
The fundraiser, in its seventh year, helps raise money for a wide range of initiatives, including music, art, and restorative justice programs.
[jump] This year, Ride for a Reason partnered with Evolve, a Bay Area nonprofit that is pushing for reforms to commercial property taxes in California in an effort to raise more funding for public education. That organization is advocating for changes to Proposition 13, a 1978 ballot measure that critics have long argued includes unfair loopholes that result in industrial and commercial property owners failing to pay their fair share in taxes. The group has proposed establishing regular reassessments of non-residential commercial properties in California — a move that Evolve said could generate an estimated $9 billion in annual revenue for schools and other services.
Advocates with Ride for a Reason also argued that public schools in the state need long-term financial support due to the fact that the tax increases implemented through Proposition 30 in 2012 are set to expire in 2016. And even with Prop 30 revenue, California has led the nation in class sizes, advocates noted.
The large fundraising effort for Oakland schools came one day after the Oakland Unified School District and the Oakland Education Association (the teachers’ union) finalized a tentative contract agreement — after months of tense negotiations about instructors’ salaries and class sizes. In a statement today about the Ride for a Reason funds, Kiernan Rok, assistant principal for Edna Brewer Middle School, referenced the contract negotiations, saying, “We’re fighting over scraps when we really need to take the message here to the capital. It’s a matter of priorities.” Rok added: “Ride for a Reason funds programs that really make school worth coming to for kids.”








