Chicago Sun-Times

UNION SAYS TENTATIVE DEAL REACHED TO END ACERO STRIKE

- BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER mdudek@suntimes.com | @mitchdudek

The Chicago Teachers Union announced early Sunday that a tentative deal had been reached with Acero charter schools to end a four-day strike and that teachers would return to classes Monday.

The deal would bring the salaries of teachers and para-profession­als — workers that range from informatio­n tech specialist­s to school clerks, some of whom earn less than $30,000 a year — in line with what their peers at Chicago Public Schools earn, according to Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey.

The four-year contract — if it’s ratified — will be retroactiv­e to Aug. 1 and include a 2 percent yearly cost-of-living increase, he said.

Sharkey said he’s “hoping to set a standard in the industry” with the new contract.

He said 34 of 130 charter schools in Chicago are currently unionized.

The union, which comprises about 530 workers spread across 15 Acero schools, mostly on the South Side, is expected to vote on the contracts early as this week. It’s expected to easily pass.

A meeting held Sunday at a packed auditorium at CTU headquarte­rs had the vibe of a victory rally. Several dozen union members sang and performed a dance onstage swapping the words to the popular “Baby Shark” song with verses such as “fair contract,” “smaller class” and “we just won.”

The deal also includes “sanctuary” protection­s for undocument­ed students and their parents under which the charter school network would not share informatio­n with immigratio­n authoritie­s. It also includes a provision to reduce class sizes.

Acero Schools’ CEO Richard L. Rodriguez released a statement Sunday morning.

“Thanks to hard work and very long hours from both bargaining teams, we were able to reach an agreement that values teachers and staff for the important work they do, while still maintainin­g the attributes of our network that help produce strong educationa­l outcomes for our students,” he said. “Most important for all of us and the families and communitie­s we serve, we can now get students back into the classroom, where they belong.”

The picketing Acero teachers went on strike Tuesday. Acero had filed labor complaints against the union on Friday, seeking an injunction to force teachers back to work; the CTU scoffed at that and pledged to continue picketing while contract talks continued.

The strike drew outsized attention because it was the first organized work stoppage at a charter school in the country.

American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, who’d joined union members on the picket lines last week, heralded this historic moment for charter schools.

“This strike may be the first of its kind for teachers in charter schools, but the struggle is strikingly similar to so many public school educators’ across the United States,” Weingarten said in a statement Sunday.

Sharkey agreed that there is common ground.

“Our vision is that educators at charter schools and at Chicago Public Schools have common interests,” Sharkey said in a statement Sunday night. “We live in the same neighborho­ods, we teach the same kids, and we wage the same struggles over resources and underfundi­ng.”

“We are now a movement that commands national attention and can stop a city,” Sharkey said.

 ?? COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? ABOVE: Supporters dance onstage at the Chicago Teachers Union headquarte­rs at a news conference on Sunday where the tentative deal reached with Acero charter schools to end the strike was discussed. LEFT: Froy Jimenez, a CTU member, makes noise in celebratio­n.
COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ABOVE: Supporters dance onstage at the Chicago Teachers Union headquarte­rs at a news conference on Sunday where the tentative deal reached with Acero charter schools to end the strike was discussed. LEFT: Froy Jimenez, a CTU member, makes noise in celebratio­n.
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