TEACHERS WALK IN 1ST U.S. STRIKE OF CHARTER
MANNY RAMOS, ALICE YIN AND LAUREN FITZPATRICK REPORT,
The historic Acero charterschools strike is set to enter its second day Wednesday as teachers plan to hit picket lines at Acero’s campuses by 6:30 a.m., the teachers union said late Tuesday.
Then the Chicago Teachers Union will hold a rally at 10 a.m. just before the Chicago Board of Education’s monthly meeting at 42 W. Madison St. Union President Jesse Sharkey plans to discuss the strike during the Chicago Public Schools board meeting at 10:30 a.m., according to a statement released by CTU on Tuesday night.
Picket lines stretched 2½ blocks around Acero’s downtown Chicago headquarters at 209 W. Jackson Blvd. on Tuesday afternoon as the nation’s first strike by charter school educators canceled classes for thousands of students.
Acero teachers who are participating in labor negotiations said Tuesday afternoon that Acero management has refused to make any concessions on their key issues of pay, classroom conditions and sanctuary status for students.
“We intend to stay on strike until we receive justice for the people who go to our schools and the people who work at our schools,” said Jesse Sharkey, president of the Chicago Teachers Union. “Know this, we are not going to quit until we get what’s right.”
First-year teacher Amanda Bright said she left her home state of Ohio to work for Acero schools.
“I believed in their mission and vision that was explained to me, which is to help minority students who need it the most,” Bright said. “We are fighting for [our students], we are not getting paid, we don’t want to be here. I would love to be in my classroom right now teaching Algebra 2, but I’m not because we are making sure they are getting the opportunities they deserve.”
Talks between the union and Acero took place Tuesday evening. A teacher at the bargaining table said not much progress had been made Tuesday evening.
Teachers for the Acero charter schools network began picketing Tuesday morning, shutting down 15 government-funded campuses operated by the privately managed Acero, which used to be known as the UNO Charter School Network. Acero teachers were bolstered by support from the Chicago Teachers Union and national labor leader Randi Weingarten.
In all, some 550 teachers and paraprofessionals aren’t showing up for classes at one of the largest charter networks in Chicago, forcing Acero’s management to close its doors to the 7,500 students enrolled.
Acero leaders encouraged parents to keep their kids at home. The charter network also directed parents to Chicago Park District programs and some YMCA locations. A complete list of school-specific resources was posted on the network’s website.
Teachers and support staff started picketing at 6:30 a.m. at Acero’s VMC/Veterans Memorial Campus, 4248 W. 47th St., whose modern building, housing two schools, had gotten the previous charter management into financial trouble.
They’re also seeking sanctuary status for their schools where more than 90 percent of their students are Latino. They want Acero to invest into classrooms some of the millions of dollars in reserves revealed in an audit at what Sharkey called “literally the 11th hour and 59th minute.”
Joining the picket lines was Weingarten, president of the 1.7 million-member American Federation of Teachers, the CTU’s parent organization.
“What a union is, it is the vehicle which we help teachers secure the teacher-learning conditions they need and deserve that management won’t do,” Weingarten said.
Acero leader slams strike
Acero Schools CEO Richard L. Rodriguez, who is not at the bargaining table, said Tuesday that he’s “very disappointed that union leaders have put their anti-charter political agenda ahead of the interests of our students. The sad fact is that interests from outside our community are using our students and our schools as a means to advance their national anti-charter school platform.”
Raises offered to educators have amounted to 6 percent over four years, Acero officials said.
“It really boils down to CTU’s desire for a strike,” INCS spokeswoman Melissa Ramirez Cooper said. “The charter movement was founded on the principle that students need high-quality educational options and opportunities, and for teachers to have more autonomy in the classroom to effectively meet student needs. A strike would do nothing to further such opportunities. The strike only disrupts the lives of students and their families.”
As charters sprang up and expanded in Chicago, promising innovation and an ability to do better with smaller budgets, they did not employ union teachers on purpose, and as a movement were funded by anti-union organizations that believed teacher unions had too much power.
Acero was one of the first charter chains in Chicago to unionize under the CHIACTS union that since has moved under the umbrella of the CTU. And since May, its teachers have been asking Acero’s management team for enhanced special-education resources, sanctuary schools protections, reducing its 32-student class size and better pay, noting that Acero’s CEO is paid about the same $260,000 salary as CPS’ CEO, though he manages 15 schools and she more than 500.
Monday’s bargaining session went late into the night, past the midnight strike deadline. Negotiations picked up Tuesday at 10 a.m.
Teachers on the picket lines Tuesday stressed the importance of sanctuary school protections for their students and families, a designation that bars federal agencies like Immigration and Customs Enforcement from entering campus without a court order, warrant or subpoena.
Such working conditions for staff are bargainable for charter schools, though not for Chicago Public Schools, union attorney Robert Bloch said.
Two strikes under Emanuel
This week’s Acero walkout becomes the second teachers strike under Rahm Emanuel’s tenure as mayor. The CTU walked off the job for seven days in 2012.
Chicago Public Schools officials emailed parents to clarify that school is in session everywhere but at the Acero schools.