Defend Adult Education for the 99% In Los Angeles!
Please Sign this Petition to Save LAUSD Adult Education. It takes less than one minute to sign. I did it tonight. www.change.org/petitions/defend-adult-education-for-the-99-in-los-angeles This important email petition to Save Adult Education in the Los Angeles Unified School District was sent to me by three different adult education teachers. They are Michael Novick, Robert Sucher and Bob Levy. It was written by Michelle Cohen. - Frank Dorrel Dear Friends, The Los Angeles school board is planning to place its adult education services on the chopping block in February. I'm an adult school teacher one of hundreds serving 350,000 students throughout the city. We provide the "second chance" services and the "leg up" services that help working adults find the tools they need to improve their lives. As an Adult Education teacher, my classroom and my students may be cut adrift after June 30th, 2012. Please sign below to prevent the end of LAUSD Adult Education. This link connects you to a very efficient petition which you can sign in ten seconds: www.change.org/petitions/defend-adult-education-for-the-99-in-los-angeles Sincerely, Michael Novick: [email protected] Robert Sucher: [email protected] Bob Levy: [email protected] MICHELLE COHEN| INSTRUCTOR | Worker Education & Resource Center, Inc. O: 213-639-2220 | F: 323-474-6122 | 500 South Virgil Avenue, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90020 | www.we-rc.org <https://mail.hcwdp.org/owa/UrlBlockedError.aspx> Article in the Los Angeles Times on this Issue Adult Education on L.A. Unified's Chopping Block With financial woes in Sacramento and new freedom on spending earmarked funds, the district proposes a budget that has no money to help adults get high school diplomas, learn English or acquire career skills. By Sandy Banks www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-banks-20120128,0,6741887.column January 28, 2012 Adult education teacher Planaria Price is used to the ups and downs of budget planning in the giant <http://www.latimes.com/topic/education/schools/los-angeles-unified-school-d istrict-ORGOV000940.topic> Los Angeles Unified School District. Price remembers boom times in the late 1980s, when classes at Evans Community Adult School near downtown ran 24 hours a day. Money was flowing and immigrants flocked to English lessons, hoping for legalization under federal amnesty programs. And Price has stuck it out through tough downturns, when classes were cut, teachers were laid off and many vocational programs closed. Still, nothing in her 39 years as a teacher at Evans prepared her for the news that the district's entire adult education division may be on the chopping block. "The program's already been cut in half," she said. "Now we find out that we are being 'zeroed out' of the budget." Indeed, according to a proposal presented to the school board last month, there is no money budgeted for the $120-million Division of Adult and Career Education in 2012-2013. But the district budget is a moving target. The spending plan goes to the school board for public review in February. Then it faces a months-long evolution as state financing numbers shift. Down the line, that "zero" might turn out to be an accounting gimmick or a political ploy. But for now, it has stoked the fears of adult students and their teachers and spotlighted how vulnerable they are. "We've had dramatic cuts over the years," said Julie Wetzel, a teacher-advisor with a program that helps disabled adults learn life skills. "This feels like we're being forced out because they don't think what we're doing is important." Supt. John Deasy disagreed that adult education's value is reflected in his budget line. Thirty adult schools offer 350,000 students a chance to earn high school diplomas or learn English and career skills. The program may be "zeroed out," but it isn't being singled out, he said. "There are so many things that are going to be zeroed out of the budget, this is just the tip of the iceberg." Deasy ticked off a list of likely cuts: preschool programs, elementary art, summer school and thousands of administrators, teachers, nurses, custodians, gardeners and cafeteria workers. "We're talking about $540 million worth of reductions," he said. "Every single one is important, and none of them should have to be made." Adult education is an easy target because of forces coalescing in Sacramento: The institutional penny-pinching required by the state's ongoing budget problems and legislative changes that have given local school systems more spending autonomy. Three years ago, state legislators untied dozens of education programs from their earmarked funding pools. That allowed districts to decide how to spend money that had had been designated for specific services, such as counseling, libraries or summer school. The biggest pot of newly flexible money was in adult education. "Some districts just wiped out adult ed and took the money," said Ed Morris, Los Angeles Unified's director of the Division of Adult and Career Education. 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