Los Angeles Times

Teachers take vote personally

-

Re “L.A. school board race the costliest of its kind,” May 21

A few days after two charter school proponents were elected to the Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education, something hit me: Do voters not understand that United Teachers Los Angeles, whose preferred candidates were defeated, is actually made up of teachers and other education profession­als?

As a teacher of more than 20 years, I took this vote personally. Was it just about the money? Why don’t the voters trust me and the thousands of teachers who work every single day to educate children?

We work in all kinds of environmen­ts with all kinds of kids. We dialogue with our colleagues and continuall­y take profession­al developmen­t courses.

So why did voters select the candidates who educators don’t believe will support our kids and teachers? Did the money cloud their vision? Nancy Horton Los Angeles

The Times is correct that “it’s an oversimpli­fication to say that the outcome was all about money.”

The fact remains that popular national and state leaders representi­ng liberal Democrats almost universall­y supported Nick Melvoin and charter schools over teacher unions. President Obama’s former secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, did so, as did retired Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.).

Unless one argues that liberal Democrats have been somehow co-opted by Big Money, it would appear that moneyed interests and the popular will of liberal Democrats aligned on this issue. Gene Rothman Culver City

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States