Los Angeles teachers strike enters fourth
day with talks set to resume
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[January 17, 2019]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Some 30,000
striking Los Angeles teachers braced for a fourth day of picketing in
the rain on Thursday as their union and America's second-largest school
district headed for their first bargaining session since talks collapsed
last week.
In the first teachers strike to hit the Los Angeles Unified School
District (LAUSD) in 30 years, union members are calling for higher pay,
smaller classes and the hiring of more support staff. But LAUSD
Superintendent Austin Beutner has said the demands, if fully met, would
place too great a strain on the district's budget.
Mayor Eric Garcetti, who attended a teachers' rally earlier this week
and has voiced strong support for their cause, said in a statement that
the two sides had agreed to reopen negotiations on Thursday, with his
office serving as mediator.
Union leaders said Garcetti had met with both parties earlier in the day
and that California's top education official, state Superintendent of
Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, was also in contact with each side and
had offered his support in efforts to reach a settlement.
Thurmond could play a key role in helping the district secure extra
funding it may need to close a deal with the teachers.
Negotiators for the district and the union - United Teachers Los Angeles
- have not met face to face since union leaders rejected the LAUSD's
latest contract offer last Friday night. The union disputes Beutner's
assertions that the district lacks sufficient resources to accept
teachers' demands.
Union President Alex Caputo-Pearl said the union was "engaged" with
Thurmond, and with California Governor Gavin Newsom, to "try to push on
the state as well for additional funding."
"The money's there. There's no doubt about it. California is the richest
state in the country," he told reporters on Wednesday. "The money is
there for kids."
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Los Angels public school teachers continue to deal with the rainy
weather as their strike enters its third day in Gardena, California,
U.S., January 16, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The teachers, who have been without a contract for nearly a year,
walked off the job on Monday. LAUSD officials have kept all 1,200 of
its schools open on a limited basis with skeleton staff of
administrators and substitute teachers, but attendance has been
running at roughly a third of normal.
Thousands of striking teachers fanned out across the sprawling
school district for a series of boisterous rallies and picketing on
Wednesday, braving a third day of showers which appeared to do
little to dampen their spirits. A fourth day of rain was forecast
for Thursday.
The Los Angeles walkout follows a wave of teachers strikes last year
across the United States over pay and school funding, including work
stoppages in West Virginia, Kentucky, Oklahoma and Arizona.
Denver teachers could vote to strike by Saturday if no deal on a new
contract is reached by then.
Beutner, a former publisher and investment banker, said the district
had proposed staff increases that would cost $130 million a year -
more than county officials have said is available - while the
union's demands would cost $800 million.
The union is seeking a 6.5 percent pay raise. LAUSD teacher pay
currently averages $75,000, according to state figures. The district
has offered a 6 percent hike with back pay.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman and Alex Dobuzinskis; Additional
reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles, Gina Cherelus in New York
and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Peter Cooney, Clarence
Fernandez and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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