
County education leaders, representing a half million students and 55,000 employees, called today for lawmakers to give school districts local control over budgeting and spending to soften the impact of the state’s ongoing fiscal crisis – and to better ensure that students graduate from high school ready for work or college. The Orange County District Superintendents’ Organization, which includes 28 district superintendents as well as the county superintendent of schools, held a news conference to unveil reform measures designed to permanently allow school boards and communities to determine spending priorities based on their most pressing local needs. Specifically, the group called for permanent local control over restricted spending and an overhaul of state and