Los Angeles Times

L.A. school board race the costliest of its kind

Unions and the supporters of charters spent a total of nearly $15 million, the statistics show.

- By Howard Blume and Ben Poston

Charter school supporters and unions spent nearly $15 million to battle each other in last week’s Los Angeles Board of Education races, which crossed the finish line as the most expensive school board election in U.S. history.

It’s an oversimpli­fication to say the outcome was all about money, but charters spent more ($9.7 million compared with $5.2 million), and their candidates finished first in both races on Tuesday’s ballot.

With the results, charter forces for the first time won a majority on the Board of Education, a shift that could bring big changes to the district. This came from an election like no other, fueled by big-money donations from across the country, giving what are typically local campaigns a national significan­ce.

In District 4, challenger Nick Melvoin finished well in front of incumbent and board President Steve Zimmer. In District 6, Kelly Gonez was in first, ahead of Imelda Padilla. That race is close and some votes remain to be counted, but Gonez is widely expected to hold on. If she does, charter-friendly board members would make up a majority on the sevenmembe­r school board for the first time. How much did this election cost per vote?

Based on spending since the March primary, procharter outside groups and individual­s spent $144 for every vote cast for one of the charter-endorsed candidates. Unions spent $81 for every vote received by teachers union-backed candidates. Which individual­s or groups spent the most?

More informatio­n will be revealed with ongoing disclosure filings, but Reed Hastings, the co-founder of Netflix and a Democrat, appears to lead the pack with nearly $7 million donated since last September to California Charter Schools Assn. Advocates. Hastings, like others, does not appear in city filings as a contributo­r because he gave to the charter associatio­n. That associatio­n then spent money on the campaign or transferre­d funds to other procharter groups.

One of these affiliated groups is Parent Teacher Alliance. This is not the PTA, but an affiliate “sponsored” by CCSA Advocates with a name that, on campaign mailers, resembles the better-known and nonpartisa­n Parent Teacher Assn. That PTA has complained about this similarity.

In city filings, Parent Teacher Alliance ($5.14 million) tops the list of outside spenders. Its money comes largely, perhaps entirely, from CCSA Advocates, which reported transferri­ng $4.53 million to Parent Teacher Alliance in the last four months of 2016.

A small group of wealthy individual­s and their foundation­s are the ultimate sources of funding for the pro-charter groups. Why did students spend

more than $1 million to defeat Zimmer?

They did not. The group LA Students 4 Change is a pro-charter political action committee managed by political consultant John Shallman and working in conjunctio­n with CCSA Advocates. In an interview with Times columnist Steve Lopez, Shallman explained that his team recruited a group of high school students, who appeared in f liers and became involved in the campaign. The students were to be compensate­d as much as $500 for their help.

The primary contributo­r, though, was former L.A. Mayor Richard Riordan, a moderate Republican, who gave $1 million to this PAC. He gave another $1 million to CCSA Advocates. And he spent an additional $41,398 directly. Where does the union side get its money?

In city filings, United Teachers Los Angeles is the big spender on the union side, at about $4.13 million. Much of this money came from other teachers unions: American Federation of Teachers, $1.2 million; National Education Assn., $700,000; and California Teachers Assn., $250,000.

The union collects an average of $9.50 a month from the 22% of its 32,000 members who have agreed to contribute to political campaigns, totaling about $67,000 a month from January onward. Union members also voted to borrow $500,000 from their strike fund for the election effort.

The teachers union also contribute­d an undisclose­d amount as part of a “We Are Public Schools” media campaign, which includes billboards with positive messages about public schools. How easy is it to figure out the source of the money in the school board races?

Not very. California Charter Schools Assn. Advocates, for example, files with state regulators, not the city, and the state requires only a semiannual report. It won’t be possible to look up who gave in the five months leading up to the May 16 election until after June. Key contributo­rs, however, gave large amounts in the last part of 2016, which was disclosed in the most recent semiannual report. Why do the candidates say they ran positive campaigns when mailers seem to indicate otherwise?

The campaign tactic is to allow the outside spenders to do the dirty work.

 ?? Robyn Beck AFP/Getty Images ?? REED HASTINGS donated nearly $7 million to California Charter Schools Assn. Advocates.
Robyn Beck AFP/Getty Images REED HASTINGS donated nearly $7 million to California Charter Schools Assn. Advocates.

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