LA Story: The Poorer You Are, the More Likely You Are to Support Charters
LA Story: The Poorer You Are, the More Likely You Are to Support Charters
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,...
By Adam Jacobs
OUSD spends taxpayers' money to persuade taxpayers to let them spend more taxpayer money
OUSD spends taxpayers' money to persuade taxpayers to let them spend more taxpayer money
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...
By Ethan Musser
Rampant Union Greed in Chicago
Rampant Union Greed in Chicago
The Windy City’s teachers union is on the verge of yet another strike. In 2012, Troy Senik wrote “The Worst Union in America,” a title he bestowed on the California Teachers Association. As a former member and longtime critic of that union, I certainly had no quibble with his selection. But now, CTA is facing...
By Larry Sand
Heartless and Mindless
Heartless and Mindless
As the National Education Association embarks on a new PR campaign, some of its affiliates engage in lawsuits and strikes. In July, the National Education Association unearthed its “Strategic Plan and Budget” for 2016-2018. The introduction to the 76-page document includes the notion that the union needs to “win the race to capture the hearts...
By Larry Sand
Clinton Turns Her Back on School Choice While Trump Embraces It
Clinton Turns Her Back on School Choice While Trump Embraces It
As Hillary Clinton cozies up to the teachers unions, Donald Trump seeks to vastly expand school choice opportunities. In November, 2015, Hillary Clinton gave a speech in South Carolina in which she abandoned her prior support for charter schools. Using language straight from the teachers union fact-free playbook, she claimed that charters “don’t take the...
By Larry Sand
Teachers Unions Double Down on Charter Vilification
Teachers Unions Double Down on Charter Vilification
UTLA and CTA’s anti-charter school obsession has reached epidemic proportions. Just weeks after United Teachers of Los Angeles president Alex Caputo-Pearl threw his if-we-don’t get-our-way-we’re-going-to-create-a-state-crisis tantrum, the teachers union has hit the streets with a media campaign. Empowered by a massive dues increase, UTLA is spreading its venom via billboards, bus benches and the media....
By Larry Sand
Sacramento and Unions: Addicted to Our Cash
Sacramento and Unions: Addicted to Our Cash
In November, we will be asked to reject or approve “The California Children’s Education and Health Care Protection Act of 2016.” If approved by a majority of the voters, this ballot measure, Proposition 55, will extend to December 31, 2030 the “temporary” income tax surcharges on upper income Californians that were authorized in November of...
By Jack Humphreville
Status Quo Stands as Supreme Court Stays Out of Education Fights
Status Quo Stands as Supreme Court Stays Out of Education Fights
The state’s teachers’ unions had a good day at the hands of the California Supreme Court yesterday but then so did the state’s taxpayers. The state Supreme Court upheld an Appellate Court decision in the Vergara case, which concerns constitutional protections of students involving teacher tenure, retention and dismissal. Student plaintiffs claimed that they, along...
By Joel Fox
California Supreme Court Strikes Down Vergara Appeal
California Supreme Court Strikes Down Vergara Appeal
Here’s an axiom of California politics. When it’s the teachers union against everyone – that’s right, everyone else – the teachers union wins. Yesterday’s decision by the California Supreme Court to not hear the Vergara case is just the latest example. Prior to losing on appeal, which brought the case to the attention of the...
By Edward Ring
The Myth of the Underpaid Teacher Lives On
The Myth of the Underpaid Teacher Lives On
Yet another “study” showing how poorly teachers are paid has surfaced. Well, it’s a new school year and there is much tumult in the world of public education. Common Core battles, testing opt-outs, and litigation about school choice and teacher work rules dot the landscape. But with all the uncertainty, it’s comforting to know that...
By Larry Sand
Court Pension Decision Weakens ‘California Rule’
Court Pension Decision Weakens ‘California Rule’
The one thing some pension reformers say is needed to cut the cost of unaffordable public pensions: give current workers a less costly retirement benefit for work done in the future, while protecting pension amounts already earned. It’s allowed in the remaining private-sector pensions. But California is one of about a dozen states that have...
By Ed Mendel
Union Kingpin Threatens California
Union Kingpin Threatens California
In a blatant power-play, UTLA president targets health benefits and charter schools, calling for a “state crisis” if he doesn’t get his way. United Teachers of Los Angeles president Alex Caputo-Pearl gave a speech for the ages a couple of weeks ago, securing a wing in the pantheon-of-vile, a place which includes such memorable outbursts...
By Larry Sand
When Black Kids Don't Matter
When Black Kids Don't Matter
Can’t understand why the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Movement for Black Lives have issued proclamations opposing the expansion of school choice and Parent Power for the very black families for which they proclaim to care? The answer can be found in the annual financial statements of the National Education...
By RiShawn Biddle
ACLU Joins Unions to Attack California Charter Schools
ACLU Joins Unions to Attack California Charter Schools
About 6.2 million students attend California’s K-12 public schools. Of those, over 570,000 are enrolled in public charter schools. Most of these charter schools operate with a degree of management autonomy and teacher accountability that goes well beyond what is permitted by the union work rules that govern traditional public schools. These charter schools themselves are...
By Edward Ring