Unions Press L.A. Unified for Pay Hikes
- Share via
Los Angeles school employees stepped up their demands for a raise Tuesday, producing a budget analysis that identifies money to increase salaries while still leaving enough to pay for new services such as libraries and tutoring.
Facing some criticism of their request for a 4% increase on top of the 2% that they have received this year, the seven unions that represent the district’s 75,000 employees took a united stand to press their case.
They also threatened to use their considerable political clout to punish school board members who oppose them.
The unions are demanding a share of the state budget windfall that will give the district $60 million more than was expected this year. They want to reopen their three-year contract, which gave them a 6% pay raise last year and 2% this year, plus another 2% due next year.
An additional 4% pay raise would cost the district $108 million a year.
The unions contend that the contract negotiated last year was not enough to make up for the voluntary pay cuts totaling 10% that employees took during the recession in the early 1990s.
“This is not a pay raise,” said Eli Brent, president of Associated Administrators of Los Angeles, the principals’ union. “This is repayment of a loan.”
Sensitivity to the employees’ sacrifices resulted in easy contract negotiations over the last few years. The district restored the cuts by the 1995-1996 school year, and the current contract added an additional 10% by the end of next year.
The latest request, however, comes at a time when the district faces increasing demands to improve student achievement and tie wage increases to accountability measures.
The board deferred a 6% raise for top administrators, pending improvement in several areas, including test scores and the number of limited-English-proficient students transferring into mainstream classes.
The Board of Education postponed a decision last week after Supt. Ruben Zacarias showed members a $54-million wish list of school improvements that he wants to make. The improvements include $11 million for ninth-grade class size reduction, $10 million for tutoring and $4.2 million for staff development.
District budget officials also said that about $24 million is needed to continue some programs that were launched last year.
The board is scheduled to make a decision Tuesday.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.