Board Has Wall Street Wolves Guarding LAUSD Henhouse

It’s high time to be paying closer attention to the $14.7b (p. 31) of taxpayer’s money that Covid19 has left in essentially the sole charge of our LAUSD Superintendent, Austin Beutner.

On March 10, 2020 under Covid19, the LAUSD’s publicly elected school board signed over sweeping authority for fiscal and management decisions to Superintendent Beutner, a former investment banker who remarks that the “guiding principle in my career, … is to put myself in uncomfortable positions and take risks.”

The emergency powers relinquished the board’s fiduciary responsibility to stakeholders regarding oversight and regulation, policy and budget, with no sunset date attached. The breathtaking subrogation was to a Superintendent appointed by a former board, chaired at the time by a member charged with and subsequently convicted of felony campaign misconduct, indebted to a different, neoliberal and privatizing ideology of public education.

At next Tuesday’s LAUSD board meeting some more fallout from this power shift will become evident. To date a tremendous amount of emergency spending has been brought to the board as simply courtesy, for ratification rather than actual approval. And the circumstances of this spending is fraught; criticism – even questioning – is awkward at best, difficult in practice. Feeding the hungry during this health and economic emergency is crucial; keeping our community safe is vital. But what happens in the long term? Should permissions for emergency operations be extended to systemic operations?

On the docket (tab 6) for discussion and for waivers of important public-interest oversight mechanisms, is the sale of LAUSD’s central administrative headquarters downtown. Known eponymously for its location at 333 S. Beaudry Ave, “Beaudry” is a building with a history of construction defects and shady real estate deals. LAUSD purchased the building in 2001 under circumstances so fraught as to attract investigation by then-District Attorney Cooley. And in 2017 District staff found “there would be no financial benefit to selling the… building at this time.” The real estate market under Covid19 is uncertain, and downtown office vacancies are climbing. It is hard to envision how the sale or lease-back of this vexed building could be in the best interests of the taxpayer. But under cover of Covid19, the taxpayer has been disenfranchised, represented instead by the former hedge fund manager of distressed assets.

What are distressed assets?

Simply something on the market for below its estimated value. If the seller is under pressure for any of a number of reasons – say, poor cash flow, inability to maintain or repair a property, bankruptcy, or market bubble – a seller might offset a low sale price in exchange for mitigating this pressure – say, via liquid cash, indemnity from repairs, etc.

And the proffering of Beaudry at firesale prices not only follows from complicated current finances resulting in budgets which are good and full even while feeling so fragile as to be on the verge of collapse, but also from an insidious, long-term narration that erroneously undervalues the commodity.

This world of distressed asset (and debt) management is the world orbiting our LAUSD. It is the true major business of local education “philanthropist” Eli Broad (not merely home-building), and it is the world of his favored acolyte, Austin Beutner. It is the world of many of the plutocrats surrounding our District – e.g., Howard Marks and Bruce Karsh and so many other investors from the private distressed assets venture fund, Oaktree Capital, run by the former personal assistant of Eli Broad.

These so-called “vulture capitalists” encircle LAUSD serially. While we arrive at the present day where the curiously-installed Superintendent with zero education experience, now moves to enact the “portfolio plan” long-signaled by Beutner.

As it happens, offering sales and distressed sales of public goods is a well-worn stratagem of Beutner’s. In approximate reverse order there was:

  • Accreting” southern California news outlets for intended privatization and sale (2015). Beutner was fired from his publishing post for this impertinence.
  • More market softening via the City of Los Angeles’ (CoLA) 2020 Commission (2014) cultivating a landscape of doom and distressed selling. A conceptual trap of disruption without solution.
  • Partnering with Eli Broad to purchase and reorganize (2013) the LATimes as a private company. Beutner was promoted following the unsuccessful purchase to Publisher, a job for which he was as supremely unqualified as his subsequent recent appointment to Superintendent.
  • Selling the public LADWP headquarters (2010), another distressed sale proposal quashed by considerable public concern and absence of appropriate conditions.
  • Softening the LA market for development, height and density through forced updating of CoLA’s “Community Plans” (2010). Such atmospherics were enabled through former mayor Riordan’s and then-mayor Villaraigosa’s engineering of a position crafted expressly for Beutner: first deputy mayor of CoLA’s economic and business policy.
  • Partnering with longtime Clinton associate Mickey Kantor and deputy treasury secretary Roger Altman to co-launch the private hedge fund, Evercore (1996), specializing in leveraged buyouts (distressed assets) from out of the personal ash-proceeds of privatizing Russia (below).
  • Participating in the privatization of Russia (1994-96), eventually leading the US Russia Investment Fund, a private investment vehicle backed by the US government – the acme of distressed assets markets.
  • Conducting 16 leveraged buyouts of distressed assets as a 20-something trader at Blackstone Group (1980’s).
  • Meanwhile as prelude to Mr. Beutner’s subsequent mono-focus on the sale of distressed assets he was mandated to protect, was Eli Broad’s own first repeated attempts at a “public” leveraged buyout of the LATimes (2007).

It’s not clear that decentralizing LAUSD’s administration and selling Beaudry is a poor plan. That it was not cost-effective three years past does not make it so today. For example it is now just one year from the time when tax limitations on rental of the building sunset. Cost::benefit analyses change with time.

But along with the proposal is a suggested waiver of public sector rules convening a committee to advise on the use or disposition of District “surplus property”. These are rules meant to protect the public, its money and its trust. It doesn’t help that an additional waiver is requested for a private real estate professional. Public asset management employees are evidently incapable of such a sale in the public’s interest. Or has a combination of inestimable corporate campaign funds, the undue tacit influence of corporatists, and unmitigated emergency powers rewritten some power imbalance on the board irreversibly?

Watch Tuesday’s BOE meeting live at 1pm, 11/10/20, here.

Think your vote doesn’t matter? Uneven early voting across LAUSD Districts means it may count more than ever.

Are you wondering whether the vote is effectively all over. Whether so many early ballots have been returned there’s, say, little point still in advocating for Schools And Community First (prop 15)? For community college board members? For Schools local bond measure RR? For your LAUSD BD3 (Schmerelson v Koziatek) or LAUSD BD7 (Castellanos v Franklin) board member?

The TL;DR is Your vote is still needed! Your advocacy is crucial. At best 4 in 5 ballots have not yet been counted as returned. Students are needing their voters’ support.

Who’s already gotten their VBM in? Who votes in the districts electing a school board member?

Continue reading “Think your vote doesn’t matter? Uneven early voting across LAUSD Districts means it may count more than ever.”

The LAUSD Budget Under Covid: An “Economy of Care” or of Institutional Protection?

Now we have seen manifest the power of budgets.

In the wake of the profoundly inequitable calamity of Covid19, has grown an international paroxysm that Black Lives Matter. In Los Angeles Mayor Garcetti is calling for “$250 million in cuts from city departments, including the LAPD, … steer[ing] the funds to invest in job programs, health initiatives and other services supporting the Black community and other communities of color.” And since it is the city council that is in charge of the purse, more weighty still is a resolution from Council President Martinez co-introduced with CD10’s Wesson and CD9’s Price instructing identification of least $100m-$150m to be cut specifically from LAPD’s budget.

The teacher’s union board, UTLA, has voted to reallocate school police funding.

So it is that a budget is proverbially “a political document”:  what politics are reflected in Superintendent Beutner’s Revised May 2020 Budget for LAUSD?

Continue reading “The LAUSD Budget Under Covid: An “Economy of Care” or of Institutional Protection?”

Bain And Company Arrive At LAUSD

While families have been scrambling to homeschool and accessorize their 20 million+ LAUSD GrabNGo meals, the District’s Superintendent and improbably employed former investment-banker, Austin Beutner, has sought guidance from his own comfort-sector, the world of corporate management consulting.

Last Wednesday, May 6 2020, LAUSD announced that Bain & Company will work on a pro bono basis “to evaluate and implement strategies to help teachers, students and families in remote, online learning.” Meanwhile the firm of Bain & Company itself announced a very different mandate to “identify and prioritize potential initiatives [based on research and insights by education experts, key district stakeholders and Los Angeles Unified personnel…] that have a tangible impact, are fiscally responsible and can be implemented quickly. Based on agreed-upon priorities, Bain will then design a high-level plan of action for Los Angeles Unified to consider. … At Bain we are committed to investing in high impact education initiatives.”

That is, notwithstanding direct authorization from LAUSD’s elected, policy-setting schoolboard, the Superintendent has invited activist, business management consultants to filter LA’s Unified School District through a sieve of market efficiency – not educational –strategies.

Continue reading “Bain And Company Arrive At LAUSD”

TogetherApart: Co-location And Collaboration Constrained By Pandemic

In the wake of pandemic, priorities are rearranged.

Prior to schools’ closing in March, 2020, several LAUSD school sites were facing the prospect of sharing their campus with a charter school next year. These forced “colocations” are directed by the District when a “public charter school” requests public space for its operations under legal mandate from a voter initiative passed in 2000.

Proposition 39 addressed schools facilities issues by lowering the passage threshold for local school bond measures from 67% to 55%. With over $10m of vested interest from ubiquitous charter privateers Ann & John Doerr, John Walton and Reed Hastings, the initiative established a facilities payload for the charter industry.  Along for the ride was the ideological position that charter schools had the right to request of the public District “reasonably equivalent conditions” for operations. The specifics for calculating and granting these conditions were litigated through a series of lawsuits (2007, 2010 and 2012) inordinately taxing on the public purse in contrast with that of the billionaire-funded charter school lobby.

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The Price Of Pandemic Opportunities – Laptops, Public Policy And Science Awareness

All this isolating and cowering in the shadow of a revolution of computerized learning shouldn’t remove us from the exhilaration of making a difference. Our actions as individuals and as families may well be making a significant difference; data is too poor to know for sure yet. So while a “bend” in the curve is hard to attest, still the trend of cases is not truly exponential. The cases reported daily by LA County’s Department of Public Health are far from the predicted exponential plotted on a log scale below as the straight, dashed line in yellow (an exponential trend plots on a log scale as a straight line).

There are other aspects of slight positivity. The pandemic may be creating budding physicians and virologists and epidemiologists in the students among us.

Continue reading “The Price Of Pandemic Opportunities – Laptops, Public Policy And Science Awareness”

We Want To Hear Your Stories Of Teaching At Home During The Coronavirus Shutdown

The headline says it all. We’re looking for stories from parents, students and teachers about what they are doing to keep our kids on track during the Coronavirus shutdown.

I have two kids, ages 7 (1st grade) and 10 (4th grade). Even though they go to the same school, their teachers are employing different strategies to educate the kids. I’ll be writing about those experiences sometime next week.

If you’re interested in sharing your story, please drop a line to me (damien@la-edex.org) or Sara (sara@la-edex.org). If you’re interested in writing down your story, that would be great. If not, but you still have something to add that would benefit the community, we’ll figure out a way to get your story out there.

Thanks everyone, and stay safe.

Resource Links Update: Covid Safety And Education

Honestly, we do have education news in the pipeline, but it is hard to settle the nerves long enough to report.

So first:  Supporting Kids’ Mental Health During the COVID-19 Pandemic

And here’s a treat for your own, or even a geeky middle schooler on up’s, academically-oriented entertainment pleasure.

Continue reading “Resource Links Update: Covid Safety And Education”

Education In The Time Of Plague

The following will be updated in the sidebar to the right as a running file of information and links about SARS-CoV-2/Covid-19. All articles for the foreseeable future will also feature these links at the bottom.

Talking To Kids/Learning About Covid:

Extracurricular Resources:  Fun, Aid & Assistance – What To Do/What Can I Do?

Continue reading “Education In The Time Of Plague”

Immediate And Peripheral Vigilance: LAUSD’s Schoolboard Election … Then Covid19

A running section appears in the sidebar to the right with information and links about SARS-CoV-2/Covid-19. All articles for the foreseeable future will also feature these links at the bottom.

In the meantime a primary election was held less than three weeks ago in Los Angeles County that is still being actively counted. Results continue to be updated twice-weekly with (2,101,601) ballots comprising more than 38% of the over 5.5m registered voters counted. As of March 17, 2020, there are 64K ballots left to count. A small subset of these will include yet-outstanding ballots from LAUSD schoolboard voters.

Representation on the LAUSD schoolboard matters all the more now under threat of pandemic than ever, since the unusual circumstances expose enormous issues regarding Education policy. The protective closing of classrooms forces into a limelight matters of online learning, homeschooling, equity and teaching and the role of Big Tech vs human practitioners in guiding, mentoring, instructing and raising our young.

Continue reading “Immediate And Peripheral Vigilance: LAUSD’s Schoolboard Election … Then Covid19”