Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Los Angeles Teachers Use the Old Successful Organizing Methods
Behind the News with Doug Henwood
14 Feb 2019
🖨️ Print Article
los angeles school strike 2019
Los Angeles parents and teachers on the picket line

Like the 2006 strike of 30,000 NYC transit workers, and the 2012 strike of 30,000 Chicago teachers, the 2019 Los Angeles teacher strike made the lives of tens and hundreds of thousands of ordinary people better. A nurse and librarian in every school, enforceable class size caps, some regulation on the activities of charter schools, open consideration of gentrifying impact of public schools vs charters, even limits on police searches and other activities inside schools were achieved.

Jane McAlevey is author of No Shortcuts, Organizing For Power in the New Gilded Age. Alex Caputo-Pearl, president of United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA), which represents 30,000 Los Angeles teachers. 

CLICK THIS TO LISTEN TO THE 50 MINUTE INTERVIEW WITH UTLA president ALEX CAPUTO-PEARL and Jane McAlevey.

On the organizing side, this was achieved by building up the union's ability to work with local communities outside the workplace. UTLA leaders planned for a likely strike as much as four years out. They persuaded supermajorities of their members to approve a dues increase, which they used to field organizing and research departments and implement repeated stress testing of the quality of their organizing. 

On the policy side, opposition to school privatization was muted under the reign of the First Black President, as he and most of the black elite were leading advocates of privatization.

Jane McAlevey observes, not for the first time, that if the organizing resources labor has devoted to the not very effective campaign to organize fast food workers were devoted instead to organizing teachers, health care workers beginning with nurses, and Amazon, organized labor would have numbers at least comparable to those it achieved in the 1950s.
 

Los Angeles
public education
School Privatization

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Black Alliance for Peace Haiti/Americas Team
    The Black Alliance for Peace Calls for Resistance Against the Accelerating Imperialist War on Black/African Peoples in Our Americas
    14 May 2025
    Accelerating crises of imperialism in Haiti, Ecuador, and beyond highlight the urgent need for regional Pan-Africanist, anti-imperialist unity and strategy.
  • Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    Saturday Mornings
    14 May 2025
    "Saturday Mornings" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Moussa Ibrahim
    How Western Churches Hijacked African Christianity—and How It's Fighting Back
    14 May 2025
    The future of the Christian church on the continent depends on the ability to develop an authentic African Christianity, moving away from its westernized forms.
  • Terri Frick
    Black People, Palestine, and the Maintenance of Empire
    14 May 2025
    Black support for Palestine underscores the fight against empire, revealing how Israel’s violence in Gaza serves U.S. hegemony and white supremacy, with Palestinian freedom as a catalyst for global…
  • Hanna Eid
    Whole Process People's Democracy: The Path Forward
    14 May 2025
    Growing socialist and people's democratic projects, as in China and Bolivia, must be seen as examples of how revolutionary forces in the United States can build a system of governance. 
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us