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Chicago teachers extend strike; mayor plans legal action to end walkout

By Noreen Ahmed-Ullah, Joel Hood and Diane Rado, Chicago Tribune –

CHICAGO — Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Sunday that he will go to court to force an end to the Chicago teachers strike, which begins its second week Monday.

“I will not stand by while the children of Chicago are played as pawns in an internal dispute within a union,” Emanuel said in a written statement. “This was a strike of choice and is now a delay of choice that is wrong for our children. Every day our kids are kept out of school is one more day we fail in our mission: to ensure that every child in every community has an education that matches their potential.”

Earlier Sunday, the Chicago Teachers Union House of Delegates refused to end the strike. Union President Karen Lewis said that the delegates could vote Tuesday to end the strike, meaning that classes could resume Wednesday.

Members wanted more time to digest the details of a contract offer, Lewis said.

“They’re not happy with the agreement. They’d like it to be a lot better for us than it is,” Lewis said.

The potential for 120 school closings in the coming years also has caused concern.

“It undergirds everything they talk about,” Lewis said.

The union’s delegates, numbering more than 700, have the authority to end the strike but not to approve the contract. The union’s full membership of roughly 26,000 teachers and paraprofessionals would vote later on the contract.

The proposed contract is for three years, with an option for a fourth year that both the Chicago Public Schools and union would have to agree to. There would be 3 percent raises in the first and fourth years, and 2 percent raises in the second and third years, according to the union.

Raises given for years of service and continuing education, would be preserved under the contract, according to the union. And the three highest steps would be increased.

The union also said it had agreed with CPS officials on the issues of performance reviews and teacher recall when schools close. Standards for teacher evaluations that could lead to firings would be eased, and some higher-rated teachers could get a better shot at being recalled after layoffs, sources said.

By refusing to call off the strike, the union continues months of public sparring between union leaders and Emanuel, whose education agenda centered on lengthening what had been among one of the shortest public school days in the country.

To build momentum early on, the mayor offered cash incentives for schools whose teachers defied the union by voting to opt out of their contracts and extend the school day a year before it would be implemented across the district.

At the same time Emanuel was promoting a longer school day, he endorsed rescinding the 4 percent raises owed teachers in their current deal, saying it was necessary to close an estimated $750 million budget gap.

Emanuel’s tough talk on education reform and his willingness to work with national groups whose reform efforts undermined organized labor, galvanized the teachers union and its members. Joined by members of Chicago’s Occupy movement, union teachers staged school sit-ins, picketed school board meetings, and chanted “fight” and “strike” in a rally of thousands at the city’s downtown Auditorium Theater in May.

Weeks later, more than 90 percent of the union’s 25,000-plus members authorized a strike if a new contract could not be reached.

With momentum on their side, teachers demanded higher pay for working that extra hour, entering negotiations demanding a 30 percent raise over two years. But as contract talks heated up, union leaders made it clear they would be willing to forgo such raises in exchange for less-restrictive job evaluations and for establishing a recall procedure for teachers who were laid off as a result of school closings, consolidations and turnarounds.

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