Union In The News – Weekly Highlights

By Sean O’Striker
10/04/2016
Marin unions appeal pension ruling to state Supreme Court By Richard Halstead, October 4, 2016, Marin Independent Journal Four Marin labor groups have appealed a state appeals court decision that some say could radically alter the ability to reduce the retirement benefits of public employees who are still on the job. The plaintiffs — the Marin...

Charters Under Attack

By Larry Sand
10/04/2016
For years, teachers’ unions have tried to kill charter schools—but only on odd-numbered days. On even-numbered days, they tried to organize them. Things lately have become very odd, at least in California; the unions are in full-assault mode. United Teachers of Los Angeles president Alex Caputo-Pearl has long groused about how charter schools don’t play...

TAGS: Alex Caputo-Pearl, Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools, Los Angeles Unified School District, United Teachers of Los Angeles

Survey Says! How One City Used a 'Poll' to Raise Taxes

By Andrew Heritage
10/04/2016
On Halloween 2014, Stanton, California, city manager James Box wrote to the city’s residents. City officials were at the end of a year-long campaign to stampede residents toward acceptance of Measure GG, creating a one-cent city sales tax, the first of its kind in Orange County. They had warned residents that failure to approve the...

TAGS: California, Stanson v. Mott, Stanton

Keep Breaking the Law: Your Government Needs the Money

By Will Swaim
09/29/2016
My colleague Matt Smith recently observed that Huntington Beach is following the model of Ferguson, Missouri: raising fines on misdemeanors in order to generate more revenue for a cash-strapped city. The Department of Justice found that strategy was a contributing factor to rioting that followed the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson on August...

TAGS: Department of Justice

Unfunded Pension Costs Driving Huntington Beach to Become More Like Ferguson, MO

By Matt Smith
09/29/2016
It’s been 19 months since the U.S. Department of Justice released its scathing report on the Ferguson Police Department. Chief among the DOJ’s findings: Ferguson’s law enforcement practices were “shaped by the city’s focus on revenue rather than public safety needs.” Nearly every policing activity – including tickets, misdemeanor fines and court fees – was...

TAGS: Department of Justice

LA Story: The Poorer You Are, the More Likely You Are to Support Charters

By Adam Jacobs
09/29/2016
Los Angeles school teachers gathered in August in the posh, iconic – and for the group, weirdly ironic – Westin Bonaventure Hotel. They heard their union’s leaders extol their role as revolutionary defenders of the city’s poorest communities against the wealthy. But that’s not how the city’s poor have seen it. The poorer you are,...

TAGS: Charter schools, LAUSD

School District's Bond Controversy Reveals Rising Concern About 'Pay-to-Play'

By Conor McGarry
09/29/2016
CUSD’s Kirsten Vital  In the space of just a few months, state officials have suddenly turned their attention to a problem in the public-educational shadows: insider dealing among California school district officials and outside vendors. In a January opinion, state Attorney General Kamala Harris concluded that school officials had become too cozy with companies that...

TAGS: Capistrano Unified School District, Jerry Brown, John Chiang, school bonds

OUSD spends taxpayers' money to persuade taxpayers to let them spend more taxpayer money

By Ethan Musser
09/28/2016
Officials of the Orange Unified School District have spent more than $50,000 to support a $288 million bond measure on the November ballot. Expenses include $23,200 for opinion polling and $6,000 per month for campaign consultants, according to documents reviewed by the California Policy Center: School board members authorized the district to spend up to...

TAGS: Orange Unified School District, teachers union

Controversial ‘Education Center’ Schools Parents in Bond Pitfalls

By Catrin Thorman
09/28/2016
Capistrano Unified HQ: More like a Four Seasons resort. Anyone looking down the barrel of an $889 million school bond should consider what the Capistrano Unified School District did with its last bond, in 2002. After issuing the bond – called a certificate of participation (COP) – the district began constructing a $35 million administration building...

TAGS: Capistrano Unified School District