The Commercial Appeal

Chicago teachers OK deal that halted strike

Contract includes raises, funds for smaller classes Kathleen Foody

- ASSOCIATED PRESS ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/CHICAGO SUN-TIMES VIA AP, FILE

– Chicago teachers on Friday approved a contract offer that ended an 11-day strike and includes pay raises, $35 million to enforce limits on class sizes and a pledge to supply each school with a nurse and a social worker.

The Chicago Teachers Union’s 25,000 members went on strike Oct. 17 following months of unsuccessf­ul negotiatio­ns with the school district and Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administra­tion.

Teachers held marches and rallies across the city; the district kept school buildings open but canceled two weeks of classes. More than 300,000 students and their families were affected.

Teachers said they were striking for “social justice,” with the aim of increasing resources such as nurses and social workers for students, and reducing class sizes, which teachers said exceed 30 or 40 students in some schools.

Union leaders said the strike forced city officials to negotiate on issues they initially deemed out of bounds, including support for homeless students.

Lightfoot, who took office this year, said the strike was unnecessar­y and dubbed the city’s offer of a 16% raise for teachers over a five-year contract and other commitment­s on educators’ priorities “historic.”

The district also committed $35 million to enforce class size limits and agreed to put nurses and social workers in every school by 2023.

“Our contract fight was about the larger movement to shift values and priorities in Chicago,” CTU Vice President Stacy Davis Gates said in a union news release. “Working class taxpayers in Chicago have paid for skyscraper­s that most will never visit – but a school nurse is someone their child in need can see on any day. In a city with immense wealth, corporatio­ns have the ability to pay to support the common good.”

Teachers suspended the strike on Oct. 31 after more than half of the union’s elected delegates tentativel­y approved the agreement.

Union leaders have said the agreement would create “real and lasting change” for students. But some members wanted to hold out for more CONCHICAGO cessions on classroom conditions.

With 80% of schools reporting, 81% of members had voted yes to ratify the new contract, the union tweeted late Friday.

“This contract is a powerful advance for our city and our movement for real equity and educationa­l justice for our school communitie­s and the children we serve,” the union’s president, Jesse Sharkey, said in the release.

The contract is subject to approval by the Chicago Board of Education, which is scheduled to meet Nov. 20. The mayor appoints all of the board’s members.

Lightfoot and union leaders have agreed to make up five of the school days lost to the strike.

 ??  ?? Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey calls the new deal “a powerful advance for our city and our movement for real equity and educationa­l justice.”
Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey calls the new deal “a powerful advance for our city and our movement for real equity and educationa­l justice.”

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