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Striking Los Angeles teachers rallied in front of City Hall on Friday, one day after the teachers union and the school district went back to the negotiating table.
More than 30,000 educators walked off the job Monday to demand smaller class sizes, more school staffing and higher teacher salaries.
“We are having an impact,” said Alex Caputo-Pearl, president of the United Teachers Los Angeles union. “That impact is being felt across the city. And we’ve just got to keep it up.”
Tyler Okeke, the student member of the LA School Board, issued a statement on Twitter urging compromise: “If the Los Angeles Unified and UTLA are to come to a peaceable contract agreement, concessions on both sides will have to be made,” he tweeted.
But while teachers demand millions more dollars in school funding, the Los Angeles Unified School District said it has already lost $125.1 million during the strike through Friday
That’s because the state of California funds schools based on daily attendance, and the number of students going to school has plunged during the strike.
Friday, for example, 85,274 of the district’s 600,000 students went to school, the district said, noting that number is incomplete because 18 schools had yet to submit reports through the system’s internal attendance system.
Thursday, about 84,000 students went to school, the district said, noting that number may still be adjusted. That’s a 37% drop in attendance from Wednesday.
Parent Karen Goldman said she is well aware of the money lost by lower attendance. That’s one reason she’s keeping her fifth-grade son out of school.
“I feel like the message I am sending by not sending him and creating a budget loss is better than if I send him, because that will hopefully bring the strike to a conclusion faster,” she said.
But don’t expect teachers to end their strike anytime soon, the union president said Thursday.
“After 21 months of negotiations, I think it’s an unrealistic expectation to say that this is going to be over after today,” Caputo-Pearl said.
The teachers on strike are not getting paid. But the union leader said it’s critical for them to outlast district Superintendent Austin Beutner, a former investment banker who doesn’t have a background in teaching.
“If it goes into next week … we have to last one day longer than Austin Beutner,” Caputo-Pearl said. “We have to last one day longer than somebody who’s never taught in a classroom.”
“Negotiations continued today,” the school district said on its website. “Los Angeles Unified remains committed to working around the clock to find a solution that ends the strike.”
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