Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

What if LAUSD unions stood up for kids instead of themselves?

- By Edward Ring

L.A. Unified’s employee unions are prepping the public for another schools closure, their third in about four years. Union leaders will say it’s for the kids. In this case as in the others, it’s the kids and their families who will be hurt.

In 2019, United Teachers of Los Angeles struck for a full week for higher pay and benefits — it was for the kids, they said. They got modest wage increases for their efforts but left the district in worse financial condition.

And beginning in March 2020, the same union shuttered schools for 18 months in response to the pandemic. That too, was for the kids, union leaders said, despite data showing K-12 kids were less likely than all other age groups to catch Covid, get hospitaliz­ed or die. In fact, the data soon showed that it was, in fact, the closure that hurt LAUSD’S 500,000 students. Confronted with evidence that students were falling behind union leader Cecily Myart-cruz dismissed the learning loss as irrelevant.

“Our kids didn’t lose anything,” she told Los Angeles Magazine in an interview so extraordin­ary it went global. “It’s OK that our babies may not have learned all their times tables. They learned resilience.

They learned survival. They learned critical-thinking skills. They know the difference between a riot and a protest. They know the words insurrecti­on and coup.”

This year, it’s the LAUSD’S service workers, represente­d by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union. They’re threatenin­g to strike, claiming the district has $4.9 billion in reserves. LAUSD Superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho has flatly contradict­ed that figure, stating “We’re not sitting on $5 billion worth of reserves, and to say that is inspiring false hope — period. I stand by it.”

“Reserves” turns out to be a somewhat ambiguous number.

While there may be an impressive sounding amount of unallocate­d cash available today, the district is projected to spend about $1 billion more than it will take in over the next two fiscal years, and already anticipate­d increases to staffing and new programs will reduce the unallocate­d portion of that $4.9 billion.

According to the SEIU, the average annual salary for the 30,000 LAUSD service workers they represent is $25,000. But that includes all service workers, from part-time to full-time. About 75% of the members work fewer than eight hours per day, and with school in session only 180 days, or 36 weeks per year, even many of the workers with “full-time hours” are off for up to 16 weeks per year.

Union representa­tives themselves acknowledg­e LAUSD’S reliance on a part-time workforce. But it raises an uncomforta­ble question that applies to teachers as well: If K-12 schools in California operate for the equivalent of just 36 full weeks per year, is it reasonable for people working in these schools to expect to earn enough to cover a full year of expenses? Similarly, if some of the service jobs require a worker for only a few hours each day, how can the district’s taxpayers afford to pay them for a full day?

These are difficult questions. But LAUSD, and the unions representi­ng LAUSD’S workers, have to start by recognizin­g that if there were an efficient way to convert every parttime worker to full-time work, thousands of parttime workers would have to be let go. And until California’s public schools require not 36 weeks per year of active service, but the 48 weeks which is typical in the private sector, they should not expect to receive annual pay equivalent to what people in similar jobs make in the private sector.

Whether there’s enough cash today to grant the LAUSD’S service workers the 30% wage increase they’re demanding, the long-term financial outlook of the district remains troubled, thanks in no small part to the teachers union’s practice of financing the campaigns of school board candidates who, once in office, return the favor with higher pay and benefits.

In 2021, the average annual pension and benefit package for a full-career LAUSD retiree in the teachers pension fund, called CALSTRS, was over $77,000. Meanwhile, the funded status of CALSTRS on June 30, 2022 was a dismal 67%. Translatio­n: the state managed fund is short 33% of the money it needs to pay retirees.

CALSTRS is staring down an unfunded liability of $104 billion. This translates into a huge financial burden on LAUSD. Their current budget allocates 12 percent for CALSTRS, over $2 billion. As CALSTRS copes with a moribund stock market, real estate values that are topping out, and the attenuatin­g burden of Diversity Equity and Inclusion restrictio­ns on where they can place their investment­s, expect that debt to rise.

Like all California public schools, LAUSD receives funds based on student attendance, and how much that per student rate has gone up is tied to the state’s general fund budget. According to reports from the California Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office (LAO), and after adjusting for inflation and for population growth, the state’s general fund budget is up 84 percent compared to just 10 years ago. Put another way, the state’s per capita general fund spending in the current fiscal year is just under $6,000 per California resident; 10 years ago — in 2022 dollars — it was just over $3,000 per resident.

This increase translates into vastly more funds for LAUSD, because 38 percent of all General Fund expenditur­es go to K-14 public education in California. When general fund spending goes up, school districts get 38% of the increase. In the case of LAUSD, the increase over the past 10 years has been equally dramatic. The district’s general fund expenditur­es in 2012-13 were $5.8 billion. In their 202223 adopted budget, the General Fund projection is $12.6 billion, a doubling in just 10 years. Meanwhile, enrollment at LAUSD is down below 600,000 this year — lower than it’s been in over 30 years.

The unions representi­ng SEIU membership in LAUSD may get the windfall they’re demanding.

But their need to perpetuall­y negotiate wage increases that keep up with California’s exploding cost-of-living is, in fact, one of the engines driving inflation: every time a government worker receives an increase, taxes rise — taxes for everyone, including teachers, service workers, and families of students in the district.

Union leaders need to recognize that the nature of work in California’s public schools necessitat­es a lot of part-time, partial-year employment. Until that structural obstacle is somehow overcome, they’re pushing water uphill.

They might also recognize that California’s state legislatur­e — over which the coalition of government unions exercises near-total control — is also directly responsibl­e for the fact that California is the least affordable state in the nation. That burden is most difficult for working families. Union leaders might support state investment in practical water, power, and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, such as we saw back in the days of Gov. Pat Brown. These investment­s paved the way for an oversupply of homes and abundant, cheap water and power. That is a path to prosperity for everyone in the state, and an inspiring objective that these unions have the power to make a reality. helps explain the billions of dollars that went to public schools during the pandemic, even though most students were kept at home to receive subpar educations and large doses of anxiety.

From sugar and steel consumers to students who already paid off their loans or used their savings to pay for their education, political capitalism punishes those who aren’t elite or can’t organize to extract favors from politician­s. Sadly, it gives a bad name to both politics and capitalism. of Harvard, even argues we should reject “the libertaria­n assumption­s central to free-speech law and free-speech ideology — that government is forbidden to judge the quality and moral worth of public speech.”

Obviously, the First Amendment only applies to government efforts to restrict speech. Individual­s and private companies (including social-media platforms) have the right to set their own terms and conditions. You can say what you choose in your own publicatio­n, but this newspaper has no duty to publish it. You might not like the result, but it beats a world where the government judges the “quality and moral worth” of what we say.

Legalities aside, our nation would benefit from a renewed cultural commitment toward embracing a freewheeli­ng public dialogue. I don’t expect Americans to fight to the death to defend their foes’ right to speak, but they should at least stop trying to censor, shame, shun and destroy each other.

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