Los Angeles Times

Lessons from a teachers strike

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Re “A teachers strike will harm L.A. families,” Opinion, Sept. 7

In the spring of 1970, members of the newly formed United Teachers Los Angeles embarked on a five-week strike. I was in 9th grade, and while many students went to the beach, a large number of us marched on the picket lines with our teachers.

Nearly half a century later, I’m a proud member of another union and an activist of almost three decades. Even amid a controvers­ial contract ratificati­on that might lead to a strike, I recognize that my union has given me decent working conditions, a livable wage and a pension that assures that I won’t lose my home as I approach retirement.

If there’s a teachers strike soon in the Los Angeles

Unified School District, families will weather it somehow, and the union of caring teachers will find a way to help the students about whom they care so deeply. We should return the favor and give equal regard to the teachers. Suzan Lowitz Los Angeles

In 1993, I received money from then-Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina’s office to pay for a bus to take my seniors to UCLA to see Carlos Avila’s “La Carpa.” This was before YouTube and smartphone­s proliferat­ed and made it easier to see independen­t films produced by Latino and Latina artists.

I have happy memories of Molina’s government service. I also agree with her candid and forceful assessment of the impasse reached by LAUSD and UTLA.

But she leaves out one important point: Supt. Austin Beutner’s refusal even to sit down for negotiatio­ns until Sept. 27. If he cares as much about “the kids” as he claims to publicly, then he needs to put his considerab­le money where his mouth is and start talking seriously and stop trying to pretend that UTLA is the one refusing to negotiate in good faith. Leigh Clark Granada Hills

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