SAN PABLO MOM Gabriella Garcia mentioned her fourth-grade son typically comes house in tears after being bullied about his speech obstacle.
Her son receives assist by means of Zoom calls with a speech specialist.
“Unfortunately, I don’t think this virtual format is effective for him,” Garcia mentioned. “He continued to struggle with pronunciation, and it’s been tough for him.”
Garcia pleaded with the West Contra Costa Unified college board this previous Wednesday to cease chopping employees, together with speech specialists, so her son and others like him can proceed getting the hands-on assist they want.
Her son’s instructor at Lake Elementary Faculty, Christina Baronian, mentioned she and the opposite college students usually have issue understanding him and that the one assist out there is on-line and thru a contractor.
“It’s awful,” Baronian mentioned throughout public feedback. “It’s not giving him the support he needs; he needs an in-person speech therapist. Then I found out (the district) just cut some of the very few in-person (speech therapists) we have. This is his right. This is his future.”
The United Lecturers of Richmond additionally gathered on the board’s Feb. 12 assembly to protest the $13 million in price range cuts the board accredited one week earlier, saying the cuts are “unnecessary,” “harmful” and “devastating” to college students. The $13 million in cuts shall be unfold over the following two college years.
“We greatly appreciate the dedicated staff who continually serve our students and community,” interim Superintendent Kim Moses mentioned in a press release to EdSource. “Although reductions are necessary, we are taking great care to address these reductions with minimal impact on staff and students.”
Seeing pink
Greater than 60 West Contra Costa Unified Faculty District (WCCUSD) educators confirmed up in particular person and just about to induce the board to rethink the fiscal solvency plan it handed. For almost two hours, nearly each speaker requested the board to rethink the cuts. Union members wore matching pink shirts, held up indicators, and cheered after each public remark.
Group members at Wednesday’s board assembly chanted “revote” all through the assembly.
A speech-language pathologist and member of United Lecturers of Richmond addresses the West Contra Costa college board in the course of the Feb. 12, 2025, assembly to protest the staffing cuts the board accredited one week prior, which included speech specialists. (Monica Velez/EdSource)
“We are urging the board to keep our schools stable,” mentioned United Lecturers of Richmond President Francisco Ortiz. “This is going to have a destabilizing effect, and they (the board) have the authority to (avoid cutting staff).”
West Contra Costa Unified Faculty District officers have mentioned that to remain afloat, they should reduce a complete of $32.7 million in funds between 2024 and 2027. The majority of these cuts, $19.7 million, have been slashed from the present college 12 months’s price range.
Declining enrollment, expiration of COVID-19 aid funds, elevated prices for particular teaching programs, and underfunded mandates from state and federal governments left West Contra Costa strapped for money, based on district officers. These struggles are being felt throughout the state, together with close by districts in San Francisco and Oakland that are grappling with price range cuts, college closures and consolidations.
In the meantime, the California Lecturers Affiliation final week launched a statewide marketing campaign referred to as We Can’t Wait, uniting lecturers in 32 college districts to leverage their administrations for larger pay and advantages, smaller class sizes, and psychological well being assist. As a part of the marketing campaign, greater than 100 San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley and Richmond educators rallied in a downpour in entrance of Oakland Metropolis Corridor.
Will the board revote?
No board member has indicated any plan to name for an additional vote on the price range.
Board members Leslie Reckler, Cinthia Hernandez, and Guadalupe Enllana voted for the plan. Jamela Smith-Folds abstained, and Demetrio Gonzalez-Hoy was absent.
West Contra Costa has confronted difficult price range deficits earlier than. In 1991, the district turned the first within the state to go bancrupt and obtained a $29 million bailout mortgage, which took 21 years to repay.
“We as a whole spend more time getting rid of what is broken instead of trying to fix it. If we just keep concentrating on cuts and reduction, eventually we will disappear.”
WCCUSD Trustee Demetrio Gonzalez-Hoy
Board member Gonzalez-Hoy mentioned in a press release that the district must cease concentrating on what to chop and start specializing in the place it wants to speculate and the way to usher in extra income. He added that assets needs to be put into rising enrollment, every day attendance and rising applications. He mentioned he’ll ask the board president to kind a activity pressure to deal with these points.
“We as a whole spend more time getting rid of what is broken instead of trying to fix it,” Gonzalez-Hoy mentioned. “If we just keep concentrating on cuts and reduction, eventually we will disappear. We are deeply divided as a community, and it is time for us to come together for the future of our students.”
“As a board member, I deeply understand the profound impact these financial challenges have on our school community and the urgent need for essential services that may no longer be available,” Hernandez mentioned. “These are difficult choices, and none were made lightly. However, our priority remains securing a fiscally responsible path forward that allows us to continue serving our students effectively.”
Vacancies and staffing cuts
Emilia Calderón teaches math at Richmond Excessive Faculty, and she or he mentioned she continuously has to sub for different lessons throughout her free interval due to the excessive variety of vacancies.
“Every year they cut teachers, and even though we are lacking teachers, they (the district) still cut teachers,” she mentioned. “And so I’m subbing for classes with vacant positions, and then it feels ridiculous to have them turn around and say, ‘We’re going to cut more teachers.’ How does that make sense?”
Over the following two college years, about 1.6% of the United Lecturers of Richmond employees shall be let go for a complete financial savings of about $3.7 million, together with lecturers, social employees, speech therapists and assistant principals.
However with looming cuts, college students and employees have additionally felt the load of getting longtime vacancies. How do these exist on the similar time? It’s a query the lecturers union and neighborhood has been grappling with, Ortiz mentioned.
Francisco Ortiz, United Lecturers of Richmond president, addresses the West Contra Costa college board on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, throughout public remark to protest the staffing cuts the board accredited one week prior. (Monica Velez/EdSource)
West Contra Costa’s fiscal solvency plan makes use of multiyear projections primarily based on fully-staffed faculties, Ortiz mentioned, which is about 1,600 educators. Presently, there are about 130 vacant positions, which is equal to just about $19 million, he mentioned.
“It creates this crisis that we have to reduce but we don’t have fully staffed people,” Ortiz mentioned. “If we had a fully staffed school district, then that could potentially make sense, but we don’t have a fully staffed school district.”
However Moses mentioned that when there are vacant positions, the district nonetheless must pay for substitutes, extra time or contractors to cowl providers.
“These replacement costs offset the salaries that have been set aside for the vacant positions,” Moses mentioned. “Due to current vacancy levels, we expect that there will be a certificated job available for all current WCCUSD educators for the 2025-26 school year.”
The deadline for the district to ship layoff notices is March 15.
“A lot of the folks we have in our district, they’re either homegrown or they choose to come here,” Ortiz mentioned, referring to district educators. “We want to provide them with an incentive to stay in our district, and we’re currently not doing that with these haphazard or ill-conceived moves.”
However within the meantime, the educators who’re selecting to remain in West Contra Costa try to assist college students in methods they weren’t skilled to.
“We not only provide curriculum and teaching, but we’re literally like their parents sometimes and emotional support,” Calderón mentioned. “Since they’re cutting all these social workers, guess who gets the brunt of that emotional support? I try my best, but I’m not a therapist, and it’s quite honestly dangerous to try and have a math teacher be a kid’s therapist.”
This story initially appeared in EdSource.