The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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LAUSD serves up a taste of vegan menu options after a healthy debate

Always with an appetite for dishing up something new for school meals, LA Unified’s school board unanimously approved a pilot program to test vegan options on their school menus. At least one school in each of the seven regional districts will get their first taste of a non-animal-based school lunch, and the program is being prepared...
By Mike Szymanski | May 11, 2017
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Commentary: Why we must vote in Tuesday’s LAUSD school board election

By Evelyn Aleman Macias As a Los Angeles Unified School District parent, school volunteer, and a member of the district’s Parent Advisory Council for the Local Control Funding Formula, I’m often dismayed by the ongoing rift between charter and non-charter school advocates. The issue seems to become even more of a focal point during elections,...
By Guest contributor | May 11, 2017
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Here’s what’s really fueling the nation’s most expensive school board race ever

Los Angeles is days away from the finish line in the most expensive school board race in U.S. history. So it’s all about money. But what money, exactly? The $11.4 million in campaign spending? The $1.6 billion projected deficit for LA Unified? The nearly $1 billion in state funding that has left the district, as...
By Sarah Favot and Mike Szymanski | May 10, 2017
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Unified enrollment plan on hold as tech decision is delayed

A sweeping technology plan for LA Unified that included an expanded unified enrollment system was postponed Tuesday night as school board members await more information and staff adds up the total costs. The school board was being asked to set aside money for a unified enrollment system even as one has launched on the district’s website this week...
By Mike Szymanski | May 10, 2017
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EXCLUSIVE: Greg Martayan endorses Steve Zimmer in LAUSD school board race

Greg Martayan, the fourth-place finisher in the primary election who received a crucial number of votes that could sway the outcome in the runoff, has endorsed Steve Zimmer, he told LA School Report on Wednesday. Martayan joins a number of other high-profile endorsements in the most expensive school board race in U.S. history. U.S. Senator...
By Sarah Favot | May 10, 2017
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LAUSD board takes another strong stand against feds to soothe immigrant fears

LA Unified reinforced its position Tuesday as the strongest school district to stand against the Trump administration’s anti-immigrant policies by passing a resolution that specifically forbids employees from cooperating with federal authorities over immigration inquiries. The resolution was another addition to a series of sweeping propositions passed by the second-largest school district in the nation since...
By Mike Szymanski | May 9, 2017
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Zimmer and Melvoin in their last debate: good guys with sharp tongues

They both agree the other’s a good guy. What they don’t agree on is whether LA Unified is a success. On Monday night, LA Unified school board President Steve Zimmer faced Nick Melvoin in their last debate before the May 16 runoff. The audience of about 75 at Palisades Charter High School was the most...
By Laura Greanias | May 9, 2017
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John Legend, Bernie Sanders, Barbara Boxer rush to make endorsements in the most expensive school board race in U.S. history

It’s not every day that national political figures like Bernie Sanders and Arne Duncan rush to endorse candidates in local school board races. But then again, very little about the intensifying Los Angeles school board showdown is typical. As we’ve reported extensively in our 2017 election series, this year’s board race — which concludes in...
By LA School Report | May 9, 2017
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300 students turn out to hear LAUSD school board candidates address college readiness

It’s difficult to measure whether voters are interested in the Los Angeles school board elections, which could shift the ideological balance of the board. But for those most affected by how well LA Unified delivers education, it was standing room only at a Saturday forum where students heard how the four candidates plan to make...
By Sarah Favot | May 8, 2017
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Reaching 90% grad rate unlikely without an acute focus on low-income, minority kids, report finds

As the national high school graduation rate continues to rise — it hit a record 83.2 percent last year — the leaders of a campaign to raise that number to 90 percent by 2020 said they fear the country will not meet that goal. Hitting that ambitious target would require a far more intense focus...
By Mark Keierleber | May 8, 2017