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Teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District joined striking support staff on Tuesday, halting schooling for over 400,000 students in the district in what is currently slated to be a three-day strike.

For Context: The Los Angeles Unified School District is the second-largest district in the country. Local 99 of the Service Employees International Union, composed of aides, special education assistants, custodians, and other support staff workers, called for the strike. The Los Angeles Times quoted Union Executive Director Max Arias stating the support staff workers are calling for their average wage to be raised from $25,000 to $36,000. As of Saturday, the district’s offer reportedly included a 23% raise over three years, a 3% bonus for qualified staff members, more full-time positions, and increased healthcare access.

Key Quotes: Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) voiced support for the striking workers, stating, “people with some of the most important responsibilities in our schools should not have to live in poverty.” The New York Post quoted a special education assistant in the district saying, “the working conditions have gone down every year. We’re very understaffed. The custodial staff is a ghost crew, so the schools are dirty. They’re doing the best they can.” Superintendent Alberto M. Carvalho said the strike “could have been avoided,” alleging the union members refused to negotiate.

How The Media Covered It: Outlets across the spectrum are covering the ongoing strike. The New York Post did not mention the three-day time frame on the strike.

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Last-minute efforts failed to avert a Tuesday strike that will shut down Los Angeles public schools and lead to a disruption of learning, vital meal services and the daily lives of some 420,000 children and their families in the nation’s second-largest school system.

L.A. schools Supt. Alberto Carvalho called the walkout an unnecessary harm to students that will compound the setbacks of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2019 teachers strike, when six school days were lost.

The second-biggest school district in the US was closed Tuesday as tens of thousands of employees and teachers went on strike over stalled contract negotiations in Los Angeles.

Thousands of teachers’ aides, special education assistants, bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers and other SEIU Local 99 members in LA’s Unified School District joined picket lines Tuesday morning to demand better wages and increased staffing.

March 21 (Reuters) - The second largest school district in the United States canceled classes on Tuesday for what could be a three-strike by 30,000 Los Angeles education support staff who are backed by a teachers' union that refuses to cross their picket line. The strike in the Los Angeles Unified School District will disrupt education, meals, counseling and other social services for 565,000 students and their parents. It follows a six-day teachers' strike in 2019 and the coronavirus pandemic that closed classroom instruction for more than a year in...