FROM GOLD RUSH TO GOLD BUST: HOW CALIFORNIA FUMBLED ITS EDUCATION CROWN IN 50 YEARS
A tale of billionaires, ballot measures, and the slow-motion heist of the Golden State's greatest public good
California once ran the most envied public school system in the world. In 1965, the state sat comfortably at 5th in the nation for per-pupil spending — a gleaming monument to the postwar promise that a kid born in Fresno deserved the same shot at the future as a kid born in Greenwich, Connecticut. Teachers were respected. Schools were funded. The California Dream had a classroom in it.
Fast forward fifty years, and the state that invented the future couldn't figure out how to pay for the teachers explaining it. By 2011, California had cratered to 47th in the nation — ahead of only a handful of states that appeared to be conducting some kind of race to the bottom. The 4th largest economy on Earth, spending like it was the 4th largest economy on Mars.
How does a state go from the winner's circle to "also-ran" in a single political lifetime? Grab a #2 pencil. Class is in session.
The Golden Age: When California Schools Were Actually Golden
The postwar California school system wasn't just good — it was aspirational. Local property taxes funded schools generously, the state invested heavily in its future workforce, and the University of California system was essentially free. California was building engineers, artists, teachers, and dreamers on the public dime, and it was working.
The funding model was elegantly simple, if profoundly unequal: rich neighborhoods had expensive homes, expensive homes generated high property taxes, high property taxes funded excellent schools. Poor neighborhoods got the math problem in reverse. It was a system that worked magnificently for the people it was designed to work for — which is to say, not everyone.
This inequality planted the seed of the system's own undoing.
The Serrano Paradox: Fixing Inequality by Flattening Excellence
In 1971, the California Supreme Court dropped a bombshell in Serrano v. Priest, ruling that funding schools through local property taxes was unconstitutional — a violation of equal protection because it meant the quality of a child's education depended on the wealth of their zip code. A noble ruling. A correct ruling. And, as it turned out, a ruling with catastrophic unintended consequences.
The state's solution was elegant in theory and disastrous in practice: level the playing field by capping the top rather than lifting the bottom. Rather than flooding poor districts with new money, California essentially told wealthy districts, "Slow down, you're making everyone else look bad." The state's national ranking slid from 5th to 14th by the mid-1970s.
It was the educational equivalent of solving hunger by putting everyone on a diet.
Proposition 13: The Bomb That Keeps Ticking
Then came 1978, and with it, the most consequential ballot measure in California history: Proposition 13.
Sold to voters as property tax relief for elderly homeowners being taxed out of their houses — a genuinely sympathetic cause — Prop 13 capped property taxes at 1% of assessed value with annual increases limited to 2%. Overnight, local property tax revenues collapsed by nearly 60%. The state had to step in to fund schools, replacing stable, locally-rooted revenue with volatile state income tax receipts that rose and fell with the economy like a cork in a storm drain.
The results were swift and brutal:
| Year | California's National Rank | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 1965 | 5th | The Golden Age |
| Mid-1970s | 14th | Post-Serrano leveling |
| 1982 | Below national average | Four years after Prop 13 |
| 1992–93 | 38th | The long slide continues |
| 2011 | 47th | Great Recession trough |
| 2026 | ~13th–16th | Historic recovery (nominal) |
By the early 1990s, California — home to Silicon Valley, Hollywood, and the world's most productive agricultural valley — was spending less per student than Mississippi. Let that land for a moment.
The Billionaire Cavalry: Arriving to Help, Leaving a Crater
Into this underfunded landscape rode the philanthropic cavalry — Bill Gates, Eli Broad, and Reed Hastings (yes, the Netflix guy) — armed with billions of dollars, genuine conviction, and a set of ideas about public education that had been stress-tested primarily in boardrooms rather than classrooms.
Their diagnosis was seductive: public schools are failing because they are inefficient, unaccountable, and captured by teachers' unions. The solution is competition, data, and market forces. Their prescription was charter schools — publicly funded, privately managed institutions that would, in theory, innovate their way to excellence and force traditional public schools to improve or die.
What followed was one of the most aggressive privatization campaigns in American educational history, funded by dark money, executed through school board elections, and concentrated with particular intensity in California's largest and most vulnerable urban districts.
The LAUSD: Ground Zero for the Billionaire Experiment
The Los Angeles Unified School District became the poster child — and the cautionary tale — of what happens when billionaire ambition meets democratic governance.
School board seats in LAUSD, which pay roughly $50,000 a year, became the most expensive local elections in American history. Outside money — much of it traced back to charter school advocacy networks funded by Gates, Broad, Hastings, and their allies — bid up the cost of a school board seat into the millions of dollars. A seat that once required a yard sign and a handshake was now requiring a Super PAC.
The results were transformative, and not always in the ways promised:
- Nearly 50% of LAUSD schools have been converted to or replaced by charter schools
- Charter scandals proliferated: data harvesting of student information, financial mismanagement, discriminatory enrollment practices that quietly screened out the most expensive-to-educate students
- Dark money flowed through networks of nonprofits with names like "Great Public Schools Now" — a title that would be ironic if it weren't so expensive
- The district's traditional public schools, starved of students and the per-pupil funding that follows them, entered a death spiral of consolidation and closure
To be fair, some charter schools in California are excellent. Some are genuinely serving communities that traditional public schools failed. But the system that was built around them — opaque, inequitable, and answerable primarily to its funders — turned a crisis of underfunding into a crisis of fragmentation.
Poverty: The Variable Nobody Wanted to Talk About
Here is the uncomfortable truth that no amount of charter school competition or data-driven accountability can solve: poverty is the most powerful predictor of educational outcomes, and California has a lot of it.
The old property-tax funding model didn't just create unequal schools — it created a system where the children who needed the most got the least. Poor districts, with lower property values, generated less tax revenue, hired fewer teachers, maintained crumbling buildings, and produced worse outcomes — which were then used as evidence that the schools (and their teachers) were failing, rather than evidence that the funding system was failing.
The Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), implemented in 2013, was the first serious structural attempt to address this. It replaced the old flat-rate system with a model that gave supplemental and concentration grants to districts serving English Learners, foster youth, and low-income students. It was a genuine reform — arguably the most progressive school funding formula in the country — and it began California's slow climb back up the national rankings.
The Recovery: Real Progress, Real Asterisks
The numbers today are, genuinely, impressive on their face:
| Metric | 2011 (Trough) | 2026 (Projected) |
|---|---|---|
| Per-Pupil Spending | ~$9,200 | $27,418 |
| National Rank | 47th | ~13th–16th |
| Total K-12 Funding | Deeply cut | ~$150 Billion |
| Average Teacher Salary | — | $103,552 (#1 nationally) |
California has clawed back from the abyss. The state now spends roughly 40% more per student than the national average of ~$19,200. After decades of embarrassment, California can finally look New York in the eye at the education funding table.
But here come the asterisks, and they are large:
Asterisk #1 — Inflation: The jump from $17,014 (2019) to $27,418 (2026) looks like a 61% increase. Adjusted for inflation, it's closer to 30% in real purchasing power. Still good! But not the miracle the headline suggests.
Asterisk #2 — Cost of Living: California's teachers are paid #1 in the nation, yes — but they also live in a state where a one-bedroom apartment in a decent school district costs more than a house in Ohio. When the Education Law Center and PPIC apply cost-of-living adjustments, California's ranking drops from ~13th to roughly 31st. The money is real. So is the cost of spending it.
Asterisk #3 — The Settle-Up Debt: The state has been using "payment deferrals" — essentially borrowing from future school funding to balance current budgets — creating a multi-billion dollar debt it must eventually repay to itself. The per-pupil number looks great. The balance sheet underneath it is more complicated.
Asterisk #4 — The 4th Largest Economy Problem: California's GDP, when compared to nations, ranks 4th in the world — behind only the United States as a whole, China, and Germany. The state produces more economic output than France, the United Kingdom, or India. And yet, even at its current record-spending levels, it still trails New York by nearly $5,000 per student. A state this wealthy, spending this little on its children relative to its capacity, is not making a funding decision. It's making a values decision.
November 2026: The Ballot Box Battlefield
The fight over California education funding is heading, once again, to the voters — because in California, every major fiscal question eventually ends up on a ballot measure, which is either democracy in action or democracy as an extreme sport, depending on your perspective.
Three critical measures are shaping up for November 3, 2026:
The "Save Prop 13" Initiative
A constitutional amendment — backed by 1.35 million signatures — that would explicitly prohibit future "split roll" efforts and raise the threshold for any changes to property tax assessments. Supporters call it protecting homeowners. Opponents call it permanently locking schools out of the revenue generated by California's booming commercial real estate market.
The Split Roll Ghost
Proposition 15 (2020) — which would have taxed commercial properties over $3 million at market value, generating $6.5–$11.5 billion annually with 40% going directly to schools — lost narrowly, 52% to 48%. The "Save Prop 13" initiative is, in large part, a preemptive strike against its return.
Initiative 1983: "Limits Ability of Voters to Raise Revenues for Local Government Services"
This is the one with the most Orwellian title and the most direct impact on local school funding. Currently, citizen-led ballot initiatives for local taxes only need a simple majority (50%+1) to pass — a 2019 California Supreme Court ruling opened this door. Initiative 1983 would slam it shut, requiring a two-thirds supermajority for all local special taxes, including those placed on the ballot by citizens rather than government bodies.
It would also carry retroactive provisions that could invalidate taxes already passed under the simple majority standard, potentially creating immediate budget holes in districts that built their plans around that funding.
The counter-punch is ACA 13 — a "supermajority for supermajorities" measure that says: if you want to require a two-thirds vote for future measures, your own measure must first pass by two-thirds. It is the legislative equivalent of "I know you are but what am I," and it is entirely serious.
| Measure Type | Current Requirement | Post-Initiative 1983 |
|---|---|---|
| School Bonds (Prop 39) | 55% | Unchanged (for now) |
| School Bonds (Traditional) | 66.67% | No change |
| Parcel Taxes (Board-led) | 66.67% | No change |
| Parcel Taxes (Citizen-led) | 50% + 1 | Increases to 66.67% |
What the Education Law Center Says
The Education Law Center's Making the Grade 2025 report — the most comprehensive national analysis of school funding equity — offers a sobering national context for California's story.
The report evaluates states on three dimensions: funding level (how much), funding distribution (how fairly), and funding effort (how much relative to the state's GDP). The findings are striking:
- In 2023, only 17 states had progressive funding distribution — meaning they gave more to high-poverty districts — down from 28 states in 2022. That is a collapse in equity, not a trend.
- Federal funding programs — Title I, IDEA Part B, the Child Nutrition Act — are the primary equalizers in an otherwise regressive system, and they are currently under threat from federal budget cuts.
- California's LCFF is cited as a model of progressive distribution, even as the state's overall funding effort (spending relative to GDP) remains underwhelming for an economy of its size.
- States like Florida, Idaho, and Tennessee combine low funding levels with low funding effort — a combination the report describes with the diplomatic restraint of academics who clearly want to say something much stronger.
The report's central warning: the primary responsibility for fair school funding lies with states, and the current national trend is moving in the wrong direction.
The Uncomfortable Bottom Line
California's education story is, at its core, a story about who we decide matters.
When California decided in 1978 that protecting property values mattered more than funding schools, it made a choice. When billionaires decided in the 2000s that market competition mattered more than democratic accountability in public education, they made a choice. When voters in 2020 decided — by just 4 percentage points — that protecting commercial landlords from market-rate taxation mattered more than $11 billion in annual school revenue, they made a choice.
Every one of those choices had a child on the other side of it.
The state has made genuine, significant progress. The LCFF was a real reform. The funding recovery since 2013 is real. The return to a respectable national ranking is real. But California remains a state that is, by any honest measure, under-investing in its children relative to its wealth — and now faces a November ballot that could make that structural under-investment constitutionally permanent.
The Golden State built its gold on the backs of an educated workforce. The question for November 2026 — and for every year that follows — is whether California still believes that investment is worth making, or whether it has decided that the future is someone else's problem.
Spoiler: the kids in the underfunded classrooms are the future. They've been waiting for California to figure that out for about fifty years now.
Sources: Education Law Center, Making the Grade 2025; EdSource; California Department of Finance 2026-27 Governor's Budget; PPIC School Finance Analysis; California Secretary of State Ballot Measures 2026.
📚 Sources & Citations
🔵 Primary Sources (Directly Cited in the Article)
1. Education Law Center — Making the Grade 2025 The foundational national report analyzing school funding fairness across all 50 states. Covers funding level, distribution equity, and funding effort. Directly cited for California's rise to 13th in the nation and the national decline in progressive funding distribution.
🔗 https://edlawcenter.org/research/making-the-grade-2025/
2. EdSource — California's Education Funding Level Rises Compared to Other States A deep-dive analysis of the Making the Grade 2025 findings as they apply specifically to California. Covers the state's climb from 50th (2010–11) to 13th (2022–23), the LCFF equity formula, teacher pay rankings, and the cost-of-living caveat.
🔗 https://edsource.org/2026/california-education-funding-rise/757381
🟠 Historical & Structural Background Sources
3. SCPR / LAist — The Block That Prop. 13 Built: Public Schools, Public Trust A landmark investigative piece on how Proposition 13 (1978) dismantled local property tax funding for schools and centralized control in Sacramento — with lasting consequences for equity and per-pupil spending.
🔗 https://projects.scpr.org/prop-13/stories/education
4. California School Boards Association (CSBA) — New Report Analyzes the Legacy of Prop 13 on Education Funding Published in 2022, this report directly examines the 40+ year impact of Prop 13 on California school funding adequacy, local district autonomy, and the structural revenue gap it created.
5. UC Berkeley — A Brief History of California's Education Finance System An academic overview of how California's school finance system evolved — from local property tax reliance through Serrano v. Priest, Prop 13, Prop 98, and the LCFF — tracing the structural decisions that shaped today's funding landscape.
🔗 https://youngamericans.berkeley.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Finance_history.pdf
6. California Debt Financing Guide — Proposition 13 Overview (B.1.1.2) The official state-level technical reference for how Prop 13 operates within the school facility finance system, including the 1% cap, the 2% annual assessment limit, and its interaction with school bond measures.
🟡 Ballot Measures & 2026 Election Context
7. California Secretary of State — November 3, 2026 Ballot Measures The official source for all qualified measures heading to California voters in November 2026, including Initiative 1983 ("Limits Ability of Voters to Raise Revenues for Local Government Services") and the "Save Prop 13" constitutional amendment.
🔗 https://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/ballot-measures/
8. California Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) — ACA 13 Analysis The nonpartisan LAO analysis of ACA 13 — the "supermajority for supermajorities" counter-measure — explaining its fiscal implications for local school parcel taxes and special tax measures.
🟢 Charter Schools & Billionaire Philanthropy Sources
9. The Los Angeles Times — How Billionaires Are Shaping LAUSD School Board Elections Investigative reporting on the role of Gates, Broad, Hastings, and affiliated dark money networks in funding LAUSD school board campaigns and driving charter school expansion in the district.
🔗 https://www.latimes.com/local/education
10. LAUSD — Charter School Data & Oversight Reports Official LAUSD data on the number and percentage of schools operating as charters within the district, including oversight and audit findings.
🔗 https://achieve.lausd.net/charterschools
11. Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) — California's K–12 Education Funding System PPIC's comprehensive ongoing analysis of California school finance, including cost-of-living adjusted rankings, LCFF implementation outcomes, and the gap between nominal and real per-pupil spending gains.
🔗 https://www.ppic.org/publication/californias-k-12-education-funding-system/
🔴 National Comparison & Federal Context
12. National Education Association (NEA) — Rankings & Estimates Report The NEA's annual state-by-state comparison of teacher salaries, per-pupil spending, and pupil-teacher ratios. Source for California's #1 average teacher salary of $103,552 and national spending comparisons.
🔗 https://www.nea.org/resource-library/rankings-and-estimates-report
13. U.S. Census Bureau — Survey of School System Finances (F-33) The primary federal dataset used by the Education Law Center and most national researchers for state-by-state school funding comparisons. Currently at risk due to NCES staffing reductions.
🔗 https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/school-finances.html
📋 Quick Reference Table
| # | Source | Type | Key Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education Law Center | National Report | Funding fairness rankings | |
| EdSource | News Analysis | CA-specific funding rise | |
| SCPR / LAist | Investigative | Prop 13 & schools | |
| CSBA | Policy Report | Prop 13 legacy | |
| UC Berkeley | Academic | Finance history | |
| CA Debt Guide | Official/Legal | Prop 13 mechanics | |
| CA Secretary of State | Official | 2026 ballot measures | |
| LAO | Nonpartisan Analysis | ACA 13 / supermajority | |
| LA Times | Investigative | Billionaire influence | |
| LAUSD | Official Data | Charter school stats | |
| PPIC | Policy Research | Cost-adjusted rankings | |
| NEA | Annual Report | Teacher pay / spending | |
| U.S. Census Bureau | Federal Data | F-33 school finance data |
