Dear Friends,
I hope this letter finds you  well. Please take a few minutes to read this, and I hope you'll be  inspired to contribute.  In collaboration with a broad, diverse group of  leaders, I've decided to run for president of  United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA), with the goal of helping to build  the kind of movement for social justice we need.  I need your financial  support and, in addition, I hope you will reach out to your networks for  additional financial contributions.
As we know, public education  is under attack.  Schools are more segregated by race and class than at  any time since the late 1960s. Schools across the United States are  chronically under-funded, with vital student programs,  services, and personnel cut dramatically in the last 5 years.  The "run  schools like businesses" approach is ascendant, even in the White  House, with test scores being viewed as the bottom line.   Corporate-turnaround-style school restructurings proliferate  even though they, and the dramatic over-reliance on testing, are not  supported by research.    
With test scores treated like  the bottom line, the arts, music, physical education, civic training,  and cultural, ethnic, gender, and environmental studies are driven out  of the curriculum, particularly in schools that  serve students of color and low-income students.  As public schools are  ravaged, many problematic charter schools exist as radically  de-regulated schools - serving only some students while keeping  higher-needs children out, operating under private management  using public money, and destabilizing the educational climate with a  revolving door of educators.  Despite the remarkable efforts of many  people at school sites and in communities, far too many of our students  are not getting what they need and deserve.
Amidst these attacks, most  teacher unions have been, at best, ineffective in building a fight-back,  and at worst, silent and complicit - despite courageous efforts on the  parts of some leaders.  This failure has created  fertile ground for a second, correlated attack to accelerate - the  attack on unions.  Political forces that advocate market-driven  approaches attack unions so that "things can run more efficiently,"  while they simultaneously call for broader cuts.  These forces  know that teacher unions - as potentially progressive and influential  entities - must be weakened in order for the market-driven agenda to  move forward. 
As teacher unions have been  weakened, quality of education for our students has suffered.  We are  losing experienced career teachers, the folks who bring classrooms to  life and mentor newer teachers. We see many educators  fearful to advocate for their students, communities, and colleagues. We  see fewer educators expecting to set down roots at schools, to build  the kind of relationships with families and communities that are  essential for real education to occur.
In Los Angeles, we are drawing  a line in the sand.  We've been inspired by colleagues from Chicago,  Milwaukee, Newark, and other places who have run for union office as  parts of movements, and won - around a vision  for quality public education and a strategy to build with parents and  community to fight for that vision.
I am honored to be a part of a  slate for office in United Teachers Los Angeles called Union Power.  I  am running for UTLA president with a fantastic team of candidates for  officer positions - a team that brings tremendous  experience in sustainable school improvement, innovative curriculum and  instruction, deep parent involvement, powerful community organizing,  strategic labor contract campaigns, and more.  It is a team with  representatives from across Los Angeles and across  caucuses.  I am running with Cecily Myart-Cruz (candidate for NEA Vice  President), Betty Forrester (current, and candidate for, AFT Vice  President), Colleen Schwab (candidate for Secondary Vice President),  Juan Ramirez (current, and candidate for, Elementary  Vice President), Arlene Inouye (current, and candidate for, Treasurer),  and Daniel Barnhart (candidate for Secretary).
Some key experiences have brought me to this place.  I started teaching through Teach for America - and am now in my 22nd  year in the classroom.  I have been lucky enough to have been mentored  by remarkable,  experienced teachers - and I have many classroom teaching awards that  recognize my commitment to social justice, and to teaching that is  culturally-relevant, literacy-immersed, inter-disciplinary, and  community-connected.  I have been lucky enough to have  been mentored by powerful civil rights, labor, and community organizers  - and have years of building organizations and being part of winning  policy victories, with the Bus Riders Union, Coalition for Educational  Justice, the Crenshaw Cougar Coalition, UTLA  West Area, and more.  I have also been lucky enough to have worked with  a broad group of parents, students, educators, union leaders,  researchers, community organizers, and progressive foundations to build a  nationally-recognized curriculum and instruction  model at Crenshaw High School - the Extended Learning Cultural Model,  which connects students' cultures and in-classroom learning to  internships and leadership experiences in social justice, community  business development, and environmental justice.
I've learned from these  experiences that a teacher union, especially the second largest teacher  union local in the country (UTLA), embedded within the second largest  school district in the country (LAUSD), can be -  and must be - an essential component of a social movement for  educational justice, and can have significant ripple effects across the  country.
Our Union Power slate is committed to:
·         Collectively developing, with educators, parents, youth, and community, a vision for the schools our students deserve;
·         Basing that vision on values  that promote educational excellence, equity, access, civil rights, and  public management - the values that market-based "reformers" contradict;
·         Transforming UTLA into an  organizing union that works with parents and community to fight for this  vision at the grassroots and in board rooms;
·         Reclaiming educators' role as curriculum and instruction experts, and leaders in sustainable school improvement;  
·         Winning more funding for  schools to reduce class size, improve working and learning conditions,  expand student programs and class offerings, and provide wrap-around  counseling, emotional, and health support for students  so that their needs are met in school, rather than students being  suspended or expelled;
·         Fighting for pay and benefits that respect educators and encourage them to remain in the profession;
·         Developing a real, research-based teacher support and development program;
·         Becoming integrally involved  in community-, parent-, and youth-led struggles that are inextricably  linked to children's education, those around housing, environmental  justice, access to healthy food, access to gardens  and parks, living wage jobs, transportation, civil rights, humane urban  development, immigrant rights, police accountability, etc.
The Union Power slate has the  kind of broad-based support that gives us a real opportunity to win this  election.  It is, however, going to take major funding to do it.  We  need to raise close to $100,000 by January,  well before the election in February.  Contributions will go toward  city-wide mailings to 35,000 members, toward materials and food for  regular city-wide campaign activist and leadership development meetings,  toward publication and distribution of policy papers,  towards visiting as many as possible of our over 650 schools in LAUSD,  and toward logistical support for grassroots actions that we are  building around a variety of issues that reflect our values, and more.
While many of you are not UTLA  members, some of you don't live in LA, and some of you are enjoying  retirement after years of teaching, we know that you are aware of how  positive it would be - for public education, for  the labor movement, for LA, and for the country beyond LA - to have  UTLA under a progressive leadership.  We will be honored to receive any  contribution from you, and we encourage you to think as generously as  you possibly can.  Some individual donors, inside  and outside UTLA and LA, give us $25.  Other individual donors, inside  and outside UTLA and LA, have given us over $1,000.  
Still others have given us a  few hundred dollars individually, with the promise to organize  concretely to have several other individuals within their networks match  those donations.  In this regard, please think about your networks carefully, and  forward this letter as far as you would like - to teacher networks,  union networks, community organizing networks, college networks, friend  networks, TFA networks, family networks, whatever  it is.  We would love for you to actively organize in that way.  
We will have a Pay Pal account  up soon for this to be done over the internet, and we will be having  local LA fundraising parties.  But, please don't wait for those.  Please give as  soon as you can through the mail in response to this letter - the sooner  we have a sense of what we're able to raise, which we think will be  substantial, the better our strategy can roll  out.  For the moment, you can send checks made out to  "Union Power" to the following address -- Union Power, c/o David Rapkin,  837 W. 11th Street, San Pedro, CA 90731.
Of course, feel free to call or email with ideas and suggestions you have for this campaign. 
A Union Power slate victory  would represent a major step forward for the work that many of us have  devoted our lives to, and that we all support deeply. Please support us  as generously as you can, so together we can  accomplish this goal.
Warmest regards, and thank you very much,
Alex Caputo-Pearl
Teacher, Frida Kahlo High School
Teacher Supporter of Student Organizations, Crenshaw High School
Board of Directors Member, UTLA West Area
Core Leader, Coalition for Educational Justice