Los Angeles school board borrows $250M for settlements
The Los Angeles Unified School District recently borrowed $250 million to settle claims of sexual abuse.
That’s in addition to the $500 million that the LAUSD Board of Education approved for borrowing in 2025.
Neither the United Teachers Los Angeles, a union, nor State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, a Democratic gubernatorial candidate, responded to The Center Square’s request for comment. LAUSD acknowledged The Center Square’s request for comment, but did not say anything by press time.
Sonja Shaw, a Republican candidate this year for Thurmond’s job, said the actions by the nation’s second-largest school district are beyond incompetence.
“It is systemic failure,” Shaw told The Center Square Tuesday. “Another $250 million in borrowed money on top of an earlier half-billion and hundreds of millions already paid out to settle sexual misconduct claims. That is not bad luck. That is a pattern. …
“Children have been speaking up for years,” Shaw said, noting families have been sounding alarms. Even so, Shaw said, the system repeatedly protects the adults first.
“When a district pays out massive settlements tied to employee sexual misconduct, it reveals a structure that failed to protect children,” said Shaw, currently the president of the Chino Valley Unified School District Board of Education. “Why are taxpayers now financing bonds to clean up abuse that should have been prevented in the first place?”
Maria Luisa Palma of Oleada Parents made similar comments to the Los Angeles school board in late February. During her time at the podium, Palma questioned what the district was doing to prevent sexual abuse of students and said the board continues to “protect sex abuses through the bargaining agreement with UTLA and other unions.”
Meanwhile, Palma said, children’s lives have been damaged.
“Any amount of money is never going to fix those children’s lives,” Palma told the board. “Even one case is too many, so if you continue to agree to the same protections for teachers in those bargaining agreements, sex abuse is on your heads going forward. How do you sleep at night?”
Palma told The Center Square on Tuesday that only three of the seven board members were in the room for public comment.
“Some of them, like Karla Griego, appear to leave intentionally when I and others from our Oleada parent group speak,” Palma said.
Los Angeles resident Adam Carolla also blasted the teachers’ union, saying on his podcast that “horrible teachers and ones that get caught in pedophilia” are moved to neighborhoods where people don’t complain.
“People speak Spanish mostly, and mom and dad work all day,” said Carolla on his podcast. “They continue, except for now with people that can’t lawyer up.”
Latest News Stories
Federal courts limit operations as funding lapse continues
Lake Land College Extends President Bullock’s Contract to 2028, Sets New Strategic Goals
Clark County 4-H Foundation Announces Scholarship Opportunities
US Army, contractors constructing miles of border wall barriers in Arizona
Illinois ranks in lower half in new ‘Safest States’ poll
WATCH: Hegseth announces another boat strike as tensions build
WATCH: Trump responds to ‘No Kings’ protests; Pritzker criticizes SNAP, trade policies
Poll: Kamala Harris still Democratic favorite for 2028
New York Dems seek to withhold federal taxes over funding cuts
Congressional Conflicts: Stock ban pits affluent, super rich
Supreme Court to consider drug user gun possession case
Illinois quick hits: Davis Gates selected to lead IFT; new veterans facilities in Quincy