Moorlach’s 2018 report, “Financial Soundness Rankings for California’s Public School Districts, Colleges & Universities,” found two-thirds of the 944 state school districts “bleed red ink.”

“LAUSD ranked 922nd, at a negative $2,315 per capita, based on its 2017 CAFR. Using the LAUSD’s new 2018 CAFR, that number now jumps to a negative $4,180 per capita. This is what every man, woman and child would have to pay to get LAUSD out of its negative condition,” Moorlach found.

This is why Mayor Garcetti and LAUSD officials were counting on passage of Measure EE and the anticipated cash infusion.

Ten years ago, Los Angeles voters were faced with a $100 per year parcel tax to raise about $100 million per year for LAUSD. “Measure E not only failed to reach the required two-thirds majority needed to pass the measure, but it was actually voted down 53 percent to 47 percent,” LADN reported.

“Nine years later, LAUSD is still a fiscal train wreck, and is led by a school board and superintendent who thought the best way to get out of the district’s financial hole was to dig a deeper hole and then ask for a $500 million per year tax increase through Measure EE.”

Notably, Garcetti’s Los Angeles spends one out of every five general fund dollars on retirement benefits for city employees, according to the city’s proposed annual budget.