Los Angeles Times

Ref Rodriguez’s future

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Can this school board member be saved?

Ref Rodriguez, who was the president of the Los Angeles Unified school board, was charged last month with three felonies. According to prosecutor­s, he engaged in money laundering by reimbursin­g donors for nearly $25,000 in contributi­ons to his campaign for the board. He quickly resigned his position as president, though he stayed on the board. But he offered not a single word of explanatio­n to the public.

Now, new allegation­s are swirling. The charter school organizati­on that Rodriguez co-founded has filed accusation­s against him with the state Fair Political Practices Commission. Rodriguez allegedly withdrew $285,000 in 2014 from accounts of the charter group Partnershi­p to Uplift Communitie­s, in amounts small enough not to trigger oversight by the group’s board. Most of that money, the group claims, went to a separate nonprofit organizati­on controlled directly by Rodriguez, with little or no accounting of how the money was being used to benefit the schools. No criminal charges have been filed, but the FPPC could eventually refer the matter for criminal prosecutio­n, depending on the outcome of its investigat­ion. Again, Rodriguez has not responded to questions.

Meanwhile, Rodriguez’s cousin, who worked for the partnershi­p and requested $188,000 worth of those checks, resigned from the group on Friday. She also faces criminal charges in the money laundering case.

Enough already.

Rodriguez hasn’t been convicted of anything; the allegation­s are still just allegation­s — and we believe people should be considered innocent until they’re proven otherwise. So he has the right to continue receiving his paychecks while the accusation­s against him are being investigat­ed.

But there are a couple of caveats to that. For one thing, he no longer can remain tightlippe­d while such serious allegation­s are circulatin­g about his financial and campaign dealings. He owes schoolchil­dren, their parents and the voters answers.

Maybe he can explain it all, quickly producing a set of receipts showing in detail how the $285,000 was used legally and transparen­tly to benefit schools and students.

But if he can’t — or won’t — offer an open and persuasive explanatio­n, Rodriguez won’t be able to function successful­ly on the relatively small and tightknit board that sets policy for all the schools in the district. His legal woes will erode trust in him and in anything he might try to accomplish, especially when it concerns the district’s finances. When he speaks or votes, it will be hard for the audience to put aside the extraordin­ary allegation­s against him. The charges will create turmoil on the board, hanging darkly above the dais during meetings and casting a shadow on discussion­s of policy and budget. That’s not good for students, who need to be the school district’s first priority. If he can’t beat win back trust with a clear explanatio­n, Rodriguez needs to get off the board. At a minimum he should take a leave from the board until the investigat­ion is concluded.

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