| In This Issue:                  |  |                    | • | THE CHANGING OF THE GUARD: Cortines moves on, Deasy moves in |  |  |                    | • | LAUSD PRESENTS ONE-YEAR BUDGET PROPOSAL: The one-year plan could save 80 percent of expected layoffs + smf's 2¢ |  |  |                    | • | Tardy in Handcuffs?: POLICE TO STOP TICKETING TARDY STUDENTS ON THEIR WAY TO SCHOOL |  |  |                    | • | HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T FIT: The Rest of the Stories from Other Sources |  |  |                    | • | EVENTS: Coming up next week... |  |  |                    | • | What can YOU do? |  |  |  
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 |  |  |  | "For I will pass through the land of Egypt this  night, and will smite all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man  and beast; and against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgment: I  am the LORD. "And the blood shall be to you for a token upon the houses where ye are:  and when I see the blood, I will pass over you, and the plague shall  not be upon you to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt.
 "And this day shall be unto you for a memorial; and ye shall keep it a  feast to the LORD throughout your generations; ye shall keep it a feast  by an ordinance for ever." - Exodus 12 12:14
 
 "And you shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and  the LORD your God redeemed you: therefore I command you this thing  today" Deuteronomy 15:15 .
 
 
 When Israel was in Egypt's land: Let my people go,Oppress'd so hard they could not stand, Let my People go.
 Go down, Moses,
 Way down in Egypt land,
 Tell old Pharaoh,
 Let my people go.
 
 "A little patience, and we shall see the reign of witches pass over,  their spells dissolve,...." - Thos. Jefferson to John Taylor , June 4,  1798 (....to be continued)
 ___________________
 
 Mayor Villaraigosa in his State of the City address on Wednesday  delivered instead a prolonged discourse on the State of The School  District, proposing many solutions to many problems that plague the Los  Angeles Unified School District.
 
 With that speech made and those problems well on the way to solution  4LAKids is left with nothing to write about this week.
 
 Except maybe to enumerate the problems The City of Los Angeles faces.
 
 It has a mayor that is preoccupied with problems outside his purview,  jurisdiction or control ...and I worry: capability.  I fully understand,  sympathize, appreciate and agree that LAUSD and public education in  California is a mess. I welcome the mayor's concern. But the government  and governance of The City of Los Angeles is likewise a mess and the  city charter and the state constitution say that those are problems  within hizzoners jurisdiction and - if not control - purview. And both  documents specifically say that the school district is not.
 
 Six Years Ago the newly elected Mayor Tony made Education his first  priority. He bashed LAUSD. Reform was about urgency instead of  incrementalism and grsdualism. He rolled out his new plan for education,  called The Framework. And great was the tumult thereof.
 
 Now he's at it again - only the plan is now  called "A New Contract".  How is this different from "A Million Trees" and "No Pothole Left  Unfilled"and "Ten Thousand Policemen" and "The Subway to the Sea" and  "Wireless Internet Access for All"? None of those things has happened.   OK, I'm exaggerating. Some of the trees have happened, some of the  potholes have been filled and some of the policemen hired. Soon maybe  the surface rail will reach almost to Culver City,   The mayor has even  managed to take over twenty some-odd schools and they are getting a  little bit better every year ...though though the jury is out if you ask  the teachers who teach in them, or the parents or the students. The  police work has improved, but there are decidedly more potholes than  ever. Despite the Energizer Bunny appearance of urgency it is all very  gradually incremental.
 
 Mayor Villaraigosa is not responsible for the economy or the schools  ...but he ran and was elected to be responsible for the City. We The  People need to hold him and the councilpeople and the bureaucrats -  ourselves, our representatives - accountable.  And insist that the mayor  add a little value - and stop posing in front of of a set-piece  backdrop of flags. Antonio is about to become the president of the US  Conference of Mayors - he needs to set an example to his colleagues by  being the mayor of The City of Los Angeles first - not the mayor of  mayors.
 
 Otherwise We the People need to be considering a film the Conference of  Mayors recently produced: RECALL FEVER IN THE U.S. - a documentary on  local recall efforts and the growing movement around the country to  enact recalls on the mayoral level. [http://bit.ly/fqrZCD] - a film appalled-at-the-prospect that can be easily reverse-engineered into a how-to primer for Recall 101.
 
 
 SO WE BID FAREWELL TO RAMON CORTINES and we give him thanks for his  service in difficult times. Ramon was always at his best and in his  element surrounded by kids in classrooms and on playgrounds.
 
 AND WE WELCOME JOHN DEASY - who inherits the challenges and the times  and our high expectations of him, of the educators and the system and  public education. We are investing our most precious treasures and our  hopes for their future.
 
 We expect miracles for them and of them ...but this is the season for that.
 
 ¡Onward/Adelante! - smf
 
 THE CHANGING OF THE GUARD: Cortines moves on, Deasy moves in
 ● RAMON CORTINES LEAVES HIS MARK ON L.A. UNIFIED:  DEPARTING SUPERINTENDENT MADE GAINS UNDER ENORMOUS POLITICAL AND  ECONOMIC PRESSURES.
 
 By Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times | http://lat.ms/hD5AIg
 
 April 16, 2011 - Ramon C. Cortines returned as head of the nation's  second-largest school system three years ago to complete unfinished  business, namely, to transform education in Los Angeles. He left this  week at the age of 78, after dealing with the worst budget crisis in  memory and constant political pressures from an aggressive mayor and  other powerful, often conflicting forces.
 
 The superintendent's supporters and critics agree that Cortines, known  for an innate stubbornness and self-confident pride, managed these and  other pressures by adjusting, creating results that he felt would  benefit students and that would match his own goals for the school  system.
 
 "I have never felt completely hijacked on any of the issues," Cortines said in an interview. "And I have pushed back on some."
 
 The financial duress — caused by an economic recession and declining  enrollment — allowed him, ironically, to push forward with some of his  plans: He succeeded in shrinking the central bureaucracy through layoffs  and gave schools more control over their spending. In other areas, he  tried to tread water, keeping campuses cleaned and maintained at a  sharply reduced cost, for example.
 He took on a succession of controversial initiatives. He allowed more  charter schools to move on to traditional school campuses. He also  replaced administrators at some schools that failed to show rapid  improvement and he required staffs at several other campuses to  re-interview for their jobs, which infuriated the teachers union.
 
 And he carried out the landmark "Public School Choice" resolution, which  allowed groups inside and outside the district to bid for control over  new schools as well as the lowest-achieving ones. It was proposed by  board member Yolie Flores and backed by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who  called it "the most far-reaching thing this district has done."
 
 Its development epitomized the Cortines era. The idea that professional  educators could not be trusted to run district schools was offensive to  Cortines, but he put those feelings aside.
 "I sat down with my staff," said Cortines, "and I said to them: 'How can  we make this work.' " He added: "I made it work. I moved it from a  resolution that I felt was somewhat flawed to be an effective tool."
 
 In the most recent round in March, Cortines recommended which outside  groups should take control of 10 new campuses and three long-struggling  ones. But the mayor's allies on the Board of Education overruled several  key recommendations, preferring to give more campuses to independently  operated, mostly nonunion charter schools. They also wanted to force  teachers at more schools to re-interview for their jobs.
 
 Cortines' critics, including mayoral ally Ben Austin, who runs a  lobbying and parent-organizing group, describe Cortines as a talented,  honorable gradualist in an era calling for revolution.
 The "20th century" approach of Cortines "is to put the right people in  the right positions of power to make the right decisions," said Austin.  "He was comfortable only as long as he and the school board remained in  complete control. Ultimately he could only stretch so far."
 
 Austin, with the mayor's support, had lobbied Cortines to allow parents  the right to instigate wholesale changes at a school, saying that  parents could be better trusted than officials to look out for students.
 Cortines resisted, disagreeing with the details but not the concept. Austin's "parent trigger" later became state law.
 
 A Texas native who grew up in San Francisco with adoptive parents,  Cortines worked his way up from classroom teacher to the only individual  to head school districts in Los Angeles and New York City, the nation's  two largest school systems. He nursed Pasadena Unified through  integration and San Jose Unified through bankruptcy.
 
 A demanding boss who never mastered a computer, his impatience was tempered by his charm and sincerity.
 
 A tanned, trim exercise fanatic known to arrive at work before dawn, he  abandoned retirement several times, including before and after serving  in New York City, where he was famously at odds with Mayor Rudolph W.  Giuliani.
 
 During his prior stint in Los Angeles, in 2000, he came in as the school  board was forcing out incumbent Ruben Zacarias. Cortines vowed to  remain only long enough to assist with a tense transition. In six  months, he installed the Open Court phonics-based reading program  district-wide, fought off attempts to break up the school system and  selected a management team.
 That school board begged him — futilely — to stay on.
 
 While supportive of new Supt. John Deasy, current board member Steve  Zimmer — who is not part of the mayor's bloc — said he wishes Cortines  would have stayed longer.
 
 "We had simply the most skilled, most accomplished superintendent in the  nation at the magical moment of his last job," Zimmer said. "He did  this work completely unfettered, unchained. There was no objective other  than what was best for children. He absolutely held the district  together, understanding exactly where the organization was, where it  needed to be and how much change it could absorb."
 
 Cortines was working as chief education adviser and deputy mayor to  Villaraigosa when Cortines agreed to return to L.A. Unified as deputy  superintendent in April 2008. The move was seen as enhancing the mayor's  influence in L.A. Unified, although the rapport between the two men was  cooling.
 
 Cortines' initial role was to run all day-to-day operations under  then-Supt. David Brewer. The school board soon decided that it wanted  Cortines for the top job.
 
 Senior district administrator George McKenna said of Cortines: "He knows  exactly what he thinks a school should look like, and he's not afraid  to say it."
 
 Education historian Diane Ravitch, who worked with Cortines in New York,  puts him in the "tradition of educator-superintendents who see their  job as supporting and improving public schools, quietly, without fanfare  or self-glorification." In contrast, "the new breed," she said,  "arrives in town with a large megaphone…launching top-down reforms that  alienate those who must implement them."
 Even as L.A. Unified critics wanted to blow up what they term the  "status quo," Cortines took pride in working forcefully within  established rules.
 
 Cortines stood firm when the teachers union launched a boycott of  district tests that are given periodically to measure progress. That  dispute seems quaint compared to issues that teachers would later  confront.
 
 Officials soon pressed to speed up the process for firing teachers  accused of misconduct and to link instructors' evaluations to their  students' test scores.
 
 In the Cortines era, union influence has waned, dangerously so in the  view of union supporters, and yet he has retained respect among some  union leaders who see him as staving off worse developments. And they  believe him when he effusively praises classroom teachers and other  workers or lauds the willingness of unions to make salary concessions in  tough budget times.
 "What makes Cortines a unique bureaucrat," said teachers union President  A.J. Duffy, "is that he is first, last and always a classroom teacher."
 
 
 ● LAUSD SUPERINTENDENT RAMON CORTINES ENDS HIS TENURE
 
 Contra Costa Times - Daily News Wire Services/City News Service | http://bit.ly/hodnbB
 
 4-14-2011 18:02 (CNS) LOS ANGELES - Los Angeles Unified School District  Superintendent Ramon Cortines wrapped up his tenure leading the district  Thursday, passing the torch to his top deputy.
 Cortines, who announced his retirement last year, was hired by then-  Superintendent David L. Brewer in April 2008 to oversee the day-to-day  operations of the district. He took over as superintendent Jan. 1, 2009,  following Brewer's retirement.
 
 He previously served as LAUSD interim superintendent in 2000, as Mayor  Antonio Villaraigosa's top education adviser and was the head of school  districts in New York and San Francisco.
 
 "Ramon C. Cortines is a bold and courageous leader who has taken a  colossal steps toward improving overall academic achievement, pushing  LAUSD's lowest-performing schools to dramatically change their practices  and empowering school communities to make more decisions at the school  site," LAUSD board President Monica Garcia said.
 
 "His professional decisions are guided always by his deep understanding  of the needs of students, by his belief system that every student can  succeed and by his inviolable personal integrity," she said. "He is  greatly loved and admired and will be deeply missed."
 
 Cortines battled through difficult financial times during his tenure,  slashing budgets and issuing layoff notices to thousands of district  employees.
 
 The Service Employees International Union Local 99, which represents  district cafeteria workers, bus drivers and other classified employees,  issued a statement praising Cortines' leadership of the district.
 
 "He steered the district through some of its most trying times and it  would have been easy, even expected, for union workers and school  administrators to entrench on opposite sides on budget issues,"  according to the union. "Yet, he always looked for ways to bring all  sides together to find solutions. Even when difficult decisions were  made, and we disagreed, Ramon Cortines could be counted on to bring  honesty and integrity to discussions."
 
 The Board of Education in January chose John Deasy, a top deputy to  Cortines, to take over the district. He will become superintendent  effective tomorrow.
 
 
 ● AMID LAUSD'S RECENT TURMOIL, THE SUPERINTENDENT DID GOOD WORK
 
 LA Daily News Editorial | http://bit.ly/dQKvc3
 
 4/14/2011 - Friday, April 15, 2011, is Ramon "Ray" Cortines' official  last day as superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District.  And despite the external turmoil roiling through the educational system  at the moment - academic reform, charter schools, budget cuts, to name a  few - he leaves the district better than he found it.
 
 The veteran schools chief took leadership of LAUSD in 2008 (officially  at the start of 2009, but he had been the presumed leader since the  previous April) at a particularly low point for the district. It had  been destabilized by abysmal academic performance, a bloated  bureaucracy, a payroll system disaster, and sexual misconduct scandals  in the schools. Many people had lost faith that the second-largest  school district in the nation could meet its basic obligation to  students.
 
 LAUSD hasn't recovered yet from years of failures, but after three years  of competent leadership from Cortines it's on track to do so, and much  of that is due to the work of Cortines.
 
 One of the main reasons for this is Cortines' openness to reform.  Previous LAUSD management had resisted the changes blowing through the  nation that demanded accountability in schools and new models of  teaching students. Even with an educational formula that was broken,  past district leadership was unwilling to embrace the new.
 
 Of course, Cortines was predisposed to support reform. Before returning  to the district (he served briefly as interim chief in late 1999 through  2000), he served as Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's deputy mayor of  education and oversaw the mayor's pioneering reform project, the  Partnership for Los Angeles Schools. Indeed, Villaraigosa this week said  that Cortines was the architect of the mayor's educational ideas and  credits him for steering LAUSD through one of its' most difficult  financial times.
 
 Under his tenure, the district undertook a ground-breaking reform  effort, one of the outgrowths of which was the the pioneering Public  School Choice Program. This program opened up failing and new schools to  outside management and non-traditional education models
 
 This is not to say Cortines was perfect. One of his first public actions  as superintendent was to renege on his promise to dozens of charters to  share district facilities. And some chronic problems at the district,  such as the amount of highly paid consultants and conflicts of interest  in the facilities department, weren't immediately fixed during his  reign. As well, his frankness over the past year led to tension with the  mayor.
 
 In an enormous and troubled bureaucracy, it's unlikely any human could  have had instantly and effortlessly fixed the district's many problems.  Overall, Cortines's contributions to LAUSD far outweigh his few fumbles.
 
 Cortines' candidness and good-sense will be missed in Los Angeles,  though it seems he leaves the district in able hands with successor John  Deasy, who has been serving as Cortines' second-in-command since last  summer. Deasy comes from a background of innovative education as well,  and hopefully will build upon the foundation that Cortines built.
 
 We wish Cortines well in whatever endeavor he embarks upon next and  thank him for his not-small contribution to public education.
 
 ● L.A. UNIFIED'S NEW CHIEF OUTLINES AMBITIOUS AGENDA
 
 SUPT. JOHN DEASY PROMISES SWIFT, SUBSTANTIAL AND SPECIFIC INCREASES IN  GRADUATION RATES, ATTENDANCE AND TEST SCORES. OTHER GOALS TARGET ENGLISH  COMPREHENSION, ATTENDANCE AND SUSPENSION RATES.
 
 By Jason Song and Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times | http://lat.ms/hMj9L2
 
 April 16, 2011 - In his first official day on the job, Los Angeles  schools Supt. John Deasy promised swift, substantial and specific  increases in graduation rates, attendance and test scores in the  nation's second-largest school system.
 
 The graduation rate must rise from 55% to 70% in four years; the  percentage of middle and high school students who test as "proficient"  in math must nearly double; and the percentage of students who pass  courses required to attend state four-year universities must nearly  triple, he said.
 
 Other ambitious goals announced Friday apply to English comprehension, attendance and suspension rates.
 If the district achieves the goals, "we've done a bit of a moon shot,"  Deasy said in an interview Friday. "If we come near them, we're doing  great. If we don't, then we will have failed … And if we fail, we should  be held accountable."
 
 Some goals overlap with bonus clauses in Deasy's contract. He could, for  example, receive a $10,000 bonus if the number of graduates rises by at  least 8% in a given year.
 
 Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa reiterated Friday that he would  pursue measures to support changes in the school district aimed at rapid  academic improvement.
 
 Speaking to a downtown meeting of California newspaper publishers, the  mayor said he would lobby for changes in state law that would alter the  rules for evaluating teachers and for granting tenure to teachers.
 
 He also wants state laws amended so that layoffs, when necessary, occur  based on instructors' performance rather than seniority.
 
 School board member Yolie Flores said she thinks Deasy's targets are reachable, even during an ongoing budget crisis.
 
 "I don't want to be naïve … but it's doable if he has the right team around him," she said.
 
 ● NEW LAUSD SUPERINTENDENT DEASY HITS THE SCHOOL GROUNDS RUNNING
 
 By Connie Llanos, LA Daily News | http://bit.ly/gk5qWC
 
 16 April 2011 - John Deasy doesn't walk - he sprints.
 
 And that's exactly how he assumed his new role Friday superintendent of  the Los Angeles Unified School District, laying out an ambitious set of  goals for the nation's second-largest school district.
 Deasy, who was hired as the district No. 2 eight months ago, replaces  Ramon Cortines, who this week retired from a career in education  spanning six decades after serving as LAUSD's superintendent for 2  years.
 
 While Deasy, 50, is still working on his 100-day plan, on his first day  he announced a districtwide performance management system that he said  will be the centerpiece of his administration.
 
 The New England native said all schools, educators and administrators -  including himself - would be measured on how well they met 15 key  targets that include almost doubling the percentage of students who are  reading at grade level in third grade, completing algebra in eighth  grade and raising high school graduation rates to 70 percent - from 54  percent - by the end of the 2013-14 school year.
 
 "What gets measured usually gets attention and gets done. ... You can't  achieve a goal if you don't know what your goal is," Deasy said.
 
 Speeding from one campus to another Friday, Deasy peppered teachers and  principals with questions about their strategies to improve academic  programs, taking breaks between classroom stops to check his iPhone -  admittedly his one addiction.
 
 At Castelar Elementary in Chinatown, Deasy congratulated administrators  on their high state test scores and their clean campus. Then he  questioned staff on how they were addressing the achievement of Latino  students on campus, who are underperforming their Asian peers.
 
 "I read the data before coming. ... Tell me what you're doing about it," he asked.
 
 Castelar's school coordinator, Sal Sandoval, said he appreciated the tough questions.
 
 "Of course it's a little intimidating. I mean he is our boss, but it's  great to see how much he knows about our school," Sandoval said.
 
 Rushing from one end of the school to another, Deasy slowed down at the  sight of a group of first-graders. He grabbed a seat with them as they  ate their morning snack.
 
 "Tell me about what you're learning," he asked them, a scene that would  repeat itself at each of the four schools Deasy visited Friday morning.
 
 At every school he also forced administrators to take him to the  classrooms they considered "bright spots" and the "biggest concerns."
 
 After spending five minutes in a classroom at another South Los Angeles  elementary school, where a teacher never made eye contact with his  students as he read a math lesson script from a computer screen, Deasy  stormed out of the classroom.
 
 "That is a problem. We need to do something about that," he told the administrator.
 
 Before the principal could answer, Deasy interrupted: "Three-quarters of  your students not reading at grade level is intolerable."
 
 Deasy inherits an LAUSD that is much improved from three years under Cortines' leadership.
 Test scores have risen and dropout rates have decreased, but the issue  that is already dominating his attention is the district's massive  budget deficit.
 
 LAUSD faces a deficit of $408 million for the 2011-12 school year that  could cause the layoff of more than 5,000 teachers, nurses, counselors  and librarians and thousands of other school workers.
 
 The superintendent has already drafted an "emergency budget plan" that  would use a combination of furloughs and money borrowed from the  district's health and welfare benefits account to plug the hole. But  that requires approval from the district's nine employee unions.
 
 As the district negotiates financial concessions with unions to get  through next year, it is also engaged in talks for a new contract for  teachers. Among the new items the district would like to place in the  contract are the use of test scores as a way to evaluate teachers and  more flexibility in hiring and firing.
 
 Pressure to complete these reforms is huge with community groups and  elected officials - including perhaps most vociferously Mayor Antonio  Villaraigosa - demanding change.
 
 Some school board members are already concerned that Deasy may be  getting too involved in setting district policy, traditionally reserved  for the seven-member panel.
 
 And then there are the myriad crises that the superintendent of the  nation's second largest school district has to manage on a daily basis.
 
 On his first day at the helm, Deasy had to deal with a campus lockdown  in the San Fernando Valley and a shooting in the Mid-City area that  injured a high school student.
 
 "I did wake up this morning aware that all of the responsibility is on me," Deasy said.
 
 Fueled with the drive that's helped him climb the professional ladder -  and with a daily dosage of caffeine that includes at least three shots  of espresso and an equal number of coffee cups - Deasy said he's  prepared to deliver.
 
 "There is huge work in front of us," Deasy said.
 
 "But we're not going to talk about the work ... we're just going to get it done."
 
 
 ● NEW LAUSD SUPERINTENDENT FACES $400M DEFICIT, LAYOFFS ON 1ST DAY
 
 KABC News | http://bit.ly/gBM6ab
 
 Friday, April 15, 2011 -- DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Major issues  are already on John Deasy's plate as he officially steps into the role  of Los Angeles Unified School District superintendent Friday.
 
 Deasy faces a $400-million budget deficit and thousands of employee  layoffs. Facing these challenges, the new superintendent says he has a  plan.
 
 He is proposing a series of steps aimed at saving $304 million in the  upcoming school year. This would include requiring district employees to  take an average of 12 furlough days each, borrowing approximately $100  million from the health and welfare fund, and borrowing another possible  $60 million from various other accounts.
 
 This would put the district in a $700-million budget deficit for the  following year, but Deasy said it would also save 80 percent of the jobs  currently on the chopping block.
 
 Deasy also talked about Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's humorous statements  in his State of the City address, in which the mayor referred to Deasy  as "Bill Bratton with a ruler."
 
 "It was a humorous statement being Bill Bratton with a ruler. I think it  was obviously a compliment. He was an amazing police chief, one who  drove the system through the use of data, high expectations and  support," said Deasy.
 
 Deasy said that like Bratton, he plans to move LAUSD quickly with the use of data, facts and support for his staff.
 
 
 LAUSD PRESENTS ONE-YEAR BUDGET PROPOSAL: The one-year  plan could save 80 percent of expected layoffs + smf's 2¢
 
 LAUSD Office of Communications & Media Relations News Release  | http://bit.ly/gdCQ5l
 
 April 12, 2011 - Los Angeles –  A one-year budget proposal was presented  to the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Board of Education  today that would preserve many school programs and save thousands of  jobs as the District attempts to find ways to address its $408 million  deficit as the deadline to rescind layoff notices to employees draws  near.
 
 The one-year temporary proposal, drafted by Superintendent-elect Dr.  John Deasy, is a solution to stabilize LAUSD for the upcoming 2011-12  school year when the District faces the prospect of laying off up to  5,000 teachers and support staff, and thousands of classified personnel.
 
 “This is a tourniquet to stop the bleeding; it’s not a Band-Aid  anymore,” said Dr. Deasy. “We need to stabilize the District one year at  a time.”
 
 After budget negotiations broke down earlier this month in Sacramento,  in which Governor Jerry Brown had lobbied to allow voters to decide  whether to extend current vehicle, sales and income taxes that, if  passed, could have reduced the District’s deficit by nearly half, school  board members asked Dr. Deasy to create a new budget plan to find other  alternative savings.
 
 “Besides saving LAUSD, it’s about saving public education in  California,” said Los Angeles Board of Education Member Nury Martinez.  “Public education is never funded the way it should be.”
 
 In fact, based on historical data, LAUSD is due to receive  attendance-based funding from the State for the 2011-12 school year  that, when adjusted for inflation, is similar to what the District  received in 1999.
 
 The one-year plan would be a starting point for discussions with the  District’s labor partners in asking employee unions to agree to 12  “furlough” days, which would add up to an estimated savings of up to  $168 million. The plan would also temporarily “borrow” $127 million from  LAUSD’s Health and Welfare Fund, which currently maintains reserves.
 
 In return, the plan would roll back proposed class size increases to K-8  classes, and save school programs including those that support the  arts, magnet schools, after-school activities and early education.
 
 The potential savings would be significant as the proposal could save up  to 80 percent of expected layoffs. This means saving the jobs of  teachers, counselors and school-based administrators, campus aides,  nurses and librarians.
 
 However, time is fast approaching to act on this plan and the District  must work together with labor partners to have sufficient time to  rescind layoff notices to employees, according to District officials.
 “If we want to rescind these notices and give people peace, we have to  get this done by May 1,” said Dr. Deasy. “And I believe we can do that.”
 
 Board of Education Vice President Dr. Richard Vladovic echoed the need  for urgency, saying the LAUSD doesn’t “have the luxury of time.”
 
 “If it takes us 24-hours a day, we will meet. If that’s what it takes to  save our employees and children, then that’s what we’ll do,” Dr.  Vladovic said.
 
 
 Though advertised as such, this is no budget. It's an opening  negotiating position by management in a labor contract ; a gambit -  presented as a 'take-it-or-leave-it," last-and-best offer with a  deadline a couple of weeks off. This is no way to run a business or a  contract negotiation or a school district.
 
 First off - Mayor Tony's A New Contract® notwithstanding -  the Union  Contract is not the governing document of the District. A school  district's constitution is the Ed Code, the script is Board Policy and  the budget is - well - The Budget. The health and safety of kids and  employees is paramount and positive educational outcomes are the goals.  Collective bargaining becomes part of glue that holds the process  together, along with good will and shared vision.
 
 The mayor has been on (or perhaps off)  of late about the size of the  contract:  "It's the size of a phonebook!" he says. Charter operators  and their friends want a "thin contract" - as if the svelteness of the  binder matters.
 
 You can never be too to rich or too thin," the Duchess of Windsor is  said to have said. She was rich and she was thin. And shallow.
 
 Nothing is more constraining and inflexible than a short laundry list of  hard-and-fast rules; "Thou shalt not", "You always must", "It is  written and so it shall be".
 
 First we need to agree that if kids are the first priority everyone else  can't have everything else they want. If we cannot agree on that let's  declare bankruptcy and invite the Fiscal Crisis & Management   Assistance Team in.  Here's the form: http://bit.ly/dEYK0R
 
 What we need is an agreement on what it is we wish to do and an  understanding that we will work together in good faith towards those  ends. We don't have the time, money or latitude to do it any other way.  THAT  is a contract that will empower teachers and administrators and   boardmembers and parents and citizens - and the mayor of the city who  serves us. And the mayors and city managers and supervisors and parents,  voters and taxpayers of the other 25 jurisdictions of LAUSD.
 
 Though the only empowerment that really matters is how education empowers young people.
 
 Tardy in Handcuffs?: POLICE TO STOP TICKETING TARDY STUDENTS ON THEIR WAY TO SCHOOL
 
 LOS ANGELES POLICE AGREE TO STOP TRUANCY SWEEPS  DURING THE FIRST HOUR OF CLASS AS FOCUS SHIFTS TO ENCOURAGING  ATTENDANCE.
 
 By Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times | http://lat.ms/gXyfTE
 
 April 14, 2011 - The Los Angeles Police Department has agreed to avoid  ticketing tardy students who are on their way to school, lawyers and  advocates for students announced Thursday.
 
 The tickets, which carry steep fines, are exactly the wrong method for achieving better attendance, said those involved.
 
 Under new and "clarified" procedures agreed to by the LAPD at the  request of advocates for students, truancy sweeps will no longer occur  during the first hour of classes. And daytime curfew sweeps cannot be  conducted except in response to suspected criminal activity by youths in  the sweep area.
 
 Officers are to ask students if they have legitimate explanations for  not being in class before writing tickets. Police are to shift their  focus to making sure students get to school rather than ticketing them.  The LAPD, community groups and lawyers will monitor how the approach is  working.
 
 "It is not our intention to target our youths or to place undue burdens  on their families," said Chief Charlie Beck in a news release.
 
 Finding the right balance between discipline and counseling has  challenged officials of the Los Angeles Unified School District. A city  attorney's program includes counseling but also carries the threat of  criminal penalties for parents. And tickets, with a fine of more than  $200, are intended as a financial deterrent. At Roosevelt High, a  scared-straight method, abandoned last year, included handcuffing  students, advocates said.
 
 "It's teachers, parents and students who will ultimately change the  culture of a school," said Manuel Criollo, lead organizer for the  Community Rights Campaign, which has long focused on this issue. He  praised the new approach at Roosevelt, which still includes selective  discipline at school.
 
 His group joined forces with Public Counsel and the American Civil  Liberties Union of Southern California in working with the LAPD. Talks  are ongoing with L.A. Unified.
 
 City and school police issued more than 47,000 tickets from 2004 to  2009, 88% of them to African Americans and Latinos, according to data  compiled by activists through public records requests. And not one of  the more than 13,118 curfew tickets issued by the school police went to a  white student, advocates said.
 
 Gerardo Navarro was ticketed Friday at Roybal Learning Center. He ran  late for about the sixth time this year, by his count, arriving 15  minutes past the bell. The ticketing process cost him 45 minutes more.  He said friends stay home when they are running late to avoid getting  ticketed. Dealing with a ticket also can consume school time.
 
 School board member Tamar Galatzan, a deputy city attorney, said she  welcomed "any agreement … that results in our students being in class,  ready to learn, when the bell rings."
 
 She also added: "The best way for students to avoid truancy tickets is to get to school — and be in class — on time."
 
 ●●smf's 2¢: ● The accompanying photo to this story in The Times [http://lat.ms/i43AAK]  was captioned:"Photo: Students arrive for school just before the 8:30  a.m. start at Antelope Valley High School. Administrators say the later  start time has cut tardiness."  Antelope Valley HS is not in LAUSD and I  doubt if LAPD enforces tardiness there. BUT the story of the late  school start is a story The Times should cover. The data I've seen from  other schools shows student achievement as measured by standardized  tests improves with a later start. see this:SCHOOL START TIMES AND THE  SLEEP–WAKE CYCLE OF ADOLESCENTS: A Review and Critical Evaluation of  Available Evidence. http://bit.ly/hUzLzY
 
 ● 4LAKids would have expected that this story would've been driven by  the mayor's office, seeing as how he's the Education Mayor and this is a  story about LAUSD and LAPD coming together. HOWEVER the decision was  driven by  "lawyers and advocates for students" - in other words  enlightenment came through the threat of legal action. And when you read  a little deeper you realize that Roosevelt High School (where tardy  students were handcuffed) is one of the Mayor's Partnership Schools.   "Selective Discipline" (current practice at Roosevelt instead of "Scared  Straight") sounds about as inequitable as it gets - and 180 degrees  separated from the LAUSD Discipline Foundation Policy of School-Wide  Positive Behavior Support. | http://bit.ly/LAUSD-DFP
 
 HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T  FIT: The Rest of the Stories from Other Sources
 California Community Colleges, State Universities  and UC: “I CAN BARELY AFFORD TO BE HERE”: Themes in the News f... http://bit.ly/hg3yo2
 
 DEEP RIFTS OVER NEXT NCLB: Consensus on what's wrong, not how to fix it: By John Fensterwald - Educated Guess | ... http://bit.ly/gURd7t
 
 DETROIT SENDING ALL TEACHERS PINK SLIPS, PLANS TO MODIFY CONTRACT:   By Lori Higgins and Chastity Pratt Dawsey,... http://bit.ly/dGtHqp
 
 LAUSD SUMMER SCHOOL PROGRAM CUTS: LAUSD summer school offerings to be limited due to budget crisis Daily Breeze... http://bit.ly/eppvXk
 
 LAUSD PRESENTS ONE-YEAR BUDGET PROPOSAL: The one-year plan could save 80 percent of expected layoffs + smf's 2¢:... http://bit.ly/fTNFph
 
 NEW EAST LA STAR HIGH WILL NOT OPEN THIS FALL/LA NUEVA PREPARATORIA EN EL ESTE DE LOS ÁNGELES NO ABRIRÁ ESTE OTO... http://bit.ly/hJRNpk
 
 MAYOR’S STATE OF THE CITY SPEECH FOCUSES ON THE SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTEAD: Villaraigosa calls for a streamlined te... http://bit.ly/huVeSs
 
 L.A. UNIFIED CAN’T ESCAPE CELEBRITTY CHEF’S DRAMA: District officials take reporters on a tour of an East L.A. p... http://bit.ly/i6TVH6
 
 Jamie Oliver on Jon Stewart’s Daily Show: LAUSD & SUPERINTENDENT CORTINES GUILTY OF ‘UNDERHANDED PROCUREMENT’: p... http://bit.ly/eRsWHu
 
 VILLARAIGOSA TO FOCUS ON EDUCATAION IN HIS STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS: The mayor's emphasis on struggling schools... http://bit.ly/giaiIS
 
 L.A. UNIFIED RELEASES SCHOOL RATINGS USING ‘VALUE-ADDED’ METHOD: The approach focuses on how much progress stude... http://bit.ly/dO9jKG
 
 FORMER L.A. COMMUNTY COLLEGE CONSTRUCTION CHIEF TO GET $211,000 SALARY FOR A YEAR, PLUS OTHER BENEFITS: Unanimou... http://bit.ly/gngBdC
 
 Calendar of Doom: OPTIONS TO FIX STATE BUDGET GETTING ‘MORE DIFFICULT’: By John Woolfolk and Sharon Noguchi/ Med... http://bit.ly/dIOsoe
 
 EVENTS: Coming up next week...
 *Dates and times subject to change. ________________________________________
 •  SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION BOND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE:
 http://www.laschools.org/bond/
 Phone: 213-241-5183
 ____________________________________________________
 •  LAUSD FACILITIES COMMUNITY OUTREACH CALENDAR:
 http://www.laschools.org/happenings/
 Phone: 213-241.8700
 
 
 
 
 What can YOU do?
 •  E-mail, call or write your school board member:
 Yolie.Flores.Aguilar@lausd.net •  213-241-6383
 Tamar.Galatzan@lausd.net •  213-241-6386
 Monica.Garcia@lausd.net  •  213-241-6180
 Marguerite.LaMotte@lausd.net •  213-241-6382
 Nury.Martinez@lausd.net •  213-241-6388
 Richard.Vladovic@lausd.net •  213-241-6385
 Steve.Zimmer@lausd.net •  213-241-6387
 ...or your city councilperson, mayor,  the governor, member of congress,  senator - or the president. Tell them what you really think!  •  Find  your state legislator based on your home address. Just go to: http://bit.ly/dqFdq2 •  There are 26 mayors and five county supervisors representing jurisdictions within LAUSD, the mayor of LA can be reached at mayor@lacity.org •   213.978.0600
 •  Call or e-mail Governor Brown: 213-897-0322 e-mail: http://www.govmail.ca.gov/
 •  Open the dialogue. Write a letter to the editor. Circulate these  thoughts. Talk to the principal and teachers at your local school.
 •  Speak with your friends, neighbors and coworkers. Stay on top of education issues. Don't take my word for it!
 •  Get involved at your neighborhood school. Join your PTA. Serve on a School Site Council. Be there for a child.
 •  If you are eligible to become a citizen, BECOME ONE.
 •  If you a a citizen, REGISTER TO VOTE.
 •  If you are registered, VOTE LIKE THE FUTURE DEPENDS ON IT.  THEY DO!.
 
 
 
 
 
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