Your donation will help us produce journalism like this. Please give today.
Not all of the seven candidates vying for the vacant seat on the Los Angeles Unified school board are turning up the heat as the special election on June 3 heads to the finish line.
To reach voters in South LA’s District 1, which as been without a board member since Marguerite LaMotte died in December, four of the candidates report they are campaigning by sending out direct mail pieces, knocking on doors, sending out emails or making phone calls. The other three are doing none of the above.
- Rachel Johnson a teacher and city council member from Gardena with teacher union support, reports distributing one direct mail piece.
- Sherlett Hendy-Newbill, also endorsed by the teachers union has printed and distributed a flyer and sent an email to voters.
- George McKenna, a retired administrator supported by the principals union reports two walk pieces, a mailer and an email blast.
- Alex Johnson, an education aide to County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas reports 19 communications including mailers, emails and phone calls.
The remaining candidates, Genethia Hudley-Hayes a former school board member, Omarosa Manigault, best known as a contestant on “The Apprentice,” and Hattie McFrazier, a retired teacher who is also endorsed by the teacher’s union, have reported no communication activity at all. Despite an absence of a campaign, they showed no sign of dropping out of the race.
Read Next
-
COMMENTARY
5 questions schools and universities should ask before they purchase AI tech products
-
LAUSD schools roll out science of reading and training, state lawmakers reject mandate
-
Post childbirth without paid leave, teachers leave their own children to teach others’
-
Study: Lengthy school closures were especially hard on high-achieving students
-
189 innovative school leaders: Teacher staffing, AI, mental health top ed issues
-
Financial aid reform was his legacy. Now, Lamar Alexander calls it ‘a big mess’
-
California launches new mental health-based apps for families and youth
-
COMMENTARY
This Earth Day, make sure every child learns key lessons about the environment