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On Wednesday, educators in Los Angeles are anticipated to reveal the date for a potential strike that could disrupt education for nearly 400,000 pupils.
This announcement is strategically planned to align with a significant demonstration in downtown LA, which will feature three prominent unions uniting their efforts.
Should the strike commence, it would persist indefinitely until a fresh agreement is reached. United Teachers Los Angeles, representing over 30,000 teachers and support staff, has been without a contract since it expired last June.

The union’s current proposal suggests a 17% salary increase over two years, with a particular focus on substantially benefiting early-career educators.
In contrast, LA Unified has proposed an 8% pay raise over the same period, citing diminishing district reserves as a concern. The financial strain is exacerbated by the cessation of pandemic-related aid, decreasing student enrollment, and expensive settlements related to misconduct cases.
In addition to United Teachers Los Angeles, the event will see participation from Local 99, which represents 30,000 support personnel, along with the Associated Administrators of Los Angeles. This marks an unprecedented collaboration for principals and mid-level managers in an action of this magnitude.
The announcement could trigger an immediate standoff, and schools may face major disruption if an agreement isn’t reached before the strike date.
The potential for another strike comes amid a wave of educator unrest across California. In San Francisco last month, educators staged their first strike in nearly 50 years, closing all 120 district schools in a move that kept roughly 50,000 students home as they fought for higher pay, better staffing and healthcare protections.
Other districts, including San Diego and Sacramento-area schools, also recently authorized strikes as unions push for improved wages and working conditions.
Within Los Angeles, the strike threat hits while the district is already under heightened scrutiny.
Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has been on paid administrative leave since late February after the FBI raided his San Pedro home and downtown offices in a probe tied to a failed AI chatbot project. While Carvalho has not been charged, the board sidelined him amid the investigation.
The combination of statewide labor unrest, contract disputes and leadership turmoil are coming to a head as three employee unions get set to rally in downtown LA on Wednesday.