- LOS ANGELES TIMES
Tuesday, May 19, 1998
- Wilson Backs Ballot Measure to Ban Bilingual
Education
By CARL INGRAM, Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO--Gov. Pete Wilson on Monday vetoed the Legislature's bill to provide local
control of bilingual education, and endorsed a ballot initiative that would require all
children in California to be taught in English.
But the initiative's sponsor, Silicon Valley businessman Ron Unz, denounced the
governor's support of Proposition 227, saying that Wilson's endorsement may play into
the hands of the measure's opponents. "It is very unfortunate that the governor has
chosen to endorse our initiative," said Unz, whose proposal has a large lead in polls.
"It would be grossly opportunistic and deceitful if our opponents seized upon Wilson's
endorsement to attempt to discredit those of us involved in the campaign who have
worked so hard over the past year to improve the public education of California's
immigrant children."
Unz, who opposed Wilson for the GOP gubernatorial nomination in 1994, declined to
amplify his comments, but suggested in a telephone interview that the governor's
sometimes divisive style could become a burden to passage of Proposition 227.
"It is one of the problems we are facing. . . . We cannot judge exactly what our opponents
would do." He said he had "no indication whatsoever" that Wilson was going to endorse his
plan.
Clearly stung by Unz's rebuke, Sean Walsh, the governor's chief spokesman, shot back:
"Little words from a little man, but it's a free country."
Walsh said Wilson will not actively campaign for the proposal but will be happy to
discuss his opinion if asked.
In vetoing the Legislature's bilingual bill, the governor said it would perpetuate a
"serious failure" in public education.
"In California's schools, English should not be a foreign language," Wilson said in a
stinging veto message and a two-page statement endorsing Proposition 227 that aides
said he crafted himself. "And yet it remains one for too many limited English proficient
students because of the failure of bilingual programs."
Assembly Speaker Antonio Villaraigosa (D-Los Angeles) criticized the governor for his
veto, and said his endorsement of Proposition 227 would be used in the campaign to
defeat the initiative.
"What we will say is that the man who brought you Proposition 187 and 209 is now
bringing you Proposition 227," said Villaraigosa, who opposes Unz's initiative.
Proposition 187 in 1994 called for the elimination of public services to illegal
immigrants. Proposition 209 in 1996 eliminated affirmative action in government
programs. Both were approved by wide margins.
"[Wilson] has a history of supporting divisive and polarizing initiatives. . . . From that
vantage point, it is more of the same, Gov. Wilson at his finest," Villaraigosa told
reporters.
The measure by Sen. Dede Alpert (D-Coronado) would have given school districts greater
flexibility in developing their own bilingual programs, while Proposition 227 would all
but scrap bilingual education.
Wilson said Proposition 227 is the remedy to reverse the state's bilingual education
system, which he said keeps English-language learners "dependent upon their primary
language for far too long, shortchanging their opportunity for the [American] Dream."
In California, about 1.4 million schoolchildren (about 1 in 4) speak a language other
than English. Of these, about 30% receive some form of bilingual education, which has
drawn both praise and criticism for the past 20 years.
Generally under Proposition 227, children learning English would be immersed in
English-only classes for up to a year and then placed in mainstream classes. The
program would cost about $50 million a year.
The governor criticized Proposition 227's opponents, who he said claim that the
initiative is poorly crafted and will produce a generation who cannot speak English. "To
the contrary, studies have shown that English immersion is the quickest and easiest way
for children to learn a second language."
The Legislature's bilingual education bill, approved May 5 as an alternative to Unz's
plan, would have rejected what critics call the "one size fits all" restrictions of
Proposition 227.
The bill (SB 6), a similar version of which Alpert has been sponsoring for four years,
was aimed at giving school districts new flexibility to design and operate bilingual
programs tailored to local needs.
In addition, students would be required to achieve scholastically in core subjects such as
math and social studies. Students could receive instruction in their native tongue
exclusively, or be immersed in English, or receive some combination of both.
Alpert called the governor's veto "simply shortsighted." She charged that Wilson had
refused to be a "constructive participant" in developing the legislation and then
"cavalierly" dismissed it.
Wilson lashed out generally at bilingual education and specifically at Alpert's bill.
The governor charged that the bill was written in such a way that a student of "limited
English proficiency" could continue to be taught in his or her "primary language for
years after the child has learned English."
Alpert said she had offered separate legislation that would meet Wilson's objections.
Instead, she said, he sent her proposed amendments last week that would "gut nearly the
whole bill."
Last year, Alpert's bilingual reform bill was advancing through the Legislature but got
snagged in the Assembly when then-Speaker Cruz Bustamante and other influential
Latinos lined up against it.
Last month, the blockade gave way reluctantly when Latino legislators and others agreed
that the Alpert bill was superior to Proposition 227. But even then, the governor noted
that it was "too little, too late."
California has not had a state bilingual education program since 1986, when the law
lapsed and was not renewed by the Legislature because of controversy over the issue.
Funding, however, continued.
In March, in response to a Superior Court decision, the State Board of Education took
itself out of the business of regulating whether schools could scrap primary language
instruction in favor of English-intensive methods.
Statewide bilingual education is a patchwork of programs that vary from district to
district.
- Copyright Los Angeles Times