Logo

Students with the Los Angeles Unified School District will slink back to school Tuesday as the district averted disaster, penning an agreement with Local 99 of the Service Employees International Union.

Union leaders had been prepared for students to have the day off had thousands of school employees took to the picket lines. It also means 390,000 students will go to school after going to bed thinking they could be off.

Workers scored a monstrous 24% pay hike under their new contract. The union had been without a new deal since June 2024.


  School workers scored a monstrous 24% pay hike under their new contract. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images School workers scored a monstrous 24% pay hike under their new contract. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

“Because of your unity and readiness to take action, we secured major wins for our members — including significant improvements to wages and hours, stronger protections against subcontracting, increased staffing, and we successfully stopped layoffs for IT workers,” Local 99 said in a social media post. “This is what collective power looks like.”


  Bass thanked the workers and cheered that class would be in session. David Buchan for CA Post Bass thanked the workers and cheered that class would be in session. David Buchan for CA Post

“For tomorrow: All members should report to work as usual,” it added.

The sweetheart deal for Local 99 was the third and final milestone to avert a walkout among one of the largest school districts in the nation.

Local 99 represents thousands of school essential workers including teacher aides, campus aides, gardeners, custodians, bus drivers, cafeteria workers and tech support staff. 

As part of the deal, workers will nab the 24% pay raise, more work hours, a nixing of the layoffs directed at tech support workers, more health care benefits, and limitations on subcontracting work to outside vendors.


  The sweetheart deal for Local 99 was the third and final milestone to avert a walkout among LA school staff Tuesday. CHRIS TORRES/EPA/Shutterstock The sweetheart deal for Local 99 was the third and final milestone to avert a walkout among LA school staff Tuesday. CHRIS TORRES/EPA/Shutterstock

The district celebrated the agreement early this morning.

“We are pleased to announce that we have reached an agreement in principle with SEIU Local 99 that will allow schools to be open,” the announcement said.

“Los Angeles Unified and SEIU Local 99 teams will continue to work together to finalize the details of a tentative agreement. Thank you for your patience and partnership during this time.”

Acting Superintendent Andrés E. Chait, who has taken over for Superintendent Alberto Carvalho as the FBI looks into him, also celebrated the cancellation of the strike.

“We are proud to have reached resolution with all of our labor partners, UTLA, SEIU, and AALA Teamsters Local 2010, ensuring stability for our schools and continuity for the students and families we serve,” he said.

Two other unions, the United Teachers Los Angeles and Associated Administrators of Los Angeles, reached tentative deals with the district on Sunday.

Mayor Karen Bass said she stepped in to ensure schools would be open.

“I stepped into the negotiations to make sure every effort was made to find an agreement, because a strike would disrupt the lives of hundreds of thousands of kids and their parents, who need childcare and need to go to work,” she wrote on social media.

Bass added that she also involved herself to make sure the city could provide for children if schools had been closed. “I also stepped in to make sure the City was prepared to provide safe places for children while schools are closed — and I am glad that we do not need those contingency plans,” she added.

Bass thanked the workers and cheered that class would be in session.

“Our schools’ teachers, instructional aides, nurses, custodians, bus drivers, and other dedicated workers care for our children every day, and they deserve a fair contract,” she said. “Now, there is one on the table, and class is in session tomorrow.”

All three deals still need to be ratified by union members and the Board of Education, but the tentative agreements will keep schools open.

Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post SportsFacebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!
Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


Comments
anonymous profile image
Powered by RoundtableBuilt on infrastructure designed for real-time media. Learn more at RTB.io.© Roundtable 2026. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy