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UTAL Softens Up Rank and File For School Takeover
- To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
- Subject: UTAL Softens Up Rank and File For School Takeover
- From: Rich Gibson <rgibson@pipeline.com>
- Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2006 15:11:40 -0700
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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-schools21aug21,1,6422582.story?coll=la-headlines-california&ctrack=1&cset=true
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http://www.latimes.com/services/site/premium/access-registered.intercept
Mayor Takes Case to Teachers
Villaraigosa seeks union support for his bid to take over some control of
L.A. Unified.
By Sandy Banks
Times Staff Writer
August 21, 2006
LA QUINTA, Calif. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa made a passionate pitch for
the support of teachers union activists Sunday, as his plan to assume some
control of the Los Angeles Unified School District moves forward amid
grumbling from some union members.
Speaking before a ballroom packed with hundreds of union members at United
Teachers Los Angeles' annual leadership conference, Villaraigosa was at
first greeted with a few catcalls and boos. But in the end, his 20-minute
talk drew an ovation.
"Come and sit up here, so I can see you," he said, beckoning to his critics
in the crowd like a no-nonsense teacher. His promise to answer questions at
a meeting following his speech quieted the group.
His speech focused less on his current proposal than his long history of
support for Los Angeles teachers. He cited his work as a union organizer
during UTLA's 1989 strike and as an advocate for teachers in district
disciplinary hearings, as well as as a state legislator who fought private
school vouchers and teacher merit pay both opposed by the union.
"I stood with you every single time you asked for a decent wage, for good
benefits," he reminded the crowd.
But while Villaraigosa the politician has consistently been supported by
the union financially and philosophically Villaraigosa the education guru
has not fared quite as well. The mayor's initial plan to assume total
control of the Los Angeles Unified School District was opposed by UTLA and
the California Teachers Assn., which forced him into a power-sharing
compromise.
That deal struck in closed-door negotiations with top union leaders has
angered some UTLA members, who have petitioned for a referendum to gauge
rank-and-file support.
The legislation passed a key hurdle last week when it passed 9 to 2 in the
Senate Appropriations Committee. It is expected to be considered by the
full Senate as early as Tuesday, after which it will go to the Assembly.
Lawmakers and political analysts widely expect it to be approved, and the
governor has pledged to sign it.
Villaraigosa does not need the support of the rank-and-file for his plan to
go forward; the union's governing board has approved it. But he will need
the support of teachers to make it work, and the skepticism of classroom
veterans may be a substantial hurdle.
Some union members were rankled that they didn't have more of a say in the
agreement and believe it does not go far enough in sharing power with
teachers, parents and community members.
At the weekend conference, UTLA leaders suggested that the plan has
potential to improve a district that has made some strides building new
schools and raising elementary test scores but has been unable to lower
dropout rates, reduce teacher turnover or close an achievement gap that
strands black and Latino students.
Villaraigosa intends to assume responsibility for about 40 of the
district's worst schools and grant teachers more say in their operation.
Success would provide "a beachhead and a model & that could bolster our
contract demands and be used at the bargaining table as a wedge for other
teachers" across the district to demand similar power-sharing arrangements,
UTLA's director of special projects, Joel Jordan, told the crowd.
Jordan predicted that Villaraigosa's involvement would draw more private
funds to the cash-strapped district allowing for smaller class sizes and
better-equipped classrooms and would draw more social services to campuses
to aid struggling families.
But more than two dozen union members signed up to question Villaraigosa
after his speech. They had a laundry list of concerns including bilingual
and special education, gay and lesbian students, and military recruitment
on campus that they want the legislation to address.
Villaraigosa borrowed from traditional union rhetoric in his responses,
lambasting the district's "bloated bureaucracy" and vowing to "chop from
the top." He pledged to launch an independent audit a long-standing UTLA
demand to "look at where the fat is and redirect those dollars to the
classroom."
But the mayor also made clear that he differs from the union on some key
issues.
He favors the creation of more charter schools, which the union has opposed
because many do not require their teachers to join the union. He wants a
stronger "peer review and assistance program" to assist struggling teachers
and weed out incompetent ones.
Some teachers complained that others before Villaraigosa have tried to
reform the district with disappointing results.
"Reform has come and gone in all kind of forms over the years and it just
keeps getting worse," Glenwood Elementary kindergarten teacher Janette
Gembitz told Villaraigosa.
Gembitz expects to begin the semester next month on her Sunland campus with
34 students and no classroom aide for the first time in her 20-year career,
she said.
"How are you going to help me? How is this going to improve my life?"
Others said they are staking their support not on the specifics of the
plan, but on the substance of the man.
"I'm taking a leap of faith because of who you are," Irving Middle School's
Howard Bransky told Villaraigosa. A teacher for 30 years and member of
UTLA's board of directors, Bransky said the mayor has a rare combination of
charisma, popularity and stature to make reform work.
"I'm going to try to convince other teachers to take that leap of faith,"
Bransky said as Villaraigosa huddled with dozens of teachers many passing
their cellphones around so friends could snap photos of them with the
mayor. "Because when is this kind of opportunity going to come along again?"
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