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Jun 19, 2019
Listen 47:45
With A Budget For The Next Three Years In Place, A Look At The Future Of LAUSD
The nation’s second-largest school district is at a crossroads.
Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin Beutner (center) delivers remarks at a press conference on June 5, 2019
Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin Beutner (center) delivers remarks at a press conference on June 5, 2019
(
Kyle Stokes/KPCC
)

The nation’s second-largest school district is at a crossroads.

The nation’s second-largest school district is at a crossroads.

Back in January, Los Angeles Unified school teachers went on strike and received widespread public support and the deal that ended the strike seemed to raise hopes of a new day in the LAUSD.

But two weeks ago, a proposed tax increase to fund it all, Measure EE, went down to defeat in a special election.  Almost 600-thousand children attend public schools in L.A with a projected 470-thousand in LAUSD-run schools and another 120-thousand in charter schools. Most of those children in these schools qualify as low-income and nearly a quarter are still learning English.

Today on AirTalk, we’ve assembled a panel of experts to discuss the future of LAUSD in light of Measure E-E’s failure.

What caused Measure EE’s failure? Tax fatigue? Lack of voter engagement? A vigorous opposition? Are you a teacher, student or parent of a student in the LAUSD system? Why do you think Measure EE failed? And how should LAUSD move forward from that failure? Give us a call at 866-893-5722

With guest host Kyle Stokes

Guests:

Jackie Goldberg, LAUSD Board Member for District 5 which encompasses the Northeast communities spanning from Highland Park to East Hollywood, and the Southeast cities from Maywood to South Gate

Alberto Retana, President and CEO of Community Coalition, a nonprofit organization that works to help transform the social and economic conditions in South LA that foster addiction, crime, violence and poverty by building a community institution that involves thousands in creating, influencing and changing public policy; he tweets

Katie Braude, CEO and co-founder of Speak Up, an organization founded by LAUSD parents who want to change the dynamics of education policy and improve public education in California

Credits
Host, AirTalk
Host, All Things Considered, AirTalk Friday
Senior Producer, AirTalk & FilmWeek
Producer, AirTalk with Larry Mantle
Producer, AirTalk with Larry Mantle
Associate Producer, AirTalk & FilmWeek
Apprentice News Clerk, AirTalk
Apprentice News Clerk, FilmWeek