Schools

L.A. City Council to Vote to Oppose Cuts to After School Programs

LAUSD trustees are also expected to vote on the district's final budget Tuesday. It calls for the virtual elimination of the "After the Bell" programs.

 

L.A. City Council members are expected to consider a resolution Tuesday opposing any cuts to LAUSD's "After the Bell" after school programs. The resolution is being introduced by Council President Herb Wesson.

The LAUSD board is expected to vote later on Tuesday on its final budget for the next fiscal year.

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On Saturday the After School Action Coalition said in an email that according to the Office of Bennett Kayser, two very important after-school programs--the All City Marching band and the Academic Decathalon-- have been reinstated.

On Friday, six days after the California Department of Education turned down an appeal by the LAUSD to restore funding for after-school programs, some 50 parents, children and other community members gathered Friday outside in Eagle Rock to oppose the District’s own $7.5-million cut to the Beyond the Bell initiative, which could “dump 42,000 children onto the city streets and into latchkey status,” in the words of Board Member Bennett Kayser.

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Kayser presided over the meeting, the second in eight days at Dahlia Heights, called on the issue of cuts to after-school programs. Featured speakers ranged from activists and parents to politicians and a school policeman.

Much of what was said wasn’t new, but some of the speakers certainly conveyed the importance of ensuring that thousands of school kids not be forced off campuses at 3 p.m. and left to loiter in the streets until their parents pick them up.

Dahlia Heights is among 566 elementary and middle schools that will lose the “open-playground” Youth Services Program starting in the new school year unless the LAUSD Board agrees to restore funding. (Four out of seven board members must vote against the cuts for them to be averted.) It would be the first time since 1915 that the District will offer no after-school options to families in hundreds of schools.

Related: Dahlia Heights Parents Brace for Cuts to After-School Programs (Video) 


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