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		Chicago teachers reach contract deal for the first time in more than a 
		decade without a strike
		[April 15, 2025]  
		By SOPHIA TAREEN 
		CHICAGO (AP) — For the first time in over a decade, Chicago’s public 
		school teachers have a new contract without a strike or threat of a 
		walkout. The four-year agreement includes pay hikes, hiring more 
		teachers and class size limits.
 While negotiations between the Chicago Teachers Union and the district 
		didn’t escalate this time, there was unprecedented turmoil surrounding 
		the unusual yearlong talks. The drama included the school 
		superintendent’s firing, the entire board resigning and historic 
		elections that tested the union’s power.
 
 Now, Chicago faces uncertainty with Trump administration education cuts 
		and looming questions about how the nation’s fourth-largest school 
		district will pay for the contract.
 
 The turmoil
 
 While all parties are celebrating the agreement now, there’s been no 
		shortage of turbulence.
 
 Perhaps the main reason negotiations didn’t devolve into a strike, as 
		was the case in 2019 and 2012, was union ally Mayor Brandon Johnson. A 
		former teacher and CTU organizer, the union helped elect him in 2023.
 
 He spent months trying to oust Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro 
		Martinez, an appointee of former Mayor Lori Lightfoot, in a public spat.
 
 “All of that chaos and turmoil there clearly dragged down the bargaining 
		and probably shut it down for a fair amount of time,” said Robert Bruno, 
		a University of Illinois professor of labor and employment relations.
 
		
		 
		Johnson wanted a $300 million loan to cover the new contract and a 
		pension payment, which Martinez and the board rejected as fiscally 
		irresponsible. District officials and good government groups argue that 
		borrowing would incur high interest rates, but Johnson has pushed back, 
		saying rates are “relatively” low. In October, the board resigned in 
		protest.
 The next month, the city held its first school elections. The 
		transitional board — a mix of union-backed candidates, charter school 
		supporters and independents — includes mayoral appointees until it’s 
		fully elected in 2027.
 
 In December, the board moved to fire Martinez, though he’ll remain until 
		June. At one point, Martinez accused new members of meeting privately 
		with the union and won a judge’s restraining order.
 
 The talks
 
 The union started contract talks last year with more than 700 requests, 
		a record for the almost 30,000-member union.
 
 Union leaders say their goal is always equality in the segregated city. 
		Roughly 70% of the 325,000 students in the district are low-income and 
		more than 80% are Black or Latino.
 
 But district officials said those lofty requests would have cost over 
		$10 billion. The district’s annual budget is roughly $10 billion.
 
 The new agreement’s price tag is about $1.5 billion.
 
 “We stayed true to our values,” Martinez said after the deal was 
		announced. “We succeeded in keeping the best interest of our students 
		always at the center."
 
 Both sides touted transparency. For the first time, some bargaining 
		sessions were publicly livestreamed.
 
 It was also the first time in nearly three decades the union was allowed 
		to bargain on issues like class size. In 1995, a Republican-led Illinois 
		legislature passed a law limiting collective bargaining rights largely 
		to pay and benefits. Democratic leaders changed that in 2021.
 
		
		 
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            The Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) President Stacy Davis Gates answers 
			a question from media during news conference at CTU headquarters in 
			Chicago, Monday, April 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) 
            
			
			
			 
            CTU President Stacy Davis Gates celebrated the contract as a win 
			that protects students, particularly those who are vulnerable under 
			Donald Trump’s presidency.
 “It’s big, it’s complex and it is certainly a step in the right 
			direction,” she said.
 
 Johnson also took a victory lap, trumpeting his union ties.
 
 “When I was running for office, they said it would be a liability,” 
			he told reporters recently. “But it sounds like to me that no other 
			mayor could have brought Chicago Public Schools, the Board of 
			Education, the mayor’s office and the CTU together to the table to 
			make sure that our children get exactly what they deserve, which is 
			a fully funded, well-rounded education.”
 
 The deal
 
 Under the deal, teachers will get 4% retroactive raises as the 
			contract expired last year. Then they’ll get 4% or 5% raises each 
			year after.
 
 Starting next year, the median teacher pay will be $98,000. By the 
			contract’s end in 2028, the average teacher will earn around 
			$110,000, according to the district.
 
 The district, which employs roughly 7,000 teachers, will hire 800 
			more, and nearly 100 additional librarians. Teachers will get an 
			extra 10 minutes of daily prep time, for 70 minutes total.
 
 Also, class sizes will be limited by grade level. For instance, 
			kindergarten will have the smallest and be capped at 25 students.
 
 Union leaders announced Monday that 97% of members who voted 
			approved the deal. Davis Gates called it “overwhelmingly historic 
			levels” of support for a contract that built on previous years' 
			work, including strikes.
 
 The future
 
 Experts say what happened in Chicago could give other unions 
			momentum. Los Angeles teachers, who are currently negotiating, noted 
			CTU in a recent newsletter.
 
            
			 
			“Organizing is how we resist political agendas to dismantle our 
			public schools and public services. And we can Win Our Future in Los 
			Angeles, just like our union siblings in Chicago,” the United 
			Teachers Los Angeles newsletter read.
 Still, serious funding questions remain.
 
 The district has a roughly $500 million annual deficit and a pending 
			$175 million pension reimbursement to the city. The district is also 
			about to enter contract negotiations with the principals’ union.
 
 Martinez said the first year of the contract is covered, but there’s 
			uncertainty after that.
 
 Where the two sides agree is that the talks took too long.
 
 As Trump took office, union organizers said there was more gravity 
			to their work, even as both sides in the Democratic stronghold are 
			aligned on issues including immigrant rights.
 
 “We had a sense of urgency, we had a sense of responsibility,” Davis 
			Gates said. “The district shared the responsibility, but not the 
			urgency.”
 
 School officials accused the union of taking their time.
 
 “We should have had this contract months ago,” Martinez said.
 
			
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