Common Sense Kids Action Announces New Legislative Ratings

SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwired - March 03, 2016) - Common Sense Kids Action announced today that it has launched a new initiative that will rate legislation based on how the potential law would help or harm kids. Common Sense Legislative Ratings will highlight, publicize, and advocate for bills that would significantly help kids -- and expose bills that would appreciably harm kids, including naming the special interests behind them.

"America's kids are our future, and they should unequivocally be the top priority for policymakers from California to Washington, D.C.," said James P. Steyer, CEO and founder of Common Sense. "Common Sense Legislative Ratings puts policymakers on notice that the public is watching to see if their actions are for kids or against kids -- and that they will be held accountable."

The initial release today includes "For Kids" ratings for seven bills that were introduced in California prior to the February 19 legislative deadline in Sacramento. The bills are:

  • AB 908, authored by assembly members Jimmy Gomez and Autumn Burke, which would improve the state's Paid Family Leave program by raising the current wage-replacement rate and expanding coverage from six to eight weeks, thereby helping California employees meet their obligations to their children and other family members and maintain stable employment;

  • AB 2799, authored by Assembly Member Ed Chau, which is a children's privacy bill that would help California's children by extending online privacy protections currently in place in California's schools to the state's preschools and pre-kindergartens;

  • SB 62, authored by senators Fran Pavley, Marty Block, and Bob Huff, which is an education bill that would help address California's teacher shortage that is leaving too many students, particularly students in low-income communities, without qualified teachers by reducing the financial cost of becoming a teacher;

  • SB 915, authored by Senator Carol Liu, which is an education bill that would help students affected by the teacher shortage by allowing school districts to recruit teachers to California from colleges, other careers, and other states and provide them with valuable information about how to become credentialed and enter the profession;

  • SB 933, authored by Senator Ben Allen, which is an education bill that would create a California Teacher Corps and help students being taught by under-qualified teachers as a result of the teacher shortage by giving matching grants to school districts to recruit, train, mentor, and retain teachers by creating or expanding teacher-training programs known as "residencies" in high-need districts;

  • SB 1166 (the New Parent Leave Act), authored by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson, which would help families by providing three months of job-protected maternity and paternity leave for almost all California employees;

  • and SB 1383, authored by Senator Ricardo Lara, which is a bill that would help children by addressing pollutants that contribute to asthma, one of the leading causes of school absenteeism, by requiring the California Air Resources Board to approve and implement a comprehensive strategy to reduce emissions of short-lived climate pollutants.