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School closings

As CPS prepares to close a record number of schools, the fate of students and communities is in question.

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

The school-level budgets released to principals Friday afternoon
included no reduction in the number of teachers that would result in class size increases, but the salary lines did not include the four
percent raises promised to teachers. The school-level budgets released to principals Friday afternoon included no reduction in the number of teachers that would result in class size increases, but the salary lines did not include the four percent raises promised to teachers.

 

The district is facing an estimated $720 million budget deficit and CEO Jean-Claude Brizard could be setting the stage for district leaders to declare a fiscal emergency--a move that could get the district out of paying the raises. The raises will cost the district about $80 million.

The board needs to declare by June 15 if they are going to do so. If a fiscal emergency is declared and the board votes not to pay the raises, the union would have the option of renegotiating its contract, or of going on strike.

In a letter to principals, Jean-Claude Brizard said that the board of education must approve the salary increase and that he was being conservative. 

CPS spokeswoman Becky Carroll said Brizard doesn't know what the board wants to do, especially because the district faces such a big deficit, and it is up to them to declare a fiscal emergency. The new board members, like Brizard, were appointed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel and have yet to meet.
"We are in a unique situation," she said.  

Kenzo Shibata, member communications coordinator for the Chicago Teachers Union, took a conciliatory tone in response to the raises not being included in the school-level budgets.

“They are following procedure,” Shibata said. “We do know that it’s a new board, a new mayor and a new CEO, and we are expecting them to do the right thing by kids. That is all we know at this point.”

It is unclear whether school-level budgets typically have salary lines with raises, but there’s seemingly no reason why Brizard couldn’t have included them if he planned on paying them. The school-level budgets are planning documents.

Don Moore, executive director of Designs for Change, points out that the district signed a legal contract agreeing to pay the raises.

“It is nonsense,” said. “It is all public relations.”

Other than not committing to the salary increases, the budgets released to the schools did not shed much light on where Brizard will find pools of money to offset the deficit. About 150 “supplemental teaching positions and other staff” were not funded by the district, Carroll said. But she noted that principals could keep these counselors and other staff on by using discretionary money. 

At this point, Brizard, however, isn’t instructing principals to layoff teachers in order to increase class sizes, nor is he cutting positions for magnet and world language programs. He’s also funding early childhood and full-day kindergarten, despite the fact that it looks as though the district is going to receive less state funding for them. And discretionary money is remaining level.

Brizard announced Thursday that he has already found $75 million to trim in the central office and facilities and maintenance budgets. Area offices also have reportedly been told to cut between 37 and 40 percent.

Below is the letter Brizard sent to principals:

Dear Principals:

As you know, CPS faces a massive budget deficit of $720 million for fiscal year 2012. A large portion of this deficit is being driven by the loss of millions in federal stimulus dollars. We have also faced a great deal of uncertainty in Springfield, only learning Tuesday that the legislature is slashing aid to schools along with some CPS block grants, leaving us another $77 million in the red.

Yesterday, Mayor Emanuel and I announced $75 million of reductions in administrative and non-classroom spending to do our part in ensuring that our children’s education comes before all else during this fiscal crisis. I believe that commitment is reflected in the priorities funded in your school-based budget.

My commitment to you as our school leaders is to keep cuts as far away from the classroom as possible while directing every dollar possible towards them.  I know you have been faced with an unconscionable delay in the release of your school-based budget, which is why I instructed staff on my first day as CEO to have budgets in hand by today. I’m now writing to let you know that the Public Sector Budgeting (PSB) tool in Oracle is now open for schools, and you can begin working on your budgets immediately.

Unfortunately, because of the delay in issuing these budgets, you are going to face some very challenging time constraints: the PSB tool will close on Sunday, June 12. Our information technology teams have worked diligently over the last several weeks to prepare our technology systems for the heavy load in traffic we expect next week, but we still encourage you to get started right away.

These school based budgets reflect the best assumptions available to us at this time and we believe they will be very reliable planning tools for you.

Let me address some of the major items you will see in the budgets as you open them:

•    There will be no increases to class size.

•    We are sustaining our support of early childhood education, including supplemental full-day kindergarten positions, despite the fact that the state has slashed block grant funding for them.

•    We are maintaining magnet and world language positions.

•    We are maintaining existing Culture of Calm positions, which will be funded with Title I dollars and not your school’s discretionary allocation.

•    Supplemental General State Aid and NCLB Title 1 (discretionary) funding will remain level.

Our budget situation will force us to trim some supplemental and instructional support programs. Impacted schools will see these reductions in their budget packets and these reductions will vary on a case by case basis.

You will also see that there are no 4% salary increases for teachers loaded in your budgets. That is because any increases must be approved by the Board of Education, and the newly appointed board has not yet met. Therefore, we took a conservative approach and left out scheduled salary increases for now. The final decision lies with the board (not with senior management), and we anticipate they will make a determination this month, in accordance with the deadline in the collective bargaining agreement. As you plan your budgets for next year, you should expect that any board funded positions not supported by school membership after the 20th day of student attendance will not be maintained. This may not require any immediate action, but should be kept in mind during your planning process.

A small group of you will see some cuts to supplemental teaching positions and other staff. You may be able to augment these cuts with your discretionary dollars. Once you submit budgets, our human capital team must conduct an analysis of positions—and any potential layoffs—to ensure we abide by all parts of our collective bargaining agreements. Once that is complete, we will reach out to you with more guidance and detailed timing.

While some things may change, and the CPS budget will not be final until August, the school-based budgets available to you today will help you make the decisions you need to define your FY 12 programming. Our central office staff, our business service centers, and your chief area officers are all prepared to support you in this process. Business service centers will offer extended hours throughout next week, and will be open next weekend (June 11 and 12) to assist you. In fact, many of you are already participating in training today.

On behalf of the entire senior leadership team, I want to thank you for your incredible patience and understanding over the last several months. We know this has been enormously frustrating for you, and we appreciate how hard you are working on behalf of our students, teachers and communities.

Jean-Claude Brizard

Chief Executive Officer

15 comments

Our budget is screwed up! wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

"Certainly if this was the very first implication of how I'm going to work and how my team is going to work, I certainly would have sat down and made sure that this ran smoothly," said Clarice Berry.
Some principals went online Friday and found that their school budgets had been slashed drastically while other schools had their budgets remain steady. Other principals are getting their budgets hand-delivered to them while still others are unable to find their budgets at all.

Love how they are going to stop wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

cleaning area that are not used in the school.(LOL) Our school never has these areas cleaned in hopes that are custodians can into the dirty classrooms due to food left by all that wasted breakfast!!

All media-demand a forensic audit! wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

Another way to pick up cash - CPS just discovered in an audit - All retired teachers who worked from Fall of 2007 thru 6/2010 were over paid by CPS. They received benefit day pay. Even when they called and reported it they were told it was in the contract. Now all have received letters instructing them to return the money they owe. Not unreasonable but I love the part about as an employee they want me to sign an authorization to take 15% of the amount every pay period or else there will be "strong disciplinary action." Humph! Haven't worked for CPS for 2 years, would've thought they might notice. I heard there were many who went to CO about this - one person asked what happened if they died before they repaid it all and the office person said they didn't know, they hadn't thought about that yet. Anyway, there are many for whom this will be a hardship, but I guess CPS sees it as a good way to pick up some quick cash. So if this has taken them 3 years or so to notice, how often do they audit payroll?

dear Catalyst- did CPS postpone the wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

budget so that the media would not inquire about the SAT 10 scores released for 3-6-8th grades==promotion detention? The new list will be up on Monday. Any trends? Will the scores and promotion rate for June be used to retain the CAOs? There's proof for Brizard!

Scantron sucks wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

most of our students who had a 'meets' in Scantron ended up having to go to summer school. And they say Scantron predicts ISAT....

food and warm milk in 1000s wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

of classrooms and they will cut the custodians. unsanitary!

As a CPS principal I am the wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

instructional leader, social worker, accountant for a large budget, HR, disciplinarian, engineer, nurse, purchaser/approver, in charge of the inventory and cash, technology coordinator, professional development provider and bullet proof vest. I am lucky that I do not have to serve lunch (have had to cook it and serve it on the snow days,) or mop the floors-although with all the milk spills occurring with the new breakfast, I am helping there too. And all central office and the CAO gives me to do is more work and more criticism. Love it when they tell you that ‘it’s the end of their day,’ but they will (try) to help you anyway and it is only 3:15!
Charters do not have central offices. There is no reason for such a lage CO and for CAOs. Ours was instrumental in getting our scores DOWN! And we lost our great coach. And if Mr. Brizard keeps the ones at the CAOs office instead and keeps CAOs... he surely has not listened to principals.

disparity in theses budgets wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

Some favored schools kept their positions from last year with the same amount of students or less and others, with no student changes are getting fewer positions-cuts. Since Brizard wants more charters, is he cutting positions more at some schools in order to have them fail take them over? The distribution of money given for the school budget is supposed to be fair to ALL schools. Who is watching this?

Credit Cards for City??? wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

I heard Rahm is gonna cancel city credit cards. How Ironic?? Cps teachers buy their own supplies with their OWN money and get 100 dollars back? WHile these big shots are buying dinners, paying tickets on the city's dime? Why didnt rahm start with these guys???? He goes ganbusters that teachers dont deserve a raise. Do you think rahm pays for his copy paper?? Honestly...sounds petty....but does he? Does he pay for his pencils and pens and markers?? Why cant he?? Shoe some solidarity

The Retired Principal (RP) wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

Principals, how many positions did you have to cut at your school in this years budget (teachers and PSP's). How much less money did you get in this years budget from last year (local, state and federal).

Greg wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

About time

It is great that we finally have budgets set, but at this point in the year, we really should have a game plan in place for all players...

5 years 36 different policies wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

CPS has been churning, and changing the game plan every single year. In 5 years I have had 3 new principals, 3 new CEOs, 2 new mayors, 2 different education area changes, ( that is 3 x 3 x2x2=36) that is about 36 different policies in 5 years???

not to mention about 50 percent staff turnover, NCLB, Race to the Top, new legislation for teachers, kids coming and going all year long, how in the H am I supposed to create a "plan"??? How can we blame anyone for this mess...I say CPS make a plan and stick with it!!! Change is not always good.....when it is just for change's sake!!!! How can they even begin to say it is the teachers fault???

The Retired Principal (RP) wrote 1 year 49 weeks ago
Layoffs?? wrote 1 year 49 weeks ago

Principals finally get their budgets; teacher raises in question

Does anyone know the status of layoffs at cps??? Seems very strange...something doesnt add up? No layoff threats? Is there someting up their sleeves?? It cant be this simple? TO be honest I am willing to get no raise if I and all others can keep their jobs? BUt...this is CPS...something is gonna happen over the summer...just like the SB7 law seems to have been over SPring break? Am I wrong????

c.l.ball wrote 1 year 49 weeks ago

Why aren't these posted?

Why can't CPS post the preliminary budgets online?

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