Wednesday, November 2, 2022

California Today: How Hollywood got behind Prop. 28

The ballot initiative would dedicate a percentage of the state general fund for arts and music education in public schools.
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By Shawn Hubler

California Correspondent, National

It's Wednesday. On the November ballot, Proposition 28 would increase funding for arts and music instruction in public schools. Plus, a drastic spike in R.S.V. cases.

Sixth-grade students during an elective art class at Virgil Middle School in Los Angeles.Andrew Cullen for The New York Times

Show business in California is stalwart in supporting political causes, but rarely does the industry turn on the wattage for, say, a school-finance ballot initiative.

Enter Proposition 28, which would channel about $1 billion in additional state money each year into public schools for arts and music instruction. The creators of "Everybody Loves Raymond" chipped in $1 million to back the proposal. Christina Aguilera recently opened her house for a $50,000-a-plate fund-raiser. Barbra Streisand, Katy Perry, Graham Nash, Lenny Kravitz, Earth Wind & Fire and Sheryl Lee Ralph of "Abbott Elementary," among others, have done social media endorsements. The actor Sean Astin has rallied SAG-AFTRA around it. And that's not to mention the Microsoft billionaire Steve Ballmer and the California State P.T.A.

Currently cruising toward passage, the measure arises from a familiar complaint and a less conventional confluence of forces. Arts and music programs were eviscerated in many California school districts when state funding was slashed during the 2008 financial crisis; in many low-income communities, the programs have yet to recover.

The movement to provide secure financing for them arose from the only-in-Los Angeles contact list of Austin Beutner, a philanthropist and former venture capitalist, who was helming the Los Angeles Unified School District when the pandemic hit.

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As classrooms closed in 2020 to curb the spread of Covid-19, hundreds of thousands of Los Angeles school children, most of them from low-income families, were switched to remote instruction. To keep them engaged, Beutner reached out to prominent business and creative people, including his own affluent friends and neighbors, for ideas.

The responses included a Snapchat book club led by Alicia Keys; a course on the Titanic aided by the director James Cameron; art classes created with Illumination Entertainment; and free guitar lessons on thousands of instruments provided by Fender. By the time Beutner stepped down as superintendent in June 2021, the district had started two schools meant to help diversify the region's entertainment work force, with backing from the music producers Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine and a group of entertainers led by George Clooney.

By winter, the campaign for Proposition 28 was underway, with Beutner as a leading donor and a bandwagon of show-business support. "We pay attention when friends call," Iovine said.

I caught up with Beutner at Santa Monica High School, where he was moderating a panel discussion with Dre, Iovine, the rapper Lil Baby and their business adviser, Paul Wachter. "I don't know whose idea it was to take arts and music out of schools, but I'm a prime example of why it should be here," Dre told the wildly applauding audience.

Here's some of my conversation with Beutner, condensed and edited.

How do you know Lil Baby?

I know people who know people. Actually, he works with Paul Wachter, who I met through Arnold Schwarzenegger, like, 15 years ago. Paul is Arnold's investment adviser. Arnold, I've known for so long, I forget how we met.

Networking seems to have so much to do with this ballot measure. Or was it the pandemic?

The head of Illumination Entertainment, Chris Meledandri, and I went to college together. The board chair of Snap, I've known for 30 years since we lived in New York together. But it's more about the shared history of getting stuff done, among people who have been in the trenches together. Jimmy and Dre I got to know working on their school project. The Fender people helped in schools during the pandemic.

What will Proposition 28 do if it passes?

This provides ongoing funding for arts and music in all schools, without raising taxes. California law requires that about 40 percent of the state budget be set aside for education. This requires that an additional 0.4 percent be set aside to pay for art and music programs out of the general fund.

Doesn't that take a pretty big budget decision away from elected legislators?

Yes, and the ends justify the means. In Sacramento, as a practical matter, those with the loudest voices get their needs met, and families who are struggling to get by unfortunately don't get heard much.

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This initiative is a little like the one Schwarzenegger led in 2002 to channel money into after-school programs.

Yeah, we actually learned from that initiative. It helped us get a lot of things right about Prop. 28.

Schwarzenegger was running for governor then. Are you running for something?

No, I am not running for public office. I'm a public-school kid — the son of an immigrant and a public-school teacher — who has lived the American dream. When Prop. 28 passes, it will create a brighter future for six million public-school kids in California. That's my reward.

For more:

Shawn Hubler is a California correspondent for The Times and is based in Sacramento.

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Dr. Caitlyn Berg and her infant daughter, Natalie, at their home in Mount Zion, Ill. Natalie fell seriously ill from R.S.V. and was in an I.C.U. for four days.

The rest of the news

  • Respiratory syncytial virus: A drastic and unusually early spike in R.S.V. infections is swamping pediatric units across the United States.In California, Orange County declared a public health emergency because of an alarming rise in pediatric hospitalizations and emergency room visits because of R.S.V. and the flu, The Associated Press reports.
  • Pelosi attack: The man accused of breaking into the home of Speaker Nancy Pelosi and assaulting her husband had other targets, the authorities say.Here is what we know about the attack, based on court documents and accounts provided by officials.
  • Microplastics: Blue whales swimming off the California coast are each consuming about 10 million pieces of microplastic — or in some cases as much as 95 pounds — daily, according to a new study by Stanford University, The Mercury News reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • New queen of Los Angeles?: Larry David presided over her wedding to Ari Emanuel. Kendall Jenner and Hailey Bieber have carried handbags from her fashion label. Who is Sarah Staudinger?
  • Building more housing: The Los Angeles mayoral candidates Rick Caruso and Representative Karen Bass both agree that overcrowded living conditions are at the heart of the region's housing challenges, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • McCarthy: Kevin McCarthy, the Bakersfield Republican, is likely to be the next speaker of the House if his party regains control of the chamber in the midterm elections, The Los Angeles Times reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Fake student: William Curry of Alabama was removed from Stanford University after pretending to be a student and bouncing from dorm to dorm on campus for 10 months, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Sheriff: Laurie Smith, the Santa Clara County sheriff who has struggled to recover from multiple scandals, abruptly stepped down ahead of a verdict in a civil corruption trial that could have led to her removal from office, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Lawsuit: The Hoopa Valley Tribe is suing the federal government for failing to collect money from California farms that rely on federally supplied water to pay for damages to tribal fisheries, The Associated Press reports.
Christopher Testani for The New York Times.

What we're eating

The San Francisco downtown skyline.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Richard Rothman, who recommends a site in northern San Francisco:

"My favorite place to visit is the New Deal Murals in Coit Tower in San Francisco. This is a collection of artwork from 1930 which put artists to work. The murals are open to the public free of charge. San Francisco City Guides gives tours of the mural on Wednesdays and Saturdays at 10 a.m., but you need to make a reservation in advance."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

Tell us

Have you visited any of the travel destinations that we've recommended in the newsletter? Send us a few lines about your trip and a photo!

We'd like to share them in upcoming editions of the newsletter. Email us at CAToday@nytimes.com. Please include your name and the city in which you live.

With no grand prize winners in nearly three months, today's Powerball drawing will have an estimated value of $1.2 billion.Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA, via Shutterstock

And before you go, some good news

A Los Angeles lottery player will win $790,000 after matching the first five numbers of the Powerball draw.

The winner, who was not identified, bought the winning ticket at 777 Market on La Brea Avenue in the Mid-City neighborhood. Another lotto player won $790,000 at a Chevron gas station in Visalia. The two California winners were among eight others across the country to hit five of the six numbers.

"We're feeling very lucky about the store," Mohammed Akram, the owner of 777 Market, told The Los Angeles Times.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

Soumya Karlamangla, Briana Scalia and Maia Coleman contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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