400,000 Los Angeles Students Missed School As Union Employees Launch 3-Day Strike Demanding Better Wages, Benefits

Nearly half a million students in Los Angeles missed school Tuesday after tens of thousands of workers employed with the second-largest district in the nation walked off the job, beginning a three-day strike demanding higher wages to afford Southern California living.

Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) employees, which staff roughly 65,000 workers and serves 442,000 students, launched the strike early Tuesday morning after a year of negotiating pay increases and health benefits with district officials came to a standstill.

“Some of our bus drivers are actually homeless, some of them can’t pay their bills,” Lynneier Boyd-Peterson, a bus driver employed with the Los Angeles Unified School District, told KTLA. “They can’t even pay their mortgage — it’s impossible.”

Boyd-Peterson is one of many employees represented in the strike organized by The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 99 union or United Teachers Los Angeles (UTA), which includes educators and other school districts employees, like bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers, and teaching aids.

“We love our students, and we’re here for the students,” she said. “But if we can’t properly take care of our kids, how can we properly come here and work as well?”

Union officials are seeking an overall pay increase of 30% in base salary over four years, an additional $2-an-hour increase for the lowest-paid workers, and other increases in compensation as most of the full-time and part-time employees make an average of $25,000 annually, which barely covers the costly price of living within a drivable radius to district schools.

“We are asking the parents to please stand with us because if we can take care of our families properly, we can actually take care of their families as well,” she added.

The New York Times reported that SEIU officials called for a limited strike this week to protest the district’s negotiation tactics.

Max Arias, the executive director of Local 99, told The Times in a statement that its members “know a strike will be a sacrifice, but the school district has pushed workers to take this action.”

Yolanda Mimes Reed, a special education assistant who attended the rally in Koreatown, told NPR that she works four different jobs to afford to live in Los Angeles, and seeing an increase in her salary would pull her above the poverty line.

“And it means letting go of one of those jobs, so I don’t have to be working all the time,” Reed said. “I can spend some time with my family.”

District officials reportedly offered the unions a 23% raise over a five-year period, including bonuses. However, union officials have yet to respond to the past three offers.

LAUSD Superintendent Alberto Carvalho reportedly said on Monday that he hoped to have “a transparent, honest conversation” to stop the planned three-day strike.

“We understand the plight, the frustration, and the realities faced by our workforce members,” Carvalho said Monday evening, NPR reported. “We’re willing to work with them, but the way we find a solution is by having a partner at the table to actually negotiate possible results.”

“We were never in the same room or even in the same building,” he said, according to The Epoch Times.

Aaron Withe, CEO of Freedom Foundation, a Washington-D.C.-based think tank advocating for public employees from political exploitation, told The Daily Wire in a statement that the organization frequently hears from teachers who are sick of union politics — especially after seeing what the COVID school shutdowns have done children, he said, calling the latest strike from union officials “unconscionable.”

“They just want to teach their students reading, writing, and math, Withe said, adding, “they’re fed up.”.

The strike marks the school district’s second protest in the last four years, where United Teachers of Los Angeles went on strike for six days before reaching a deal.

Lindsey Graham, Al Franken Bet On The Winner Of The 2024 Presidential Election

Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and former Senator Al Franken (D-MN) made a bet on the winner of the 2024 Presidential election.

The two former colleagues made the wager in an interview on “The Daily Show” Monday night. Toward the end of the segment, Graham and Franken sparred over former President Trump’s legacy and argued whether Trump could beat President Joe Biden in a rematch. Graham said Trump would have to work hard to win back many of his supporters, but bet $20 that he would win.

Graham began the exchange. “Here’s the question for you and maybe others: Trump is trying to come back,” he said. “I think he’s got a better than good chance of winning the primary and a 50/50 chance of being president again.” Franken put his head in his hand, while the audience jeered. “So you’ve got to ask yourself, how can that be?”

“Here’s what I know about this country, about this democracy, about our Constitution,” Franken interjected. “The number one tradition that’s meaningful in this country is the peaceful transition of power. … How then can you want a guy who allowed us to go through this violent insurrection?” he said, referring to the January 6 Capitol riot.

“Well let me just say this — the other side of the story is that when President Trump was president, on the things I care the most about — national security — I thought he did a damn good job,” said Graham, also lauding Trump for negotiating the Abraham Accords, taking out Iranian terrorist leader Qasem Soleimani, securing the southern border, and acheiving energy independence. “So I look at the policies of Trump, and I like the policies of Trump.”

But Graham said that both Trump and Biden would be challenged to prove that they deserve four more years in office. “At the end of the day, [Trump]’s got to prove to people — not me — that he’s able to lead us again. And that will be a challenge for him. And that will be a challenge for Biden to say ‘Give me four more years after the last four.’ We’ll see what happens.”

“Well, l think Biden wins that,” Franken replied.

“Let’s bet. Can we bet?” Graham responded.

“Yeah, how much?” Franken asked.

“Twenty bucks. To be paid here,” Graham said. He then shook Franken’s hand to seal the bet.

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Then on Tuesday morning, Graham knocked Trump for picking a fight with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, and advised him to stop. “If you start this thing, you better be willing to take it,” Graham said in an interview on “Fox & Friends.”

“I don’t like it. Trump’s not into these ‘thou shalt nots.’ That’s not his thing,” he said, referring to the phrase, “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican,” the so-called “11th Commandment” used by Ronald Reagan during his 1966 campaign for California governor.

“The bottom line is, I think if I were Trump, which I am not, I would be running on four years of being a pretty effective president, ‘the best is yet to come,’” Graham added. “I would say, ‘DeSantis, I picked him out of a crowd. I knew he was talented early on. I’m the guy that saw the talent. He’s been a great governor, but I’m better able to be president the next four years.’ But that ain’t gonna happen.”