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Los Angeles School Board Moms Push for Paid Parental Leave

Three moms on the LAUSD school board have written and passed a resolution for the district to provide paid leave and other benefits to new parents.

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Three moms on the L.A. Unified School Board have assembled to improve benefits for pregnant teachers and other district employees who don鈥檛 qualify for California鈥檚 state-paid family leave.

The board unanimously last month 鈥 and now the district is putting together a preliminary plan, with a deadline of February, 2026 to produce a package of new parental benefits.

Board Member , who represents , which includes neighborhoods such as South L.A., Watts and San Pedro, is the sponsor and a co-author of the resolution.

She said it鈥檚 about time the nation鈥檚 second-largest district treats its workforce of more than 70,000 employees, including thousands of working moms like her, more fairly.

鈥淧arents are spending the vast majority of their paycheck on rent and childcare, and a little bit left over for food and gas and other bills,鈥 said Ortiz-Franklin, a former LAUSD teacher who has two young children. 鈥淚t’s really affecting people’s livelihood.鈥

The resolution, which was co-sponsored by board members Karla Griego and Kelly Gonez, includes provisions for the district to support family planning, pregnancy, parental leave and childcare. 

The district is beginning with a demographic study to determine which employees have families, or are planning to, and identify areas of need. The study will also assess the costs of expanding leave for new parents.

The district has contracts with unions that govern pay and benefits for its employees and is  currently negotiating a new contract with the city鈥檚 teachers union, which is also for parents.

Ortiz-Franklin said new parents who work for L.A. Unified currently face an impossible choice: pay for childcare for their family or pay other household expenses. The cost of high-quality childcare in L.A., she said, exceeds the income of many LAUSD employees.

She said teachers and other LAUSD workers are ineligible for the state鈥檚 disability insurance program, which offers partially paid leave of up to 16 weeks for new parents. Teachers and other LAUSD employees are exempt from the state鈥檚 family leave programs because the district鈥檚 benefits programs predated those of the state. 

Often, Ortiz-Franklin said, district employees have to use their limited sick days to take parental leave, leading many teachers and other school staffers to time their pregnancies so they give birth during the summer months, when they are off anyway.

In addition to calling for leave for pregnant employees, the resolution also calls on LAUSD to:

  • Provide more access to reproductive healthcare, including fertility treatments.
  • Create dedicated spaces for lactation at all district schools and offices.
  • Help employees enroll their children in LAUSD schools near where they work.

LAUSD officials are now working on a plan to provide these new benefits, Ortiz Franklin said, with some of the new services coming online in the current school year.

Maya Suzuki Daniels, a teacher at San Pedro High School and a mother to a kindergartner and an infant, said the district needs to do more to support working parents like her.  

Suzuki Daniels said she鈥檚 spent up to $1,600 a month for childcare, putting financial stress on her family while she鈥檚 trying to work full time and raise young children.

鈥淚 exhausted all of my sick time, and I now am paying for their child care through personal loans,鈥 Daniels said, 鈥渨hich I’m told is very typical and normal for a working teacher. That sucks.鈥

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