Showing posts with label budget. Show all posts
Showing posts with label budget. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

SIGN THE PETITION: Maintain the Integrity of the Arts Instructional Programs of LAUSD + traduccion en español


View Current Signatures   -   Sign the Petition

(Para una traduccion en español, por favor consulte: http://lausdartsed.blogspot.com/, 12/3/09)


To:  Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education Members: Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte, Monica Garcia, Tamar Galatzan, Richard Vladovic, Yolie Flores, Nury Martinez, Steve Zimmer; Superintendent Of Schools, Ramon C. Cortines

Background:

On February 9, 1998, the Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education unanimously adopted a Resolution to Restore Arts Education as an essential part of the core curriculum for all students. In 1999, the Board adopted the Arts Education Plan, which ensures comprehensive, quality education in Dance, Music, Theater and Visual Arts by providing resources necessary to implement arts programs to every child, K-12.

Since that time, articulated arts programs have been established across the District from elementary to secondary serving as a powerful factor in motivating student interest in school. Through the implementation of the Elementary Arts Program, which was expanded in the 2009-2010 school year to include all elementary schools, over 3 million elementary students have received arts instruction by highly-qualified arts educators. LAUSD is the only large urban district in the United States that provides an equitable standards-based arts education for all of its elementary students by giving them the opportunity to experience all of the four arts disciplines through the Elementary Arts Program.

Yet in June of 2009, after ten years of growth and restoration of arts education, the LAUSD Board of Education passed a three-year budget that includes a 50% cut to the Elementary Arts Program for the 2010-2011 school year, and the elimination of the entire Program for 2011-2012. Superintendent Ramon Cortines and Board of Education Members have demonstrated support for the District Arts Programs in the past but are now faced with difficult budget decisions.

Full Petition Text:

We can't afford to cut Arts Education for our children and the children of the future!!!

  • We have come too far as a District - not only in restoring arts education, but in becoming a nationally recognized leader in arts education - to step back now.
  • Arts are a primary, central, academic core subject that must be funded as consistently as math, language arts, science and history/social science.
  • The proposed cuts to the Elementary Arts Program will have deep ramifications to arts programs at the secondary level, resulting in displaced teachers and leaving students less prepared for arts instruction in middle and high school.
  • We do not think it reasonable for LAUSD students and employees to shoulder the entire responsibility for our statewide budget deficits with salary
  • reductions, staff reductions and cuts to vital instructional programs and support services. We must all share the obligation of the education of our children.
  • We advocate that non-essential, non-school based services, and any non-instructional program be considered for cuts prior to approving any reductions to instructional programs, including the Elementary Arts Program.
  • We advocate that the LAUSD Education Foundation (501(c)(3) non-profit) be utilized to help support and preserve the integrity of the Elementary Arts Program.
  • We advocate for statewide and local legislative changes, including local parcel taxes, in order to create more sustainable and locally controlled funding sources for education.
  • We as concerned citizens, in endorsing the principles and proposals set forth above, are holding Superintendent Cortines and the Board of Education to their commitment to arts education, and to the consistent funding of LAUSD Arts Education Programs now and into the future."

This petition was written by LAUSD Elementary Arts Teachers, November 2009

Sincerely,

The Undersigned

View Current Signatures


The Maintain the Integrity of the Arts Instructional Programs of LAUSD Petition to Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education Members: Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte, Monica Garcia, Tamar Galatzan, Richard Vladovic, Yolie Flores, Nury Martinez, Steve Zimmer; Superintendent Of Schools, Ramon C. Cortines was created by and written by Ginger Fox and Michael Blasi, Chair and Co-Chair of the Elementary Arts Committee, United Teachers Los Angeles (blasikin@gmail.com). 

This petition is hosted at www.PetitionOnline.com as a public service. There is no endorsement of this petition, express or implied, by Artifice, Inc. or our sponsors. For technical support please use our simple Petition Help form.

tags: arts ed arts education dance drama LAUSD music Theater theatre visual arts

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Sunday, October 11, 2009

This just in: SCHWARZENEGGER SIGNS 14 EDUCATION BILLS, VETOES 17

 

from Capitol Alert | SAcramento Bee

October 11, 2009 | As legislative leaders continue talks on a package of water bills, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's office released word of the fate of 183 bills.

The governor, who threatened to veto "a lot" of bills if leaders can't strike a water deal, has until midnight to act on the more than 500 bills remaining on his desk.

See the governor's office's list of the 89 bills he signed and the 94 bills struck down with the veto pen after the jump.

EDUCATION BILLS IN RED

Bills Signed:

  • SB 19 by Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) - Education data.
  • SB 36 by Senator Ron Calderon (D-Montebello) - Real estate, finance lender, and residential mortgage lender licenses: mortgage loan originators.
  • SB 48 by Senator Elaine Alquist (D-San Jose) - Joint powers agencies: City of Santa Clara.
  • SB 102 by Committee on Local Government - Validations.
  • SB 103 by Committee on Local Government - Validations.
  • SB 117 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Adult day health care services: eligibility criteria: Medi-Cal reimbursement methodology and limit.
  • SB 136 by Senator Bob Huff (R-Diamond Bar) - State real property.
  • SB 143 by Senator Gilbert Cedillo (D-Los Angeles) - Hazardous materials: California Land Reuse and Revitalization Act of 2004.
  • SB 147 by Senator Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) - California State University: career technical education courses.
  • SB 148 by Senator Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach) - Mammogram machines: inspection: posting of results.
  • SB 149 by Senator Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego) - Claims against the state: appropriation.
  • SB 150 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Sentencing.
  • SB 224 by Senator Lou Correa (D-Santa Ana) - Housing assistance.
  • SB 237 by Senator Ron Calderon (D-Montebello) - Real estate appraisers.
  • SB 239 by Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) - Mortgage fraud.
  • SB 240 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Vehicles: Department of Transportation vehicles.
  • SB 247 by Senator Elaine Alquist (D-San Jose) - Instructional materials.
  • SB 249 by Senator Dave Cox (R-Fair Oaks) - Vaccinations: meningococcal disease.
  • SB 273 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Domestic Violence.
  • SB 283 by Senator Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) - Department of Water Resources: recycled water.
  • SB 285 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Disability benefits: attachment.
  • SB 312 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Public meetings and hearings.
  • SB 337 by Senator Elaine Alquist (D-San Jose) - Health information.
  • SB 357 by Senator Denise Moreno Ducheny (D-San Diego) - Tribal gaming: grants to local jurisdictions.
  • SB 412 by Senator Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego) - Electricity: self-generation incentive program.
  • SB 419 by Committee on Veterans Affairs - County veteran service officers: funding.
  • SB 448 by Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) - California State Safe Harbor Agreement Program Act.
  • SB 471 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - California Stem Cell and Biotechnology Education and Workforce Development Act of 2009.
  • SB 478 Senator Lois Wolk (D-Davis) - Employment safety: manlifts.
  • SB 481 by Senator Dave Cox (R-Fair Oaks) - Airports: wildlife.
  • SB 511 by Committee on Education - Education.
  • SB 519 by Senator Roy Ashburn (R-Bakersfield) - Public employment.
  • SB 532 by Senator Dave Cogdill (R-Modesto) - State Highway Routes 1, 108, 132, and 201.
  • SB 538 by Committee on Public Employment and Retirement - County employees' retirement: mandatory retirement.
  • SB 588 by Committee on Public Safety - Sex Offender Management Board.
  • SB 592 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Charter Schools Facilities Program.
  • SB 614 by Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) - Vessels.
  • SB 619 by Senator Tony Strickland (R-Thousand Oaks) - Flood control: County of Santa Barbara: Lower Mission Creek.
  • SB 651 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Pupil retention.
  • SB 680 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - School attendance: interdistrict transfers.
  • SB 702 by Senator Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) - Ancillary day care centers: employees: trustline providers. See attached signing message.
  • SB 734 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Transportation.
  • SB 744 by Senator Tony Strickland (R-Thousand Oaks) - Clinical laboratories.
  • SB 751 by Senator Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) - Teacher credentials.
  • SB 792 by Senator Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) - Tidelands and submerged lands: City and County of San Francisco: Hunters Point Naval Shipyard and Candlestick Point.
  • SB 822 by Committee on Revenue and Taxation - Property taxation: local administration.
  • SB 826 by Committee on Governmental Organization - General obligation bonds.
  • SB 827 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - South Coast Air Quality Management District: CEQA: permits.
  • SB 831 by Committee on Governmental Organization - California State Lottery: multistate lottery.
  • SB 833 by Committee on Natural Resources and Water - Natural resources: mining: conservation lands: Native American historical sites: tidelands and submerged lands.
  • SBX3 18 by Senator Denise Moreno Ducheny (D-San Diego) - Corrections.
  • AB 14 by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes (D-Sylmar) - Vehicles: nuisance abatement: impoundment.
  • AB 37 by Assemblymember Warren Furutani (D-South Los Angeles County) - Public postsecondary education: honorary degrees.
  • AB 66 by Assemblymember Joel Anderson (R-El Cajon) - Pupil work permits.
  • AB 73 by Assemblymember Mary Hayashi (D-Hayward) - Marriage licenses: vital records: fees: domestic violence.
  • AB 74 by Assemblymember Wesley Chesbro (D-Arcata) - Flood control: Middle Creek and Hamilton City Flood Damage Reduction and Ecosystem Restoration Projects.
  • AB 92 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - State claims.
  • AB 93 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - Claims against the state: appropriation.
  • AB 94 by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) - Natural Heritage Preservation Tax Credit Act of 2000.
  • AB 136 by Assemblymember Jim Silva (R- Huntington Beach) - Horse racing: imported harness or quarter horse races.
  • AB 154 by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) - Adoption assistance: federal law.
  • AB 167 by Assemblymember Anthony Adams (R-Hesperia) - High school graduation: local requirements: foster children.
  • AB 236 by Assemblymember Sandré R. Swanson (D-Alameda) - Employment: car washes.
  • AB 242 by Assemblymember Pedro Nava (D-Santa Barbara) - Dog fighting.
  • AB 246 by Senator (former Assemblymember) Curren Price (D-Inglewood) - Horse racing: deductions and distributions: trust funds: harness and quarter horse racing.
  • AB 262 by Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) - American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan: energy activities, programs, or projects.
  • AB 275 by Assemblymember Jose Solorio (D-Anaheim) - Missing persons: DNA database.
  • AB 282 by Committee on Transportation - Transportation.
  • AB 286 by Assemblymember Mary Salas (D-Chula Vista) - Vehicles: additional registration fees.
  • AB 287 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Persons with developmental disabilities: employment.
  • AB 292 by Assemblymember Yamada (D-Solano) - Personal income taxes: contributions: Alzheimer's disease.
  • AB 293 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - Gambling regulation.
  • AB 299 by Committee on Insurance - Insurance.
  • AB 318 by Assemblymember Bill Emmerson (R-Redlands) - Bureau of Automotive Repair: inspection fees.
  • AB 329 by Assemblymember Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles) - Reverse mortgages.
  • AB 343 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Pupils: military families.
  • AB 344 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) - State highways: relinquishment.
  • AB 386 by Assemblymember Ira Ruskin (D-Redwood City) - Public postsecondary education: instructional materials: disabled students.
  • AB 399 by Assemblymember Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica) - Public employee benefits.
  • AB 483 by Assemblymember Joan Buchanan (D-Alamo) - Workers' compensation: Internet Web sites.
  • AB 485 by Assemblymember Wilmer Amina Carter (D-Rialto) - Civil Air Patrol: California Wing: employment leave.
  • AB 523 by Assemblymember Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) - Hospitals: seismic safety.
  • AB 530 by Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) - Unlawful detainer: controlled substances and firearms.
  • AB 547 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - Commercial feed: license fee: inspection tonnage tax.
  • AB 595 by Assemblymember Anthony Adams (R-Hesperia) - Placement of children: criminal background checks.
  • AB 601 by Assemblymember Martin Garrick (R-Carlsbad) - Motor vehicle insurance: special assessments.
  • AB 636 by Assemblymember Dave Jones (D-Sacramento) - Charter-party carriers: busdrivers.
  • AB 654 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - State teachers' retirement.
  • AB 665 by Assemblymember Alberto Torrico (D-Fremont) - State adoption services: investment.

Bills Vetoed:

  • SB 20 by Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) - Personal information: privacy.
  • SB 34 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Petitions: compensation for signatures.
  • SB 45 by Senator Alex Padilla (D-Pacoima) - Public works: payment of prevailing wage: violations.
  • SB 84 by Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) - Education finance.
  • SB 86 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Public postsecondary education: executive officer compensation.
  • SB 109 by Senator Ron Calderon (D-Montebello) - Auctioneers: real estate.
  • SB 115 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Public employment.
  • SB 158 by Senator Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa) - Health care coverage: cervical cancer screening: human papillomavirus vaccination. .
  • SB 161 by Senator Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood) - Health care coverage: cancer treatment.
  • SB 172 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Voter registration.
  • SB 173 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Food safety: testing and recalls.
  • SB 193 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Class size reduction: Long Beach Unified School District.
  • SB 196 by Senator Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro) - Emergency medical services.
  • SB 201 by Senator Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach) - Vehicles: illegal taxicabs.
  • SB 212 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Pupil health: communicable diseases.
  • SB 213 by Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) - Gambling licenses.
  • SB 218 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Public records: state agency: auxiliary organizations.
  • SB 219 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Disclosure of improper governmental activities: University of California: damages.
  • SB 242 by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) - Civil rights: language restrictions.
  • SB 248 by Senator Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach) - Educational equity: Title IX.
  • SB 257 by Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) - Lactation accommodation: state employees.
  • SB 262 by Senator Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Coastal resources: California Coastal Commission: meeting.
  • SB 272 by Senator Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa) - Local government: organization.
  • AB 1 by Assemblymember William Monning (D-Carmel) - Teachers: program of professional growth: conflict resolution. See attached veto message.
  • AB 3 by Assemblymember V. Manuel Pérez (D-Coachella) - Workforce development: Renewable Energy Workforce Readiness Initiative: local workforce investment boards.
  • AB 6 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Initiatives: paid circulators.
  • AB 8 by Assemblymember Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica) - Education finance: working group.
  • AB 21 by Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) - Renewable energy resources.
  • AB 24 by Assemblymember Marty Block (D-San Diego) - California State University: feasibility study: Chula Vista.
  • AB 43 by Assemblymember Sam Blakeslee (R-San Luis Obispo) - California Earthquake Authority: employees.
  • AB 56 by Assemblymember Anthony Portantino (D-Pasadena) - Health care coverage: mammographies.
  • AB 57 by Senator (former Assemblymember) Curren Price (D-Inglewood) - University of California hospitals: staffing.
  • AB 82 by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) - Dependent children: psychotropic medications.
  • AB 98 by Assemblymember Hector De La Torre (D-South Gate) - Maternity services.
  • AB 101 by Assemblymember Joel Anderson (R-El Cajon) - Elections: vote by mail ballots.
  • AB 115 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Adult Health Coverage Expansion Program.
  • AB 120 by Assemblymember Mary Hayashi (D-Hayward) - Healing arts: peer review.
  • AB 132 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - School safety: immigration investigations.
  • AB 146 by Assemblymember Tony Mendoza (D-Norwalk) - Instructional materials: delivery.
  • AB 147 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Hazardous waste: electronic waste.
  • AB 213 by Assemblymember Bonnie Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) - Vehicles: parking.
  • AB 217 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Medi-Cal: alcohol and drug screening and brief intervention services.
  • AB 241 by Assemblymember Pedro Nava (D-Santa Barbara) - Dogs and cats: breeding for sale.
  • AB 243 by Assemblymember Pedro Nava (D-Santa Barbara) - Animal abuse: penalties.
  • AB 244 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Health care coverage: mental health services.
  • AB 245 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Physicians and surgeons.
  • AB 249 by Assemblymember Wilmer Amina Carter (D-Rialto) - Health facilities: marking patient devices.
  • AB 261 by Assemblymember Mary Salas (D-Chula Vista) - Pupil records: privacy rights.
  • AB 267 by Assemblymember Tom Torlakson (D-Antioch) - Education finance districts: taxes.
  • AB 311 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Property taxation: certificated aircraft assessment.
  • AB 320 by Assemblymember Jose Solorio (D-Anaheim) - County jails: reentry facilities.
  • AB 322 by Assemblymember Jim Silva (R-Huntington Beach) - Less lethal weapons.
  • AB 324 by Assemblymember Jim Beall (D-San Jose) - Aging: Elder Economic Security Standard Index.
  • AB 330 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Elections: voting devices.
  • AB 335 by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes (D- Sylmar) - Employment contracts.
  • AB 337 by Assemblymember Norma Torres (D-Pomona) - Juvenile court records: sealing and destruction.
  • AB 338 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Transit village developments: infrastructure financing.
  • AB 358 by Assemblymember Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) - Criminal procedure: narcotics and drug abuse cases.
  • AB 368 by Assemblymember Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) - State lands: oil, gas, and mineral leases.
  • AB 369 by Assemblymember Mariko Yamada (D-Solano) - Adult day health care centers.
  • AB 374 by Assemblymember Marty Block (D-San Diego) - Consequences of dropping out notice.
  • AB 382 by Assemblymember Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) - Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation: inmates and wards: classification.
  • AB 402 by Assemblymember Mike Davis (D-Los Angeles) - Employment: entertainment work permits.
  • AB 423 by Assemblymember Norma Torres (D-Pomona) - Emergency telephone systems.
  • AB 429 by Assemblymember Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica) - Public school accountability: advisory committee.
  • AB 436 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) - Elections: initiatives.
  • AB 442 by Assemblymember Juan Arambula (I-Fresno) - Notaries public.
  • AB 443 by Assemblymember Cathleen Galgiani (D-Livingston) - Apple pests: pest and disease prevention.
  • AB 469 by Assemblymember Mike Eng (D-Monterey Park) - Sales and use taxes: qualified use tax payment.
  • AB 472 by Assemblymember Bob Blumenfield (D-San Fernando Valley) - Earthquake and emergency preparedness.
  • AB 473 by Assemblymember Bob Blumenfield (D-Woodland) - Solid waste: recycling: multifamily dwellings.
  • AB 476 by Assemblymember Tom Torlakson (D-Antioch) - Standardized Testing and Reporting Program.
  • AB 503 by Assemblymember Warren Furutani (D-South Los Angeles County) - Battered women's shelters: grant program.
  • AB 504 by Assemblymember Warren Furutani (D-South Los Angeles County) - Peace officers: training.
  • AB 513 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - Health care coverage: breast-feeding.
  • AB 517 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Safe Body Art Act.
  • AB 527 by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes (D-Sylmar) - Employee complaints: proceedings: payroll records.
  • AB 543 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Perinatal care: The Nurse-Family Partnership.
  • AB 1401 by Assemblymember Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco) - Transition to Organics Act.
  • AB 1404 by Assemblymember Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) - California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006: offsets.
  • AB 1435 by Assemblymember V. Manuel Perez (D-Coachella) - Public school accountability.
  • AB 1439 by Assemblymember Jose Solorio (D-Anaheim) - Gang and youth violence: prevention.
  • AB 1447 by Assemblymember John Perez (D-Los Angeles) - State Compensation Insurance Fund: audits.
  • AB 1462 by Assemblymember Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles) - Medi-Cal: inpatient hospital services contracts.
  • AB 1510 by Assemblymember Mike Eng (D-Monterey Park) - Public schools: parental access.
  • AB 1512 by Assemblymember Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) - Food and drugs: sale.
  • AB 1527 by Assemblymember Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) - Motor vehicle emission reduction projects.
  • AB 1559 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Workforce development: summer youth job training.
  • AB 1561 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Occupational safety and health: citation outcome analysis.
  • AB 1562 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Employment: garnishment of wages.
  • AB 1563 by Committee on Labor and Employment - Employment: contracts or agreements for labor or services.
  • AB 1567 by Committee on Veterans Affairs - Employment training panel: 3-year plan: training programs: veterans.
  • AB 1577 by Assemblymember Joe Coto (D-San Jose) - Problem and pathological gambling.
  • AB 1580 by Assemblymember Charles Calderon (D-Montebello) - Taxation: federal conformity.

Sunday, August 02, 2009

AMID FISCAL CRISIS, L.A. GIVES SCHOOL SITE COUNCILS REINS

Education Weekcollection logo

Published Online: July 14, 2009

Published in Print: July 15, 2009

By Stephen Sawchuk | Education Week

Los Angeles -- In theory, it is every school’s dream to control its own destiny, rather than having administrators impose spending plans and reform initiatives from the central office.

At Jefferson High School, one of the largest high schools here, a governing body made up of teachers, nonclassroom-based educators, parents, and Principal Michael Taft appears to be living the dream, to the extent such a thing is possible during a staggering fiscal crisis.

The leadership team, officially known as a “school site council,” has mainly used an infusion of federal stimulus funding to keep class sizes around 25 students. With its remaining money, it has preserved a successful “eighth period”—a mandatory after-school class for students struggling to pass the California High School Exit Exam, or CAHSEE, a graduation prerequisite.

The example sums up the goal of district leaders, who have allotted nearly $114 million in Title I economic-stimulus funds to school site councils like the one at Jefferson High to spend on their own needs.

Decentralized Decisionmaking

According to the California Education Code, school site councils are elected bodies charged with setting and measuring the effectiveness of improvement strategies at the school, seeking input from other school advisory committees, revising strategies and expenditures, and creating and monitoring the approved “single plan for student achievement”—a consolidated plan requested of schools receiving state or federal school improvement funding.

The councils are made up of:
• The principal
• Representatives of teachers selected by teachers at the school
• Other school personnel selected by peers at the school
• Parents of students attending the school selected by such parents
• Students selected by students attending the school (at the middle and high school levels)

Middle and high school councils are composed to ensure parity among the principal, classroom teachers, and other school personnel. additionally, they must ensure that equal numbers of parents or other community members selected by parents and students serve on the council.

SOURCE: California Education Code

“If parents and the community feel they have some responsibility, they’ll be accountable for the direction of the school,” said Ramon C. Cortines, the superintendent of the district. “When [a school] is faced with the draconian cuts I’ve made, ... [it] needs parents and the community to be engaged and involved on an ongoing basis.”

Decentralization has long been a rallying cry among constituents in this sprawling district of 700,000 students. But as some Los Angeles educators are discovering, it pays to be careful what you wish for.

The influx of money this year through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act carries much higher stakes for the site councils for several reasons. First, the funding will double some schools’ typical Title I allocations, and thus it will be closely scrutinized.

These are not funds for a rainy day; they are a stopgap. In preparing budgets, the councils have had to determine how many teaching positions to preserve, how small they can afford to keep class sizes, and which local initiatives are worth saving. Many are making those decisions for the first time.

In effect, the district has spread the decision about cutting programs and personnel from seven school board members to 700 councils.

The decentralization has been praised by some Los Angeles administrators for moving instructional policy closer to the schools. But it has raised the hackles of other administrators, some parent groups, and the teachers’ union.

“There was no transition plan to develop the capacity of these schools that in some cases received an embarrassment of riches,” said Bill Ring, who heads TransParent, a grassroots organization that seeks to increase parents’ voices in school decisions.

Back and Forth

Required by the California Education Code, the school site councils have been around since the 1970s. But the discretionary pots of money they oversee typically wax and wane depending on the current district leadership. Some superintendents have funneled more discretionary funding, including federal Title I aid for disadvantaged students, to the councils; others have chosen to manage those funds centrally.

Mr. Cortines, who became the district chief in 2008, has generally favored a more localized approach to school instruction. Previously, during a stint as Los Angeles’ interim superintendent, in 2000, he broke the district into subdistricts, each overseen by a superintendent.

His latest push for decentralizing is unusual, though, not only for the amount of money involved, but also in its timing.

As the councils geared up to meet this spring, Los Angeles officials watched as their tax revenues dropped and as Sacramento made a succession of cuts to state funding. To reduce the resulting shortfall, the school board canceled programming, sent out more than 4,000 layoff notices to teachers, and pared the central-office staff. Upon receiving its first stimulus allocations, the district put most of its state-stabilization money and eligible money from the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act toward its bottom-line deficit. But officials also decided to pass the Title I stimulus dollars to the councils, rather than filling in holes centrally.

With the money, schools could, for instance, “buy back” classroom teaching positions that had been eliminated under the central budget. Alternatively, they could choose to maintain after-school tutoring, preserve the jobs of school psychologists and counselors, or hire instructional coaches to help teachers make sense of the data from periodic student assessments.

More Discretionary Aid

In addition, the district liquidated a centrally run coaching program and federal Title II teacher-quality funding and disbursed those dollars to schools—a change officials said provided more discretionary aid to schools receiving small or no allocations under Title I.

The district, the Los Angeles teachers’ union, and others collaborated on a series of training sessions for school-site-council personnel, beginning last winter. Part of that training included mock council meetings to give educators clear examples of good and poor collaborative decisionmaking.

Mr. Cortines also gave each school a lot of data on student demographics and test scores to help the councils as they set their budgets.

Mr. Taft, the Jefferson High principal, and members of that school’s team—while not in agreement on every detail—felt it was worthwhile to maintain classroom teaching positions and the eighth period, and they had three years of higher scores to back up their decisions.

“Because of the success we’ve had, our parents are getting more involved in their child’s education,” Mr. Taft said. “When their child comes home and says he passed the math portion of the CAHSEE, that’s like handing them a $20 bill. They can see it, they can feel it, they understand it.”

But others say that Mr. Taft’s experience has been the exception, not the norm. Mr. Ring of the parents’ group said that the district’s efforts to build schools’ capacity to spend the money wisely have so far only scratched the surface.

“It’s exposure, not culture change,” he said of the training.

The teachers’ union, meanwhile, has grown increasingly critical of the plan, saying it has unnecessarily compromised teachers’ jobs and raised class sizes. District figures show that schools have kept a significant number of nonclassroom positions, such as coaches.

The district, officials of United Teachers Los Angeles say, shouldhave spent the stimulus money centrally to ensure a minimum class size for all elementary students and to preserve more classroom teaching positions.

“I honestly don’t think Ray [Cortines] understood that you can’t just snap your fingers and go turn an authoritarian system into a decentralized one,” said Daniel Barnhart, a UTLA board member.

The union has also accused the district of pressuring principals on the councils to maintain reading coaches over classroom teachers, and it has filed 17 grievances alleging that schools didn’t staff or conduct their councils in accordance with state law.

“Decentralization is illusory,” said Sean Leys, a teacher at Lincoln High School who went on a well-publicized hunger strike to protest the layoffs. “Without a doubt, there are hundreds of school councils that show no oversight because they have no idea what the role of the council is.”

District Response

Monica Garcia, the president of the Los Angeles school board, concedes that the district has more work to do on training. But she argues that the district’s centrally mandated strategies were not always effective for all schools.

Schools likely to benefit most under the shift are big high schools like Jefferson, which serves 2,800 students, many disadvantaged. At Jefferson, Mr. Taft estimates that during the upcoming school year, the council will oversee a total of $8 million to $9 million in regular Title I money, stimulus funding, and other state and federal bilingual education grants, for instance.

“For the first time, our large high schools have a good chunk of money to do things with,” Ms. Garcia said. “I think that is probably the silver lining, that these large underperforming high schools got attention on what they needed, rather than what we prescribed.”

And district officials flatly deny the union’s charge that they have acted as puppetmaster over councils and principals.

“It’s very frustrating because [the union] supported decentralization in 2000,” Mr. Cortines said. “But it came to the bottom line. If [the council] didn’t spend the money the way UTLA wanted, it was wrong.”Michelle King, a local area superintendent in west Los Angeles, said that schools there did make classroom teachers a priority.

But councils nevertheless struggled with the buy-back process because of seniority provisions in the district contract, she said. Local schools budget classroom “positions,” so buy-backs do not guarantee the return of beloved instructors—merely teachers who fit the appropriate categories and are next on the seniority roll.

“I think of all the messages, that was the one we had to repeat over and over,” Ms. King said.

Still, Ms. King expects councils to take on more responsibilities over time, such as promoting school safety and ensuring spending is aligned with academic goals.

“[Decentralization] was a shock to the system, but it’s something the community has been asking for a long time,” she said.

Observers hope for the best, but some harbor doubts. David Tokofsky, a consultant for the principals’ union and a former school board member, worries not just about the logistics of the move, but has a philosophical concern, too.

While it may complete Mr. Cortines’ long-held decentralization plans, it may not satisfy the reform-minded rhetoric coming from President Barack Obama’s administration on the use of stimulus funds, he suggested.

“They say all politics are local politics. Well, in Los Angeles, we say all politics are ‘loco’ politics,” Mr. Tokofsky said. “And right now, the politics of the past are racing forward at the very time that Obama is putting more money and attention toward education.”

Coverage of leadership is supported in part by a grant from The Wallace Foundation, at www.wallacefoundation.org.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

BUDGET VIDEO FROM SPEAKER BASS: California faces the worst financial crisis since the depression, and the options are between bad and worse.

http://democrats.assembly.ca.gov/members/a47/

This video highlights what would happen if we accept the Governor's proposals without any modifications.  As you can see, the picture is not pretty.

As your Assemblymember, I need to know your priorities as I prepare to vote on the difficult choices before us.  Please take this budget survey to assist me with this urgent matter.

http://democrats.assembly.ca.gov/speaker/FightingForOurFamilies/default.aspx?utm_source=email&utm_medium=eAlert&utm_campaign=SpeakerBassFightingForFamilies

Thank you for taking an active part in California's future.

Sincerely,


Speaker Karen Bass

Press Release Update: June 24, 2009

 

Assembly Speaker Bass Updates Budget Progress

(Sacramento) – The State Assembly and State Senate debated and voted today on the spending cuts included in the Legislative Budget Conference Committee’s revisions to the state budget. The Conference Committee’s proposal was defined after more than a month of public debate. However, GOP Lawmakers refused to vote for the spending cuts, leaving the state without the needed budget revisions for another day. The budget revision package will be reconsidered tomorrow.

Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) and Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa), Chair of the Budget Conference Committee, told reporters it is critically important for the Legislature to pass the budget package because the state will be out of cash as of July 1st.

 

Budget Conference Committee Chair Evans Updated Budget Status

Sacramento) – The State Assembly and State Senate debated and voted today on the spending cuts included in the Legislative Budget Conference Committee’s revisions to the state budget. The Conference Committee’s proposal was defined after more than a month of public debate. However, GOP Lawmakers refused to vote for the spending cuts, leaving the state without the needed budget revisions for another day. The budget revision package will be reconsidered. Budget Conference Committee Chair Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) says Republicans should not be claiming they don’t know what’s in the legislation and says it’s critically important for the Legislature to pass the budget package because the state will be out of cash as of July 1st.  Here’s more in this Assembly Access video.

Here are links to audio of Speaker Bass and Assemblymember Evans:

Speaker Bass’ opening statement to reporters this afternoon after the Assembly floor session. (2:30)

Speaker Bass says it’s ironic that GOP lawmakers refused to vote for billions of dollars in cuts because they say they want deeper cuts.

Speaker Bass says Democrats do not want to vote for the deep spending cuts but did so because it’s the right thing to do.

Speaker Bass says policy reforms need to be considered immediately after the Governor and Legislature deal with the immediate cash crisis.

Assemblymember Evans says GOP lawmakers should know what’s in the legislation.

Assemblymember Evans says she remains hopeful the GOP lawmakers will decide to vote for the budget solutions.

Capitol Office:
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA 94249-0047
(916) 319-2047
Fax: (916) 319-2147

District Office:
5750 Wilshire Blvd.
Suite 565
Los Angeles, CA
90036
(323) 937-4747
Fax: (323) 937-3466

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

LAUSD FIGHTS WORK STOPPAGE: Teachers will stay away from class on May 15 to protest the cuts

by Rubén Moreno | La Opinión

May 5, 2009 -- The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) is “reviewing all the options” to avoid a work stoppage during one day of instruction called for by United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA).

The teachers union plans not to teach class on Friday, May 15, in response to the layoffs of teachers approved by the school board.

During the next few days, students will be involved in assessment and performance tests, which is why the union defends “May 15 as the least controversial day” because of the tests being conducted.

Seventy-four percent of teachers voted in favor of carrying out the stoppage, out of a total of almost 27,000 teachers who cast their ballots in a vote organized by UTLA last Thursday.

Almost 75% support

“It hasn’t been an easy decision to make, but we don’t have any alternative since the superintendent has decided to increase class size and bring chaos to the schools when the District has money to avoid the layoffs,” said A.J. Duffy, union president.

LAUSD Superintendent Ramón Cortines said he understood “the frustration that some teachers may feel” because of the financial situation the District is facing, and he said he hopes that they fulfill “their responsibilities every day,” including May 15. Furthermore, he called the union’s action irresponsible because it “violates the law and the contract with the union.”

The last time that teachers did not show up in their classrooms was last June, although the stoppage was only for an hour at the beginning of the school day to protest the state cuts in education.

At that time, LAUSD officials requested the intervention of the Public Employee Relations Board (PERB), which found in favor of the teachers and did not consider the stoppage illegal because it could not find enough reasons that it would cause some time of public harm.

“That option [appealing to PERB] is one that we may take, but we are still not in a position to say what we will do. It’s too premature, and we are considering all options,” said Lydia Ramos, spokesperson for the school district.

So far, LAUSD has rescinded the layoffs of 1,996 teachers that had already been approved, whereas 1,360 certificated employees agreed to take early retirement. District officials extended until Friday the date to request early retirement, which could help to save more jobs if additional people sign up for the retirement program.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

MAYOR: DEEP CUTS WILL ‘KILL EDUCATION IN L.A.’

By George B. Sanchez, Staff Writer | LA Newspaper Group/Daily News

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa discusses the city's budget woes during an interview with the Daily News editorial board. (Evan Yee/Staff Photographer)

April 22, 2009 - With the leadership of his schools in doubt, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on Tuesday sharpened his attack on L.A. Unified plans to layoff nearly 7,000 employees and said the teacher's union needed to make concessions to get the school district through the rough patch.

The Partnership for Los Angeles Schools, the 10 LAUSD schools overseen by Villaraigosa and his staff, stands to lose all of its principals and assistant principals - 49 people - as well as 20 percent of its teachers - approximately 200 educators - under the district's cost-cutting plan.

The district faces a deficit expected to reach $1.3 billion over the next three years.

"You cut 4,500 teachers in this town, you're going to kill the reform effort, you're going to kill my Partnership schools and you're going to kill education in L.A.," Villaraigosa told Daily News editors and reporters at an editorial board meeting.

Offering his own solution, Villaraigosa said if district officials implemented a 3 percent district-wide wage cut and further snipped central office staff, it could cover the rest of its massive budget with federal stimulus funds.

The mayor noted that schools in low-income neighborhoods are getting hit especially hard because many of their teachers are new. State seniority laws force teachers with less than two years experience to be dismissed before tenured teachers. As a result, some schools will lose up to 70 percent of their teaching staff, replaced in some cases by administrators or office staff who haven't taught in years.

The disproportionate number of layoffs at poor schools, Villaraigosa suggested, could be grounds for a civil rights lawsuit.

Villaraigosa said it's time to change the law that preserves seniority during layoffs.

"I'm hearing it from teachers everywhere. They're saying `Why should I get thrown under the bus because I'm a new teacher?"'

Renewing his call for shared sacrifice, Villaraigosa said LAUSD's employee unions, particularly United Teachers, Los Angeles, must agree to short-term concessions to get through the current budget crisis.

Villaraigosa insinuated the UTLA leadership is out of touch with its rank and file membership. Stopping short of mentioning UTLA President A.J. Duffy by name, Villaraigosa said teachers union leaders need to end their chest pounding and demagoguery.

Responding to the mayor's call for shared sacrifice, Duffy said teachers sacrifice every day of every week of every year.

"The mayor would serve the community best by pressuring his allies on the board to finally complete the job of cutting all the bureaucratic fat out of the budget," Duffy said.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

The news that didn’t fit from April 19th

THE TWO MAJOR CALIFORNIA TEACHERS UNIONS AGREE THAT THE STATE OWES EDUCATION BILLION$, CTA Goes to the Ballot Box, CFT to the Courts
Thursday, April 16, 2009 11:43 PM
The latest on California politics and government  Posted by Kevin Yamamura, SACBEE  April 16 - The California Teachers Association has pumped $5 million so far into a campaign to pass Propositions 1A and 1B, with the carrot of $9.3 billion in total additional education revenues starting in 2011-12 under 1B.  But the California Federation of Teachers believes there's a different way to get that


L.A. ACADEMY SPEAKS OUT AGAINST PROPOSED LAUSD TEACHER CUTS
Saturday, April 18, 2009 12:57 PM
by Nadra Kareem | Contributing Writer The Watts Times  April 16, 2009 -- Lamar Queen considered applying to three school districts in Southern California upon graduating from Louisiana’s Grambling State University. In the end, the math teacher settled on the Los Angeles Unified School District.  “They had a nice incentive program for new teachers who were going to teach math, so I went with


YouTube: CTA’s YES ON 1A & 1B COMMERCIAL
Thursday, April 16, 2009 6:16 AM
4LAKIDS unenthusiastically recommends  YES votes on 1A, 1B & 1C. We don’t like any of them, but they are the best we are going to get in this economy with politics-as-unusual in Sacramento.     1D  and 1E hold early childhood education and mental health programs temporary hostage for education, if you can accept that – vote YES.     1E is a no brainer.    Familiarize yourself with the measures


NY Times’ Los Angeles Journal: GIVING LESSONS IN TRAFFIC SAFETY AT MIDDLE SCHOOLS
Thursday, April 16, 2009 5:18 AM
By JENNIFER STEINHAUER | NEW YORK TIMES    Michal Czerwonka for The New York Times - Mitchell Summer, the dean of students at Florence Nightingale Middle School in Los Angeles, helps students cross the street  April 10, 2009 — LOS ANGELES — At 2:58 each weekday afternoon, the adults brace for traffic chaos at Florence Nightingale Middle School.  The bell sounds, and children dash to the left

5000? 5400? 6850? THE NUMBERS OF LAUSD LAYOFFS LIKE THE SIZE OF THE BUDGET DEFICIT AND THE SIZE OF THE FEDERAL STIMULUS REMAINS UNKNOWN. BUT HOWEVER MANY OF THEM THERE ARE THEY ARE LIKE, SO FIRED! OR NOT.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 3:17 PM
Update 4/15 | 3pm:           Before yesterday’s vote to “save” 1996 elementary school jobs Reduction in Force/RIF/layoff  notices  had been sent to 10,571 employees.            The final vote technically authorized 8,541 layoffs,             Superintendent Ramon Cortines and Chief Financial Officer Megan Reilly said the district would route state funding to individual schools, allowing them to


“DO THE RIGHT THING FOR KIDS …AND THE RIGHT THING IS NOT TO PROCEED WITH THIS BUDGET”
Saturday, April 18, 2009 2:48 PM
“You have heard from Jackie Goldberg and John Mockler;  you have heard from teachers and parents and student. Listen to them.” 

smf to the Board of Ed at the April 14th Meeting:  Members of the Board of Education, I speak today as Vice President of Los Angeles Tenth District PTA and I bring the greetings of Thirty-first District. Together we represent the entirely of PTA in LAUSD.   I am here in


LABOR ORGANIZES AGAINST BUDGET MEASURE 1-A + Strange 1A fellows move their beds closer together
Tuesday, April 14, 2009 8:10 AM
By Kevin Yamamura | Sacramento Bee     Monday, Apr. 13, 2009 - A powerful California public employee union formed a campaign committee Monday with two other labor groups to oppose Proposition 1A, a May 19 ballot measure that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders have said will solve future budget problems.  Service Employees International Union's California State Council, which says

 

COALITION OF LAUSD UNIONS & H.O.P.E PARENT COALITION TALKING POINTS

Saturday, April 11, 2009 10:34 PM
Spend the Stimulus monies to ensure a future for the kids  &  Deny the District’s self-defeating and rash cuts.     Guiding Principle From 4/6 Meetings                        Public Interest Message of Hope· Maintain level of consistency of instructional and operational support.· Equity.           ·

THE LAUSD BUDGET: What we know/What we don't know.

by smf for 4LAKids

●THIS MUCH WE KNOW:

· The Federal government though the stimulus package is committed to maintain and create jobs in public education – that is the goal of this initial phase of the stimulus. Reform comes later, with different dollars.

· LAUSD's budget, approved last Tuesday, is reform and 'rightsizing' driven: the Board of Ed voted to reduce and eliminate, not save and create jobs, positions and programs.

· Yes, 1996 elementary teacher positions from a Reduction-in-Force (RIF) pool of over ten thousand were 'saved' – but 8,541 jobs were done away with Tuesday. The possibility of saving 3,167 of these jobs through the federal stimulus was relegated to the school sites' discretion – if they can find the money and can figure out the district, state and federal mandate. 5,374 jobs cannot be saved under the 4/13 budget plan.

· The California Ed Code says that only the Board of Education has hiring and firing authority.

· The first of the Federal Stimulus was released by the feds to the state Friday; California was the first state in the nation to receive the funding.

· The feds say the governor has authority and responsibility to send the money to school districts. The legislature says the California Constitution gives them that sole authority. Where the California Superintendent of Public Instruction – the state's premiere elected official in education fits in is unclear – but he has weighed in (see $3.1-BILLION ECONOMIC STIMULUS WINDFALL OFFERS A CHANCE TO REFORM CALIFORNIA SCHOOLS, TOP EDUCATION OFFICIAL SAYS, following) In LAUSD the Board of Ed and the superintendent are at odds with O'Connell's advice to come up with "creative solutions that benefit all students" while saving jobs of teachers, administrators and employees. They are intent on rightsizing – pushing the decision making authority on saving jobs out to the 900 school sites.

· The March 10th Board of Ed meeting – the first reading of the district budget – was held with no public witnesses, broadcast by a single TV camera controlled by the board from am undisclosed location behind locked doors, inaccessible to the public — in extremely dubious compliance with the state's open meeting law.

· At the next Board of Ed budget hearing on March 31st Dr. Vladovic recused himself – removing himself from the process – citing a conflict of interest. His son was subject to layoff under the proposed RIF proposal.

· Absent consensus, under pressure of the District's congressional delegation and in deference to the public the board voted to postpone to a certain time (the regular April 13th meeting) the motion on the floor (the budget resolution).

· Immediately prior to the April 13th meeting a special meeting was held and Dr. Vladovic's son and 1995 other teachers were removed from the RIF list. Dr. Vladovic did not participate in the special meeting.

· At the April 13 regular meeting – at which the budget resolution was reconsidered as amended – Dr. Vladovic was recorded at the opening roll call as absent. Whether he was ever recorded as present is unclear. From time to time he came and left. At no time did he announce he was no longer recused.

· When the final vote was taken there was a 3 to 3 tie; Dr. Vladovic not being present. In a tie vote the motion would have failed – but the vote was left open pending Dr. Vladovic's return

· When Vladovic returned he explained his absence as illness (…with perhaps more detail then was required!) Asked for his vote he made an inquiry of counsel: [LATimes: "He then asked for a legal opinion on whether the district could spend more restricted money to save jobs. The district's top lawyer warned against it." — this in itself is parliamentarily questionable, no further information should be provided during a vote], He got a reply and recorded an Aye vote. 4 to 3 the motion carried.

● WHAT WE DO NOT KNOW:

· Questions arise as to whether Dr. Vladovic's participation was correct in light of his:

1. previous recusal on a continued motion,

2. absence at the roll call and

3. absence at the vote – which was understood by some witnesses as his continued recusal.

· There is also question as to whether the decision to save the 1996 elementary positions was engineered to secure Vladovic's participation.

· 4LAKids questions what the intended and unintended consequences of saving the 1996 elementary teachers will be. The initial RIF was proposed to facilitate class size increase; now 2000 more teachers are available but the class size increase mandate was not addressed in the budget. What exactly will those teachers are doing?

· How School Site Councils – charged under this budget with determining which RIFed teachers and staff will be rehired — and untrained and unprepared for this fiduciary and ethical responsibility – will function when they are likely to be composed of RIFed employees and their co-workers – and by parents whose children will be served by impacted employees.

· The composition of SSCs is statutory, they are elected bodies and their makeup is formulated to create equitable representation of employees, administration, parents and community, and in secondary: students. Wholesale recusal would disturb the equity

· SSC meetings, normally open, will be closed as they would be discussing personnel matters. This creates both the appearance-of and actual conflicts of interest of biblical proportions with little or no transparency, accountability or oversight. Stay tuned.

Tune in and watch: The April 13th Board meeting will be rebroadcast Sunday, April 19, 10:24 AM on KLCS/Channel 58 - CHANNEL 58.1 Check your cable listings for which channel it is carried.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

LA UNIFIED MOVES TO CUT 5000 TEACHERS AND OTHERS

The board's 4-3 vote closes most of a $596.1-million deficit for next year and will lead to larger classes. But the battle over funding will rage on for weeks.

LAUSD protest

An LAPD officer stands in front of demonstrators at the LAUSD building as school district officials moved forward with plans to lay off more than 5,000 teachers, counselors and other employees. (smf: He is actually an LA School Police Officer0

By Howard Blume | LA Times


April 15, 2009 -- Los Angeles school district officials moved forward Tuesday with plans to lay off more than 5,000 teachers, counselors, custodians, clerks and other employees, but the battle over funding will rage on for weeks -- affecting who goes, who stays and what schools and classrooms will look like for students next year.
The Board of Education's 4-3 vote, after more than four hours of pleading and debate, closed most of a $596.1-million deficit for next year in the nation's second-largest school system.

Related Content

"Anger is appropriate and outrage is appropriate," said school board President Monica Garcia, who voted with the majority. "Nobody wants to do these layoffs."

No one expects every employee with a layoff notice in the Los Angeles Unified School District to be out of work, and most observers believe the current budget plan will evolve, perhaps considerably.

The board action affects about 3,500 newer teachers who have yet to earn tenure protections as well as administrators, nursing staff, library aides, computer programmers and others.

The teachers will lose positions as a result of larger classes, which could rise from 20 to 24 students in the early grades. Sixth-grade classes would rise to 35 students. The average high school class would be larger still.

Much of the contention centers on how much money will be available from the federal stimulus package and how that money could and should be used. Opponents of the cuts have added up federal dollars and come up with figures that surpass the current deficit.

District officials insist that their math is wishful thinking.

But there's also a strategic disagreement. Supt. Ramon C. Cortines has decided to spread the federal money over the next two budget years. Even with the cuts, the district faces an additional deficit in 2010-11. Using most of the federal money now, Cortines said, would create an untenable funding cliff when the dollars ran out.

His top advisors have also yet to factor in some additional funding that they fear could be poached by other government agencies. And some of the money has restrictions that limit the district's flexibility in saving jobs and programs.

    • Initially, the budget proposal deadlocked on the seven-member board at 3 to 3, with Richard Vladovic suddenly becoming the swing vote. He missed the first roll call, explaining when he returned that recent food poisoning had forced him to leave for several minutes.
    • He then asked for a legal opinion on whether the district could spend more restricted money to save jobs. The district's top lawyer warned against it, and Vladovic tipped the scale for the Cortines plan.
    • Vladovic had recused himself from some recent budget votes because his son, a teacher, had received a layoff notice. But that conflict evaporated earlier Tuesday when Cortines recommended rescinding notices of possible layoff that had been sent to nearly 2,000 tenured teachers, including Vladovic's son.

Those still at risk include all teachers without tenure: 1,605 at the elementary level and 1,872 at middle and high schools. The notices also went to 498 other employees with teaching credentials and to 2,875 administrators. Most of those administrators will keep their jobs, but some small campuses will lose a full-time principal.

At one point, a group of Spanish-speaking parents cited security fears and other concerns should their children's campus lack a principal at all times.

Some principals are likely to be replaced by administrators with more seniority.

The "bumping" process, officials acknowledged, could become a nightmare, because more than 1,200 positions will be cut from central and regional offices.

These cuts are not just to save money, but also about decentralizing operations, which is a key Cortines goal and a longtime demand of the teachers union. In the short run, at least, this approach could bump teachers out of their jobs.

Some campuses could be especially hard hit, among them Del Olmo Elementary in Koreatown, where test scores surged in 2008.

At Del Olmo, nearly two-thirds of teachers received notice that they could be laid off. About half of these, however, were spared when permanent teachers got their reprieve.

"I'm glad to hear some teachers' jobs will be saved," Del Olmo second-grade teacher Regina Ramos said, "but it's not enough. . . . What type of reform is it if quality teachers are being let go?"

There was little solace for middle schools and high schools, especially those with less-experienced teachers.

Marla Mattenson, 38, who teaches at Bernstein High in Hollywood, changed careers to become one of the district's new and badly needed math teachers. "But I got a little letter in the mail," she said referring to her layoff notice.

Board member Tamar Galatzan lined up with the budget plan skeptics and financial optimists, as did most of the parents who spoke before the board.

"I don't think the stimulus money should be saved for a rainy day," Galatzan said. "I think we should look outside and see a storm brewing."

Several district officials, including some board members, have alluded to "shared sacrifice," the same words used by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on Monday when he discussed the district's budget crisis. The term has become de facto code for the idea that employee unions need to accept lower wages to save jobs.

The United Teachers Los Angeles leadership has maintained that there is no need to lay off teachers or reduce their pay. Other unions have signaled a willingness to discuss unpaid furlough days.

The board vote could put additional pressure on the unions to discuss furloughs or other wage concessions that the mayor and Cortines have suggested.

The superintendent's push to decentralize includes millions of dollars for schools to "buy back" some lost staff. That process will unfold in the coming weeks, as will the debate over the federal money. Cortines insisted that he would entertain all options.

"We should continue the conversation," he said. "We need to exhaust every avenue."

5000? 5400? 6850? The numbers of LAUSD layoffs like the size of the budget deficit and the size of the federal stimulus remains unknown. But however many of them there are they are like, so fired! Or not.


Update 4/15 | 3pm:
  • Before yesterday’s vote to “save” 1996 elementary school jobs Reduction in Force/RIF/layoff  notices  had been sent to 10,571 employees.

  • The final vote technically authorized 8,541 layoffs,

  • Superintendent Ramon Cortines and Chief Financial Officer Megan Reilly said the district would route state funding to individual schools, allowing them to "buy back" 3,167 positions

  • Resulting in a final estimate of 5,374 layoffs.

Allowing them” being the mother of all assumptions. - smf


LAUSD OKs plan to lay off 6850 employees

Los Angeles Daily News – April 15

By Connie Llanos and George B. Sánchez, Staff Writers A divided Los Angeles Unified Board of Education narrowly approved a plan Tuesday to lay off more than ...

Board OKs 5400 LA school layoffs

Long Beach Press-Telegram – April 15

The Los Angeles Board of Education voted Tuesday to lay off up to 5400 teachers and support personnel for the 2009-10 year, hours after saving nearly 2000 ...

L.A. Unified moves to cut 5000 teachers and others

Los Angeles Times – April 15

No one expects every employee with a layoff notice in the Los Angeles Unified School District to be out of work, and most observers believe the current ...

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

WHO WOULDA THUNK IT?: BOOMERS ARE RETIRING! NYT:Report Envisions Shortage of Teachers as Retirements Escalate + USAToday: A 'tsunami' of Boomer teacher retirements is on the horizon

Report Envisions Shortage of Teachers as Retirements Escalate

image

By SAM DILLON | New York Times

April 7, 2009 -- Over the next four years, more than a third of the nation’s 3.2 million teachers could retire, depriving classrooms of experienced instructors and straining taxpayer-financed retirement systems, according to a new report.

The problem is aggravated by high attrition among rookie teachers, with one of every three new teachers leaving the profession within five years, a loss of talent that costs school districts millions in recruiting and training expenses, says the report, by the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future, a nonprofit research advocacy group.

“The traditional teaching career is collapsing at both ends,” the report says. “Beginners are being driven away” by low pay and frustrating working conditions, and “accomplished veterans who still have much to contribute are being separated from their schools by obsolete retirement systems” that encourage teachers to move from paycheck to pension when they are still in their mid-50s, the report says.

To ease the exodus, the report says, policy makers should restructure schools and modify state retirement policies so that thousands of the best veteran teachers can stay on in the classroom to mentor inexperienced teachers. Reorganizing schools around what the report calls learning teams, a model already in place in some schools in Boston, could ease the strain on pension systems, raise student achievement and help young teachers survive their first, often traumatic years in the classroom, it says.

“In the ’60s we recruited many baby-boom women and men, and the deal we made was, ‘You’ll have a rewarding career and at the end, pension and health benefits,’ ” said Tom Carroll, the commission’s president. “They signed up in large numbers and stayed, and now 53 percent of our teaching work force is getting ready to collect. If all those boomers walk into retirement, our teacher pension systems will be under severe strain, with the same problems as the auto industry.”

This is not the first report to predict widespread teacher shortages unless policy makers took quick action. In 1999, an Education Department study warned that the impending retirement of millions of teachers could lead to chaos, a dire outcome that never materialized.

One economist who spoke out skeptically then was Michael Podgursky, who studies teacher retirement at the University of Missouri. The latest report, too, may overstate the case somewhat, Dr. Podgursky said in an interview. “There’s a bit of hyperbole” in the assertion that the teaching career is “collapsing at both ends,” he said.

The recession may help ease potential teacher shortages because the profession’s relative job security and generous health benefits will probably attract more new college graduates and career-changers than when plenty of good jobs were available.

“Still, the authors make a credible case that the number or teachers who retire will rise in coming years,” Dr. Podgursky said, “and it makes a good deal of sense to develop phased retirement systems that permit retired or semiretired teachers to mentor new teachers.”

__________________________________

A 'tsunami' of Boomer teacher retirements is on the horizon

image By Jeanette Der Bedrosian, USA TODAY

7 April -- More than half the nation's teachers are Baby Boomers ages 50 and older and eligible for retirement over the next decade, a report says today. It warns that a retirement "tsunami" could rob schools of valuable experience.

The report by the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future calls for school administrators to take immediate action to lower attrition rates and establish programs that pass along valuable information from teaching veterans to new teachers.

"We face a tsunami in the shift of the future of the teachers' workforce," says Tom Carroll, president of the commission, who co-wrote the report. "Over the next five or six years, we could lose over a third of our teachers."

Co-author and director of strategic initiatives Elizabeth Foster agrees: "Whether this big retirement tsunami hits in the next two or three years, or whether the economy keeps them around for a little bit longer, it's coming."

Exacerbating the problem are low retention rates for young teachers: A sufficient number of teachers are recruited at colleges and universities, but many leave the field within five years, Carroll says. "We're trying to fill a bucket with a hole in the bottom, and we have been for decades," he says.

Dan Domenech, executive director for the American Association of School Administrators, says that although Boomer retirements mean a loss of experience, the recession is actually a silver lining. Retirement of higher-paid teaching veterans could help save younger teachers' jobs, and stimulus package money could create training programs, he says.

"If there were no other factors involved, it would be — wow, bad news," he says. The situation is still not great, he says, But with the recession and stimulus funding, "it won't have as adverse an impact."

The report combines statistics from the National Center for Education Statistics with an Internet survey of 400 teachers and 95 principals in November.

Over the next year, the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future will host retreats for school administrators looking to combat the problem, Foster says. More information is available at learningteams.org.

"We don't just want to come out and say: 'Here's bad news. Good luck,' " Carroll says. "We're saying, 'This could be bad news, but this could be an opportunity.' "

4/7 - Today’s headlines: PLAYING THE UNION CARDS

LAUSD, unions to discuss options

Los Angeles Daily News - ‎6 hours ago‎

Los Angeles Unified School District staff and union officials have until next Tuesday to find alternatives for the 8500 proposed layoffs. ...

LAUSD, UTLA continue negotiations

abc7.com - ‎11 hours ago‎

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Formal negotiations continued Monday afternoon between United Teachers Los Angeles and the LA Unified School District in an ...

Teachers from 2 L.A. schools offer to take pay cuts to avoid layoffs

Los Angeles Times - ‎12 hours ago‎

... LA Schools Superintendent Ramon C. Cortines and leaders of United Teachers Los Angeles, the teachers union for the Los Angeles Unified School District. ...

LAist

Furloughs Are Better Than Pink Slips Say Some LAUSD Teachers

LAist - ‎20 hours ago‎

(Photo by Norma*Iriz* via Flickr) Under pressure from United Teachers Los Angeles, the union representing educators working in the LAUSD, ...

LA school board chief meets with teachers willing to accept pay cuts

Los Angeles Times - ‎22 hours ago‎

A top Los Angeles school district official is meeting this morning with teachers who are breaking with their union to support pay cuts as a way to avoid ...

Monday, April 06, 2009

MAYOR GAVIN NEWSOM AND SUPERINTENDENT CARLOS GARCIA OFFICIALLY RESCIND TEACHER LAYOFFS

California Political Desk

April 03, 2009 — SAN FRANCISCO, CA — Today Mayor Newsom and Superintendent Carlos Garcia officially rescinded the majority of teacher layoffs set to take place this month by allocating over $23 million from the city´s Rainy Day Fund.

"Our commitment to education, demonstrated by the release of these rainy day funds, ensures that our teachers can spend their spring break relaxing instead of looking for new jobs," said Mayor Newsom. "We know that the school district, city, state and federal governments are all facing shortfalls. But San Franciscans can take pride in the fact that their city prioritizes education and once again, has stepped up to help."

Nearly all permanent teachers who received layoff notices on March 15 will have their notices rescinded and will have their jobs for the 2009-2010 school year. This represents 405 people who will be getting rescission letters over the next few days.

Almost all administrators who received ´may not renew´ or layoff notices will also be getting rescission letters within the week. Final determinations of the exact number of administrators whose notices will be rescinded are still being made, though it is likely to be almost all of the 144 positions who were noticed in March.

The Rainy Day Fund was created in 2003, when voters passed Proposition G. It requires the city to save revenue above 5% growth year over year, during good economic times. The school district is eligible for up to 25 percent of the total if two conditions are met: The school district must be getting less money per pupil from the state when adjusted for inflation, and must be facing significant teacher layoffs. Last year, the City provided the San Francisco Unified School District with $19.2 million in rainy day funding.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

REAL TRANSPARENCY WILL BE TRICKY WITH STIMULUS SPENDING: Following the money will be the hard part

Obama says he wants the public to know exactly where the stimulus aid is going. But watchdogs complain that the White House disclosure guidelines have loopholes.

By Paul West | The Baltimore Sun | From the Los Angeles Times


March 21, 2009 — Reporting from Washington — Barack Obama says unprecedented transparency will be a hallmark of his presidency. But following the money in the stimulus package won't be easy.

Many of the most important spending decisions aren't being made in Washington. They're getting thrashed out at state and local levels, where accountability is a wild card and there's no guarantee that taxpayers will get the dollar-by-dollar information Obama is promising.

In some cases, money that goes to a local government may be impossible to follow under White House guidelines, advocates of open government say.

"It could go to the mayor's brother-in-law. We don't know," said Craig Jennings of OMB Watch, a Washington-based watchdog group.

It is up to the states, for example, to decide how to divvy up the $28 billion for "shovel-ready" highway projects.

In Maryland, for example, none of the funding that will flow to subcontractors on highway projects will be disclosed, said David Buck, a State Highway Administration spokesman. The state also doesn't provide detailed information about the location of most resurfacing projects, which will account for the largest share of highway spending under the stimulus plan.

Under the Obama administration's transparency guidelines, "the money disappears after it changes hands twice," said Greg LeRoy of Good Jobs First, a watchdog group.

As things stand, the federal government will disclose how much money it gives to a state, and the state must report back on how the money is distributed to a private company or to a local government. Beyond that point, there is no requirement for disclosing where the money ends up, LeRoy said.

His group is part of the Coalition for an Accountable Recovery, which has warned there could be "corruption on a massive scale" as stimulus and financial bailout funds are spent.

The "only antidote is millions of eyeballs watching the money," LeRoy said, referring to ordinary citizens tracking the spending on government websites.

Obama emphasized transparency in his 2008 campaign and is continuing that theme.

"Instead of politicians doling out money behind closed doors, the important decisions about where taxpayer dollars are invested will be yours to scrutinize," Obama says on recovery.gov, an administration website.

Some states have created stimulus websites, but at least 18 -- including California -- have not.

Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell said states should go the extra mile in laying out exactly how federal money gets spent, even if it means providing more information than the administration requires.

"I think this is the biggest test of government in my lifetime," the 65-year-old Democrat, who also chairs the National Governors Assn., told a group of reporters.

"I don't want people to say, 'You hid this. You hid that,' " he said. "Regardless of the federal requirement, I'm hopeful that a lot of us will try to make this the most transparent, because it's important."