Community Board High Five

Board Of Directors; Board of Industry. The High Fives Foundation supports the dreams of outdoor action sports athletes by raising injury prevention awareness while. Jul 9, 2018 - Full Board. Thursday, July 12th, 2018, at 6:00pm. Xavier High School 30 West 16th Street, 2nd Floor Library. Vikki Barbero, Chair.

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Allison Greenwood Bajracharya is an L.A. Unified parent who lives in Los Feliz. She was the operations and strategy chief at the Camino Nuevo Charter Academy network of schools until she stepped down in November. Her two children attend Franklin Avenue Elementary in Los Feliz. She has 18 years of experience working in public education.

Prior to her job at Camino Nuevo, she worked as a public school teacher in New Orleans before moving to Los Angeles to get her master’s degree in public policy from USC. She is chair of the Silverlake Jewish Community Center’s board and a board member of STEM Preparatory charter schools and United Parents and Students. “This is bigger than any candidate’s campaign. It’s about making sure all our children have the opportunity to learn, prosper, and succeed,” she said in a statement when she began an online calling on Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state legislature to provide new school funding in order to help end the Los Angeles teacher strike. Bajracharya has raised in contributions.

Her endorsements include Students for Education Reform, families and community members. Graciela Ortiz is a Huntington Park councilwoman and a social worker who has worked for L.A. Unified as a pupil services and attendance counselor at Banning High School, Peary Middle School and Linda Esperanza Marquez High School, where she notes she became a UTLA member. Ortiz was elected to serve on Huntington Park’s City Council in March 2015.

She was vice mayor in 2015-16 and mayor in 2016-17, when she voted in favor of a moratorium on new charters schools in Huntington Park which lasted for one year. Ortiz told Speak Up in an that she had to “wear that hat” as a councilwoman and that the charter moratorium was temporary. “My view on schools, in general, is I believe in good schools, period. I believe in good schools in all our communities. To put a label on a school, I don’t believe it’s fair. That’s a charter school, that’s a public school, that’s an option school, that’s another LAUSD school. Schools are schools.

And we need good schools. So I believe in good schools, and I believe in good programs. We have amazing programs in many of our schools, and we don’t advertise it enough to our communities, to our parents.” Ortiz has raised in contributions. Her endorsements include elected officials from the southeast cities, as well as L.A. City Councilmember Gil Cedillo from District 1, who represents the areas northeast of downtown that are in Board District 5. Other endorsements include the Association of Pupil Services and Attendance Counselors, the National Association of Social Workers and Los Angeles School Police Association.

Heather Repenning has served Mayor Eric Garcetti in various roles including director of external affairs. She has a daughter attending an elementary school in Silver Lake. She told Speak UP in an about the importance of havin g a parent of an L.A. Unified student on the board.

“I think it’s really important. At the end of the day, we’re representing the clients of LAUSD, which are the kids. I don’t think it’s the only perspective that should be represented on the board.