Chicago
schools to reopen after teachers agree to end COVID-19 walkout
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[January 11, 2022]
By Costas Pitas
(Reuters) -Chicago Public Schools, the
third-largest U.S. education district, will resume in-person classes on
Wednesday after a union backed ending a walkout over COVID-19 fears in
an agreement it said would boost safeguards.
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Teachers began their action last week, idling some 340,000 students,
following a union vote to reinstate virtual instruction and a push
for more rigorous safety protocols, including wider testing, as the
Omicron variant spread.
While most U.S. public school districts have reopened their campuses
for the new year, education systems in some major cities have opted
for online learning or delayed back-to-classroom plans due to staff
shortages.
The United States reported at least 1.13 million new coronavirus
infections on Monday, according to a Reuters tally, the highest
daily total of any country in the world, but there are also fears
over the impact on younger people's schooling.
"Switching completely back to remote learning again without a public
health reason to do so would have created and amplified the social,
emotional and economic turmoil that far too many of our families are
facing," Mayor Lori Lightfoot said at a news conference.
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The spat between Lightfoot and
workers' representatives saw her and the
district brand the walkout an illegal work
stoppage for which teachers' pay will be docked.
The union had accused the mayor and school
officials of "locking out" teachers by freezing
their online instruction platforms, preventing a
return to remote learning while the conflict is
unresolved.
On Monday, Chicago Teachers Union President
Jesse Sharkey said the deal was not ideal but
made improvements.
"It's not a perfect agreement," he said during a
news conference. "It does include some important
things which are going to help safeguard
ourselves and our schools."
(Reporting by Costas Pitas;Editing by Dan Burns
and Lincoln Feast.)
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