Chicago Sun-Times

Striking CICS teachers bring Loop office to halt

- Mitchell Armentrout

Striking Chicago Internatio­nal Charter School teachers brought a busy Loop office lobby to a standstill Wednesday on their seventh day of a work stoppage.

About 100 Chicago Teachers Union Members blocked the entrances to 1 N. Wacker to bring their grievances to the accounting firm office of CICS President and Treasurer Laura Thonn.

Frazzled building security and gawking office workers struggled to make their way through the sitin, which shifted to the center of the lobby to block a bank of elevators.

“It’s unacceptab­le that people [in charge] can have six-figure salaries and yet say they have no money to make sure our schools are properly invested in,” CICS Ralph Ellison High School English teacher Kimberly Randle said.

The teachers walked off the job Feb. 5 and say CICS’ management firm is sitting on $36 million in reserve funds that could be used to raise their pay to the level of Chicago Public Schools teachers while increasing ranks of social workers and counselors.

CICS says its reserve fund is considerab­ly less and that the teachers’ salary demands would bankrupt the network within three years.

About a dozen Chicago police officers surveyed the peaceful protest and, after about 90 minutes of chants, escorted three teachers upstairs to deliver a letter of demands to Thonn’s private-sector colleagues. The executive in question was out of office and couldn’t be reached for comment.

A CICS spokeswoma­n shared an email the charter network’s CEO Elizabeth Shaw sent to employees ahead of the demonstrat­ion urging workers not to call police and to treat demonstrat­ors “with respect and compassion.”

No negotiatio­ns took place Wednesday. The sides were scheduled to be back at the table Thursday afternoon.

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