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National News

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Chicago Teachers Strike Enters 2nd Week

September 17th, 2012 8:06 am Associated Press

CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is turning to the courts to try to put an end to a teachers strike that’s entering its second week and has left parents scrambling to make alternative child care arrangements for at least two more days.

The union and school leaders seemed headed toward a resolution at the end of last week, saying they were optimistic students in the nation’s third-largest school district would be back in class by Monday. But teachers uncomfortable with a tentative contract offer decided Sunday to remain on strike, saying they needed more time to review a complicated proposal.

Emanuel fired back, saying he told city attorneys to seek a court order forcing Chicago Teachers Union members back into the classroom.

The strike is the first for the city’s teachers in 25 years and has kept 350,000 students out of class, leaving parents to make other plans.

Working mom Dequita Wade said that when the strike started, she sent her son 15 miles away to a cousin’s house so he wouldn’t be left unsupervised in a neighborhood known for violent crime and gangs. She was hoping the union and district would work things out quickly.

“You had a whole week. This is beginning to be ridiculous,” Wade said. “Are they going to keep prolonging things?”

Months of contract negotiations have come down to two main issues central to the debate over the future of education across the United States: teacher evaluations and job security.

Union delegates said they felt uncomfortable approving the contract because they had seen it only in bits. The union will meet again Tuesday, after the end of the Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year.

“There’s no trust for our members of the board,” Chicago Teachers Union president Karen Lewis told reporters Sunday night. “They’re not happy with the agreement. They’d like it to actually be a lot better.”

Emanuel said the strike was illegal because it endangers the health and safety of students and concerned issues — evaluations, layoffs and recall rights — that state law says cannot be grounds for a work stoppage.

“This was a strike of choice and is now a delay of choice that is wrong for our children,” Emanuel said in a written statement.

The strike has shined a spotlight on Emanuel’s leadership more than ever, and some experts have suggested the new contract — which features annual pay raises and other benefits — is a win for union.

“I’m hard-pressed to imagine how they could have done much better,” said Robert Bruno, a professor of labor and employment relations at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “This is a very impressive outcome for the teachers.”

With an average salary of $76,000, Chicago teachers are among the highest-paid in the nation, and the contract outline calls for annual raises. But some teachers are upset it did not restore a 4 percent raise Emanuel rescinded last year.

Emanuel pushed for a contract that includes ratcheting up the percentage of evaluations based on student performance, to 35 percent within four years. The union contends that does not take into account outside factors that affect student performance such as poverty and violence.

The union pushed for a policy to give laid-off teachers first dibs on open jobs anywhere in the district, but the city said that would keep principals from hiring the teachers they think are most qualified.

The union has engaged in something of a publicity campaign, telling parents about problems that include a lack of important books and basic supplies.

Some parents said they remain sympathetic to teachers.

“I don’t think they’re wrong. The things they’re asking for are within reason,” said Pamela Edwards, who has sent her 16-year-old daughter to one of about 140 schools the district has kept open during the strike to provide meals and supervision.

Others said they understand why teachers are taking their time.

“As much as we want our kids back in school, teachers need to make sure they have dotted all their i’s and crossed their t’s,” said Becky Malone, mother of a second grader and fourth grader, who’ve been studying at home and going to museums over the last week. “What’s the point of going on strike if you don’t get everything you need out of it? For parents, it’ll be no more of a challenge than it’s been in the past week.”

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Follow Sophia Tareen at .



  • stephenumkc

    Our children spend on average 45 hours a week times 36 weeks a year with our teachers.
    We have basically asked out teachers to raise our children, 9 months out of the year. We have taken money from them every time we find our state budget in need of extra monies for the vacations of the political big wigs,
    We have taken away their right to discipline the children. We have bypassed the necessary cost of living increases and asked them to pay for their own benefits and we have given them the ultimatum of making certain that a high percentage of the children meet the high standards of required education or lose their job, regardless of the fact that parents are leaving it all to the teachers and taking no responsibility for their children’s education.
    Having been a college instructor for lo these many years, I wasn’t as subjected to these unfair conditions and hardly feasible demands on our public school teachers.
    I do however, support and admire the teachers of this country who get up every morning, face a group of young people who don’t understand the concept of respect, strive to enlighten students that have no interest in learning and deny themselves a quality of life because we won’t let them earn what they deserve.
    I salute the teacher of Chicago. Good for you. May your endeavors be successful and may the rest of the country learn from your example.