California’s next school bond should include money for grass, trees and green spaces on campuses

Schools should be a refuge for children to learn and play.

But many of California’s K-12 public school campuses are the opposite: hot, barren, fenced-in and paved-over compounds that draw comparisons to parking lots or prison yards. Asphalt-dominated schoolyards are not only detrimental to learning, health and well-being, they’re inhumane.

Read more at the Los Angeles Times.