logo
L.A. teachers union pursues big salary hike and bold ideals in opposition to Trump agenda

L.A. teachers union pursues big salary hike and bold ideals in opposition to Trump agenda

Yahoo26-03-2025

At a time when President Trump has threatened to cut education funding to institutions that cross him, the Los Angeles teachers union is having a throwback moment: It's pushing an aggressive social justice and diversity agenda — and demanding a big raise from the L.A Unified School District.
United Teachers Los Angeles President Cecily Myart-Cruz said her members are fully cognizant of Trump's hostility to union priorities but are determined to stick with theirs.
"Trump's laser-like focus attacks on immigrant families; LGBTQIA+ community; diversity, equity, inclusion; our kids — is hitting our communities hard," Myart-Cruz said in a recent briefing to lay out bargaining demands ahead of the June 30 expiration of the current contract. "We are hearing those fears and seeing the concerns and worries throughout classrooms and school doors daily."
The union's platform "is not only about protecting Los Angeles students, educators and families over the next three years, but it means continuing to build a future that is monumental," she said. "In a time when the federal government is trying to tear everything down, we will keep on building."
At the center of the union platform is a push for automatic annual salary increases — meant to reward experience and additional education — at a proposed 3.25% a year for the first 10 years of an educator's career. That would be more than 26 times the current annual bump in some cases, and the higher annual raises would be built in, without having to bargain for them in every contract cycle. Additional across-the-board raises would still be possible, and UTLA is proposing such a 3% raise in the second year of a two-year contract.
Wages aside, UTLA's wide-ranging, socially conscious platform springs from 665 member meetings held at schools in the fall, when the union also sought broad input from students, parents and other community members. The union's official bargaining team has 140 members.
In a direct challenge to Trump's opposition to diversity, equity and inclusion practices, known as DEI, UTLA is calling for support of "new educators, with targeted investment in the recruitment and retention of BIPOC, multilingual and immigrant educators and service providers." BIPOC stands for Black, Indigenous and people of color.
The Trump administration, meanwhile, canceled some $600 million in teacher training grants nationwide, alleging that these programs are promoting inappropriate and 'divisive ideologies' linked to DEI. A judge has issued an order temporarily blocking this action.
The UTLA contract proposal also calls for "support for, defense and expansion of the school district's Black Student Achievement Plan and Ethnic Studies."
Even before Trump won election to a second term as president, Los Angeles Unified had made changes to the Black Student Achievement Plan. Under pressure from the Biden administration to abide by court bans on affirmative action, district officials had revised the program to take in students of all races and ethnicities — a concession that UTLA opposed.
Read more: Key points people need to understand about Trump's Education Department closure
The Trump administration has characterized programs that single out any group for help based on race as illegal discrimination. Trump-appointed Education Secretary Linda McMahon has testified before Congress that a Black history course could come under scrutiny based on its content.
UTLA also is calling for "strengthened policies to support LGBTQIA+ students, educators and staff" at a time when Trump has announced that the government will recognize two genders only — male and female. Trump has removed nonbinary individuals from among the groups that will be protected from discrimination.
While Trump has authorized immigration officers to enter schools to arrest immigrants for deportation, UTLA calls for "increased support for immigrant students and families, with and without documentation, including support for newcomers."
Leaders of L.A. Unified are closely aligned with the teachers union on protecting immigrants and LGBTQ+ rights. Before and after Trump won election, school district leaders embraced the role of being a "sanctuary" for immigrants and LGBTQ+ individuals.
Read more: The California Office for Civil Rights is closing. What now for school discrimination cases?
These L.A. Unified's policies put the district in the crosshairs of Trump directives, said Will Swaim, president of California Policy Center, a group whose projects include persuading government employees to drop union membership.
"The district's DEI initiatives and self-declared sanctuary status make it a potential subject of investigation by the federal government," Swaim said.
Swaim's organization has been involved in the March 3 filing of a Title IX complaint to the federal Office for Civil Rights, now headed by Trump appointees. Title IX prohibits sex-based discrimination in any educational program or activity that receives federal financial assistance. This complaint alleges that L.A. Unified is violating federal civil rights law by allowing students to use the bathroom and locker room that best conforms to their gender identity. The complaint also targets San Francisco Unified and Capistrano Unified.
L.A. Unified defines its policy as complying with California law.
The complaint, in turn, also takes aim at state officials, accusing the California Department of Education of violating federal law — which, the Trump administration said, does not permit gender identity to factor into the use of restrooms and locker rooms and eligibility for sports teams. The administration has opened investigations into San Jose State and the California Interscholastic Federation, which governs high school athletics.
The UTLA agenda also includes minimizing or eliminating school police, pursuing low-income housing for both union and community members and investing in campus green spaces and recycling.
Contract negotiations will hinge on what the district can afford to pay the 37,000 employees that UTLA represents, who include teachers, psychologists, counselors and nurses.
"LAUSD has the money to fund these contract proposals, but you will hear that they don't," Myart-Cruz said. "Don't believe it."
Myart-Cruz and leaders of other district employee unions point to a record $6.4-billion ending balance.
District officials declined to comment on UTLA's demands, but have said repeatedly that the size of the reserve is misleading, saying that most of the dollars already are committed to future obligations and that currently the district is spending at a rate much higher than it is taking in money. School district leaders, including Supt. Alberto Carvalho, have said LAUSD is spending at a pace that would nearly wipe out its reserves over the next three years.
District officials also said they are concerned about future federal funding, which accounts for about 8% of the district total, or an estimated $1.26 billion per year.
Another significant cost element in the UTLA proposal would boost the minimum teacher pay from $69,000 to $80,000 — a 16% increase, as both a recruitment incentive and to offset the high cost of living in Southern California. The maximum pay — for a 30-year teacher with full education credits — would increase from about 119,000 to about $134,000.
In addition, UTLA wants to lower the number of education credits needed to earn salary bonuses by nearly 30%. This also would make higher wages available earlier in a teacher's career. UTLA claims that teachers currently must earn the equivalent of two master's degrees to get the full bonus — a heavy lift, they say, amid ongoing classroom duties.
The proposed automatic pay-scale bumps alone would immediately provide a 10% pay increase for 95% of UTLA members, the union has calculated. And the average salary increase over two years would be 20% under their entire proposal.
Negotiations are just beginning to ramp up in intensity. The union has gone on strike twice since 2019.
The district's other mega employee union, Local 99 of Service Employees International Union, has been working under a contract that expired in June. Local 99 represents more than 30,000 L.A. Unified employees, who include bus drivers, teacher aides, campus supervision aides, cafeteria workers and custodians.
Although its members won wage hikes as high as 30% in the previous negotiations, union Executive Director Max Arias said more gains are needed in salary raises and increased working hours to get all his members above the poverty line.
In connection to the demands of UTLA, Arias said: "There's a lot of alignment. And there's a shared analysis that LAUSD can definitely afford to fulfill all of these things that are essential for education."
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon Musk threatens to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft after Trump feud. What does it mean for the US space industry?
Elon Musk threatens to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft after Trump feud. What does it mean for the US space industry?

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Elon Musk threatens to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft after Trump feud. What does it mean for the US space industry?

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. An explosive, and very public, feud between President Donald Trump and SpaceX founder Elon Musk on Thursday (June 5) has raised doubts over the future of America's space industry. The war of words could place $22 billion of SpaceX's government contracts with multiple U.S. space programs at risk, according to one estimate, although the real figure — which remains classified — could be significantly higher. Following threats from the president on his social media platform Truth Social that the U.S. could cancel the government contracts and subsidies awarded to Musk's companies, the CEO of SpaceX retorted that his space company would "begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately." Hours later, Musk responded to a follower telling him to "cool off" by saying "Good advice. Ok, we won't decommission Dragon." The disagreement began on Tuesday (June 3) when Musk criticized the administration's proposed tax and spending bill on his social media platform X. "This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it," Musk wrote on X. Related: 'No radio astronomy from the ground would be possible anymore': Satellite mega-swarms are blinding us to the cosmos — and a critical 'inflection point' is approaching This then escalated into a full-blown social media feud on Thursday, with Musk claiming that Trump's name appears in unreleased files relating to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The White House condemned these allegations. "This is an unfortunate episode from Elon, who is unhappy with the One Big Beautiful Bill because it does not include the policies he wanted," representatives wrote on X. Trump then claimed Musk "just went CRAZY," posting: "The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts. I was always surprised that Biden didn't do it!" SpaceX's Dragon capsule is a reusable spacecraft capable of carrying up to seven passengers and cargo to and from Earth orbit, according to SpaceX. NASA currently relies on the capsule to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS), so canceling these government contracts effectively eliminates America's ability to launch astronauts to space from American soil, Live Science's sister website, reported. NASA also heavily relies on SpaceX for other space programs, having selected the Starship Human Landing System (HLS), a lunar lander variant of the company's next-generation Starship spacecraft, to carry American astronauts to the moon for the first time in more than 50 years aboard the 2027 Artemis 3 mission. NASA is investing $4 billion into Starship's development, and canceling its contract could seriously handicap NASA and the future of U.S.-led space exploration. While other competitors exist, such as Amazon founder Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin and Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, they lag far behind SpaceX. RELATED STORIES —Facing steep funding cuts, scientists propose using black holes as particle colliders instead of building new ones on Earth —Trump's 2026 budget would slash NASA funding by 24% and its workforce by nearly one third —NASA plans to build a giant radio telescope on the 'dark side' of the moon. Here's why. The Starliner capsule is not yet certified to fly operational astronaut missions and was responsible for "stranding" two astronauts on the ISS for nine months last year. The astronauts returned to Earth on March 18 aboard a SpaceX Dragon capsule, and neither Boeing nor NASA have offered any significant updates into fixes that will make Starliner flightworthy. SpaceX's lead on its competitors is reflected in the size of its government subsidies. In April, the U.S. Space Force, the military branch of U.S. space exploration, awarded the company nearly $6 billion in launch contracts, while the United Launch Alliance received $5.4 billion and Blue Origin $2.4 billion. In response to the feud between Musk and Trump, NASA press secretary Bethany Stevens declined to comment on SpaceX, but she did tell Reuters that "we will continue to work with our industry partners to ensure the president's objectives in space are met." NASA's deputy administrator Lori Garver told Reuters that, as well as not being in national interests, canceling SpaceX's contacts would probably not be legal. However, she also added that "a rogue CEO threatening to decommission spacecraft, putting astronauts' lives at risk, is untenable."

The Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz for June 7
The Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz for June 7

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz for June 7

Happy June, quotes readers! It was a tense and smoggy week in Chicago. Immigration advocates were alerted Wednesday of people being detained at a U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement office on the Near South Side. Organizers and several aldermen went to protest, and several of them clashed with federal agents. Now, City Council members plan to have a hearing to look into the Chicago Police Department's response to the demonstration. Local immigration advocates also plan to challenge President Donald Trump's travel ban that bars or restricts travelers from 19 countries. The U.S. president spoke with several world leaders this week. After a call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Trump said the two countries will continue their trade talks. During their phone call Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin told the president that he would respond to Ukraine's recent drone attacks on a Russian airfield. And in a meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Trump suggested that pursuing peace in eastern Europe is not the best path forward right now. Amidst all of this, the relationship between the president and his former close adviser Elon Musk came to a bitter end as the two exchanged harsh words on social media, and Trump threatened to cut Starlink and SpaceX's government contracts. The Trump administration is also investigating former President Joe Biden's use of an autopen to sign pardons and other documents. Meanwhile in Chicago, Mayor Brandon Johnson pushed aldermen to add a city grocery tax as the long-established state grocery levy expires. A jury found Crosetti Brand guilty of first-degree murder in the slaying of Jayden Perkins, the 11-year-old killed in a brutal 2024 attack as he tried to protect his pregnant mother. And Chicago police determined that Officer Krystal Rivera, a mother and four-year veteran of the force, was mistakenly shot and killed by a fellow cop during a confrontation with an armed suspect Thursday in the Chatham neighborhood. In Springfield, Illinois lawmakers voted to pass the state budget. The $55 billion spending plan was balanced with a combination of spending cuts and an estimated $800 million in tax increases, including hikes on tobacco products, vaping and online sportsbooks. The passage of the budget closed out a legislative session with mixed results for Gov. JB Pritzker. Jerry Reinsdorf is selling the Chicago White Sox — just not this year. On Thursday, the team announced Reinsdorf and billionaire Justin Ishbia reached a long-term investment agreement for Ishbia to obtain a controlling interest in the team by 2029 at the earliest. In other sports news, the Chicago Fire are privately financing a $650 million soccer stadium at The 78, the Chicago Sports Network is finally broadcasting on Comcast and the Chicago Sky are taking on the Indiana Fever this weekend in the first professional women's basketball game played at the United Center. But fans hoping to catch another matchup between Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark will have to wait: The 2024 WNBA rookie of the year is out for a quadriceps strain. Though the forecast looks nice, you may consider spending some time indoors this weekend. Smoke from Canadian wildfires is blanketing Chicago, with the city's air quality at times ranked the worst in the U.S. That's it for the news! Test your knowledge of who said what with the Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz from June 1 to 7. Missed last week? You can find it here or check out our past editions of Quotes of the Week.

Could Musk-Trump feud stoke GOP divisions ahead of midterms? ANALYSIS
Could Musk-Trump feud stoke GOP divisions ahead of midterms? ANALYSIS

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Could Musk-Trump feud stoke GOP divisions ahead of midterms? ANALYSIS

Even by the standards of President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk's relationship -- an unprecedented alliance punctuated by a meme-inspired reshaping of the government, numerous rocket launches, assassination attempts, a quarter-billion-dollar political gamble and electric car photo-ops -- it's been an unusual week. For months, Musk had been the closest of Trump's advisers -- even living at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and spending time with the president's family. More recently, Trump gave Musk a congratulatory Oval Office sendoff from his work leading cost-cutting efforts in his administration, giving him a golden key with a White House insignia. But the billionaire's muted criticisms of Trump's "big, beautiful bill" grew louder and more pointed, culminating in posts Thursday on his social media platform taking credit for Trump's November win and Republicans' takeover of the Senate. "Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate," Musk posted. "Such ingratitude." Some lawmakers and Republicans worry Musk's apparent acrimonious departure from Trump's orbit could create new uncertainties for the party -- and stoke GOP divisions that would not serve Republicans well heading into a critical legislative stretch before the midterm elections. The back-and-forth attacks, which continued into the weekend and took a sharply personal turn, reverberated across a capital they have both reshaped. Trump on Friday told several reporters over the phone that he was not thinking about Musk and told ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl that Musk had "lost his mind." In the near term, Trump and the GOP are trying to muscle their signature tax and domestic policy megabill through the House and Senate, with the slimmest of margins and no shortage of disagreements. MORE: Speaker Johnson tries to protect fate of megabill from Trump-Musk crossfire Any shift on the key issues could topple the high-wire act needed to please House and Senate Republicans. A nonstop torrent of criticism from Musk's social media megaphone could collapse negotiations, harden the position of the bill's critics and even undermine other pieces of Trump's first-term agenda. "You hate seeing division and chaos," Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., who represents a swing district, told ABC News about the Trump-Musk fracas. "It's not helpful." Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, called Musk a "credible voice" on "debt and spending" issues. "It's never helpful when he says those things. He's a believable person and he has a broad reach, but I think he's frustrated and people understand the context," Arrington said, predicting that both men will eventually resolve their dispute. Republican operatives watching the spat unfold this week told ABC News it is too early to say how the feud between Trump and Musk could affect the next election. The billionaire spent more than anyone else on the last election, pouring $270 million into groups boosting Trump and other Republicans up and down the ballot, according to Federal Election Commission filings. MORE: Trump-Musk feud leaves some DOGE staffers worried about their futures: Sources He already suggested he would cut back on his political donations next cycle, more than a year out from the midterm elections. In the final stretch of the 2024 race, he relocated to Pennsylvania, hosting town halls and bankrolling his own get-out-the-vote effort in the critical swing state. Since his foray into Washington, Musk has become a deeply polarizing and unpopular figure, while the president's approval rating has ticked up in some recent surveys. Groups affiliated with Musk spent $20 million this spring on the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, only for the liberal candidate to win -- signaling to some Republicans the limits of Musk's political pull. While his support may be missed by Republicans next cycle, Trump has continued to raise millions of dollars to support his future political plans, a remarkable sum for a term-limited president that underscores his central role in the party and undisputed kingmaker status. MORE: Trump tells ABC Musk 'lost his mind,' as CEO's dad says 'make sure this fizzles out' Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., who is mulling a gubernatorial bid in 2026, downplayed the tensions or political implications, suggesting that reporters "spend way more time worrying about these things than most average people." "I'm sure they will make peace," Lawler told ABC News on Friday. There were some signs of a détente. While Musk continued to hurl insults at Trump ally and critic Steve Bannon, his social media activity appeared to cool off on Friday, and the billionaire said one supporter was "not wrong" for saying Trump and Musk are "much stronger together than apart." Through nearly a decade in politics and three campaigns for the White House, Trump has demonstrated a remarkable ability to move past disputes or disagreements with many intraparty rivals and onetime critics, including some who now serve in his Cabinet. Now, some Republicans left Washington this week asking themselves if Musk is willing to do the same. Could Musk-Trump feud stoke GOP divisions ahead of midterms? ANALYSIS originally appeared on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store