[Editor’s Note: As a community leader, Liz Kinnon, a parent, sent the following letter to many community members and School Board members regarding proposed job cuts. Board member Kathy Paspalis’s response follows Ms. Kinnon’s dispatch.]
One would think all CCUSD parents would be interested in writing to Board members and local media about this.
If so, it needs to be done IMMEDIATELY (by Monday) or it will be moot. Do we care that only teachers — and no administrators — are facing possible layoffs?
The School Board appreciates respectful input from the people it represents.
What can we, as parents, do? Write to the Board and local media.
Please pass this along to any and all interested parties.
http://www.thefrontpageonline.com/new/articles1-8894/AMielkeSuggestionPutAllAdministratorsonNotice
http://www.thefrontpageonline.com/new/articles1-8858/HowtheDistrictMakesSureCutsFallNeartheClassroom
Sincerely, Liz Kinnon`
The Paspalis Response
Dear Liz, and other concerned members of the Culver City community:
I appreciate everyone’s concern for our students and our teachers. Indeed, our students are my primary concern, and I take pride in knowing we have one of the best teaching staffs around. I’d like to try to sort through some of the misleading sound bites I’ve listened to from the Teachers Union leader over the past number of weeks.
First of all, let’s look at the administrative staff. The District Office has a Superintendent and has been shaved down to 4.4 certificated administrators. That’s it. For a student body of over 6,500 and an organization with over 500 employees. Those are the folks who would need March 15 notices. All the other certificated administrators are either principals or assistant principals. Classified administrators and staff require only 45 days notice; not the March 15 notice.
Now, let’s look at LAUSD’s administrative notices. The sound bite is that LAUSD lays off its entire administrative staff annually. Actually, these notices, according to our Superintendent who has spoken to LAUSD officials, are merely notices to LAUSD administrators that they may be transferred to another site or another administrative position.
Transferred.
This is the part of the sound bite that you’ve not heard (until now), and the omission of this little bit of information creates a great misperception in terms of what LAUSD is doing and what is being advocated that we should be doing here in CCUSD.
Within LAUSD, a district that has over 100 times as many students as our district, this maneuver makes sense. They need the flexibility to move a director or assistant principal or (fill in the blank) from one “local district” to another, from one middle or high school to another, etc.
Our district has only one middle school. Thus, obviously, we're not exactly going to transfer an assistant principal from one middle school to another, as LAUSD does.
Next, let’s look at the concept of advocating emulating something a district 100 times the size of ours is doing. Note this only occurs when it's convenient for whatever the union leader is arguing, and usually is unrelated to the reality of a district the size of CCUSD.
A fair tactic, but remember to take what you’re reading (even now, of course) with a grain of salt, or with some folks, whose primary focus is to advocate for their members, perhaps the whole shaker.
For example, LAUSD has a police force to handle school security. A police force. Note that the union leader doesn't refer to LAUSD policy and practice when suggesting what we need to do with our CCUSD security force. (The suggestion: “reorganizing the security department with security officers reporting to site principals, instead of to a security supervisor.”) That's because it doesn't translate.
(It also makes no sense, at least if we want our kids to continue to be safe, but that’s an entirely different story.) Neither does the suggestion regarding so-called LAUSD administrative layoffs. It doesn't translate, but it sure did make a great sound bite!
Now let’s look more specifically at the March 15 layoff notices that unfortunately some of our amazing teaching staff have received.
Don’t for a minute think this is an action the Board wanted to take, or takes lightly. However, the union did nothing to help us prevent this. I sincerely hope that intelligent people on our teaching staff and in our Culver City community are not conflating what's going on in Wisconsin and other states with what's going on in our district.
I support people's rights to collectively bargain. I can't speak for the entire Board, but I’d bet that's something all of us actually agree on.
In fact, this Board sent its opening negotiation offer to the union in July. That's July 2010. We tried to move early and quickly in anticipation of and in the face of the severe budget crisis in Sacramento in order to come up with a viable solution and avoid as many March 15th “pink slip” notices as possible.
There’s no avoiding the impact of what’s going on in Sacramento, despite the Culver City community cushioning the blow a bit by passing Measure EE. We knew this, but somehow it appears that the union did not.
We asked the union to meet with the negotiation team in August. And September. And October… But the union came to the table and gave its first response in January. That's January 2011. And if the union doesn't start negotiating until January, we're not going to have a contract ready prior to the March 15 noticing time. And as a result, we had to send out March 15 notices. It’s just that simple.
Let that information settle in your mind for a minute. We have an unavoidable fiscal crisis due to the state’s deficit issues.
Foreseeable; coming at us like a train barreling down the track.
We try to negotiate early to avoid as many layoffs as possible, by trying to find another way to deal with the gap in the CCUSD budget.
The union doesn’t come to the table in time to negotiate a contract by the March 15 “pink slip” deadline, and all of a sudden the Board is being berated for not giving lay off notices to 4.4 certificated administrators or our principals? Seriously? Seriously. At this point, shake your fist at the Board if you like, but call and write to your legislators in Sacramento; they’re the ones who control the real purse strings. And continue to ask questions of, and send emails to, the Board as well, but if at this point you don’t also have a few more questions for the Teachers Union and its leadership than you did before reading this, you should.
Sincerely,
Kathy Paspalis