Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Los Angeles Schools, Union Leaders Reach Deal After Strike
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 2 years ago on
March 27, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The Los Angeles Unified School District and union leaders said Friday they reached a deal on pay raises for bus drivers, custodians and other support staff after a three-day strike that shut down the nation’s second-largest school system.

The deal includes a series of retroactive raises going back to 2021 as well as pay bumps this coming July and January that will collectively hike worker pay by about 30%, said Max Arias, executive director of SEIU Local 99.

The deal also sets the district’s minimum wage at $22.52; provides a one-time $1,000 raise for any worker who was employed in 2020 in appreciation of their work during the COVID-19 pandemic; and creates a $3 million educational and professional development fund for union members, district Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said at a news conference.

Free health care will be provided for any employee working at least four hours a day and their families, he added, calling the deal historic and unprecedented in the nation.

“This agreement’s going to make a lot of superintendents very nervous,” he said. “And that’s a good thing. … Elevate the bar and, in the process, elevate the people.”

The deal “elevates the dignity, the humanity of our workforce, respects the needs of our students, but also guarantees the fiscal viability of our district for years to come,” Carvalho said.

He announced the deal alongside Arias and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. Both sides credited Bass, who took office in December, with helping reach the agreement.

The mayor has no authority over the schools but she does have a grandson in the district.

The deal must still be voted on by the school board and the full union, which represents about 30,000 workers also including cafeteria employees, special education assistants and other support staff. However it gives them most if not all of what they demanded and is expected to pass handily.

Those workers walked off the job Tuesday through Thursday amid stalled talks, and classes for some 500,000 students resumed Friday.

Teachers Joined Picket Line

Members of United Teachers Los Angeles, the union representing 35,000 educators, counselors and other staff, joined the picket lines in solidarity, lending muscle to the walkout.

Teachers waged a six-day strike in 2019 over pay and contract issues, but support staff didn’t join and schools remained open.

This time Carvalho had warned parents that classrooms would close for safety reasons because both instructors and support staff were taking part. The strike ended up snarling schedules for many parents because schools had to find alternate ways to provide daycare and the meals offered on campuses.

The strike has shone a spotlight on the issue of underpaid workers who serve as the backbone of schools across the country.

The union said district support staffers earn, on average, about $25,000 per year and many live in poverty or must work several jobs because of low pay or limited hours while struggling with inflation and the area’s high cost of housing.

Carvalho agreed that what he called indispensable workers were being underpaid.

The deal came just days after the union accused the district of engaging in unfair labor practices. Arias noted that another contract must be negotiated next year but added: “There is no strike planned for the foreseeable future.”

“Thanks to the parents of Los Angeles and the students of Los Angeles and everyone who stood shoulder to shoulder with our members,” he said.

SEIU members have been working without a contract since June 2020, while the contract for teachers expired in June 2022. The unions decided last week to stop accepting extensions.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Wired Wednesday: Fresno Youth Buck California Jobs Loss Trend

DON'T MISS

Community Health Paying $31.5M to Settle Kickback Allegations of Money, Liquor, Cigars

DON'T MISS

Here’s Your Chance to Shape Fresno County Measure C Transportation Tax

DON'T MISS

Avoid Highway 41 in Fresno. Brush Fire Is Causing Traffic Delays

DON'T MISS

To Fix $50M Budget Hole, Fresno Will Hold Off Hiring and Make Spending Cuts

DON'T MISS

Bad News for California. State Budget Is $12 Billion in the Red

DON'T MISS

Can Middle Schoolers Handle College? This San Jose School Is Finding Out

DON'T MISS

Clovis Police, ABC Cite Three for Giving Alcohol to Minors in Shoulder Tap Operation

DON'T MISS

Trump to Remove US Sanctions on Syria in Major Policy Shift

DON'T MISS

US Overdose Deaths Fell 27% Last Year, the Largest One-Year Decline Ever Seen

UP NEXT

Can Middle Schoolers Handle College? This San Jose School Is Finding Out

UP NEXT

California Democrats Restore Penalties in Teen Sex Trafficking Bill After Backlash

UP NEXT

Trump Tariffs, Rising Health Care Costs Knock CA Budget Back Into Deficit

UP NEXT

Newsom Proposes Scaling Back Health Care for Immigrants in California

UP NEXT

California Released 15,000 Prisoners Early During COVID. New Data Reveals What Happened to Many of Them

UP NEXT

State Farm Wins First-Ever Emergency Rate Hike in California

UP NEXT

Work Permits Reinstated for UC Merced International Students, Anxiety Persists

UP NEXT

‘I Never Said He Called My Son the N-Word.’ Fresno Unified Trustee Thomas Tries to Erase Accusation Against Former Bullard Coach

UP NEXT

Caltrans’ Response to Homeless Encampments Is Lagging, Cities Complain

UP NEXT

Has the California Dream Become a Mirage?

Avoid Highway 41 in Fresno. Brush Fire Is Causing Traffic Delays

2 hours ago

To Fix $50M Budget Hole, Fresno Will Hold Off Hiring and Make Spending Cuts

3 hours ago

Bad News for California. State Budget Is $12 Billion in the Red

4 hours ago

Can Middle Schoolers Handle College? This San Jose School Is Finding Out

4 hours ago

Clovis Police, ABC Cite Three for Giving Alcohol to Minors in Shoulder Tap Operation

4 hours ago

Trump to Remove US Sanctions on Syria in Major Policy Shift

4 hours ago

US Overdose Deaths Fell 27% Last Year, the Largest One-Year Decline Ever Seen

5 hours ago

Debate Turns Raucous as House Panel Weighs Medicaid Cuts

5 hours ago

California Democrats Restore Penalties in Teen Sex Trafficking Bill After Backlash

5 hours ago

Fresno Police Activity Shuts Down Stretch of Blackstone Avenue

5 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Fresno Youth Buck California Jobs Loss Trend

GV Wire’s Edward Smith talks with KMPH Fox 26 “Great Day” anchor Justin Willis about Fresno’s young population and how it’s driv...

11 minutes ago

https://www.communitymedical.org/thecause?utm_source=Misfit+Digital&utm_medium=GVWire+Banner+Ads&utm_campaign=Branding+2025&utm_content=thecause
11 minutes ago

Wired Wednesday: Fresno Youth Buck California Jobs Loss Trend

30 minutes ago

Community Health Paying $31.5M to Settle Kickback Allegations of Money, Liquor, Cigars

2 hours ago

Here’s Your Chance to Shape Fresno County Measure C Transportation Tax

Highway 41 brush fire Wednesday, May 14, 2025
2 hours ago

Avoid Highway 41 in Fresno. Brush Fire Is Causing Traffic Delays

3 hours ago

To Fix $50M Budget Hole, Fresno Will Hold Off Hiring and Make Spending Cuts

4 hours ago

Bad News for California. State Budget Is $12 Billion in the Red

4 hours ago

Can Middle Schoolers Handle College? This San Jose School Is Finding Out

4 hours ago

Clovis Police, ABC Cite Three for Giving Alcohol to Minors in Shoulder Tap Operation

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend