A new research report from the Applied Research Center (ARC) documents
the failure of California lawmakers to invest in policies that benefit
all Californians.
For Immediate Release CONTACT: Jarad Sanchez
JANUARY 16, 2007 Telephone: 213-623-4627
PRESS RELEASE
Schwarzenegger Gets ‘F' on Legislative Report Card, Fails to Invest in Racial Justice
New Report Shows California Governor and Legislature Neglect Communities of Color
Download the pdf of Facing Race: California Legislative Report Card on
Racial Equity 2007 here .
Streaming audio of the press conference is available here.
Oakland, CA-A new research report from the Applied Research Center
(ARC) documents the failure of California lawmakers to invest in
policies that benefit all Californians. Facing Race: California
Legislative Report Card on Racial Equity 2007 evaluates the Governor
and Legislature on their support for proactive legislation to close
long-standing disparities in health, education, income and other key
indicators. With the legislature scoring a "D" and Governor
Schwarzenegger an "F," the report reveals an increasingly urgent state
of racial inequity that prevents progress in the nation's most diverse
state.
"The unwillingness to pursue racial equity has real and lasting effects
on Californians," says Jarad Sanchez, policy analyst at the Applied
Research Center and the report's author. "The Governor claims that
government has to be daring when the need is great. But the
boldest legislation that could have decreased growing racial
inequalities were gutted, held in committee or vetoed by the Governor
himself."
Facing Race: California Legislative Report Card on Racial Equity 2007
poses the critical questions of the nation's racial divide, assessing
California's leadership in a changing California. The annual report,
now in its 4th year, offers a county by county mapping of demographic
shifts and an analysis of the racial divide in California healthcare,
schools and jobs.
"The Governor's obfuscating maneuvers have hurt all students, but
especially students of color, immigrants, and low-income students-those
currently being harmed most by our sorely deficient schools," says
Olivia E. Araiza of Justice Matters Institute. "It is time for these
communities, courageous policy makers, and concerned Californians to
step forward and push through the bold changes that our students need."
Report Highlights
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger received an F (59 percent) for racial
equity legislation. Although the governor improved his score by 4
percentage points from 2006, he was one point short of a D based on the
new grading system. The governor received high marks for signing all
health equity bills and four of five civil rights bills passed by the
state legislature. The Governor received a failing grade because he
signed only 59 percent of the racial equity legislation that reached
his desk.
Both the Assembly and the Senate received a D for support of racial
equity legislation-receiving scores of 66 percent and 64 percent
respectively. Both houses received lower scores than in 2006. Thirteen
of the 22 racial equity bills graded in this report originated in the
Assembly. More senators received an F than an A.
Missed Opportunities
Increasing College Access: Governor Schwarzenegger has highlighted
education reform as one of his highest priorities, but this is contrary
to the veto of the California Dream Act (SB 1), which would have
allowed college access and affordability to California's undocumented
immigrant students this past session.
Fair Housing for All: With the nation struggling to find answers to
economic woes due to subprime lending, the California Residential
Mortgage Lending Act (AB 512) was stalled preventing California's
homebuyers from having contracts in their native languages of growing Latino and Asian communities..
"While racial disparities are pervasive in California, they need not be
permanent. For this state and others around the country, the time has
come to begin dealing straightforwardly with its racial realities," says Tammy Johnson, policy director at the
Applied Research Center, which also released reports on racial equity
in Minnesota and Illinois.
FACING RACE: California Legislative Report Card on Racial Equity 2007
is the follow-up to the Applied Research Center's California
Legislative Report Card on Racial Equity 2005 and California's New
Majority 2004 Legislative Report Card on Race.
El comunicado de presa en español aquí .
Speaker's Bureau contacts:
Gabriel Medel - Parents for Unity -323-734-9353
Maria Brenes - Inner City Struggle - 323-780-7605
Elizabeth Sholes - California Council of Churches - 916-502-1106
Liz Guillen - Public Advocates - 916-442-3385
The Applied Research Center (ARC) is a public policy institute
advancing racial justice through research, advocacy and journalism.
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