Parent group leaders launch campaigns for school board.
Dear John,
Just when you thought things couldn’t get any more ridiculous in California’s government-run schools, two stories this week show that intransigent school boards continue to ignore parents — and common sense.
First, shocked parents pushed back against their local school board when news broke that board members were voting on allowing a Planned Parenthood clinic to open at John Glenn High School. The school is part of Norwalk-LaMirada Unified School District in southern California where the majority of students are Hispanic/Latino.
Hundreds of parents protested at the school board meeting Monday, forcing the board to postpone its vote.
The high school clinic would reportedly provide contraception and would refer students to off-campus Planned Parenthood locations for “services not offered” on campus, according to the proposal. In that proposal, the school district acknowledges “that under California law minors have the right to consent to reproductive health services without parental consent or notification” (emphasis added). Parents are rightly concerned that the clinic would be used as a base to deploy Planned Parenthood’s transgender and sexual ideology on vulnerable minors.
“Other Planned Parenthood clinics do provide gender-affirming hormone therapy, so there is a very real possibility students will be referred off-campus to receive this treatment…with zero parental notification,” explained Nicole Neily, the president and founder of Parents Defending Education.
But the proposed clinic at John Glenn high school is not simply a singular misstep by one errant school board. In 2019, Planned Parenthood announced an agreement with Los Angeles County officials and L.A. Unified to establish 50 "Wellbeing Centers” at local high schools with the “aim to create a safe space in each school where students can receive the education and health services they need to lead healthy lives."
WHO IS THAT MASKED MAN(DATE)?
Also this week, the San Diego Unified School Board came under fire for its decision to reinstate a mask mandate for students enrolled in summer school after the CDC moved San Diego County into the “high” COVID tier. The district said the policy could remain in place when students return to school in the fall if COVID case numbers don’t drop.
School board president Dr. Sharon Whitehurst-Payne faced immediate backlash from parents after she flatly announced during a television interview that the only option for students who do not want to wear a mask is to return to remote “Zoom school.” When pressed on the reality of students who want to be on campus without a mask and do not want the option of more online school, Whitehurst-Payne abruptly retorted, “They should just make it known that they don’t feel comfortable and at that point, just not return.”
Never mind that California’s children are still recovering from the severe learning loss and mental health crisis caused by the governor’s decision to keep schools closed far longer than other states at the behest of the state’s powerful teachers unions. Or that the state’s own data continues to show that K-12 children have a 0.1 percent chance of dying from COVID-19.
“Parents are outraged,” said Carlsbad parent Sharon McKeeman, founder of the parent group Let Them Breathe, which won a lawsuit against the district vaccine mandate earlier this year. “We're tired of talking at these school boards and not being listened to.”
SEE PARENTS RUN
McKeeman announced that she is running for Carlsbad Unified School Board at a press conference Monday and called on other parents to follow suit.
“Instead of just talking to the school board, it’s time to step up and be the school board,” she said.
Former school teacher Becca Williams joined McKeeman at the presser and announced she will run for San Diego Unified School Board. And in northern California, Jonathan Zachreson, founder of the parent group Reopen California Schools, announced his candidacy for school board in Roseville City School District near Sacramento.
“We need more parents on boards that will put students first,” Zachreson tweeted when making his announcement.
At CPC, we couldn’t be more thrilled to see parents taking back their local school boards and pushing back against school board members who continue to advance the teacher unions’ radical agenda and ignore parent concerns.
If you’re thinking about running for your school board, visit our new online CLEO Candidate Academy. The online site walks aspiring candidates through the steps of launching your campaign and it’s FREE if you use the password “CPCFREE” at calelecteds.org. But don’t delay! The filing period to run for school board in California closes August 12, 2022.
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