Los Angeles Times

The L.A. school board race

- Fter a rocky

Astart to 2019, when schools closed briefly for a contentiou­s teachers’ strike, things have been fairly calm for the Los Angeles Unified school board. Supt. Austin Beutner, still relatively new in his job, has held on to enough support on the board that his position appears secure for the moment.

The board itself remains divided. Three members, all of them incumbents up for reelection, tend to support teachers union priorities, and three others sympathize with the charter school and school accountabi­lity movements. A seventh member, board Chairman Richard Vladovic, has often been the deciding vote. The balance hasn’t worked out badly; the difficulty of getting motions passed makes it hard for any really ditzy ideas — remember the district’s iPad scandal? — to be adopted.

In the March 3 election, four school board seats are in contention.

The Times is always looking for candidates who will steer the board away from contention and divisivene­ss while offering fresh ideas about how to improve education and address the district’s looming financial issues. They should be independen­t thinkers who vote on the merits of each issue rather than hewing rigidly to a prounion or pro-charter ideology. Unfortunat­ely, such candidates are rare these days.

So this year, the incumbents, flawed though some of them may be, are the best candidates and should be returned to their seats. And in the race to replace Vladovic, who is termed out, a creative, articulate newcomer named Silke Bradford is by far the strongest contender.

District 1: George McKenna

McKenna, an incumbent, is running unopposed in District 1, which encompasse­s South Los Angeles and sections of West Los Angeles.

McKenna draws on his history as a reform-oriented principal to inform his decisions, rather than hewing to any strict ideology. He has good ideas for improving education, especially through better teachertra­ining programs.

Where he has fallen short, though, is in translatin­g ideas into action. He has not introduced resolution­s to revamp or even study the district’s training programs. His tenure on the board began five years ago; he hasn’t lacked opportunit­y. Since he has no opponent, his reelection is assured, but he should be doing more than just expressing opinions and casting votes, but also leaving a legacy of action.

District 3: Scott Schmerelso­n

Schmerelso­n, an incumbent who is strongly allied with the teachers union, United Teachers Los Angeles, has been the most vocally hostile to Beutner and to the growth of charter schools. Yet he is not so rigid in practice, and, to his credit, has actually voted to approve many charters.

Schmerelso­n shows a dismaying tendency to think narrowly about his own district, which covers the West San Fernando Valley, rather than the students of L.A. Unified as a whole. Asked why there were so few magnet schools in South Los Angeles, he replied that it was up to individual board members to ask for these programs in their district.

Not quite. While board members have a particular obligation to their own districts, it is their responsibi­lity to consider the fair allocation of resources to all students.

But Schmerelso­n is a stronger candidate than either of his challenger­s.

Elizabeth Bartels-Badger, who runs a nonprofit, was unable to articulate a clear vision. Marilyn Koziatek, a community outreach manager for Granada Hills Charter School, is well informed, but her main goal is to extend practices that have worked at Granada Hills to schools districtwi­de. It’s a common but mistaken notion that what works at one school, and a charter school at that, will work at most schools.

District 5: Jackie Goldberg

Goldberg — a former teacher who’d previously served on the board, the L.A. City Council and the state Assembly — did not win our endorsemen­t in her 2019 bid for this seat, which encompasse­s Los Feliz and Silver Lake to the north, and Cudahy and Huntington Park to the south. But with the strong financial and political support of UTLA, she won hands-down. And you know what? She’s doing a very good job.

Goldberg wasted no time in figuring out areas where she might make a positive difference in the lives of students. She has successful­ly pushed for ways to make district finances more transparen­t, and she has forged a relationsh­ip with Beutner, not a natural ally, to work together on innovative projects. Her intelligen­ce and energy are obvious to anyone who sits in a room with her.

Her opponent, education consultant Christina Martinez Duran, can’t match Goldberg at articulati­ng a vision for schools or in expertise and leadership.

District 7: Silke Bradford

Five candidates are running to represent Vladovic’s district, which runs from South Los Angeles to San Pedro. The clear standout is Bradford, who has experience as a teacher, assistant principal and principal in South L.A. and Compton. She’s worked in both charter and district-run schools.

Far from being entrenched in a pro-charter or pro-union mind-set, Bradford brims with smart ideas for all students. She was a major force in the passage of a California law that requires charter schools to provide free lunches to their low-income students.

Bradford thinks in fresh ways. Considerin­g the teacher contract that calls for a fulltime nurse at every middle and high school, for example, she wondered why the district would put the same amount of staffing in schools that might have very different needs. Good question!

One of her most formidable opponents is Mike Lansing, who is generally viewed as the most pro-charter among the candidates. Lansing, executive director of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Los Angeles Harbor, sat on the school board from 1999 to 2007 and was both thoughtful and rational. But he is short on fresh ideas for the district and lacks Bradford’s energy, recent educationa­l experience and creative thinking.

Bradford is not expected to win the endorsemen­t of either charter supporters or UTLA, which will make it difficult for her to win office — but is also a very good reason to vote for her. A fresh, independen­t voice is exactly what the board needs.

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