LAUSD Libraries are Safe (For Now)

“We intend to bring forth a budget in June that will commit to sustaining library aides for all elementary schools for the 2019–20 school year.”
- LA Superintendent Austin Beutner
In the days leading up to the strike by Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) teachers, Board Member Nick Melvoin told parents that the teachers just wanted to “get it out of the system for a day or two” and then they would “settle on pretty much same terms that they started with.” What Melvoin did not anticipate was that hundreds of thousands of parents would keep their students out of the classroom and that many would walk the rain-soaked picket lines in solidarity with their teachers. As a result, the teachers won many of their demands that were centered on improving educational outcomes for the children of Los Angeles.
One of the outcomes of the strike is that in coming years funding will be provided to ensure that libraries will be open in all secondary schools within the LAUSD and will be staffed with a librarian. Elementary schools were not included in the agreement because they are staffed with library aides who are represented by a different union. LAUSD Superintendent Austin Beutner was, therefore, able to hatch a plan that forced elementary principals to choose between libraries and other vital services. This meant that some elementary schools would see their libraries closed in the next school year.
Reacting to complaints of parents who understood the importance of libraries, Board Members Scott Schmerelson and George McKenna introduced the “Providing Quality Elementary School Libraries” resolution. Under their proposal, “the Superintendent [was directed] to provide a library aide to every elementary school with a library.” Additionally, the district would “centrally fund the salary and benefits for the library aide as a separate line item in elementary schools’ budget” and these funds would be “restricted and non-flexible.”
Unfortunately, the passage of this plan was uncertain, especially with the blockage of an appointment to the board seat vacated by Ref Rodriguez by the board members backed by the charter school industry. Superintendent Beutner argued that promoting local control meant that principals should have the choice to shut down their school’s library. He told the Los Angeles Times that local school communities rather than the central bureaucracy [should] make decisions on what will best serve their students as if libraries were not an essential part of the school mission.
