It's in the air. You can
smell and taste it. It's not pleasant. Union bosses and city officials
struck a deal. A previous article headlined Capitulation in Chicago?
Final details aren't known, but bet on it. It's baked in the cake. By
the time this article circulates, it may be official. It practically
is now.
Unions in Chicago and across America ill represented rank-and-file members
for decades. Corporate and government negotiators know it. Beating labor
means staying hardline and waiting them out. They'll cave like they
always do.
Months of discussions produced stalemate. On September 10, teachers
walked out. Board of Education (BoE) and Chicago Public Schools (CPS)
officials spurned them on core issues. Resolving them in five days reveals
sellout.
Saving public education is key. It's a fundamental right. It's on the
chopping block for elimination. Commodifying it as another business
profit center is planned.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is hellbent on doing it. Doing so means placing
bottom line priorities over teaching and learning.
Schools aren't businesses. Education isn't a product. It's a bedrock
societal obligation. Keeping it out of profiteer hands is essential.
Teachers are on their own to save it. It's also up to them to preserve
their jobs with decent pay and benefits, as well as futures for Chicago
kids.
Union bosses think sacrificing what's too important to lose doesn't
matter as long as their welfare is secure. There's still a chance to
beat them. Grassroots efforts alone can do it. Final contract terms
aren't approved.
Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) president Karen Lewis wants House of Delegates
approval fast. They're the CTU's governing body. Members elect them.
They number over 700. Every city school is represented.
All union members have final say. Tallying their votes will take days.
Once strike action ends and classes resume, it'll be too late to say
no deal. Saying it now crucial. Later won't matter. Perhaps 24 hours
means the difference between victory and defeat.
On September 15, the Chicago Tribune headlined "Tentative deal reached
with striking Chicago teachers," saying:
Contract terms are agreed on. A tentative deal was struck. A City Hall
source said school officials and union bosses reached a "framework with
all points resolved."
Lewis revealed her duplicity. She's "very comfortable" with terms. "We
think it's a framework that will get us to an agreement." She didn't
explain what's in it, and most important what's not.
"Creative thinking" was involved, she claimed. "They thought about some
stuff, and we thought about some stuff."
Education isn't "stuff." It's teaching, learning, and preparing kids
effectively to move on for more of the same through graduation.
CTU attorney Robert Block said union officials will recommend the deal
to members. He expects House of Delegates approval Sunday.
He and Lewis didn't explain why terms are withheld. CTU vice president
Jesse Sharkey spilled the beans, saying:
"If our membership looks at a detailed summary of an entire contract
and rejects it, then we are still on strike."
In other words, they'll reveal sellout. A bad deal no one should approve
will be scuttled. Union bosses want sugar-coating cover. They want defeat
looking like victory. Hopefully rank and file members will act in time
to stop them.
School board president David Vitale was upbeat. "The heavy lifting is
over," he said. "The general framework is in place. My message (to parents)
is they should be prepared to have their kids in school on Monday."
His comments and body language alone show Emanuel got what he wanted.
It's at the expense of teachers, parents, and kids. He confirmed it
saying the deal is "an honest and principled compromise that is about
who we all work for: our students."
He doesn't give a damn about students, teachers, and all ordinary Chicagoans.
He represents money and power interests. What benefits them harms others.
"It's a deal," headlined a Tribune editorial, saying:
Parents "no doubt cheered the news." Wait 'till they find out what they
got and see their reaction. Wait 'till teachers and student learn they
were sold out.
"Schools will open Monday," said the Tribune. "That's all most parents
will care to know." Did Emanuel really get the "reform" he wanted, it
asked? Will public education destruction continue unabated? Will marketplace
rules replace it?
Can teachers be fired or laid off freely? Will seniority rights no longer
matter? Will principals have diktat authority? Will teaching to the
test still be policy? Will teacher evaluations depend on prioritizing
it over learning and good education? It looks certain on all counts
and more.
The Tribune seems almost sanguine about dozens of planned school closures,
consolidations, and parents left scrambling over where to send their
kids when nearby schools close.
A Chicago Sun Times editorial tried having it both ways. Headlined "Stand
up to teachers, but don't demonize them," it said:
"Allow us today to come to the defense of the striking Chicago teachers
in a way that will fully please almost nobody, certainly not the teachers."
Teachers aren't greedy, it said. They're not striking for themselves
alone. Sure they want better pay, good benefits, and job security. "Who
doesn't? No apologies necessary."
They also want justifiable school improvements "so they can do their
jobs right….These are not faked-up issues." They're real. Kids can't
learn properly in classrooms too cold or hot to learn.
Up-to-date textbooks are essential. So are manageable class sizes. Striking
teachers aren't "aliens dropped among us, selfish and dumb and duped
by their union bosses. They're hardworking Chicagoans…" They take great
pride in their work.
They want and deserve "schools they can believe in and be proud of,
schools where they can do their job right. They want it for themselves
and for their students."
Now the part they won't like. "They have to call of this strike." It's
baked in the cake, of course. Unless grassroots displeasure balks its
sellout terms, classes will resume Monday.
"They've already gained" enough, said the Sun Times. "There are serious
doubts as to whether the city can even afford" concessions made.
What's lost matters most. No matter. The "city must hold the line…"
"As we said, this is an editorial sure to please almost no one….we believe
this strike is wrong."
Sun Times editorial writers don't care about what's most important.
Nor do Tribune bosses. Neither mentioned public education, its importance,
and how Emanuel plans destroying a societal bedrock.
Remember those teachers "who made us what we are today," said the Sun
Times. At the same time, it forgot what's most important and why it
matters.
A Final Comment
Jerry White is the Socialist Equality Party's presidential candidate.
At a Saturday rally, he'll distribute a supportive statement. In part,
it says:
"The truth is that the CTU and the AFT (American Federal of Teachers)
are preparing a betrayal of the strike and the imposition of a sellout
contract that will have devastating consequences for teachers and the
future of public education in Chicago and across the country."
CTU agreed on terms reportedly let school officials fire non-tenured
teachers immediately. Others can be dismissed after a year. Teacher
evaluations will depend on teaching to the test, standardized scores,
and principles having diktat authority to decide if its done their way.
Dozens of schools will be closed. Poor and low income neighborhoods
will lose theirs. Quasi-private charter schools will proliferate. They
prioritize profits over teaching and learning.
"As the presidential candidate of the Socialist Equality Party, I urge
teachers to reject this sellout. The teachers have remained solid since
the strike began and won powerful support from parents, students and
workers throughout the city and across the country."
"Now is the time to broaden the struggle and stand fast against the
phony 'reform' agenda of Emanuel, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, Obama,
and the entire political establishment."
"The assault on teachers and public education can be defeated only on
the basis of a recognition that the struggle against it is a political
struggle against both parties of big business and the financial-corporate
elite whose interests they serve."
"This elite includes the speculators and parasites looking to cash in
on the carve-up of public education and proliferation of privately run
schools."
"I urge teachers to broaden their strike and fight to mobilize all school
workers, public employees, auto workers, young people and unemployed
workers behind them and in opposition to the united front of Democrats
and Republicans, the media and big business. The union leadership has
no intention of waging such a fight."
"Teachers should organize rank-and-file committees to take control of
the conduct of the struggle and oversee the contract negotiations."
Corrupt politicians and corporate profiteers say "How dare teachers
strike!" Democrats and Republicans are like-minded. Media scoundrels
support them. Teachers are treated like "serfs revolting against their
lords."
Parents and kids are treated like they don't matter. Public education
isn't mentioned nor its importance. Teachers know what works in classrooms
and what doesn't. Principles are hired to enforce federal, state, and
City Hall diktats.
What's best for super-rich elites harms most others. Good schools, teaching
and learning are incompatible with profit making. Democratic values
and social rights can't survive under mandated unequal conditions.
Chicago teachers have a chance to change things. It's their jobs, their
schools, and their choice. The futures for thousands of Chicago kids
depend on them. They have hours left to do the right thing.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
His new book is titled "How Wall Street Fleeces America: Privatized
Banking, Government Collusion and Class War"
http://www.claritypress.com/Lendman.html
Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News
Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time
and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy
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http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour
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