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LA Unified, trades union reach agreement on three-year deal
The Los Angeles Unified School District has reached agreement with the union on a new labor agreement. No, not that union The district and Unit E, Los Angeles/Orange County Building and Trades Council, which represents 1,300 electricians, plumbers, carpenters, roofers and other skilled workers, have agreed to terms on a three-year deal that includes a...
By LA School Report | February 26, 2015
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JUST IN: Teachers union declares labor talks with LAUSD at impasse
UTLA today declared an impasse in negotiations over a new contract for teachers with LA Unified. The next step is to request the Public Employment Relations Board to assign a mediator to try to bring the sides together. Failure to do so would bring the union that much closer to a strike vote. More details...
By LA School Report | February 18, 2015
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Teachers union flatly rejects latest LA Unified labor contract offer
The teachers union today made it official, flatly rejecting LA Unified’s most recent contract offer, which included a five percent salary rise, a nine percent increase in minimum salary for first-year teachers and additional money to lower class size. With the union sticking by its demand of an 8.5 percent salary increase, the sides remain...
By LA School Report | February 12, 2015
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LAT endorses only 2 incumbents for LA Unified school board
By the Los Angeles Times Editorial Board The LA Times weighed in today with its endorsements for the LA Unified school board, backing two of three incumbents in the March 3 elections but both with language that suggests moderate misgivings. The editorial board recommends Tamar Galatzan for board District 3 although the support “comes with...
By LA School Report | February 8, 2015
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LA Unified increases salary offer to teachers, but does it really?
LA Unified today revised its salary offer to the teachers union today, increasing the level of raises to 5 percent, one percent above its previous offer. But the additional money for professional development that was included in the earlier offer, which the district had valued at another 2 percent, was not part of the new...
By Michael Janofsky | February 5, 2015
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Alliance charters names Katzir to become new chief executive
Alliance College-Ready Public Schools, a charter group in LA Unified, said today Dan Katzir will join the organization in March as CEO and President. He replaces Alliance’s founding CEO, Judy Burton, a former LA Unified associate superintendent of innovation and instruction, who returned to the district last month to serve as chair of what is...
By LA School Report | January 28, 2015
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LA teachers union seeking to negotiate management decisions
As part of its contract negotiations, the teachers union, UTLA, is asking LA Unified for a new approach to school oversight, a demand that seeks to move decisions on school management and operations into the collective bargaining process. In effect, the proposal would insinuate UTLA into areas now the sole province of the board and...
By Michael Janofsky | January 21, 2015
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LA Unified making plans to upgrade buildings most in need
* UPDATED LA Unified is getting close to fixing its schools most in need of repair. Superintendent Ramon Cortines has developed a priority list for rehabilitating 11 campuses, once the Bond Oversight Committee, then the school board approve his plans. In a memo to school board members last week, Cortines said he would present...
By Vanessa Romo | January 21, 2015
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New chief of troubled Magnolia: ‘I’ve done this work before’
Long time education reform advocate, Caprice Young, is taking over the troubled Magnolia Public Schools charter network, but it won’t be official until a set of test results come in. “I’m waiting to get my tuberculouses results,” she said, laughing on a phone call from her office. “Then I can actually set foot on a...
By Vanessa Romo | January 9, 2015
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Community groups that liked Deasy are OK with Cortines so far
It’s only been about a month since former LA Unified Superintendent John Deasy resigned, but leaders of two organizations that strongly supported his focus on low-income students are saying they like what they see from interim Superintendent Ramon Cortines so far. Los Angeles Urban League President and CEO Nolan V. Rollins, who strongly supported Deasy due to...
By Craig Clough | November 17, 2014