Chicago teachers authorize strike
against third-largest U.S. public school district
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[September 27, 2019]
By Brendan O'Brien
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Chicago teachers
locked in protracted labor negotiations with the city have voted
overwhelmingly to authorize their union to launch a strike against
the third-largest U.S. public school district as soon as next month,
the union said on Thursday.
A tally of ballots showed that 94% of some 25,000 dues-paying
members of the Chicago Teachers Union supported giving their leaders
the discretion to call a strike starting on Oct. 7 at the earliest,
the union said in a statement.
The outcome of the vote far exceeded the three-quarters majority
required by union rules to authorize a strike, which would be the
third by Chicago teachers since 2011.
The union's governing body plans to meet on Oct. 2, next Wednesday,
to set an actual strike deadline - the date by which a settlement
would have to be reached to avoid a work stoppage, the union said.
A walkout would disrupt classes for about 360,000 Chicago students
in kindergarten through high school, following a wave of teacher
strikes across the country over wages and education funding over the
past two years, including a week-long strike in Los Angeles in
January. African-Americans and Hispanics account for the majority of
Chicago's public school enrollment.
Speaking to reporters on Thursday morning, Chicago Mayor Lori
Lightfoot said there was "no reason why we can’t get a deal done" to
avert a strike. A walkout, she said, "would be catastrophic for the
learning environment for our kids."
In a joint statement late Thursday, Lightfoot and CPS CEO Janice
Jackson said, "We are committed to doing everything we can to
finalize a deal that is sustainable for all Chicagoans and for our
city’s future, that respects our teachers, and continues our
students’ record-breaking success for years to come."
Results of the strike vote capped another day of contract talks. The
two sides have been meeting three times a week, and were due for
another bargaining session on Friday, union spokesperson Chris
Geovanis said.
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A playground is seen behind a locked gate at Woods Elementary Math &
Science Academy in Chicago, Illinois, United States, May 8, 2015.
REUTERS/Jim Young
As was the case in Los Angeles, the labor dispute in Chicago has
centered on wages as well as teacher demands for contract language
to reduce class size and increase staffing levels for support staff,
such as nurses and social workers.
The union says the school district suffers a dire shortage of such
personnel, with so few nurses that each is assigned to five schools.
Lightfoot has offered to increase teacher pay by 16% over five
years, while the union has countered with a request of 15% over
three years.
The union is also insisting on a higher wage floor for school
clerks, teaching assistants and others, two-thirds of whose wages,
it says, are so low that their children qualify for free and
reduced-price school lunches under poverty guidelines.
The union and the Chicago Public Schools district opened
negotiations in February. The previous contract expired at the end
of June.
Members of a separate union, Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
Local 73, representing security guards, janitors and special
education aides, have already authorized a strike of their own, set
to begin as early as Oct. 17.
Geovanis said the teachers might opt to push their earliest strike
date by a week to coincide with SEIU Local 73's timetable.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Additional reporting by
Kieran Pierog in Chicago and Steve Gorman in Los Angeles and Rich
McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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