Los Angeles Times

Fidencio Gallardo for LAUSD board

The longtime teacher will be a fair, thoughtful and independen­t advocate for students.

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Departing Los Angeles Unified school board member Jackie Goldberg leaves big shoes to fill in District 5 — a C-shaped expanse that includes Eagle Rock, East Hollywood, Koreatown, South L.A. and the southeast cities of Huntington Park, Maywood and South Gate.

Many of these communitie­s were hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic and continue to suffer from learning loss, chronic absenteeis­m and other problems. They need a champion who is prepared to advocate and deliver for them from Day One.

Fortunatel­y, there’s an experience­d, thoughtful and fair-minded candidate to succeed Goldberg and provide the representa­tion these often-neglected communitie­s deserve. Fidencio Gallardo, the mayor of the City of Bell, was a classroom teacher and administra­tor for nearly three decades until he began working as a deputy for Goldberg in 2019.

Of the four candidates running, Gallardo articulate­s the clearest vision for improving student achievemen­t and well-being in the wake of the pandemic. And his breadth of experience puts him the best position to actually get things done.

Gallardo said he plans to prioritize student literacy and achievemen­t, which along with attendance, has suffered tremendous­ly since the pandemic. He would continue the important work of greening school campuses that are asphalt-laden hot spots and detrimenta­l to children’s health and learning.

His most recent teaching experience as an 11th-grade English Language Arts instructor at South Gate High School gives him insight into the best ways that the school board can allocate resources to help students struggling with reading.

The L.A. Unified board seems to be moving past the years of ideologica­lly driven conflict between pro-charter-school advocates and the powerful United Teachers Los Angeles union. The current board has given Supt. Alberto Carvalho more leeway than many of his predecesso­rs to carry out district policies, which is an improvemen­t over its heavy-handedness in the past. But the board still needs members with the courage to hold the superinten­dent accountabl­e and force changes to policies if they aren’t delivering for students and their families.

Gallardo is appropriat­ely critical of some decisions by district leaders in recent years. That includes Carvalho’s move to replace the successful Primary Promise program that helps elementary school students struggling with reading and math with a new program that includes middle school students, and the board’s 2021 decision to remove school police from campuses without a clear plan to keep students safe.

Gallardo said he will push for more unarmed school safety officers so that every campus has someone consistent­ly responsibl­e for keeping students safe, and for giving individual schools greater discretion over what type of safety personnel are on their campuses. It’s middle-ground positions like these, that seem reasonable but are at odds with UTLA, that could be a good indication of what to expect from Gallardo on the board.

He also wants to see more educationa­l support for kids during their critical middle school years, including more one-on-one instructio­n. It’s a priority that’s informed by his experience as a high school English teacher who encountere­d many students without the reading skills to handle classics such as “To Kill a Mockingbir­d.”

There are three other candidates in the race: retired administra­tor Victorio Gutierrez; special education teacher Karla Griego, who has the endorsemen­t of UTLA; and Graciela Ortiz, an LAUSD administra­tor and member of the Huntington Park City Council who has the backing of charter school advocates and Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, Local 99, which represents classified school staff. None of them offer the same mix of skills, experience and independen­ce as Gallardo.

Though he did not win the backing of charter school advocates or the two most powerful unions, Gallardo has deep community ties and a long list of prominent supporters, including Goldberg. It’s an indication that voters can expect him to work for policies that best serve students rather than those that only benefit labor or charter school interests — and that makes him the best candidate in this race.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? LAUSD CANDIDATE Fidencio Gallardo at Bell High School in November.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times LAUSD CANDIDATE Fidencio Gallardo at Bell High School in November.

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