- Proceeds from $384 million sale to also fund campus security
- Balance will finance electric bus, student enrollment efforts
The nation’s second-largest K-12 district is kicking off the new school year with a municipal bond offering while it contends with attacks from hackers, a dwindling student body and soaring labor costs.
The Los Angeles Unified School District, which begins the school year Monday, plans to borrow about $384 million to tackle cyberattacks, school safety and climate change, according to the bond offering prospectus. The series of bonds carries a sustainability label.
“The district is constantly facing a variety of persistent and evolving cybersecurity threats,” said the prospectus, which details previous incidents, including a ransomware attack last year that exposed some student data.
Bloomberg
By Lauren Coleman-Lochner
August 14, 2023