CHICAGO (AP) - The Chicago
teachers union decided Sunday to continue its weeklong strike, extending
an acrimonious standoff with Mayor Rahm Emanuel over teacher
evaluations and job security provisions central to the debate over the
future of public education across the United States.
Union delegates declined to
formally vote on a proposed contract settlement worked out over the
weekend with officials from the nation's third largest school district.
Schools will remain closed Monday.
Union president Karen Lewis said teachers want the opportunity to continue to discuss the offer that is on the table.
"Our members are not happy," Lewis said. "They want to know if there is anything more they can get."
She added: "They feel rushed."
She said the union's delegates will meet again Tuesday, and the soonest classes are likely to resume is Wednesday.
"We felt more comfortable
being able to take back what's on the table and let our constituents
look at it and digest it. We can have a much better decision come
Tuesday," said Dean Refakes, a physical education teacher at Gompers
Elementary School and a delegate.
The walkout, the first in
Chicago in 25 years, had instantly canceled classes for 350,000 students
who just returned from summer vacation and forced tens of thousands of
parents to find alternatives for idle children, including many whose
neighborhoods have been wracked by gang violence in recent months.
The walkout was the first
for a major American city in at least six years. And it drew national
attention because it posed a high-profile test for teachers unions,
which have seen their political influence threatened by a growing reform
movement. Unions have pushed back against efforts to expand charter
schools, bring in private companies to help with failing schools and
link teacher evaluations to student test scores.
The strike carried
political implications, too, raising the risk of a protracted labor
battle in President Barack Obama's hometown at the height of the fall
campaign, with a prominent Democratic mayor and Obama's former chief of
staff squarely in the middle. Emanuel's forceful demands for reform had
angered the teachers last year as the cash-strapped city began
bargaining with a number of unions.
The teachers walked out
Sept. 10 after months of tense contract talks that for a time appeared
to be headed toward a peaceful resolution.
Emanuel and the union
agreed in July on a deal to implement a longer school day with a plan to
hire back 477 teachers who had been laid off rather than pay regular
teachers more to work longer hours. That raised hopes the contract would
be settled before the start of fall classes, but bargaining stalled on
other issues.
Emanuel decried the teachers' decision to leave classrooms, calling the walkout unnecessary and a "strike of choice."
Almost from the beginning,
the two sides couldn't even agree on whether they were close to a deal.
Emanuel said an agreement was within easy reach and could be sealed with
school in session. The union insisted that dozens of issues remained
unresolved.
Chicago's long history as a
union stronghold seemed to work to the teachers' advantage. As they
walked the picket lines, they were joined by many of the very people who
were most inconvenienced by the work stoppage: parents who had to
scramble to find babysitters or a supervised place for children to pass
the time.
To win friends, the union
representing 25,500 teachers engaged in something of a publicity
campaign, telling parents repeatedly about problems with schools and the
barriers that have made it more difficult to serve their kids. They
described classrooms that are stifling hot without air conditioning,
important books that are unavailable and supplies as basic as toilet
paper that are sometimes in short supply.
The strike upended a
district in which the vast majority of students are poor and minority.
It also raised the concerns of parents who worried not just about their
kids' education but their safety. Chicago's gang violence has spiked
this year, with scores of shootings reported throughout a long, bloody
summer and bystanders sometimes caught in the crossfire.
The district staffed more
than 140 schools with non-union workers and central office employees so
students who are dependent on school-provided meals would have a place
to eat breakfast and lunch. But most parents refused to leave their
children at unfamiliar schools where they would be thrown together with
kids and supervising adults they may never have met.
When the two sides met at
the bargaining table, money was only part of the problem. With an
average salary of $76,000, Chicago teachers are among the highest-paid
in the nation. After weeks of talks, the district proposed a 16 percent
raise over four years, including bumps for experience and education -
and far beyond what most American employers have offered in the
aftermath of the Great Recession.
But the evaluations and job security measures stirred the most intense debate.
The union said the
evaluation system was unfair because it relied too heavily on test
scores and did not take into account outside factors that affect student
performance such as poverty, violence and homelessness.
The union also pushed for a
policy to give laid-off teachers first dibs on open jobs anywhere in
the district. The district said that would prevent principals from
hiring the teachers they thought best qualified and most appropriate for
the position. The tentative settlement proposed giving laid-off
teachers first shot at schools that absorbed their former students.
Emanuel did not personally negotiate but monitored the talks through aides.
The strike was just the latest and highest-stakes chapter in a long and often contentious battle between him and the union.
When he took office last
year, the former White House chief of staff inherited a school district
facing a $700 million budget shortfall. Not long after, his
administration rescinded 4 percent raises for teachers. He then asked
the union to re-open its contract and accept 2 percent pay raises in
exchange for lengthening the school day for students by 90 minutes. The
union refused.
Emanuel, who promised a
longer school day during his campaign, attempted to go around the union
by asking teachers at individual schools to waive the contract and add
90 minutes to the day. He halted the effort after being challenged by
the union before the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board.