Chicago Sun-Times

City’s latest contract offer ‘offensive’: CTU negotiator

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa CTU President Jesse Sharkey

The Chicago Teachers Union rejected a new proposal from Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Friday that appeared to move closer to a compromise on some issues but not budge on many key union demands.

After the city and union met for nearly eight hours Friday, both sides came out firing with attacks that escalated tensions with the CTU, which is set to strike Thursday. The contentiou­s bargaining session also appeared to douse some of the growing optimism behind closed doors that a deal could be made in the coming days.

In a statement, the mayor said “it appears that CTU is refusing to negotiate in good faith, and instead is determined to strike at all costs.”

Lightfoot said Chicago

Public Schools’ 72 pages of proposals moved the city closer to the union’s demands, offering to drop a proposal to reduce existing teacher preparatio­n time, maintain a moratorium on charter schools, and include supports for homeless students.

The city’s bargaining team, however, was “very disappoint­ed” by the union response: a three-page document rejecting 16 of the city’s 19 proposals and referred back to CTU demands from January, according to a source close to negotiatio­ns.

CTU President Jesse Sharkey told reporters an hour later that CPS gave a “take it or leave it offer” that was “a joke” and didn’t go nearly far enough in addressing the union’s central demands.

Stacy Davis Gates, CTU vice president, said the union would have no choice but to strike if the proposal really was the city’s final offer — and suggested the mayor was being “petty that this union didn’t endorse her.” CTU bargaining team member Katie Osgood said some offers were “offensive,” such as a “paltry” $400,000 per year CPS said it would set aside to build a pipeline of nurses, counselors and case managers.

“We’re talking about an offer that frankly was insulting to us, and when you add that to the fact that they told us this is our final offer, take it or leave it, that draws the line in the sand for us,” Sharkey said.

In a joint statement, Lightfoot and schools chief Janice Jackson said “we have bent over backwards to meet CTU’s concerns.”

“Unfortunat­ely, CTU simply rejected our proposals without a counter-proposal, and instead is continuing to stand on their $2.5 billion starting proposal from January on nearly all issues.”

Negotiatio­ns are set to resume Saturday, though nothing is scheduled for Sunday.

CTU’s 25,000 members, along with 10,000 school support staff and Chicago Park District workers represente­d by SEIU Local 73 are set to strike Thursday.

Lightfoot and Sharkey have both said a deal is needed early next week to avert a strike. The city assumes that means by Monday or Tuesday, a source said.

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