Los Angeles Times

SCHOOL BOARD BACKS LABOR PACT

- By Teresa Watanabe teresa.watanabe@latimes.com

The Los Angeles Unified Board of Education voted unanimousl­y Tuesday to back a tentative labor agreement that would give teachers a 10% raise over two years — their first pay increase in eight years.

The agreement would fund smaller classes and more counselors and soothe several months of labor tensions — including talk of a strike in the nation’s secondlarg­est school system.

“This is a family in LAUSD. Sometimes, as a family does, they fight,” said board President Richard Vladovic as he stood with board colleagues and union leaders to announce the vote. “But we have come together as one.”

Alex Caputo-Pearl, president of United Teachers Los Angeles, hailed the agreement as a victory for students, educators and the community. “This is a fair agreement that brings us closer to the schools that L.A. students deserve.”

The tentative three-year deal would cost $875.3 million, about $285.6 million more than the district’s original offer, according to a memo from Supt. Ramon C. Cortines to board members. Included in the increased amount is an additional $31.6 million for other employee groups, such as administra­tors, whose contracts entitle them to more money if other bargaining units negotiate better deals than their own.

The memo estimated that the pact, along with a multibilli­on-dollar plan for districtwi­de health benefits the board approved last week, would create a deficit of $559 million by 2016-17.

Board members said they were relying, in part, on more state funding to bridge that gap. The state’s recovering economy and surging tax revenues are likely to bring “several billions more” than projected to schools, a state legislativ­e analyst told a district budget committee this month. L.A. Unified generally receives about 11% of all state school dollars, Vladovic said.

“We absolutely can pay for this,” said board member Steve Zimmer, adding that district savings and nearcertai­n increased state revenue would cover at least the first two years of raises.

But board member Monica Ratliff said program cuts and layoffs would need to be considered if state funding falls short.

The agreement comes after months of escalating union actions led by Caputo Pearl. The union staged rallies, faculty meeting boycotts and even set aside millions for a strike fund — to get a better deal. The union had initially asked for a 17.6% raise over an unspecifie­d time period.

The pact now goes to the union’s 35,000 members; if they ratify it, the board will move to approve it.

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