CHICAGO (AP) - Thousands of striking Chicago
public school teachers packed a city park Saturday in a show of force as
union leaders and the district tried to work out the details of a
tentative agreement that would end a week-long walkout.
Months of contract
negotiations came down to two main issues: job security and union
opposition to a new teacher evaluation process it felt was too heavily
weighted on student test scores. The wrangling in one of the nation's
largest school districts was being closely watched around the country
because of its implications for other labor disputes at a time when
unions have been losing ground.
Union leaders who announced
a framework for a deal on Friday said they would not end the strike -
the first in Chicago in 25 years - until they see an agreement in
writing. Saturday's talks were aimed at settling on that exact language,
and both sides were hopeful that children could be back in class on
Monday.
Addressing demonstrators
Saturday, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said "the struggle is not over" and
there was still a long road to ensuring all residents of the city have
equal access to quality schools, especially in neighborhoods beset by
gang violence and poverty.
"Our mission is very clear:
we fight for equal, high-quality public education for all," Jackson
said. "When school opens again there will be 160 schools without a
public library. ... When school opens again, there will be schools yet
without books. So we fight today for schools on the South and West Side
to look like schools on the North Side."
Saturday's talks were
taking place at the offices of union attorney Robert Bloch, who told the
Chicago Sun-Times there was still a lot of work to be done, although
the sides had agreed on the most contentious issues.
The union hopes to present
the wording of a deal to its House of Delegates for review on Sunday. If
they approve it, students could be back in class on Monday.
On his way into the talks, Chicago Teachers Union Vice President Jesse Sharkey was optimistic that timetable was still possible.
"We're hopeful that we can
do it but frankly like I said, the devil is in the details of this
contract and we want it in writing," he told the Sun-Times. "We're going
to go in today and hammer (out) the details."
Until teachers see the exact wording, they'll continue to strike.
"They are suspicious, you
have to understand," union President Karen Lewis told reporters Friday
after a meeting with nearly 800 members of the union's House of
Delegates. "We have been a little burnt by the (school) board in the
past."
Union members from
Wisconsin, Minnesota and elsewhere joined Saturday's rally in
solidarity, and speaker after speaker said the labor fight in Chicago
was important for unions everywhere. Reflecting the optimism of the past
few days, the gathering also had a festive atmosphere, with people
pounding drums and grilling hot dogs, and children playing.
"People are going to go
down and celebrate that the teachers union in Chicago stood up to the
corporate reform agenda," said Bob Peterson, president of the Milwaukee
Teachers' Education Association. "I think they've come out with some
real victories for the kids of Chicago."
For Wisconsin teachers, the
rally also served as a moment to celebrate a judge's Friday ruling
striking down nearly all of a contentious state law championed by
Republican Gov. Scott Walker that had effectively ended collective
bargaining rights for most public workers. Walker's administration
immediately vowed to appeal, while unions, which have vigorously fought
the law, declared victory.
Teachers union leaders from
three of Minnesota's largest school districts also organized a bus to
Chicago for their members to show their support for their colleagues
there.
The plan was for the bus to
leave the Twin Cities about 4 a.m. Saturday, drive about seven hours,
attend the rally and return home the same day, said Julie Blaha,
president of the suburban Anoka-Hennepin School District's local of
Education Minnesota, the state's largest teachers union. Blaha already
had travelled to Chicago to assist her striking colleagues, "doing
whatever they need us to do."
Members of the Boston
Teachers Union were expected to make the trip on their own, said
President Richard Stutman. The group already voted to send Chicago a
token donation of money and took out an ad in the Chicago Sun-Times to
express their support of striking teachers there.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who has
blasted the union for engaging in a "strike of choice," sounded
optimistic Friday, saying "the tentative framework is an honest and
principled compromise that is about who we all work for: the students."
The walkout in the nation's
third-largest school district canceled five days of class for more than
350,000 public school students who had just returned from summer
vacation.
Until this week, Chicago teachers had not walked out since 1987, when they were on strike for 19 days.
___
Associated Press writers
Don Babwin in Chicago, Steve Karnowski in Minneapolis, Scott Bauer in
Madison, Wis., and Rodrique Ngowi in Boston contributed to this report.