Los Angeles Unified Faces District‑Wide Closures as Unions Threaten Tuesday Strike Over Pay and Reserves
Los Angeles Unified School District warns schools may close next week after three major unions representing roughly 70,000 of its 83,000 employees announced plans to strike starting Tuesday unless new contracts are reached. A LAUSD spokesperson says the district negotiated with United Teachers Los Angeles, the Associated Administrators of Los Angeles and trades unions over spring break and reached a deal only with trades, insisting its offers to the others are "among the most generous in the state" and that it is already in deficit spending. Union leaders argue the district is hoarding money, pointing to more than $5 billion in reserves, while LAUSD counters that its projected June 2026 balance of $3.8 billion includes legally restricted funds and that all unrestricted reserves would be gone within two years at current spending levels. District officials have launched a website to help families find food distribution sites and mental‑health services if schools shut down, and have acknowledged that closures are virtually certain if any two of the three unions walk out. The confrontation, which could disrupt schooling for more than half a million K‑12 students, is drawing broader scrutiny as another test of how large urban districts spend pandemic‑era surpluses and handle wage demands from educators and support staff amid inflation and rising living costs in major U.S. cities.
📌 Key Facts
- Nearly 85% of LAUSD workers, represented by three unions, are preparing to strike starting Tuesday if no agreement is reached.
- LAUSD serves more than 500,000 students and employs about 83,000 people, with about 70,000 covered by the unions involved.
- Unions say the district holds more than $5 billion in reserves, while LAUSD projects a $3.8 billion balance in June 2026 and says it is already deficit spending.
- District officials have said schools will close if any two of the three unions strike and have created a contingency website for food and mental‑health services.
- LAUSD reports having reached an agreement with trades unions over spring break but not yet with United Teachers Los Angeles or the administrators’ union.
📊 Relevant Data
In the Los Angeles Unified School District, the student body is 73.1% Hispanic/Latino, 10% White, 7.2% Black, and 5.4% Asian, with a total enrollment of 419,929 students.
Los Angeles Unified School District — U.S. News & World Report
In LAUSD, 18% of students (75,053 out of 408,813) are English Learners, defined as students who speak a language other than English at home and are learning English.
LAUSD CITY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICT - English — Innovate Public Schools
In 2020-2021, LAUSD teachers were 44.9% Hispanic/Latino, 31.6% White, 9.2% Asian, and 8.9% Black among all K-12 classroom teachers.
LOS ANGELES UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Human Resources Division TEACHER DEMOGRAPHICS 2020-2021 — Los Angeles Unified School District
In Los Angeles County, Latinas earn 46 cents for every dollar earned by non-Hispanic White men, based on 2019-2023 data.
New data analysis finds significant wage disparities for Latinas across California counties — UCLA Newsroom
School disruptions, such as those from the COVID-19 pandemic, have disproportionately affected academic performance of students from disadvantaged backgrounds, with racial/ethnic differences magnifying existing socioeconomic disadvantages.
The Impact of Socioeconomic Disadvantages on Academic Performance During COVID-19 — ERIC
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