE BOTS ARE COMING, THE BOTS ARE COMING (AND THEY'RE NOT PAYING A DIME IN TAXES) https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-bots-are-coming-bots-are-coming-and.html





Big Education Ape: THE AMERICAN SVENGALI: A FIELD GUIDE TO A NATION UNDER THE SPELL https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-american-svengali-field-guide-to.html 






Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 9, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_0564571420.html 






Big Education Ape: MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 9 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/morning-news-update-july-9-2026.html 






"One Big Beautiful Bill" Has Already Begun Damaging Children's Well-Being: It Will Only Get Worse https://janresseger.wordpress.com/2026/07/09/49119/ via @janresseger 





Lessons I Have Learned from Researching School Reform https://larrycuban.wordpress.com/2026/07/09/lessons-i-have-learned-from-researching-school-reform/ via @CubanLarry 





The Best Resources On Classroom Instruction In 2026 – So Far    Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... | The latest news and resources in education since 2007 https://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/ 






Daredevil: "Built by pain, fear, anger, grief..." "The world isn't fair, Matthew. The world is cold, cruel, and violent." Stick PAUL THOMAS https://paulthomas701128.substack.com/p/daredevil-built-by-pain-fear-anger?triedRedirect=true 





Teacher Tom: Our Minds Have Minds of Their Own https://teachertomsblog.blogspot.com/2026/07/our-minds-have-minds-of-their-own.html 






glen brown: E. Jean Carroll is Going to Outlast Trump's Delay Game https://teacherpoetmusicianglenbrown.blogspot.com/2026/07/e-jean-carroll-is-going-to-outlast.html 









Florida Tried to Stop Woke. The First Amendment Stopped Florida. – Cloaking Inequity https://cloakinginequity.com/2026/07/09/florida-tried-to-stop-woke-the-first-amendment-stopped-florida/ 








Our Latest Book Has Been Published Early – “The Better Teacher’s Toolbox” Is Here! | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... https://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2026/07/09/our-latest-book-has-been-published-early-the-better-teachers-toolbox-is-here/ 





TRUMP IN THE NEWS TODAY

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER

Here are the top news stories surrounding the Trump administration today, July 10, 2026 (breaking overnight and early this morning from the NATO summit timeline):

1. U.S.-Iran Conflict Re-Ignites & Netanyahu Call

Following fresh U.S. airstrikes hitting roughly 90 Iranian military targets in the Gulf, President Trump declared the regional ceasefire "over" while speaking to reporters at the NATO leaders' summit in Ankara, Turkey. Trump stated that the U.S. had "wasted a lot of time" on negotiations.

Late Thursday night, the White House and the Israeli Prime Minister's Office confirmed a direct phone call between Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu. Trump updated Netanyahu on active American military movements in the Gulf aimed at protecting commercial shipping routes in the Strait of Hormuz. In return, Netanyahu raised concerns regarding aggressive rhetoric from Turkish President Erdogan and emphasized the urgency of establishing security zones along Israel's borders. The escalation has sent ripples through global markets, keeping oil hovering near $73 a barrel.

2. Section 232 Proclamation Target: Commercial Aerospace

On the trade front, President Trump signed a major executive proclamation under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act. The order targets imports of commercial aircraft, jet engines, and aircraft parts, declaring that decades of foreign government subsidies have eroded domestic manufacturing and created vulnerable supply chains.

Instead of slapping down immediate tariffs, the order gives the U.S. Trade Representative and Commerce Secretary a 180-day window to negotiate new trade agreements with foreign partners to shore up the domestic aerospace ecosystem.

3. EPA Proposes Rollback on Diesel Trucking Mandates

Back home, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin unveiled a major regulatory rewrite aimed at slashing compliance costs for the trucking industry. The Trump EPA is proposing a total elimination of "DEF deratements"—the mandatory vehicle engine speed restrictions and shutdowns triggered by sensor failures in Diesel Exhaust Fluid systems.

  • The Administration's Take: Proponents argue the plan will preserve 90% of nitrogen oxide emissions cuts while saving truckers up to $12 billion in compliance and warranty costs (roughly $6,000 per new vehicle), ultimately lowering grocery and shipping costs for consumers.

  • The Pushback: Environmental defense groups have heavily criticized the proposal, arguing that weakening these operational guardrails will spike air and soot pollution, disproportionately harming communities located along freight routes.

Supreme Court Note: Legal circles are also tracking the fallout from a recent Supreme Court ruling regarding Temporary Protected Status (TPS). While an administrative deadline loomed for July 10, legal experts note the ruling shifts the implementation back to lower district courts, keeping thousands of current TPS holders from nations like Haiti and Syria in a temporary legal limbo.

 

Education tech purchases on pause as NYC schools wrestle with AI - Gothamist https://gothamist.com/news/all-education-tech-purchases-on-pause-as-nyc-schools-wrestle-with-ai 

Trump wants court to rehear birthright citizenship case | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/trump-wants-court-to-rehear-birthright-citizenship-case/ 

Administration’s Fuzzy Math Will Undermine Energy Efficiency Savings – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/administration-faulty-department-energy-analysis-2024-international-energy-conservation-code-iecc-efficiency-savings/ 

Who is the Supreme Court’s most “ideological” justice? And does that question even make sense? | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/who-is-the-supreme-courts-most-ideological-justice-and-does-that-question-even-make-sense-/ 

Justice shopping on the emergency docket? | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/justice-shopping-on-the-emergency-docket/ 

Cuba May Be in Shambles, but Miami’s New Museum Keeps the Bay of Pigs Alive – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/cuba-may-be-in-shambles-but-miamis-new-museum-keeps-the-bay-of-pigs-alive/ 

Fake IDs, Dummy Manuscripts and a Rare Book Heist at U.C.L.A. - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/09/us/ucla-library-theft-chinese-books-california.html 

Opinion | A bill would block school choice. Its sponsors chose private school. - The Washington Post https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/07/09/bill-would-block-school-choice-its-sponsors-chose-private-school/ 

How Labor Journalists Contend With a Constricted and Polarized Media Landscape - In These Times https://inthesetimes.com/article/how-labor-journalists-contend-with-a-constricted-and-polarized-media-landscape-ai 

Don’t let AI raise your kids - The Hechinger Report https://hechingerreport.org/dont-let-ai-raise-your-kids/ 

Inglewood leaders to get back their public schools in one year - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-07-09/inglewood-leaders-to-get-back-their-public-schools-in-one-year 

At SCOTUSblog’s term-in-review event, National Legal Director of the ACLU Cecillia Wang speaks about arguing birthright citizenship, the term in general, and what’s next on the organization’s docket | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/at-scotusblogs-term-in-review-event-national-legal-director-of-the-aclu-cecillia-wang-speaks-abo/ 

Graham Platner Says He’s Out. Now What? – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/graham-platner-says-hes-out-now-what/ 

New York Sued Over “Unconstitutional” Lack of Welfare Support — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/new-york-shelter-assistance-lawsuit 

Newsom on Platner: ‘Clearly there wasn’t enough vetting done.’ - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/newsom-platner-vetting-00992340 

Donald Trump is going to have to pay E. Jean Carroll $5 million - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/donald-trump-e-jean-carroll-5-million-00992363 

California judge rejects injunction to halt distributing billions to repair school facilities  | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/california-judge-rejects-injunction-to-halt-distributing-billions-to-repair-school-facilities/761839 

Trump Pushes Out Last Federal Election Assistance Commission Members — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/federal-election-assistance-commission-trump-dismantled