LOS ANGELES (CNS) — The parents of a second-grader at a Los Angeles Unified School District magnet school are among seven families suing the state of California for allegedly failing to meet its constitutional obligation to ensure "basic educational equality" during the ongoing period of remote learning stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic, according to court papers obtained Tuesday.

"These families and organizations are coming forward to hold the state accountable for educating children in their communities," said Jesselyn Friley, staff attorney at Los Angeles pro-bono law firm Public Counsel. "The education children were offered before the pandemic did not meet the standards set by California's constitution, and what they've received since March 2020 is education in name only."


What You Need To Know

  • Seven families, including one in L.A. County, are suing the state of California for allegedly failing to meet its constitutional obligation to ensure "basic educational equality" 

  • The plaintiffs contend that the state is not providing the equipment, training, and support needed for low-income families

  • A spokesman for the California Department of Education said that the office's legal team had not yet reviewed the lawsuit

  • State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond stated that the pandemic "has disproportionately impacted those who have been made vulnerable by historic and systemic inequities."

A spokesman for the California Department of Education said that the office's legal team had not yet reviewed the lawsuit and therefore could not comment.

However, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond — among the defendants in the lawsuit — stated that the pandemic "has disproportionately impacted those who have been made vulnerable by historic and systemic inequities."

Thurmond said that from the earliest days of the public health crisis, his office has focused on "the numerous access and opportunity gaps that impact student learning." He said, "Since the spring we have secured hundreds of thousands of computing devices for students, pressured internet service providers to expand access, bolstered mental health and counseling resources, made it easier for schools to provide meals, and provided published guidance and dozens of training opportunities for educators to strengthen distance learning for our highest-need students."

The plaintiffs contend that the state is not providing the equipment, training, and support needed for low-income families, leaving it up to districts and teachers to find solutions. At the same time, families of students without a computer or reliable internet access are getting further behind in their studies, according to the lawsuit, filed Monday in Alameda County Superior Court.

Plaintiff Bella R., a second-grade student who attends an LAUSD magnet school, has not had regular instruction since March and lacks a reliable internet connection, the suit states.

As a result, the lawsuit says, the girl started the 2020 academic year behind in her studies. The individualized education program she was in consideration for in the 2019-20 school year was never initiated because of remote learning and, consequently, she fell even further behind, the plaintiffs say.

According to the lawsuit, the girl wasn't offered any kind of individualized support at school until November, at which point her mother and an outside organization worked with her to supplement her school instruction.

"Education is a critical avenue for students like Bella to reach their full potential and ultimately, provide economic stability for their families and communities," Public Counsel stated in a news release. "The toll of remote education on countless students like Bella is incalculable."

As the state entered safer at home orders in March, students across California were sent home and began a period of remote education, which continues now, almost nine months later. The lawsuit filed by Public Counsel on behalf of seven families of students, and community organizations — alleges that various challenges starting with lack of digital connectivity and access to devices, ineffective remote instruction and a lack of academic or mental health support has exacerbated an inequitable learning environment.

The complaint contends that a lack of support for students is met by a similar lack of support for teachers and parents, who are taking on an unprecedented level of work without the support they need to be secondary educators to their children.

"The impact of the pandemic on California's most vulnerable students has been to deny them in far too many instances even the semblance of an education, dramatically widening an already indefensible opportunity gap with their more privileged counterparts," said Mark Rosenbaum, director of Public Counsel's Opportunity Under Law Project. "Remote learning may not be preventable but the remoteness of California officials to the desperate educational needs of its children is."

The lawsuit names as defendants the state, Department of Education, Board of Education and Thurmond.