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Friday, March 27, 2015

Despite state mediator, LAUSD and teachers still $774 million and an evaluation system apart

Despite state mediator, LAUSD and teachers still $774 million and an evaluation system apart:

Despite state mediator, LAUSD and teachers still $774 million and an evaluation system apart




A referee from California’s top labor authority proved little help Thursday in the fray between Los Angeles’ school district and teachers union.
The two sides remain divided by more than $774 million per year and at odds over teacher evaluations, Los Angeles Unified School District Chief Labor Negotiator Vivian Ekchian said in a written statement.
A key issue for district officials is $171 million in federal dollars that could be lost if teachers don’t agree to an evaluation system that groups them into one of three categories based, in part, on student performance.
“The union has not yet agreed to this proposal, leaving at risk these vital school-site services to students,” Ekchian said.
Thursday’s meeting in front of a mediator appointed by California’s Public Employment Relations Board was the first of three legally mandated gatherings, with additional dates set for April 6 and 15. Should mediation fail, a fact-finding panel will be formed, before United Teachers Los Angeles can strike.
The teachers union is demanding an 8.5 percent pay raise after more than seven years without an across-the-board increase. UTLA also wants LAUSD to hire an estimated 5,081 additional counselors, nurses and librarians, according to LAUSD’s estimates.
District officials have countered with a 5 percent bump and offered to spend $26 million on hiring new teachers – enough for just 277 of the 5,081 educators being sought by union leaders.
LAUSD also wants the teachers union to accept a new evaluation system that has been rejected by the union, which won a legal battle to repeal.
District administrators say $171 million will be lost over the next three years if UTLA fails to accept a performance rating that distinguishes the best and worst teachers under the federal program that aims to improve schools.
While the state of California declined to accept those federal demands for an evaluation system — causing its application to be rejected — Los Angeles Unified is one of nine districts that went directly to the U.S. Department of Education two years ago.
In September, all seven of the remaining school districts were placed in a “high-risk” category and Despite state mediator, LAUSD and teachers still $774 million and an evaluation system apart: