Thursday, December 10, 2020

Too bad we have such a weak mayor. A strong mayor would tell them what they're going to do.

 CTU releases list of demands for reopening CPS.....they should be fired

Some of the demands are likely to face immediate rejection by city officials who have been adamant that it’s up to them to decide how and when the nation’s third largest school district will return to classrooms for the first time since March. 

 lead thousands of striking union members on a march through the Loop.
The Chicago Teachers Union — which waged an 11-day strike last fall — has released a list of demands it wants met before it agrees to a return to in-person learning.
 Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

As the fight continues over the safe reopening of Chicago Public Schools in the midst of a raging public health crisis, the Chicago Teachers Union has released for the first time a list of demands it wants met before members return to schools, including lower COVID-19 test positivity rates, testing and vaccination protocols and changes to both hybrid and remote learning.

Some of the demands are likely to face strong and immediate rejection by city

officials who have been adamant that it’s up to them to decide how and when the nation’s third largest school district will return to classrooms for the first time since March.

The district and the union have maintained an increasingly abrasive and hostile relationship, perhaps the least collaborative of any major public school system in the nation, as the standoff over reopening schools continues. The CTU’s public release of demands after months of inaction at the bargaining table — which includes about a dozen unproductive meetings in the past month — hearkens back to the weeks leading up to last fall’s 11-day strike that was the union’s longest in three decades.

After the union threatened a strike vote in August when Mayor Lori Lightfoot was planning to send teachers and students back to schools to start the fall, the table appears set once again for the threat of a work stoppage, an option the CTU is considering. There does not appear to be enough time for agreements to be reached on all of these demands before preschool and special education cluster program staffers are scheduled to return Jan. 4.

“The CTU is putting forward a safe reopening plan that undercuts CPS’ ability to lie about us being the people who are hurting education,” reads a preliminary document that the CTU plans to publicize this week. “We will go back to in-person school when CPS can demonstrate that they have taken our concerns seriously.”

A CPS spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The union’s House of Delegates (pictured meeting during last’s year’s strike) met Wednesday to discuss demands for returning to schools next month.
The union’s House of Delegates (pictured meeting during last’s year’s strike) met Wednesday to discuss demands for returning to schools next month. 
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

The union’s demands, approved by the 800-member House of Delegates Wednesday evening, all fall under one of three categories: Safety, equity and trust.

Among the equity demands that could be the least agreeable for CPS are the CTU’s rejection of simultaneous teaching — in which teachers instruct students in classrooms and remotely at the same time — and a proposed reduction of remote learning screen time by one hour each day. CPS’ current plan only works with simultaneous teaching and would otherwise need a redesign. And schools chief Janice Jackson said this week that a reduction in online instruction would be a non-starter, despite complaints by families all fall.

The CTU is also demanding clear public health criteria for opening and closing schools and is proposing a 3% test positivity threshold. Schools would reopen citywide for all students and staff if the rate is lower, and would close if it’s higher, the union said, with community-by-community decisions also possible if rates vary. The city’s seven-day rolling average stood at 13.1% Thursday. City health officials have previously said they would look to a case doubling metric, closing schools if total cases citywide were doubling in less than 18 days.

Other safety proposals include enforceable protocols on masks, cleaning, health screening, PPE, social distancing and ventilation. CPS has said it would implement policies on all of those issues, but the union has said there need to be tighter rules for when policies aren’t followed.

On testing, the union wants to target a quarter of district staff on a weekly basis, rotating each week and focusing on communities that have the highest positivity rates. CPS has said it’s developing a plan for regular rapid testing of asymptomatic workers but has released few details. The CTU is also demanding comprehensive contact tracing and, once a vaccine is available, access to a vaccine starting with the neighborhoods that have been hardest hit by the virus.

In its “trust” category, the union is calling for a CPS-CTU joint committee on COVID-19 that would include independent experts who could conduct inspections, investigations and issue directives, and is asking for parents, community members, principals and building engineers to be brought to the bargaining table. The CTU is also looking for safety committees to be established at each school.

“The pandemic has closed schools. By not meeting these needs, CPS is keeping them shut,” the CTU document reads.

CTU leaders in recent days have tried to preempt any blame the union might receive for a delay in reopening by redirecting the onus to City Hall. CTU President Jesse Sharkey said in a livestreamed update to members Tuesday that he didn’t want Lightfoot pushing a narrative that schools are closed because of the union. He instead wanted to make clear that the pandemic forced school closures and poor public health conditions have kept them from reopening.

The CTU earlier this week filed a challenge with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board seeking an injunction against CPS’ planned reopening in January. If the board sides with the union, the plans to return to classrooms would almost certainly be delayed.

9 comments:

  1. What could Lori do, but say "no":or more likely say "yes"?

    She isn't Democratic Machine affiliated like Daley I, Bilandic, Byrne (later on), Daley II and Rahm.

    She isn't tough like Washington.

    She isn't Cook County Democratic Chair like Daley I and Preckwinkle.

    She's about the same as Eugene Sawyer.

    Ī£(ą² _ą² )(@_@)

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  2. Anonymous12/10/2020

    What a twinkie!!!

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  3. Anonymous12/10/2020

    Hey Chicago schoolteachers: despite what parents say to YOU and publicly, privately they cannot stand you. We have to be nice to you because you have our children as hostages. So tired of hearing how bad you have it. Private schools are back to in school learning, or at least a hybrid....looks to us like, once again you are using an excuse of covid to cover up for your laziness and greed and are using our kids as hostages.

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  4. Anonymous12/11/2020

    Get back to work school teachers. I am tired of hearing your excuses. The mayor should show some backbone and stand up to the CTU. Get back to work or be fired. simple as that. There are plenty of unemployed teachers to take your place.

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  5. Anonymous12/11/2020

    These whiney teachers should be the first to receive/test the vaccine. Could someone tell me why they are at a higher risk than the cashier at the grocery store when they see the same group of students everyday?

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  6. Anonymous12/11/2020

    Print up the school vouchers. Give parents a choice and children a chance.

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  7. Anonymous12/11/2020

    As a parent of 5 kids, none of whom are enrolled in the Chicago Public school system, I'd like my tax bill pro rated to exclude any amount of money allocated for this broken system. If your cable went out 8 months ago, would you expect a rebate, or would you continue paying for a service nobody receives. Screw them.

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  8. Anonymous12/11/2020

    They have a contract. If they refuse to go back to work the contract should be voided.

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  9. Anonymous12/12/2020

    Fire them all. Don’t let these broads back unless they wear some make up and get dolled up a little. They should at least make an effort to look pretty. These no make up wearing commie broads give me the creeps.

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