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LA Dreamers: ‘They may have cut our wings, but we will find a way to keep flying’

Los Angeles “Dreamers,” faith leaders, educators, elected officials, and community leaders reacted with outrage to the Trump administration’s announcement ending DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. There were tears among the dozens gathered at the Edward Roybal Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles right after Tuesday’s announcement by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, which...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | September 5, 2017
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Los Angeles educators and leaders speak with one voice in support of DACA students

Educators and local leaders in Los Angeles came out fast and strong against Tuesday’s announcement ending DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) and in support of the hundreds of thousands of students it has protected. Many worry about the effect on the families and children in schools. Here is a collection of statements with links...
By Mike Szymanski | September 5, 2017
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‘Erasing their lives’: Education advocates slam Trump’s decision to end DACA

The education world was quick and unsparing in its criticism of President Trump’s decision Tuesday to phase out protections for nearly 800,000 undocumented young people through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, more commonly known as DACA. In a press conference Tuesday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the Trump administration was rescinding DACA because the “open-ended...
By Carolyn Phenicie | September 5, 2017
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LAUSD leaders decry Trump Administration decision to end DACA’s protections for immigrant children

Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced Tuesday morning that protections for young immigrants under DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) will end in six months unless Congress acts before then. The Obama-era executive order has protected nearly 800,000 children since 2012 who were brought to the U.S. from deportation and allowed them to work legally in the U.S. LA Unified...
By Sarah Favot | September 5, 2017
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Bills on state-run STEM school and later school start time pass committees, move to full vote

A state-run STEM school is one step closer to being established in downtown Los Angeles, and California middle and high schoolers are closer to getting state approval to sleep in. The two education bills passed out of committees on Friday and will head to the floor of the Legislature. Both bills must be taken up...
By Sarah Favot | September 1, 2017
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‘Do not be afraid to take your children to school,’ says Los Angeles father who was spared deportation

At the end of six months in detention where he was one step away from deportation, the father arrested by ICE agents outside his daughter’s school celebrated his freedom Friday and urged immigrant parents to fight fear and keep taking their children to school. “We are here to give our children an education and we...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | September 1, 2017
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Later school start time could boost California’s economy, study shows

A bill being debated in the state Legislature to prohibit middle and high schools from starting earlier than 8:30 a.m. received a boost Wednesday with the release of an economic study showing that a later school start time could result in a $1.1 billion increase to the state’s economy after two years and $24.8 billion...
By Sarah Favot | August 30, 2017
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LAUSD looks at ways of saving money by adjusting health benefits

With union leaders looking on, LA Unified’s school board spent four hours looking at options of how to cut or adjust health benefits to stave off a looming budget crisis. No decisions were made — the Tuesday “board retreat” was an information session — but the board analyzed details of the annual $1.1 billion in...
By Mike Szymanski | August 30, 2017
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LAUSD employees — and their benefits — at a glance

School board members spent half the day Tuesday digesting the data given to them about employee benefits. Chief Financial Officer Scott Price and Chief Risk Officer Janice Sawyer briefed the board on the health and welfare benefits for LA Unified employees and retirees and also detailed potential cost-saving measures. The ideas will have to be...
By Mike Szymanski | August 30, 2017
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LAUSD high school counselors say they don’t have enough time to help students with college application process

Counselors at LA Unified high schools say they have enough information to give students about applying for college and financial aid, but what they don’t have is enough time to help students through these processes, according to a new study released Wednesday. Los Angeles Education Research Institute released a pair of studies on college readiness...
By Sarah Favot | August 30, 2017