The Denver Post

Chicago teachers authorize union to strike

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CHICAGO» Chicago teachers have voted to authorize their union leaders to call a strike, setting the stage for a possible work stoppage next month in the nation’s third-largest school district, officials announced Thursday.

Chicago Teachers Union delegates are set to meet next week to set a deadline for a strike, although the earliest one could happen is Oct. 7.

The union and the school district have been negotiatin­g for months over the issues, including pay, benefits and staffing shortages. The union argues that years of budget cuts have shortchang­ed schools, resulting in overcrowde­d classrooms and far fewer nurses and librarians.

After three days of voting, union leaders announced that 94% of the votes counted backed giving leaders the authority to call a strike.

“Our school communitie­s are desperatel­y short of nurses, social workers, psychologi­sts, counselors and other support staff, even as our students struggle with high levels of trauma driven by poverty and neighborho­od violence,” CTU president Jesse Sharkey said in a statement. “This vote represents a true mandate for change.”

Officials with Chicago Public Schools say the district has made improvemen­ts in recent years, thanks in part to additional revenue from a propertyta­x hike and the state’s revamped school-funding formula.

They say they’ve offered general salary raises, but the union disagrees.

The union, which represents roughly 24,000 educators, wants a 15% total raise over a three-year contract. The district has offered a 16% total raise over a five-year contract. Other issues include class size, sanctuary protection­s for students and elementary school prep time.

Chicago’s last major teachers strike was in 2012, and it lasted seven school days. But the tone and issues are far different this time.

Then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel had a more contentiou­s relationsh­ip with the union than the current mayor, Lori Lightfoot, and the district’s finances were shakier.

The contract dispute is one of Lightfoot’s first major tests as mayor, as she took office earlier this year.

Roughly 400,000 students attend district schools.

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