Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters: School Districts Set Poor Example for Students
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 5 years ago on
February 10, 2019

Share

There’s bitter irony in the loud complaints from California school officials and unions – particularly in large urban districts – about not having enough money.


Opinion
Dan Walters
CALmatters Commentary

LA Unified’s teachers union struck, demanding salary increases, lower class sizes and other costly items, even though the district was already projecting multi-billion-dollar deficits.
Schools are supposed to be teaching our children how to become productive and responsible adults, but by overspending revenues, blaming others for their fiscal problems and demanding bailouts, they are setting poor examples.
We just saw a prime – but, unfortunately, not isolated – example in Los Angeles Unified, the state’s largest school system.
LA Unified’s teachers union struck, demanding salary increases, lower class sizes and other costly items, even though the district was already projecting multi-billion-dollar deficits.
The strike’s settlement will cost hundreds of millions of dollars more, and the Los Angeles County Office of Education, in a strongly worded analysis, called it “unsustainable on an ongoing basis.”
Characteristically, district officials and United Teachers of Los Angeles blame others for the widening gap between income and outgo, particularly a burgeoning charter school movement that has lured about 150,000 students, and their financial support, away from LA Unified.

LA Unified Is Not an Isolated Example

The school board called for a moratorium on new charters – ignoring the simple fact that parents turned to charters because their children were not succeeding in LA Unified’s schools. Civil rights groups, meanwhile, warned the board not to finance the new contract with funds specified to raise the academic performances of poor and other “high-needs” students.
Gov. Gavin Newsom, who enjoyed strong support from school unions last year, immediately asked state schools Supt. Tony Thurmond, also strongly tied to the unions, to study the financial impact of charter school diversions.
Los Angeles’ school officials also cited rising pension costs for their financial woes. However, as the Legislature’s budget analyst pointed out last week, in analyzing Newsom’s plan to pump more state money into the teachers’ retirement fund, “School funding … has grown by nearly $22 billion (37 percent) over the past six years, significantly outpacing growth in pension costs.” In other words, the complaints about pension costs are something of a red herring.
As mentioned above, LA Unified is not an isolated example. In 2017, when Sacramento Unified’s teachers were threatening to strike, Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg mediated a new contract that gave teachers an 11 percent raise. Later, it emerged that the salary increases would come from a reserve set aside for pension fund payments.

School Districts Are Hoping for Bailouts

Sacramento County schools superintendent David Gordon warned Sacramento Unified several times that its budget was faulty and he eventually disapproved it. The district now is one of four districts on the “negative certification” list maintained by the state’s Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team for budgetary mismanagement.

School districts overspending their revenues are hoping for bailouts from Sacramento and/or voter approval of a pending ballot measure that would strip property tax limits from commercial real estate, raising as much as $10 billion a year.
And then there’s San Diego Unified. Last year, to partially close a looming budget deficit, it tapped into one-time funds, much like LA Unified is doing to finance its new contract, even though the district’s official policy is not to employ that irresponsible practice.
School districts overspending their revenues are hoping for bailouts from Sacramento and/or voter approval of a pending ballot measure that would strip property tax limits from commercial real estate, raising as much as $10 billion a year.
However, a new Public Policy Institute of California poll indicates that voters are not embracing the so-called “split roll” measure and the commercial real estate industry has pledged to spend $100 million to defeat it.
By example, school officials and school unions are teaching students that it’s all right to run up credit card bills, blame others for overspending and then cross their fingers that someone will bail them out.
CALmatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

DON'T MISS

Tesla’s Stock Leaps on Reports of Chinese Approval for the Company’s Driving Software

DON'T MISS

3 Law Officers Killed, 5 Others Wounded Trying to Serve Warrant in North Carolina, Authorities Say

DON'T MISS

Less Alcohol, or None at All, Is One Path to Better Health

DON'T MISS

Trion Supercars Partners with Fresno Schools to Develop Groundbreaking Nemesis Supercar

DON'T MISS

Video Shows Alleged Porchfest Anti-Palestinian Hate Crime

DON'T MISS

More California High School Students Want Career Training. How the State Is Helping

DON'T MISS

Clear Encampment or Face Suspension, Columbia University Tells Israel-Hamas War Protesters

DON'T MISS

Oklahoma Towns Hard Hit by Tornadoes Begin Long Cleanup After 4 Killed in Weekend Storms

DON'T MISS

Ongoing Protests Force Cal Poly Humboldt to Close for the Semester

DON'T MISS

Trump and DeSantis Meet to Make Peace and Discuss Fundraising for the Former President’s Campaign

UP NEXT

3 Law Officers Killed, 5 Others Wounded Trying to Serve Warrant in North Carolina, Authorities Say

UP NEXT

Less Alcohol, or None at All, Is One Path to Better Health

UP NEXT

More California High School Students Want Career Training. How the State Is Helping

UP NEXT

Oklahoma Towns Hard Hit by Tornadoes Begin Long Cleanup After 4 Killed in Weekend Storms

UP NEXT

Ongoing Protests Force Cal Poly Humboldt to Close for the Semester

UP NEXT

Trump and DeSantis Meet to Make Peace and Discuss Fundraising for the Former President’s Campaign

UP NEXT

United Auto Workers Reaches Deal With Daimler Truck, Averting Potential Strike in North Carolina

UP NEXT

Biden’s Handling of Israel-Gaza Conflict Faces Major Disapproval, CNN Poll Shows

UP NEXT

California is Joining with a New Jersey Company to Buy a Generic Opioid Overdose Reversal Drug

UP NEXT

Candace Parker Announces Retirement After 16 Seasons and Three WNBA Championships

Trion Supercars Partners with Fresno Schools to Develop Groundbreaking Nemesis Supercar

14 hours ago

Video Shows Alleged Porchfest Anti-Palestinian Hate Crime

Crime /

15 hours ago

More California High School Students Want Career Training. How the State Is Helping

Education /

16 hours ago

Clear Encampment or Face Suspension, Columbia University Tells Israel-Hamas War Protesters

17 hours ago

Oklahoma Towns Hard Hit by Tornadoes Begin Long Cleanup After 4 Killed in Weekend Storms

18 hours ago

Ongoing Protests Force Cal Poly Humboldt to Close for the Semester

Education /

18 hours ago

Trump and DeSantis Meet to Make Peace and Discuss Fundraising for the Former President’s Campaign

18 hours ago

United Auto Workers Reaches Deal With Daimler Truck, Averting Potential Strike in North Carolina

18 hours ago

Biden’s Handling of Israel-Gaza Conflict Faces Major Disapproval, CNN Poll Shows

National Elections /

18 hours ago

Putin Likely Didn’t Order Death of Russian Opposition Leader Navalny, US Official Says

19 hours ago

Tesla’s Stock Leaps on Reports of Chinese Approval for the Company’s Driving Software

NEW YORK — Shares of Tesla stock rallied Monday after the electric vehicle maker’s CEO, Elon Musk, paid a surprise visit to Beijing ov...

14 hours ago

14 hours ago

Tesla’s Stock Leaps on Reports of Chinese Approval for the Company’s Driving Software

14 hours ago

3 Law Officers Killed, 5 Others Wounded Trying to Serve Warrant in North Carolina, Authorities Say

14 hours ago

Less Alcohol, or None at All, Is One Path to Better Health

14 hours ago

Trion Supercars Partners with Fresno Schools to Develop Groundbreaking Nemesis Supercar

Crime /
15 hours ago

Video Shows Alleged Porchfest Anti-Palestinian Hate Crime

Education /
16 hours ago

More California High School Students Want Career Training. How the State Is Helping

17 hours ago

Clear Encampment or Face Suspension, Columbia University Tells Israel-Hamas War Protesters

18 hours ago

Oklahoma Towns Hard Hit by Tornadoes Begin Long Cleanup After 4 Killed in Weekend Storms

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend