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Los Angeles Charities and Minority Groups Tell United Teachers Los Angeles and LAUSD: 'Don't Hold Us Back'

Categories: Education

By Hillel Aron

dont hold us back.jpg
The kids aren't alright.
Today, full page ads appear in the L.A. Times, Daily News and La Opinion taken out by Don't Hold Us Back -- respected organizations calling out United Teachers Los Angeles and LAUSD for letting kids fail. The new supergroup includes The United Way, The Urban League, Community Coalition, Alliance for a Better Community, Families in Schools, Asian Pacific American Legal Center and Communities for Teaching Excellence.

The ad's bland wording at first seems a bit "so what?" but it's actually written in code to UTLA leaders, who have helped the local teachers union gain a reputation as one of the most anti-reform big-city education unions in the U.S. Here's a translation:

In one line, the ad says teachers should "be rewarded for academic excellence."

That sounds normal, right?

But in fact, that idea has for years been vehemently opposed by UTLA. UTLA has fiercely fought efforts to reward the most effective teachers, or the teachers who take on the toughest assignments, by giving them financial sweeteners -- merit pay.

Another line in the ad seems equally inarguable -- that kids should have well-trained teachers "regardless of where their school is located."

Who would oppose that?

Thumbnail image for obama education.jpg
Even Obama is sick of teachers' union practices that hold back poor kids.
UTLA, for one. Thanks largely to the union, the most experienced teachers in L.A. are not assigned to difficult, poor schools -- Watts, or the Eastside, for example.

Instead, LAUSD sends inexperienced newbie teachers to the poorest, most difficult neighborhoods.

Education reformers find the practice appalling.

The ad urges newspaper readers -- presumably a lot of people with kids in school -- to call or email Superintendent John Deasy, individual members of the elected Los Angeles Unified School District Board, and the UTLA led by Warren Fletcher.

Veronica Melvin, of Communities for Teaching Excellence, headed by ex-LAUSD board member Yolie Flores, says the ad is intended to clue in the public to the fact that there's "a movement afoot to really push the district and union toward making progress -- to realize quality education for L.A.'s youth."

What's fascinating about the crowd behind this ad is that it is heavy with key minority groups and most of the groups have serious, real track records in helping under-served people. And: these groups are dominated by Democrats.

Ten years ago, most of these people would have been extremely reluctant to call out UTLA.

That would have been seen as anti-union.

But with Los Angeles kids circling the drain (and remember the frightening fact that LAUSD educates one in every eight or nine kids in all of California) and with the union fighting most attempts at change, those days seem over.

This ad is more proof of that.

"Everybody, including the African American community, none of us should sit on the sidelines," says Marqueece Harris-Dawson, president of Community Coalition. "We live with the consequences. We've got to weigh in and weigh in early."

"Without public pressure, both sides will stalemate," says Melvin.

Don't Hold Us Back is demanding a new contract for teachers that firms up what school reformers (including LAUSD Superintendent Deasy) have been suggesting for years:

-- a way of evaluating teachers based on their own performance in the class

-- an end to the "last hired, first fired" practice that looks solely at teacher seniority and not at teacher competence

-- reinstituting full Public School Choice, which allows outside groups to take over flailing public schools. The LAUSD Board of Education weakened Public School Choice in late August.

The school board meets Tuesday at 1 p.m. It's guaranteed that every one of the LAUSD School Board members will have read this ad. (And figured out the coded messages almost instantly.)

Here are a few numbers listed in the ad, if you want to call and ask why the adults are digging in their heels while students fail:

UTLA President Warren Fletcher, 213-368-6267, wfletcher@utla.net
LAUSD Board President Monica Garcia, 213-241-6180, monica.garcia@lausd.net
And some of the UTLA water-carriers on the LAUSD school board:
Steve Zimmer, 213-241-6387, steve.zimmer@lausd.net
Bennett Kayser, 213-241-5555, bennett.kayser@lausd.net
Marguerite LaMotte, 213-241-6382, marguerite.lamotte@lausd.net


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24 comments
Roque Burio Jr
Roque Burio Jr

OK. Here are more lemons:

June 6: photos and media reports Page 4-7 Lemon principals sour ...4-7 “One Hour's Pay for the Kids of L.A.”. UTLA members and parents across the District protested outside of schools on June 6. 9 Lemon principals sour schools ...http://www.utla.net/utla/unitedteache...0705-06 UTLA July 22 issue.indd“Just as I dealt with lemon principals on the Westside as UTLA Area chair ...http://www.utla.net/utla/unitedteache...LAUSD principals earn overall average grade from staff18 Aug 2006 ... lemon? The answer might be found in the results from your ...http://www.utla.net/utla/unitedteache...My Principal Wants a Meeting - UTLA AOECResources available for advice include UTLA staff, committee officers, and your local Chapter Chair. Principals and other administrators will tell a teacher they ...http://www.aeutla.net/?zone=/unionact...LA County Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO :: UTLA Teachers and ...30 Jul 2008 ... UTLA Teachers and Parents Fight Back Against Twice Transferred Principal. Group stages sleepover protest in ongoing effort to remove lemon ...http://launionaflcio.org/fullstory/20...

Roque Burio Jr
Roque Burio Jr

From Roque Burio Jr the lemon who can dance:

The UTLA has self destructed itself in the eyes of those teachers who knew very well that this union never supported or helped us teachers who were subjected to the LAUSD process of dismissal  by falsely accusing and falsely charghing us. Why the UTLA never supported us unfortunate ttteachers may be due to its hidden agenda to undermine the concept of union being the only alternative to socialism in a capitalist society. But the real issue that I will ask from the leaders of this confused union is: How can you socialize our educational system when it is still in the hands the state? Should you not let this educational system be privatized first in the hands of big capitalists? I think you should all go back to your Marxist 101.By self-destructing the UTLA union you have only invigorated fascism in our capitalist society-- and this is exactly what happened to Ms. McAllister the subtitute teachers who was influnced by the idea scapegoating or blaming the Jews.Please correct me if I were wrong. I have not decided yet to which group I should belong.

rdsathene
rdsathene

Every single one of these so-called "civil rights" groups are 501C3s funded by Bill Gates and Eli Broad to continue their neoliberal school privatization program. We discuss this fund-to-advocate paradigm in: "NCTQ's LAUSD report's highly questionable veracity shows Bill Gates' pervasiveness and perniciousness"

http://www.schoolsmatter.info/...

For these non-profits to even mention "interests of adults" when many of their executives are collecting six figure salaries to advocate corporate school reforms on behalf of Gates and Broad is the height of hypocrisy.

Moreover, none of the right wing reactionary ideas -- VAM, "merit pay," removal of tenure,  -- proffered by the misleadingly named "don't hold us back" coalition have ever been shown to improve student achievement. None. In fact I defy Yolie Flores and the other reactionary leaders of this anti-community and anti-labor coalition to produce one peer reviewed study from a legitimate academic source showing their AEI/Cato derived ideas work. Just one. And no, policy papers or preliminary reports from right wing thinks like the NCTQ, or the vile Gates Foundation itself are not considered peer reviewed studies.

rdsathene
rdsathene

Every single one of these so-called "civil rights" groups are 501C3s funded by Bill Gates and Eli Broad to continue their neoliberal school privatization program. We discuss this fund-to-advocate paradigm in: "NCTQ's LAUSD report's highly questionable veracity shows Bill Gates' pervasiveness and perniciousness"

http://www.schoolsmatter.info/...

For these non-profits to even mention "interests of adults" when many of their executives are collecting six figure salaries to advocate corporate school reforms on behalf of Gates and Broad is the height of hypocrisy.

Moreover, none of the right wing reactionary ideas -- VAM, "merit pay," removal of tenure,  -- proffered by the misleadingly named "don't hold us back" coalition have ever been shown to improve student achievement. None. In fact I defy Yolie Flores and the other reactionary leaders of this anti-community and anti-labor coalition to produce one peer reviewed study from a legitimate academic source showing their AEI/Cato derived ideas work. Just one. And no, policy papers or preliminary reports from right wing thinks like the NCTQ, or the vile Gates Foundation itself are not considered peer reviewed studies.

HeadingForIdaho
HeadingForIdaho

Okay. I'll tell you what. After considering that, as of a several years back, most college grads with Education majors chose NOT to go into the field after commencement, and fully 1/2 of all those who DID, quit the profession after only 3-to-5 years (the situation today is even more dire)... considering that certain academic discipline vacancies - like Science and Math and Special Ed - have ALWAYS been hard to fill and that suburban school districts offer far better compensation packages and working conditions ... considering all the testing and continuing education coursework that California teachers must  undergo in order to keep an active credential ...considering the phenomenal rise in the number of teacher assaults over the last several years (I've been teaching for 11 years. I've been stabbed, I've had my nose and my shoulder broken, and I've been burnt on the neck with a cigarette)...considering the appalling working conditions (classrooms with 40+ kids, always including several Special Ed "emotionally disturbed" charges who are violent and often psychotic, etc) ... YOU GO RIGHT AHEAD and cut teacher benefits packages for LAUSD workers. YOU TELL the most experienced teachers - you know, the ones who fought like hell for many years to get out of the most persistently dangerous schools and into someplace half-decent - that they are going right back to the hellholes they fled (makes sure, too, that all new teachers see how they'll be rewarded after getting a few years of experience under their belts). MAKE SURE that you fully dismantle the last bastion of public safety LA has - the one that keeps thugz and punks from running wild in the streets 7 hours each day (ever notice the sharp rise in crime statistics when school is not in session?) because those who are striving to keep them under control are "gorging themselves at the public trough". DO ALL THESE THINGS. Do them completely, gleefully, and with a fierce dedication to the rightness of your cause. Only do me a favor: get me an easy chair, a martini, and an umbrella so that I can sit back and watch the results. I missed Rome's going up in flames. I don't want to miss LA's.

teapartydoc
teapartydoc

...no man, or set of men, are entitled to exclusive emoluments or privileges from the community..        Virginia Declaration of Rights, 1776

How is it that public servatnts are able to demand job security and pensions from those who don't enjoy the same privileges as well, and expect those poorer than themselves to sacrifice their rights and property to do so?  Keep in mind: This state of affairs is NOT a voluntary transaction between a purchaser of goods and services and a provider of goods and services. If you do not wish to pay the taxes that feed these public "servants" they send the Sheriff to your house and take what they want.  

Martha Infante
Martha Infante

Whoa there, teapartydoc.  You ask the right question of the wrong people.  The folks responsible for the elimination of safety nets for regular working folks...are not the regular working folks.  It is the elites who drove all of our country into our recession.  As a teacher, I am horrified to see the number of students who are now homeless and the amount of families hanging in by a thread.  The solution is not for those who still have safety nets to give them up, but for ALL families to have their pensions and health benefits reinstated.  Let's start by having the billionaires paying their fair share of taxes...even Warren Buffet agrees with this. 

Martha Infante
Martha Infante

Scott Folson from the 4LAkids blog: Q: Who is Hillel Aron? A: He's a freelance writer who wrote as good as expose as any about how the "reformers-with-deep-pockets (RWDP)" tried to buy the school board elections here. Apparently Mr. Aron has either drunk the RWDP Kool-Aid or has hired himself out to them. His Call to Action in the article is no longer that of the skeptical reporter - but instead that of The True Believer. And, though the RWDP paid a tidy chunk o' change to get their ad in the Times, the Daily News and La Opinion – they got their message out for free in the LA Weekly. Of course, the  ads in the LA Weekly tend to be outcall massage services and medicinal marijuana dispensaries. (In their defense - those businesses only make the slightest pretense at being in businesses other than they are.) Q: And who is this 'Supergroup' – are they the' Supermen' Davis Guggenheim has foretold? A: First, go to By the Numbers: HOW TO TELL IF YOUR SCHOOL DISTRICT IS INFECTED WITH THE BROAD VIRUS #29: A rash of Astroturf groups appear claiming to represent “the community” or “parents” and all advocate for the exact same corporate ed reforms that your superintendent supports — merit pay, standardized testing, charter schools, alternative credentialing for teachers. Of course, none of these are genuine grassroots community organizations. [see: HOW TO CREATE A FAUX GRASSROOTS ED REFORM ORGANIZATION IN 12 EASY STEPS! Posted by Sue Peters on seattleducation2011] #30. Or, existing groups suddenly become fervidly in favor of teacher bashing, merit pay or charter schools. Don’t be surprised to find that these groups may have received grant money from the corporate ed reform foundations like Gates or Broad. Community Coalition, Alliance for a Better Community, Families in Schools, and Communities for Teaching Excellence are Broad/Gates/Walton Foundation bought-and-paid-for Astroturf Groups with bought-and-paid for track records.. Nothing less, and, quoth-the-raven, nothing more.

The rest are previously existing issue oriented groups that have been co-opted by billionaire philanthropy.. What you say, The Urban League? Yes. The Urban League, which operates hybrid/charter-like school schools with Broad and Gates support.

Surely not The United Way? Yes. The United Way of Greater Los Angeles – the former Community Chest – a ‘brand’ which used to be an alliance of the Red Cross and the Salvation Army and PTA and USO and The March of Dimes and Boys and Girls Clubs and Scouts, etc.--are that no more.  UWGLA is now a civic-booster/political action organization indistinguishable from George Bobbitt's Zenith Chamber of Commerce …with an anti-labor-bent, aligned with the foundations and RWDP interests; Mayor Tony, developers and dark side of electoral politics in LA.

Jose del Barrio
Jose del Barrio

So let me get this straight. In these article you agree with the ad and want UTLA to agree with Public School Giveaways to Corporate Charter Schools? While at the same time the LA weekly has a COVER story on how Charter Schools Cheat! http://www.laweekly.com/2011-1... 

Sorry LA Weekly, you are on the wrong side on this debate.

Martha Infante
Martha Infante

Who funds the organizations that paid for this ad?  Could any of them possible be receiving funds from the uber-wealthy hedge fund managers who all of a sudden decided to "help poor kids?" Connecting those dots...that would be something.

Hillel Aron, I will call you out.  Do you really believe that all of a sudden the billionaires woke up and decided to funnel millions of dollars to organizations like these who are dense enough to do the dirty work of dismantling the last of the unions...for "poor kids?" 

I'm not impressed with the organizations listed here. Yolie Flores Aguilar et al have proven to be fans of the corporate style reforms that they know good and well will NOT help kids.*  But those same orgs provide six-figure landings after folks of her kind leave public service a la Donald Rumsfeld.  In short, Families That Can, Alliance for a Better Community, and Communities For Teaching Excellence appear to be nothing more than shells for the billionaires who will have them do their bidding.

And they do it so well.

*Stanford CREDO study on charter schools (conclusion: the vast majority of charters perform equal or worse than public schools in spite of creaming effects, attrition, and private donations that are unscalable)

ThatsEntertainment
ThatsEntertainment

I have the same question.  I want to know who to send my contribution to!

Forrest Sergente
Forrest Sergente

All public employee unions must be banned as they represent a conflict of interest against the taxpayers that they are supposed to serve, but often choose not to in order to increase their largess at the expense of the public at large. They are wholly evil.

JenniferL
JenniferL

The first thing Obama did as President was to shut down the small school voucher program in D.C., and kick all the poor minority kids out of the exclusive school that his own two children were to attend.

The Obama Regime then did everything in its power to crush middle class blacks, sending the youth unemployment to 50% for example.

If Obama was white, he would be correctly labeled as a racist.

Vida
Vida

Voucher programs are horrible. Kids shouldn't have to leave their community to go to a good school. PERIOD. That money should be used to fund the schools so that all kids have an equal education and equal access to opportunity.

Anthony_A
Anthony_A

Vouchers make it possible to fund a good school in the community when the school district fails to do so. 

What's the purpose of spending tax money on education? Is it to ensure that kids get educated, or is it to ensure that teachers and administrators are employed and school buildings are built? Vouchers allow parents to direct that money to schools that actually educate their kids when the public school system fails. 

ThatsEntertainment
ThatsEntertainment

Let me hear you say that when YOUR kids are stake.  Vouchers are not ideal, but are a great alternative for the short term.  As evidenced by this article, what's lacking in schools is not money.  What's lacking is honesty, intelligence and integrity on the part of the school officials who decide the rules.  Right now, the rules favor sending checks to people who write the rules.  That has GOT to change.  The schools belong to US, the taxpayers, and exist for the purpose of teaching children to read, write and do math.  They do NOT exist to generate income for a political party or to financially support tenured 'insiders' for life.

I completely agree that kids shouldn't have to leave their community to go to a good school.  When that's a reality, I'll happily support tossing the vouchers.

Thing is, we won't have to.  No one will want them!

Vech
Vech

Having had union personnel work for me and having worked around them for years, I can say with certainty:  THEY DO NOT CARE about anything except their paycheck. 

DavidBCohen
DavidBCohen

Having worked in an exclusively unionized workplace for over thirteen years, having had my safety protected by unionized workers all my life, having had my children cared for by unionized labor, having had my city (maybe not yours) effectively managed by a largely unionized work force, I can say that I have consistently met union employees who do a professional job and show that they absolutely care about the quality of their work and providing good service and good outcomes.

Jam
Jam

The point is not whether individual unionized workers care -- the point is that their union absolutely does not.  Public sector unions are one of the largest contributors to the mess that is California today.  They are un-helpful and un-needed (who is the big bad corporation they are fighting the good fight against? Us!).

ThatsEntertainment
ThatsEntertainment

Yes.  Good people in a bad system.  I don't blame them for trying to preserve the status quo for their own perceived good, but in the end it's got to go, and go it shall.

Rob King
Rob King

Where do you get your pot?  I want some.

AnitaPiece
AnitaPiece

Love the photo caption: "Even Obama is sick of teachers' union practices that hold back poor kids." Yeah. Sure. Right.  Way to cover for your candidate - Mr. Union campaign contributions himself. When the unions say "jump!", he says, "How high?" Your bias is showing - when forced to write an article critical of unions, you first have to make sure your messiah is placed on his pedestal, above the fray.  That photo caption can best be described as #fail.

liberals are hypocrites
liberals are hypocrites

ASIAN PACIFIC LEGAL CENTER?  LAST I HEARD ASIANS WERE DOING FINE.. I CANT STAND THESE PROFESSIONAL SHILL ORGANIZATIONS WHOSE ONLY PURPOSE IS TO FUND RAISE

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