If you plan to attend the Los Angeles school board meeting today, you might want to pack a lunch. And a dinner. And maybe even a pillow.
If the last two meetings are any measure, we're heading back to the bad old days of L.A. Unified, when battling board members and complex issues routinely produced sessions so long that parents had to leave to put the kids to bed before their turn to speak rolled around.
I didn't attend last week's meeting, but I watched the replay Sunday on television. It lasted longer than two football games. Who won and who lost was hard to tell.
The eight-hour session dealt with two big issues: What to do about the beleaguered iPad project, and whom to favor in passing out federal funds earmarked for low-income kids.
By the end of the night, both were resolved in ways that seemed to please no one — in a district that can't seem to avoid the dynamic of framing issues as "us against them."
Board member Steve Zimmer put it bluntly: "I'm nervous about the tone and tenor in the room," he said during the contentious discussion of how to spend federal anti-poverty money. "These questions go way beyond applauding for one side or the other."
As he spoke, I heard applause from the crowd in the auditorium.
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For years, Los Angeles campuses with at least 40% low-income students got federal money to pay for services — additional teachers, tutoring, counseling, parent education — to help close the achievement gap between poor and middle-income students.
But the district changed its formula two years ago to give more of that federal money to schools with the most low-income children. Now 50% of a school's students must be poor for the campus to receive that extra funding.
Last Tuesday the board was asked by its San Fernando Valley members to reconsider the change because it's hurting suburban schools with large groups of low-income students.
Without a change, Chatsworth High, where 49% of the students are low-income, will have to cut half a million dollars from next year's budget, after losing $235,000 this year. Tiny Dahlia Heights Elementary, near Eagle Rock, will lose after-school computer sessions, homework help, library hours, math intervention, an art program — all because it's a few poor students shy of this year's 50% threshold.
West Valley board member Tamar Galatzan sees the shift as a blow to schools and struggling families, bobbing just above the poverty line.
"These aren't the kind of schools that can raise that money from their parents," she said. Most are in working-class neighborhoods. Many are seeing test scores slide. Some are considering leaving the district and going charter to maximize their shrunken budgets.
Let them go, said board member Monica Garcia, whose Eastside schools are packed with low-income students from low-income neighborhoods.
Restoring the money to Galatzan's schools "means taking books away from poor children." she said.
But the choice is not just about books or field trips or homework help; it's also a philosophical decision about which poor kids matter most in a district that can't call on much of a middle class.
Going back to the previous formula would take about $5 away from each of the hundreds of thousands of low-income students in poverty-heavy neighborhoods like Garcia's.
And it would produce about $300 for each low-income student at schools where poverty hovers between 40% and under 50%.
"Today," board member Garcia declared, "we are choosing one over the other."
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