It is always astonishing to be reminded that the rule of law still exists in Louisiana, despite the authoritarian command of Governor Bobby Jindal.
But it does! Louisiana courts found the funding of the voucher program, using money dedicated to public schools, to be unconstitutional. The courts found Jindal’s law stripping teachers of all legal rights and protections to be unconstitutional because it included too many subjects in one bill.
And now, miracle of miracles, the Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal ruled that 7,000 teachers who were fired after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina were wrongfully terminated and entitled to back wages. The judgement could bankrupt the Orleans Parish Board.
“In a lawsuit that some say could bankrupt the Orleans Parish public school system, an appeals court has decided that the School Board wrongly terminated more than 7,000 teachers after Hurricane Katrina. Those teachers were not given due process, and many teachers had the right to be rehired as jobs opened up in the first years after the storm, the court said in a unanimous opinion.
“The state is partly responsible for damages, according to Wednesday’s ruling from Louisiana’s Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal. However, its five-judge panel did reduce the potential damages certified by the District Court: Instead of five years of back pay plus fringe benefits, the appeals court awarded the teachers two to three years of back pay, with benefits only for those employees who had participated in them when they were employed.
“During the appeal, lawyers said the damages could amount to $1.5 billion.
“The class-action case applies to all School Board employees who were tenured as of Aug. 29, 2005, the date that Katrina blasted up the Louisiana-Mississippi line and New Orleans levees failed, flooding much of the city. Many employees were members of the United Teachers of New Orleans, but the appeals court ruled that an earlier settlement with the union did not prevent this case from being tried.
“The decision validates the anger felt by former teachers who lost their jobs. It says they should have been given top consideration for jobs in the new education system that emerged in New Orleans in the years after the storm.”
But wait!
Didn’t Arne Duncan say that Katrina was the best thing that ever happened to the schools of New Orleans? Didn’t he celebrate the abrupt firing of all these teachers and their replacement by TFA? Well, yes.
The courts say he was wrong.
The law was upheld. You don’t wipe out the livelihoods of 7,000 people just because you want to. The court said that these men and women were entitled to due process. Justice prevails.

Count on an appeal. After all, the Koch brothers, Gates and the Walton family—etc—have lots of money to push this all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
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If they do appeal, then we will know what SLIME balls the deformers truly are.
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Of course they will appeal . . . . . . there is no “if” . . .
They are deranged.
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If someone can trace the money back to its source. The slime-balls you mention have managed to get federal laws passed that allows them to hide the source of that money making it harder to trace.
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Yvonne,
Read the article in the Picauyune and you will see it did go to appeal.
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There will definitely be an appeal, especially when this much money is involved. In the end, they’ll settle for much less than owed. In Buffalo the BTF had a lawsuit over back pay owed (another story) and we settled. I got $11,000 and was happy, but many were angry we didn’t get the full amount. The district “borrowed” the money from the state and never repaid it. We have another lawsuit for money owed (about $6000 per teacher), but it is doubtful we’ll win.
Those teachers deserve renumeration. The whole situation is tragic on many levels. I’m glad the state union was involved. And what happened to the local union when all the teachers were dismissed? Were they forced to disband?
My main question – Did the test scores improve by creating a district of charter schools staffed by TFA? Just wondering.
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Ellen K., Mercedes Schneider could answer your main question much more precisely, but I will take a stab at it. The answer is hell to the no! At least where the direct run RSD schools are concerned. They remain some of the lowest performing schools and some consider them to operate dysfunctionally. Now, what has changed and improved is charter schools having autonomy and an increase in funds (grants, other sources of $) for schools to offer greater support in the areas of building maintenance, human and material resources, extra curricular activities, etc… There are some schools and charter organizations who have strong leadership like the Choice Foundation whose schools are making good progress. Other success stories would include Hynes, Lusher, Lake Forest Charter School to name a few. Schools who have improved that are under the RSD umbrella now have the chance and the decision to make the return to the New Orleans Public School jurisdiction and they are not choosing to do so. They do not trust giving up their autonomy. The majority of schools in the area are still ranked with a D or F score. Louisiana was recently ranked as the 49th state according to
statistics in education. http://www.nola.com/education/index.ssf/2014/01/new_report_shows_louisiana_lag.html There have been improvements but that growth is not always accurately measured or reflected in the data. Instead of acknowledgement given and an opportunity to experience/feel success for increments in achievement, the unfortunate repeated message to both students and teachers is that you continue to fail (miss the mark) and it is your fault. So, rigor is ramped up to extreme levels that are not always the most developmentally appropriate for children, the Common Core becomes the common bore in some instances lacking instructional common sense at times…and we wonder why we’re falling behind? (Not to mention the school politics and politicians who affect education in Louisiana.) There is indeed still much room for improvement.
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There is nothing to celebrate in those scores for Louisiana, even though we shouldn’t judge a school by its high stakes testing. Yet, there is something definitely wrong. I can understand the charters not wanting to give up their autonomy, which suggests the public education system has been underfunded and bereft of many of the elements which make up a good school.
If Louisiana wants their population to join this century, they need to start properly financing public education and give their children a chance to grow and learn.
Whatever they are doing now is just not working.
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“The majority of schools in the area are still ranked with a D or F score. Louisiana was recently ranked as the 49th state according to statistics in education.”
Louisiana is ranked #49 for poverty in the United States. Only Mississippi and the District of Columbia have higher rates of poverty, and studies show that poverty has a bigger impact on crime than race leading to communities where there is a high rate of joblessness, welfare dependency, female-headed families, declining marriage rates,illegitimate births with higher rates of crime and violence.
Louisiana is ranked 5th in the list of most violent states. That means 45 states did not have as high as Louisiana.
43% of of Louisiana’s children have limited English proficiency and 64% are economically disadvantaged—the on-time high school graduation rate is 71%, below the national average. But by age 25+ that number goes up to 82.2% for those who earn a high school degree late.
Then you don’t say how the kids are selected to be accepted to these Charter schools in Louisiana.
Do these Charters have the same socio-econcomic, racial profile as the D and F schools?
Did these Charters focus on at-risk kids (kids from dysfunctional homes; kids who may be on drugs; kids with severe learning disability, kids who belong to street gangs, Kids with English as a second language, etc)—the original reason for the Charter movement?
Or are these Charters a safe haven—-an escape—-for the kids of parents who want to avoid the poverty and violence found in schools surrounded by street gangs where teacher burnout is high while still living in those same communities because they are too poor to escape but are better parents than many who live in poverty?
Did you know that teachers in risky schools that are seen as so-called failures suffer a very high rate of PTSD—even higher than combat veterans?
Did these Charters have a lottery where only the parents who were probably already practicing better parenting methods attended?
How many kids from street gangs attend those Charter schools?
What is the ratio of school suspensions at those Charters?
Did the parents who bothered to show up for the lottery—I’m assuming a lottery was used to select the students—also have to sign a contract that detailed their responsibilities as parents to support the education of the child?
What is Louisiana doing to deal with the poverty and violence? I suspect little to nothing because the state is probably run by politicians who think like the CEO’s of Wal-Mart.
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A useful source for one to look at to gain information on charter schools in New Orleans is the investigative reporting from The Lens. thelens.org They have a charter school reporting corps that reports on each charter school and their school boards/school board meetings as well as lists their performance scores.
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Lloyd, you are spot on. The very people affected by this ruling are all too familiar with the PTSD you refer to as both Katrina survivors and those who have served in “risky schools”. They have experienced first-hand the impact of poverty and violence in the classrooms, school populations, and communities they live and work in. The fact that they were dismissed, disposable, and replaced and not considered to be valuable employees; no loyalty at the time, was beyond shameful. Louisiana has lost some great educators; experienced veterans who have said “enough!”–people who moved away and chose not to come back, other people who couldn’t afford to come back and still others who risked everything and fought to come back even though that could be viewed as being “at their own risk”. There are still many who want to make a difference and try to do so every day. The students and teachers of Louisiana are not the failures here. There is a system failure (local and nationally) of which there continue to be many casualties.
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John White was not available for comment. Lies must be rehearsed and approved first.
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LOL
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Even more. I think they must actually be approved by Dictator Jindal and he has been in Asia on our dime for the past week.
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Justice has been done!
This is a temporary but critical victory.
One of the pivotal questions is if the BOE at Parish can claim bankruptcy or diplomatic immunity in avoiding the payout to these teachers who were wrongfully terminated . . . . . . . . . . .
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YES and Amen!
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Get ready Lausd, you’re next. The termination of hundreds of teachers w/o due process rights.These governments have to be reminded that they are not above the law. You can’t appeal the truth.
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Let it be heard throughout the nation. But be vigilant. Prepare a viable alternative to the testing fiasco NOW! How can I help you do what we did at the Milwaukee Village School in 1995-98 read about it in our books at http://www.wholechildreform.com
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Thank God! Justice has been served! One wrong has been righted! Several more to go!
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What is encouraging about this particular case is that it is not about civil rights, which SCOTUS often misinterpret to suit its pro-corporation bias. Instead, it is about enforcing a contract between two parties, the teachers’ union and the school board. Being able to enforce contracts is the sine qua non of the corporate world.
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Reblogged this on Roy F. McCampbell's Blog.
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They kicked those of us who did not have tenure yet out of the lawsuit. A whole batch of us had moved to N.O. from across America—fully certified and mostly experienced, older teachers, in 2004, the year before Katrina, to fill the classrooms with real teachers through a program of the New Teacher’s Project. Not only were we summarily dismissed after Katrina, while evacuated (One teacher was told she was not wanted in a note that came in on her junk mail.) but when they opened the first charters in Algiers (West Bank) and were recruiting, they did not seem interested in taking N.O. teachers back. Our teachers were working at things like gutting out houses and as security guards for FEMA. And when a group of New Orleans teachers applied for a charter of our own, we were turned down. I was part of that group.
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Yes, sweet justice for many who were affected; long overdue. Let us not forget the opinion of some that “Katrina was the best thing that happened to the New Orleans Public School System.” Also that there was such a supposive shortage of teachers in the area that some found it necessary to hire from the Philippines. Yet simultaneously, several teachers were forced out of state due to circumstances not of their choosing and spent years trying to secure teaching positions; desperately wanting to come home. In the process they were largely shut out as TFA made its mark and no longer was it viewed as a positive that you had former experience in the former school system; that was exactly the opposite of what most employers were looking for in the new RSD charter
landscape. People were financially and emotionally bankrupt. There is still a lot that needs fixing and much “building back up” that remains to be done here in Louisiana especially in education. The people of New Orleans (near and far) love their city and the pre-Katrina teachers of New Orleans loved their students. They will never “cease to love” and they do love their purple, green, and gold; especially
purple…the color of justice.
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Dear God will this ever stop? I had no idea those teachers were virtually let go without any benefits or rights to be rehired first. And to think the secretary of education celebrated their demise. I cannot fathom the lack of humanity that would celebrate 7000 people out of work and no where to go. i have no respect for him or his cohorts in that department nor for Obama for putting them there.
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So glad that state courts recognized disgraceful social injustice toward teachers. Hardline state governor(BJ) and recalcitrant henchman(JW) high-jacked Louisiana education. But they can’t(and will never) highjack the fundamental judicial system for their grand scheme.
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Were Alvarez and Marsal involved with this? Weren’t they running the district when Katrina hit?
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Chris, yes, A/M were deeply involved and driving the train. They are indemnified and won’t be liable for their part in this.
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The beneficiaries of this outrage – TFA, KIPP, for-profit CMOs and other privateers – should be forced to pay, defraying the cost to Orleans Parish taxpayers who have been doubly victimized, first by having their public school system willfully destroyed, and now to (let’s hope) pay for remedying the gross injustice to their public school teachers.
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Yes, the destruction of the New Orleans public schools, Chicago, Los Angeles is typical of the war these private profiteers have waged on public education. As long as there is money to siphon out of public education, you will have situations like this. I agree, these corporatist need to be liable for these crimes. Letting them walk away to infect other public education systems should be stopped. Let’s place a scarlett letter on these people to marginalize them and keep them out of public education. Let them fund private charters with their money, not taxpayers money.
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