As CPS prepares to close a record number of schools, the fate of students and communities is in question.
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CPS, CTU reject fact-finder
Both the School Board and the Chicago Teachers Union rejected an arbitrator’s proposed contract settlement Wednesday, starting the 30-day countdown to a possible teacher strike.
CPS was first, saying that the fact-finder’s report, which called for raises next year of 15 percent, would force the district to lay off 4,000 teachers in the first year alone. The total cost of the raises over four years--the recommended length of a contract--would reach $330 million, the board estimates.
“Quite simply, the board does not have the resources to accept it,” said David Vitale, president of the Board of Education. “It’s time for us to move beyond the fact-finder’s report, and into collective bargaining negotiations.”
Then came CTU, with what President Karen Lewis described as a “unanimous” decision to reject the settlement at a House of Delegates meeting. Moving forward, said CTU Vice President Jesse Sharkey, “we have a salary demand...and we will moderate our salary demand based on whether there’s an acceptable package” of non-monetary offers.
The union has not formally issued a notice that it intends to strike, which the law requires at least 10 days ahead of such an action.
In his report, which fact-finder Edwin Benn immediately released to the media, Benn called the relationship between CTU and CPS “toxic.” He pointed out that teachers received hefty raises over the length of the just-expired contract, at a time when the economy was in free-fall and wages in general were stagnant. Yet he rejected the district’s call for merit pay and put the blame for the current stalemate on the district, writing that it “caused this problem by lengthening the school day and year to the extent it did when it was having serious budget problems,” and adding that the board couldn’t expect not to have to compensate teachers for additional work time.
During a budget tele-town hall held Wednesday evening, Chief Administrative Officer Tim Cawley gave an overview of the budget and was asked if the district would be willing to scale back the longer, 7-hour day given its fiscal crisis. Cawley said no, saying district officials believe that the longer is the “right thing” to do for students.
At the board meeting, Vitale said CPS revenue is down this year and will decrease again next year. But he held out hope the sides would reach an agreement, noting that it has been 25 years since the last CTU strike.
“I believe both parties want this to happen. And where there is a will, there is a way,” he said.
He too appeared to rule out backing down on the longer school day. “We are committed, and have been committed from the beginning, to extending the time kids have in front of their teachers,” he said. Mayor Rahm Emanuel expressed similar sentiment in a statement late Wednesday, staying that “students need a full school day...everything else takes a back seat to this priority.”
Teachers rejected the report for their own reasons. On WTTW-Channel 11’s Chicago Tonight, the CTU’s Jackson Potter noted that job security and recall rights for veteran teachers--the rights of laid-off teachers to have first priority to be rehired for new jobs--are a major consideration.
Jeffrey Putnam, who teaches 7th and 8th grade at Lara Elementary, questioned the value of the fact-finding process. “A lot of this we could have done ourselves,” he said. “You don’t need to bring an outside person in to tell us we don’t agree. We have to go back to the bargaining table. That’s the next step.”
Joseph Dunlap, a 2nd-grade teacher at Tarkington Elementary, said that “if they can’t afford a longer school day, there shouldn’t be one.” He suggested, though, that CPS could compromise on non-financial issues like its requirement that teachers live in the city. Potter, too, suggested that teachers would make some concessions if the board gave way on non-monetary issues.
Job security is “a demand that I don’t think would cost them much at all,” said CTU Vice President Jesse Sharkey. “They rejected that summarily.”
Sharkey said it’s important to give veteran teachers priority over “new teachers off the street.”
CPS, however, has argued that giving principals discretion over who to hire in their buildings is of key importance.
The CPS board’s decision was preceded by public comment, mostly from teachers asking for concessions from the district.
But first to speak was Ald. Howard Brookins Jr. (21st Ward), chair of the City Council’s Black Caucus. Citing high unemployment in the African-American community, he said a teachers strike would impose a disproportionate burden in black neighborhoods.
“At the end of the day we have a community that is already stretched… and don’t know what they will do if school doesn’t start on time,” he said.
Miriam Rodriguez Ruiz, a teacher at Newberry Math and Science Academy, said that what’s good for teachers is good for students.
“I ask Mr. Brizard, members of the board, to walk in my shoes for one hour – not one day,” she said, citing 100- to 110-degree classroom temperatures caused by a lack of air conditioning.
“I don’t want to be the villain. Don’t separate me from the children of Chicago Public Schools,” she said. “If you empathize in any way, make it a priority to offer the teachers in Chicago Public Schools a fair contract.”
Charlotte Sanders, a citywide Head Start staffer, said teachers already sacrifice much of their own money providing for students. “I am trying to figure out how to pay Peter from Paul. But if I see a child in need, I’m buying gloves,” she said, drawing applause from the audience.
Kimberly Walls, a teacher at Fulton Elementary, accused CPS of playing games with its budget to avoid giving teachers a raise. “Yow you’re going to talk to Ms. Walls and say, ‘You can’t have a science lab,’ because you gave $3 million to the charter school down the street. … You have the money. The parents know it, the city knows it.”
CPS also contends that Benn, did not follow the law in taking to account teacher salaries in other cities and CPS’ available funds. However, Benn’s report notes that he took other large-district salaries into account and listed the districts he studied that were submitted for consideration by both sides.
The report also rejected the board’s proposal for scrapping step and lane increases and instituting a performance pay program. He urged both sides to go back to the bargaining table and come to an agreement, at one point noting that Chicago schoolchildren are in danger of becoming victims of violence should a strike keep them out of school.
“You hope there is enough common ground on other issues they both care about that would allow them to come to a solution that is financially workable and allows progress on the school day,” said Robin Steans, executive director of Advance Illinois. “It’s not encouraging when you see in the fact-finder’s report about how toxic the negotiating environment has been.”


Crimanuel summarized
A simple look back at Emmanuel's first year in office and the decisions he has made speaks clear indictment of who is to blame for this mess. Let's recap some of the mayor's lowlights:
1. Appointing a 1% represented board, including a chairmen who has ties to AUSL (creating a clear conflict of interest).
2. Hiring a CEO who was essentially run out of Rochester, after receiving an overwhelming 94% no confidence vote from the local teachers union and parent advocacy groups.
3. Rescinding a contractually negotiated 4% raise and explains that for years students have gotten "the shaft."
4. Epically fails in trying to Implement the "longer school day" initiative, by illegally (as per the ILRB) offering cash incentives for schools who sign schedule waivers. Only a handful of school accept.
5. Hiring charter champion, sweetheart (my characterization, her attitude was apparent in her office at 125) Noemi Donoso.
6. Creates a mockery of district rules by hiring Tim Cawley, a resident of the northern suburbs. The board grants him a waiver, removing the city residency requirement for his position.
7. Mr. Cawley, at a hearing reveals that the district will knowing withhold capital investment funds in buildings that the board
foresees possibly closing.
8. Emmanuel appears (prominently) in a charter advocacy group created propaganda film "A Tale of Two Cities". He states that teachers unions stand in the way of reform and that charters contain the "secret sauce" for improving public education.
9. At school closing hearings, investigations find that area reverends had paid protestors stipends to attend hearings located in different parts of the city in order to applaud pro-closing speakers and presenters.
10. In a span of months several high level, central office staffers offer their resignations. Coincidently, all are women of color (Saenz, Denoso, Rose).
11. A large amount of schools planned for "turnaround" are chartered off to AUSL.
12. Emmanuel announces that city schools will move to a 7 1/2 school day in 2012-2013.
13. Poll conducted by local media shows city residents disapprove the mayor's education agenda. The same poll shows that 2/3 of respondents side the the union's plan for bettering schools.
14. Emmanuel announces plans to move ahead of schedule and incorporate an evaluation system that incorporates student test scores, after a letter signed by over 80 area professors, researchers and education advocates addressed to him and the district speaks against it.
15. The mayor, after considerable parent pushback, reduces the length of day to 7 hours.
16. 7,000 plus teachers march in downtown. ( On a Wednesday afternoon, after work.)
17. The mayor receives a proverbial " b$#ch slap" when over 98% of voting teachers agree to authorize a strike.
18. A (2012) budget iniquity finds that CPS moved $70 million (roughly the amount to cover the cancelled 4% raise) to a
security line to pay CPD for "services rendered".
19. Emmanuel criticizes the CTU for moving ahead of the "process" and authorizing a strike.
20. Politically connected AKPD group creates ads for AstroTurf group DFER encouraging parents to speak out against the strike vote.
21. 2013 budget released to dismal reviews from all stakeholders (parents, teachers and financial analysts.).
22. Fact finder publishes report citing that teachers are due raises for extra work on top of lane/step raises. Benn goes further to say that "CPS created" the mess of the current negotiations.
I think the facts speak for themselves. This mayor and his ego has created this. Time for him to swallow his pride and come to table with some solutions "tethered to reality"
Please add to thei list:
Presents CPS budget that raids reserves to zero
City bond rating reduced (twice I think)
Something about SB7 needs to be in there
Great list! and thank you
Please update it in your style, share it and keep it
PLEASE use it when Rahm runs for mayor or any office again
Our group will donate money to buy ad space for it
And the appointed school
And the appointed school board members gave themselves raises.
Well done.
Excellent summary MBA.
Prepare to STRIKE!!
CTU members get ready to strike. The mayor is not backing down from the longer school day, and the CTU members are not willing to work without proper compensation. I'm not interested in any other promises or non-monetary offers. We didn't get a raise last year but the charter schools continued to receive millions of dollars in funding. CPS better start closing some of those charter schools to make room for teacher pay. I can't wait to vote Rhampulstilskin out of office.
Thank you but not me
I pulled the summary from another blog site. I am not the author. However that writer chose to be anonymous but I will pass along props to that person as well.
For the life of me!!!
I don't get people not truly understanding why teachers would want to be paid to work longer hours!!! Okay, so you need child care services as Alderman Brookins noted when he spoke yesterday. There are a lot of people out there who just think of teachers as "glorified babysitters." Well, if we are going to provide child care, we still want to be paid for every hour we are to work. A mere 2% raise which comes out to about $00.43 to $00.46 cents an hour for the additional hundreds of hours worked in a school year. If you were to go to the typical babysitter or any other child care provider and they watched your child for 8 hours, you will NOT pay that person who provided you this service a check for 6 1/2. So why should teachers, who by the way will have to pay aditional monies for their own children's child care due to the longer school day, should just say, "Oh the Board doesn't have the money? Oh well, I guess I better just suck it up and work for free." It ain't happening.
Step One
One way for the city to save money and simplify the bargaining process between CPS and CTU is for the mayor to immediately fire Brizard and everyone associated with him who is being paid a salary. Emanuel can also dump the whole BOE. It is obvious to the tiniest of children that the mayor claims to care so deeply about that he, Rahm Emanuel, is calling all the shots. Why pretend otherwise? Let him sit across the table from the CTU negotiators and give them direct benefit of all his experience in education.
Great list, MBA! I posted it
Great list, MBA! I posted it to my facebook page attributing it to you.
Waterloo
MBA- Excellent post. Thank you for providing that list of failures this Mayor has accomplished pertaining to Public Education.
One fact I did not see, that I believe is important has to do with the schools that piloted the extended day last year. I believe there were five schools that instituted the longer day back in September last year. I believe (based on newspaper reports) that of those five schools, two actually scored worse while one had no statistical change. That alone is an indictment on this haphazard creation of Emanuel and his Board of 1%ers.
And the list goes on
Well done MBA. But just keep going backwards in time.
Daley folding on an irresponsible five-year contract to "keep the peace" in his grandiose Olympic bid...
How are those school uniform policies working in reducing gang activity?
How many millions spent on IDS? This was an utter failure cooked up by "the experts."
NCLB. OMG. Kids can enroll in better schools... never mind there are no seats for them but it sure sounds great.
AYP. OMG II. Comparing one group of kids to an entirely different group of kids, something a fifth-grade science fair participant would avoid (but the Congress of the United States swallowed it whole).
Goals 2000. That worked! Right?
Bystanders, when you question teachers unions, please take into account that it's not just greed or protecting incompetent teachers. It's the only protection we have against ineptitude on a scale that's unimaginable in your world.
A Few Principals Are Not Fair.
Principals should have had respect for senior teachers who still possessd seniority. Not many maybe; but 1 known Principal changed p Now people are out of jobs; unemployed tenured teachers at his school; so he could say there were no jobs at the school; labeled the teachers; and of course; closed their positions. Just to bring in buddies and friends; and clear the school of the tenured teachers. Where is that LSC; and why do they just let the Principal get away with scams. How long will it be before he gets caught up in his wrong doings and scams. This Principal has turned the whole school around. The Board did not have to do it. Tut schools should be turned around by the Board; not by the Principal.As him about teaching. Never taught a day in his life. But can be new; and mess up the school. This year will tell. Because the school is seriously on probation. Doesn't look like it's decinding.
Emanuel Owns The CPS Contract Mess
How dumb is CPS' chief labor negotiator Joe Moriarty? In his response to the arbitration report he tries to make reality disappear by censoring Edwin Benn. Every teacher, parent, and preschooler knows that you can't tell workers they're going to work a longer day and a longer year, and BTW, we're not paying you.
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