Before the Chicago teachers first struck, teacher strikes were almost always cast—by politicians, the media, this or that administration—as “care-offs,” with administrators clutching their pearls and worrying to the press that the teachers simply didn’t care enough about the students. Even self-identified progressive commentators had gotten used to dismissing teachers’ unions as selfish. This language was echoed in popular myths like that of the “rubber room,” where supposedly lazy, bad teachers who couldn’t be fired were sent to hang out for years on end, getting fat on the taxpayer dime.This article makes some important points about changing the tone of the conversation. Look at today's NYT - Cory freakn Booker has yet another op ed supporting charter schools. We must be relentless in going after these people. The Chicago and LA strikes along with the red state teacher rebellions are changing the dialogue and any Democrat wanting to be president better take this into account. It is not only big industry and the wealthy who are nervous about Bernie and Warren - the charter industrial complex is very nervous.
Now, in 2019, that conversation has been flipped. There is no longer any question that teachers love their students and their work; indeed, the CTU fought Lightfoot after an agreement had been reached, demanding to make up the 11 days lost to the strike, while the mayor insisted on just five make-up days.Again and again, Chicago’s teachers have successfully made the point that it is they who care about the students, the schools, and the city as a whole. They have fought for a revitalized public sector, for an understanding that no issue is outside their purview.
The Chicago Teachers Strike Was a Lesson in 21st-Century Organizing
Despite the Janus decision and years of labor losses, the Chicago Teachers Union has figured out how to organize—and win.
By Sarah Jaffe
November 16, 2019
Thousands of striking Chicago teachers and 
their supporters march around City Hall before Mayor Lori Lightfoot was 
scheduled to deliver her first budget address during the Chicago City 
Council meeting on October 23. (Ashlee Rezin Garcia / Chicago Sun-Times via AP)
In
 2012, the Chicago Teachers Union wrote the playbook that has been 
successfully used by teachers around the country to reform their unions 
and win at the bargaining table and on the picket line. That was the 
year Chicago’s teachers waged a new kind of strike, one that redefined 
solidarity and began to change the narrative around the public good. 
Now, seven years later, the CTU has shown us all how it’s done, 
reclaiming its place at the center of the conversation about union power
 in the United States.
The
 CTU’s 2019 strike began on October 17, and lasted 11 school days, 
longer than the teachers’ 2012 strike. As in 2012, they fought for much 
more than raises and benefits for themselves: They demanded smaller 
class sizes, prep time, nurses and counselors in every school. They put 
racial justice at the center of their demands, arguing for fair 
resources for schools that serve black and brown students, sanctuary 
schools for immigrants, and restorative justice practices to disrupt the
 school-to-prison pipeline. Most important, they made the strike a 
referendum on housing in Chicago by demanding landmark resources for 
homeless students and refusing to back down when the mayor and her 
allies argued that such issues had no place at the bargaining table.
On
 November 15, the teachers ratified a new contract with Chicago Public 
Schools, sealing a significant victory: They won the resources they had 
requested for homeless students; they won hard caps on class sizes for 
the first time; they won a nurse and counselor in every school. They 
also won raises and sanctuary schools, and, most important, they shifted
 the balance of power in the schools a bit further in the direction of 
the teachers, students, and parents.
Strikes
 always require sacrifice, risk, and preparation. For teachers, they 
come with the knowledge that the students for whom they care and are 
responsible are losing learning time, but with the hope that what they 
win will make it up to those children. Strikes are scary, even for the 
strongest union. But this CTU strike erupted in a city that had already 
been transformed by years of organizing by the union and its allies in 
the progressive trenches. Although the newly elected Mayor Lori 
Lightfoot is no radical, she had repeatedly said that she agreed with 
the teachers’ demands to bring more nurses and more counselors
 into schools. At the same time, when the moment arrived to bargain with
 the union, the teachers wanted those promises written into their 
contracts, and the mayor didn’t want to budge. Lightfoot had also made 
them a pretty big salary offer
 up front, but anyone who had paid attention to the CTU’s previous 
battle with then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel would have known that this union 
isn’t satisfied either with verbal promises or “bread and butter” 
issues. It wants to transform public education in Chicago, and it’s 
playing a long game.
That
 long game has not always been easy. It has meant the occasionally 
frustrating process of remaking the union—and it has meant both ecstatic
 wins and sharp, painful losses, among them, the closure of 49 schools 
the year after that victorious 2012 strike, as well as the layoffs of several activist
 teachers. It has meant organizing alongside the community for a hunger 
strike to save a beloved school, and it has meant taking its fight to 
the electoral arena.
 It has meant working alongside other unions, particularly SEIU Local 
73, which represents the school staffers who struck alongside the CTU, 
to build broader solidarity across the city. And it has meant that, at 
times, the CTU has fallen out of the headlines—that its role in crafting
 the formula that has since been replicated in Massachusetts, St. Paul, Los Angeles, Seattle, and elsewhere has been left out of the story that too many commentators think began in West Virginia.
Now,
 it has also meant another successful strike that has reminded Chicago’s
 teachers—and students and parents—just what educators are fighting for.
Before
 the Chicago teachers first struck, teacher strikes were almost always 
cast—by politicians, the media, this or that administration—as 
“care-offs,” with administrators clutching their pearls and worrying to 
the press that the teachers simply didn’t care enough about the 
students. Even self-identified progressive commentators had gotten used to dismissing teachers’ unions as selfish.
 This language was echoed in popular myths like that of the “rubber 
room,” where supposedly lazy, bad teachers who couldn’t be fired were 
sent to hang out for years on end, getting fat on the taxpayer dime. 
Like the welfare mothers of Reagan’s racist narrative, teachers who made
 any demands for themselves were seen, as Megan Erickson wrote in Class War, as “bad people.”
 Erickson noted that teaching “is a task so critical to the maintenance 
of social life that those who are entrusted with it are expected to 
undertake it out of sheer joy with no eye to monetary ‘rewards’—and so 
vital to the perpetuation of economic life that failure is 
unacceptable.”
Now,
 in 2019, that conversation has been flipped. There is no longer any 
question that teachers love their students and their work; indeed, the 
CTU fought Lightfoot after an agreement had been reached, demanding to 
make up the 11 days lost to the strike, while the mayor insisted on just
 five make-up days.
Again
 and again, Chicago’s teachers have successfully made the point that it 
is they who care about the students, the schools, and the city as a 
whole. They have fought for a revitalized public sector, for an 
understanding that no issue is outside their purview. Two mayors and 
state law have said that certain issues—anything outside of wages and 
benefits—don’t belong at the bargaining table, and two mayors have now 
written those issues into contracts at the end of a strike. In fighting 
for “the Schools Chicago Students Deserve,” they made the slogan “Our 
working conditions are our students’ learning conditions” into a mantra 
for educators around the country. They have made “bargaining for the common good” into a strategy to be studied.
It is this strategy that has proved now, decisively, that the Janus v. AFSCME case didn’t work. Janus,
 which was decided by the Supreme Court’s conservative majority in 2018,
 was designed to be a death blow to public-sector unions—specifically, 
those pesky teachers. Under the decision, public-sector unions are no 
longer allowed to charge fees to nonmembers for the costs of 
representation, meaning that these unions must now stand or fall based 
on how many members voluntarily choose to pay dues, even as they are 
legally bound to represent every worker covered by their contracts.
The Janus
 decision was widely expected to starve public-sector unions into 
irrelevance. But what it’s done instead is make organizing, 
communication, and expansion necessities rather than things unions 
ignore or circumvent, as Jane McAlevey writes.
 It made the CTU’s model not just a recipe for reform but also a program
 for survival. Investing in an internal organizing department as well as
 community outreach, making the union’s structures open and 
democratic—these are the best ways for members to feel like they are the
 union. 
Fierce Teacher Archives
Many
 worried that the retirement of charismatic CTU president Karen Lewis, 
who led the union from 2010 until 2018, would mean the CTU would falter.
 With this strike, the union proved that its power was never about one 
person but about building a structure that allowed new leaders to step 
up and, more important, empowered every member to have a say. The 
union’s political positions come from the everyday experiences of 
Chicago teachers, and it is those everyday experiences that have put 
racial justice at the center of the union’s fight.
The
 CTU strike and ratification vote came just weeks after the vote by 
United Auto Workers members to ratify their own contract and bring a 
40-day strike at General Motors to a close. Neither union won all it 
demanded, but the CTU made gains, while the UAW mostly clung on by its 
fingernails, winning a few improvements for the highest-tier members but
 accepting, to a degree, the status quo of plant closures and temporary 
workers filling GM’s plants.    
One reason for the difference, as labor sociologist Ruth Milkman noted,
 is that auto manufacturing workers simply have less power these days, 
and not all of that can be laid at the feet of the union. While teachers
 are embedded in their communities, making explicitly political fights 
about budgeting priorities that involve, implicitly, everyone who lives 
within a certain jurisdiction, private-sector workers are at the whim of
 a company that may or may not make something most people need or want.
What
 can private-sector unions learn from the teacher strikes? One clear 
lesson is that their power won’t simply come from shutting down 
production, not when management also wants to shut down production to 
move it elsewhere. Their power has to come from a different kind of 
disruption, backed by a community. And their power may well have to come
 from returning to the old questions of who controls the production process, anyway.
This
 political moment presents opportunities for real change, even as things
 look grim for manufacturing workers. As climate change wreaks 
increasing havoc, and as interventions like the Green New Deal gain 
momentum, manufacturing and caring workers have the opportunity to come 
together around a set of demands that will affect us all. As it is, a 
climate transition powered by business will see working people continue 
to bear the brunt of the crisis: GM wanted to ensure that the green (or 
greener, at least) jobs it is considering adding would be worse jobs, 
that new jobs in new battery plants for electric vehicles would be outside the regular contract with the UAW, meaning lower pay and fewer benefits. 
We
 don’t know what it would have looked like for the UAW to put demands 
around green jobs at the center of its fight, to connect workers’ lives 
on the shop floor to the lives of their friends and neighbors off of it.
 But the challenge of halting climate catastrophe is too big to be left 
to the private sector to decide for itself. Political candidates around 
the world, including Bernie Sanders,
 are putting forward plans not just for green job creation but also for 
changing the structure of corporations in order to give workers an 
ownership stake. Unions have a chance to start thinking bigger.
They can take a cue from the CTU’s demand for naps for preschoolers
 and consider the question of shorter working hours, and take health 
care permanently off the bargaining table by fighting for Medicare for 
All. They can understand that caring jobs are low-carbon jobs, that the potential to reshape the economy is in the hands of the people who make it run or can make it grind to a halt.
 They can think about the way power is distributed, and how organizing 
can change that, and consider how to harness the power of momentum that 
comes from strike after strike to raise workers’ expectations of what is
 possible.
And
 they can remember, in looking at the photos of the past few weeks in 
Chicago, that just because the union’s gone a little quiet lately 
doesn’t mean the fight hasn’t been building.
[Sarah Jaffe is a reporting fellow at Type Media Center and the author of Necessary Trouble: Americans in Revolt. She is at work on her next book, about the expectation of loving your work.]
 
 
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