Let's put this contract in the context of 17 years of ed deform in
Chicago. Does anyone want to compare it to Cleveland, Washington and
other cities? Was the CTU strike a line in the sand to send a message to the ed
deformers but delivering little in substance? We will find out more
today.
No deal was going to be in place until two or four
layers of real democracy had examined it and held the deal — not the
personalities — accountable. -- G. Schmidt
MORE's JULIE CAVANAGH DID A GREAT JOB ON MSNBC CHRIS HAYES THIS MORNING - HERE'S THE LINK.
I was at a meeting the other night where there were already hints of blow back when one person said "we must hold the CTU leadership feet to the fire." Listen, not everyone will be happy. Clearly there will be 30% on evals but that is state law, so that is a given. Rahm wanted to escalate each year. Sadly nothing so far on class size.
9AM UPDATE FROM MICHAEL FIORILLO:
My
understanding is that Illinois state law requires some test-based
teacher evaluations, so that was the benchmark upon the CTU was
negotiating. The next step for the CTU is to work towards changing the
law, but if by striking they have been able to lessen the damage caused
by these evaluations, they have made real progress.
Not
knowing the details of the tentative agreement, it's premature to judge
it overall. Nevertheless, teachers (and all working people) across the
country own the CTU a debt of gratitude: they took on a very broad
coalition of Power, stood up the bullying of Emanuel and the lies of the
media, reawakened people to the power and potential of collective
action, and have started to change the terms of the debate. The CTU was
also able to keep Weingarten from helicoptering in and betraying them.
As Norm's report on his encounter with Mark Sternberg suggests, there is
no doubt much anxiety at Tweed, TFA, StudentsFirst, the foundations,
etc.
And at 52 Broadway and AFT headquarters in Washington.
Can't
we at least take satisfaction and feel some gratitude in the CTU wiping
some of the smugness and arrogance off the faces of these bastards, and
showing that the destruction of the public schools will not be
passively allowed to happen?
This was an
epochal strike, one that will be seen as the opening round in the battle
to reclaim public education. After decades of being slandered and
knocked back on our heels, the CTU has shown that we can fight back and
begin to reclaim the territory that is rightfully ours. They deserve our
thanks and support.
George Schmidt posted on what may be in the contract this morning:
CTU press release gives some inkling of the content of the deal so far
The Bargaining Team is expected to share new details about proposed contract language which includes a number of victories for teachers, paraprofessionals, clinicians, and students.
The earliest teachers and other school personnel could return to their schools could be Monday; however, no decision has been made to do so. Delegates, the elected leaders of their schools, have the authority to suspend or lengthen the strike. They could also ask for at least 24-hours to talk to individual members in their schools before making a decision on what to do next. The 29,000-member CTU has been on strike since Sept. 10.
“We are a democratic body and therefore we want to ensure all of our members have had the chance to weigh-in on what we were able to win,” said CTU President Karen GJ Lewis. “We believe this is a good contract, however, no contract will solve all of the inequities in our District. Our fair contract fight has always been about returning dignity and respect to our members and ensuring resources and a quality school day for our students and their families.”
The new proposed CTU/CPS contract will: *Secure Raises & Ensure Fair
Compensation:* The CTU wants a three-year contract. It will secure a 3%
raise in the first year, 2% raise in the second and 2% raise in the
third, with the option to extend to a 4th year by mutual agreement at
another 3% raise.
*Defeat Merit Pay*: The CTU successfully fought
the star of national misguided school reform policies. The Board agreed
to move away from “Differentiated Compensation,” which would have
allowed them to pay one set of teachers (based on unknown criteria) one
set of pay versus another set of pay for others.
*Preserve Steps
& Lanes:* The new contract will preserve the full value of teachers
and paraprofessionals career ladder (steps); and, it will increased the
value of the highest steps (14,15 and 16)
*Provide A Better
School Day:* The Board will hire 512 additional ‘special’ teachers in
art, music, physical education, world languages and other classes to
ensure students receive a better school day, a demand thousands of
parents have called for since last year
*Ensures Job
Security:*Creates a “CPS Hiring Pool,” which demands that one-half of
all of CPS hires must be displaced (laid-off) members.
·*Adds An
Anti-Bullying Provision: *No more bullying by principals and managerial
personnel. The new language will curtail some of the abusive practices
that have run rampant in many neighborhood schools.
·*Paraprofessional & Clinicians Prep Time:*The new contract will guarantee preps for clinicians.
·*Racial Diversity:*The CTU continues to fight the District on its
lay-off
policies that has led to a record number of African American educators
being laid off and eventually terminated by the District. The new
contract will ensure that CPS recruits a racially diverse teaching
force.
·*New Recall Rights &
Tackling School Closings:*
Acknowledging, the CTU will continue its ongoing legal and legislative
fight for a moratorium on all school closings, turnarounds and
phase-outs, the new contract requires teachers to “follow their
students” in all school actions. This will reduce instability among
students and educators. The contract will also have 10 months of “true
recall” to the same school if a position opens.
·*Fairer Evaluation
Procedures:* The new contract will limit CPS to 70% “teacher practice,”
30% “student growth” (or test scores)—which is the minimum by state law.
It also secures in the first year of implementation of the new
evaluation procedures there will be “no harmful consequences” for
tenured teachers. It also secures a new right—the right to appeal a
Neutral rating.
·*Reimbursement for School Supplies:*The contract
will require the District to reimburse educators for the purchase of
school supplies up to $250.
·*Additional Wrap-Around Services:* The
Board agrees to commit to hire nurses, social workers and school
counselors if it gets new revenue. Over the past several months, the CTU
has identified several sources of new revenue, including the Tax
Increment Financing program.
·*Books on Day One:*For the first time,
the new contract will guarantee all CPS students and educators have
textbooks on day one and will not have to wait up to six weeks for
learning materials.
·*Unified School Calendar:* The new contract will
improve language on a unified calendar. The District will have one
calendar for the entire school district and get rid of Track E and Track
R schools. All students and teaching personnel will begin on the same
schedule.
·*Reduced Paperwork:*The new contract ensures the new
paperwork requirements are balanced against reduction of previous
requirements.
I think the spin above means there were some victories but there will be critics (I saw nothing on class size -- even a minimal "no sizes over 40 would be something.) Here's a great chance to keep embarrassing Rahm this when he sends his kids to schools with 20 in a class).
I received emails this morning from people here in NYC about a "Unity style sellout." I don't agree. I imagine Unity will spin this as "We got all this without striking." My sense is the very fact the CTU went on strike is a victory. But how will that play with the membership, a crucial point, given that CORE has to run for re-election this spring. (History shows from the Debbie Lynch contract 10 years ago that bad blowback to a disappointing contract can blow you out of the water.)
An interesting article in Substance pointed in the direction critics will take this:
Capitulation in Chicago? Reading the news on a Friday night, it sounds that way by Steven Lendman
By the time this article circulates, it may be all over but the shouting, finger-pointing, and bitterness among rank-and-file loyalists over another union sellout. As this is written, it looks that way. It won't surprise. Across America, union bosses keep prioritizing their own positions and welfare over workers they represent.
Instead of fighting for rights they deserve, they capitulate to corporate and government scoundrels. Wisconsin public workers learned the hard way. The state was ground zero to save public worker rights.
By the time this article circulates, it may be all over but the shouting, finger-pointing, and bitterness among rank-and-file loyalists over another union sellout. As this is written, it looks that way. It won't surprise. Across America, union bosses keep prioritizing their own positions and welfare over workers they represent. [They] hint darkly that the strike is 'illegal' because teachers are talking about issues the Board refuses to allow into the union contract."
They include class size, recalling laid off veteran teachers, proper year-round classroom temperatures, and others. They're major ones essential for all contracts.
I heard from one parent leader late last week that there will be great disappointment amongst Chicago parents who supported the strike if the CTU doesn't bring back something positive on class size. I'm still hoping they do but not holding my breath.
Did anyone think they would purge the contract of any evaluation based on test scores? They did seem to win a partial victory in their version of the ATR pool by requiring half the teachers hired come from the laid-off pool. (Rahm has to protect those TFAs, of course.)
There is going to be great drama played out with whatever the final deal looks like. There is some thinking out there that the CTU could have played their cards given the national scrutiny in more effective ways. Like, I thought they should have emphasized that they are not traditional union bosses (as the writer above calls them) but they are teachers who saw their kids being hurt in addition to teachers and they forced them to take action 4 years ago to move to take over their union from the real bosses.)
After all the excitement of the strike from teachers all over the nation, when the results undergo analysis, expect disappointment with what was and could have been won. To me it looks like there were some victories but watch the ultra left go wild.
My guess is there was a lot of symbolism in the strike led by people just two years out of the classroom and still feeling its way politically. Like who ever heard of Karen Lewis (other than us ed freaks) until a week ago? At the minimum, the strike has pushed many of the issues it was about into the national debate (see Julie Cavanagh on MSNBC this morning and Megan Behrent yesterday) as just one example
So even if they didn't bring back all the bacon, they have moved the ball up the field, bloodied their arch enemy Rahm Emanuel, tainted Arne Duncan and Obama on their ed policies and turned themselves into heroes to teachers all over the nation.
My sense was that there was a limit on how long they could only sustain a strike of a mostly younger team of teachers who the leadership (CORE) is trying to mobilize into a potent force -- and managed to pull them out for enormous rallies, along with parent support. But was that limit reached in one week? Could they have stayed out a month and impact on the presidential race?
And then there is the possibility the teachers actually turn down the contract in the House of Delegates today or in the follow-up referendum of all the members, which I imagine will have to take place after they go back.
See Substance on the democratic process where George Schmidt makes the point that the CTU tried to make the point time and again that they are the anti-union bosses building a democratic union movement. (See the video I put up yesterday of Karen Lewis saying that even if she tried to order people around they would laugh at her -
Exclusive Video: Karen Lewis, at the AFT Peace and Justice Caucus, AFT Convention 2012)
Here are excerpts of what George wrote (click the title to read it all):
No Deal?... 'This is what democracy looks like'... House of Delegates meeting at three in the afternoon on September 16, 2012.... The same democracy that transformed the Chicago Teachers Union and transfixed the nation calls a halt to media frenzy about ending the Chicago Teachers Strike of 2012.
By George N. Schmidt - September 16th, 2012 |
For weeks before the Chicago Teachers Strike of 2012 began, the union's leaders have been warning the union's members not to believe anything they read, heard or saw in the corporate press. "Aren't the corporate media the worst place to learn the truth during a strike?" CTU vice president Jesse Sharkey, less than three years from a history teachers' classroom at Chicago's Senn High School, repeatedly reminded the unions members and delegates at rallies and meetings which eventually became too numerous to list for the history books. And with her almost trade-marked smile, CTU president Karen Lewis had tried (and failed) to remind reporters from the corporate media that the strength of the movement she was leading was its democracy.
And yet, as the first week of the strike ended and the size of the protests and rallies continued to grow, news reports kept looking for a reality that the strike (and the movement that created it) had rendered obsolete in U.S. history: the Chicago "union boss." For all the talk about "accountability" from those in the ruling class who want accountability to only go one way, when the real accountability of democratic leaders was in front of them, those who thought they were telling Chicago what was real were completely missing the truth that was before their own eyes.
No deal was going to be in place until two or four layers of real democracy had examined it and held the deal — not the personalities — accountable.
For weeks before the Chicago Teachers Strike of 2012 began, the union's leaders have been warning the union's members not to believe anything they read, heard or saw in the corporate press. "Aren't the corporate media the worst place to learn the truth during a strike?" CTU vice president Jesse Sharkey, less than three years from a history teachers' classroom at Chicago's Senn High School, repeatedly reminded the unions members and delegates at rallies and meetings which eventually became too numerous to list for the history books. And with her almost trade-marked smile, CTU president Karen Lewis had tried (and failed) to remind reporters from the corporate media that the strength of the movement she was leading was its democracy.
And yet, as the first week of the strike ended and the size of the protests and rallies continued to grow, news reports kept looking for a reality that the strike (and the movement that created it) had rendered obsolete in U.S. history: the Chicago "union boss." For all the talk about "accountability" from those in the ruling class who want accountability to only go one way, when the real accountability of democratic leaders was in front of them, those who thought they were telling Chicago what was real were completely missing the truth that was before their own eyes.
No deal was going to be in place until two or four layers of real democracy had examined it and held the deal — not the personalities — accountable.
It was always a bit more than many in the media and an era of one-liners, sound bites, an "Gotcha!" could grasp. It is a form of learning disability that has its really dramatic exemplars, my favorite of which is Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Having covered more than 40 of his press conferences during his first year in office, it eventually struck me that the man's mind was not only addled, but crippled. He really believed the world could be manipulated like he sort he had been doing with the 24-hour news cycle inside the Beltway. But of course, not matter how big the ego, he is only a spare part in the machine of empire.
The plodding drama of democracy in the Chicago Teachers Union, even as it unfolded month after month, was more than most people in that ruling arena could grasp.
And now come the next steps: [READ MORE]
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The opinions expressed on EdNotesOnline are solely those of Norm Scott and are not to be taken as official positions (though Unity Caucus/New Action slugs will try to paint them that way) of any of the groups or organizations Norm works with: ICE, GEM, MORE, Change the Stakes, NYCORE, FIRST Lego League NYC, Rockaway Theatre Co., Active Aging, The Wave, Aliens on Earth, etc.