A blog of things I find interesting. Mostly revolving around unions, workers rights, politics, and too much of my amateur photography. I am a Michigan labor union staffer, MSU alum,and a politics junkie.

Posts Tagged: AFT

You should make this your facebook profile pic immediately.The Chicago Teachers Union is on strike, and what happens there will affect teachers throughout the nation.  Hell, this strike could affect all unions for years to come. 
Rahm and CPS wanted this strike, and now they’re going to get it.Rahm, the latte liberal asshole, and his team at CPS don’t seem to know their head from their ass when it comes to labor relations.  Shit is going to get real.  Stand strong, don’t back down, Solidarity forever!

You should make this your facebook profile pic immediately.

The Chicago Teachers Union is on strike, and what happens there will affect teachers throughout the nation.  Hell, this strike could affect all unions for years to come. 

Rahm and CPS wanted this strike, and now they’re going to get it.

Rahm, the latte liberal asshole, and his team at CPS don’t seem to know their head from their ass when it comes to labor relations.  Shit is going to get real.  Stand strong, don’t back down, Solidarity forever!

Biden draws cheers at AFT convention

July 31 2012

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DETROIT - “Teachers are under fullblownassault,” declared Vice President Joe Biden, addressing the American Federation of Teachers convention here on Sunday. Vice President Biden, his wife Dr. Jill Biden - a longtime teacher, United Auto Workers President Bob King and noted educator and author Diane Ravitch all came to the AFT convention to pledge their support for our nation’s teachers.

The vice president was introduced by Jill Biden who taught for 13 years in a public high school and continues teaching full time at Northern Virginia Community College, even as she serves as the “Second Lady.” She told the audience, “Being a teacher is notwhatIdo, itswhoIam.”

Vice President Biden spelled out the choices voters have in the November election.

Why does the Republican budget cut $900 million for K-12 education, cut Head Start and Pell grants, Biden asked, answering himself: “because they have to pay for their one trillion dollar, 600 million tax cut for the wealthy.”

The attitude of the “new” Republican Party, Biden said, is: “Government needs to keep its hands out of education.” He declared, “Don’t tell me you value education but then don’t invest in it.”

Biden noted that the middle class has been clobbered by the economic crisis, and attacked the Republican aid-the-rich, trickle-down approach. He said, “We think you rebuild the middle class from the ‘middle out,’ they think from the ‘top down.’” Addressing the teacher delegates, he said, “We don’t see you as the problem, we see you as the solution.”

A sea of 3,000 teachers and school workers, wearing AFT Obama-Biden blue T-shirts, cheered enthusiastically. Thought many disagree with some of Obama’s education policies, they saw the bigger picture, as outlined by UAW President Bob King.

Addressing the convention on Saturday, King cited two priorities in the coming period. Number one is the re-election of President Obama. We may not agree with all the president does, King said, but we “cannot allow the perfect to be the enemy of the good. We will go back 50 years if Republicans win.”

Second, to achieve real progress, King said labor must recommit to rebuilding a social and economic justice movement when the elections are over.

He noted that when unions were stronger, “every measure of social justice” was stronger too. “Too many of our economists do not understand the core centrality to a fair and just society is a vibrant and strong labor movement,” King said. When union members advance, every worker in America benefits, he said, adding that labor is the “core of democracy” in any nation.

EducatorDianeRavitch tore apart the “big lie” of lagging test scores used by some education “reformers” to justify privatization. The American educational system is failing as the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) shows that test scores of American students are at their highest points ever, she said. She said increases have been steady and significant and they have been greatest for black and Hispanic students. “We should be thanking our nation’s teachers,” said Ravitch.

“Teachers need to work in a professional atmosphere where they are treated with respect and dignity,” Ravitch said. “Carrots and sticks are for donkeys, not professionals.”

She cited a number of reason students have difficulty in the classroom, from health issues to family stability but she said the “single biggest predictor of student progress is family income.” Thus, poverty and joblessness must be addressed to improve student learning.

Retired hearing specialist and past Chicago Teachers Union President Marilyn Stewart agreed. When an economic crisis hits the country, she said, “teachers feel it first in the classroom; stress from the home is carried into the classroom.”

Delegate Debbie Uribe, a 30-year early childhood educator in Los Angeles, said she feels her work with children builds the foundation for future success. She’s upset her school is getting an 8.5 percent cut in state funding.

Also bringing the crowd to its feet Saturday was Detroit NAACP President, Rev. Wendell Anthony. Reverend Anthony said if you are teaching in America you’re going through some kind of hell adding, “Love has got to kick in, because the money isn’t.” He asked what message are we sending when you can use your NRA card to vote (as in Texas) but can’t use your college ID. “Insanity is running wild,” he exclaimed.

The convention re-elected AFT President Randi Weingarten to another term.

Photo: Vice President Joe Biden greats teachers at the AFT Convention in Detroit, July 29. Courtesy AFT.

Emergency Manager 'inflates' numbers

By Eric T. Campbell
The Michigan Citizen”

DETROIT — Detroit Public Schools (DPS) emergency manager and Educational Achievement Authority (EAA) board chairman Roy Roberts is “inflating” his administrative success, according to a new study. Despite promises otherwise, the EM is directing more resources to his administration than the classroom.

Roberts has consistently criticized DPS bureaucracy, saying it directs only 55 percent of its revenue to the classroom. He further promised to increase that number to 95 percent in DPS and the state-mandated reform school district, the EAA.

A new report by the Detroit Data and Democracy Project contradicts Roberts’ numbers, indicating that Roberts has used differing formulas to support his claims.

The report, entitled “Emergency Manager Roy Roberts Pledges 95% of Funds to Classrooms: Ambition or Deceit?” was authored by Dr. Thomas C. Pedroni, Wayne State associate professor of Curriculum Studies and director of the Detroit Data and Democracy Project.

“Roberts greatly inflates his success in the area of classroom dollars and achieves the 90 percent figure by calling every expense category, except administration and debt service, ‘school based costs,’” the report states.

Using the same formula utilized by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES), the one that Roberts uses to disparage DPS’ recent classroom expenditures of 55 percent, Roberts is actually putting even less into DPS classrooms.

Pedroni estimates that number to be 48.3 percent.

“Roberts was using a much more generous assessment for his own performance,” Pedroni told the Michigan Citizen. “And it’s not just that his numbers are wrong … remember this is the whole basis for his existence.”

Pedroni says that, in general, charter schools use the same tactics that Roberts employed. National studies conclude that charter schools dedicate more money to administration than to classrooms compared to public schools.

Roberts appeared before City Council July 17 to give his 2012 report on the state of DPS. During his statements, he announced that the DPS budget deficit is now only $72 million.

Detroit Board of Education President Lamar Lemmons says that number is also skewed to fit the appearance that Roberts has led the district out of financial despair.

Lemmons told the Michigan Citizen that DPS is really $272 million in debt if you include the long-term payments associated with the $200 million deficit elimination bond negotiated by Roberts in November 2011.

“You can show anything if you change the formula to get the results you want,” Lemmons told the Michigan Citizen. “He’s certainly done that before.”

To read Detroit Data and Democracy Project’s report on Robert’s classroom expenditures, visit https://sites.google.com/site/detroitdataanddemocracyproject/

Contact Eric T. Campbell at ericcampbell@michigancitizen.com

My union cards!
Today is apparently post your union card to facebook day, so I decided to post mine to tumblr too.  I’m staff at the UNTF, AFT Local 1855, but the AFT sent me a card (though it is valid as I am an associate UNTF member).  I am a member of the IWW as well.
UNIONS MAKE US STRONG!

My union cards!

Today is apparently post your union card to facebook day, so I decided to post mine to tumblr too.  I’m staff at the UNTF, AFT Local 1855, but the AFT sent me a card (though it is valid as I am an associate UNTF member).  I am a member of the IWW as well.

UNIONS MAKE US STRONG!

Virtual Schools Not Passing the Test

By Emma Chadband

Children who enroll in a K12 Inc. cyberschool are more likely to fall behind in reading and math, move between schools or leave school altogether, according to a new study from the National Education Policy Center (NEPC) at the University of Colorado.

K12 Inc. is the nation’s largest virtual school company. It operates 48 full-time virtual schools in 2011-12, and provides services and support to dozens of other schools that offer online classes.

Some of the biggest problems the study found were K12 Inc. students’ low on-time graduation rates, math, and reading scores.

Math scores for K12 Inc.’s students are 14 to 36 percent lower than scores for students attending more “traditional schools” in the states in which the company operates schools. In grades 3 – 11, K12 Inc. students’ reading scores were between 2 and 11 percentage points below the state average.

The on-time graduation rate for K12 Inc. students is 49.1 percent, compared with a 79.4 percent on-time graduation rate for the states in which the company operates schools.

“Our in-depth look into K12 Inc. raises enormous red flags,” NEPC Director Kevin Welner said. The report’s findings were presented in Washington last week to a national meeting of the American Association of School Administrators, where the report’s lead author, Dr. Gary Miron, debated Dr. Susan Patrick, president and CEO of the International Association for K–12 Online Learning.

“Computer-assisted learning has tremendous potential,” said Miron. “But at present, our research shows that virtual schools such as those operated by K12 Inc. are not working effectively. States should not grow full-time virtual schools until they have evidence of success.”

The company’s schools usually operate on less public revenue than traditional schools, but they have “considerable cost savings,” according to a press release from NEPC. They devote minimal or no funds to operating costs including facilities and transportation, and they have more students per teacher and pay teachers less. Furthermore, the study found K12 Inc. spends half as much per student than charter schools overall spend on special education and a third of what districts spend, according to the press release.

“Part of K12’s problem seems to be that it skimps on special education spending and employs few instructors, despite having lower overhead than brick-and-mortar schools,” said Welner, who is also a professor of education policy at the University of Colorado.

K12 Inc. students are also very likely to change schools, which could lead to their low on-time graduation rates.

In light of shrinking education budgets, state governments have considered using online schools to cut costs in education. But this latest study echoes the growing body of evidence suggesting students do not learn as well in cyberschool environments.

A “more rigorous” study of student learning in Pennsylvania virtual charter schools conducted by the Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) at Stanford University found virtual-school students ended up with learning gains that were “significantly worse” than students in traditional charters and public schools. Audits and state evaluations in five different states have reported similar conclusions.

Related posts:

  1. Virtual Schools are Multiplying, But Some Question their Educational Value
  2. Must Reads – Virtual Schools
  3. Virtual Schools Under Scrutiny
  4. Test Scores Same at Wisconsin Public, Voucher Schools
  5. Public Schools and Charter Schools: Who’s Leaving Kids Behind?

With Student Learning at Stake, Group Calls for Better Working Conditions for Adjuncts

The Chronicle of Higher Education
July 31, 2012

By Audrey Williams June


Academe needs a new model for the professoriate that better supports the

growing number of instructors who are off the tenure track, the

participants in a national project about the changing faculty have

concluded.

 

The participants, who represent a cross-section of academe and its

stakeholders, also said in a report being released this week that they

need to align to gather data that will paint a clearer picture of higher

education’s increasing reliance on contingent faculty.

 

A key reason for those two strategies to improve the jobs of contingent

faculty members is that their poor working conditions may harm student

learning, says the report, a “working document” produced by the Delphi

Project on the Changing Faculty and Student Success.

 

The 49-page document, in part, details the challenges linked to the

rising number of contingent faculty, who now make up about 70 percent of

all instructors at the nation’s colleges and universities. But data that

quantify the effects of this shift in the make-up of the faculty and the

issues it creates aren’t readily available, the report says. Without

hard numbers, campus policy makers may be unaware of the extent of the

challenges they face.

 

“Everybody agreed that we lack good data tools to help inform policy

making at various levels as it relates to non-tenure-track faculty,”

says Adrianna Kezar, director of the project and an associate professor

of higher education at the University of Southern California.

 

“What we’re doing now is creating all of these data tools and resources

so that we can make people aware of the extent of the issue and then

have a series of best practices that have been put in place at various

institutions that we can point to that we know work.”

 

Participants in the Delphi project also agreed that the current

system—with tenure-stream faculty on the one hand, and full-timers and

part-timers who work off the tenure track on the other— “isn’t working,”

Ms. Kezar says. “We all thought, What is the new model of the faculty

that we need to have?”

 

The document reflects a year’s worth of work by more than 40 people,

including college presidents, higher-education researchers, leaders of

scholarly associations, faculty union leaders, and representatives of

organizations that represent faculty who are off the tenure track. The

report and the strategies it proposes emerged from discussions at a

recent meeting where most of the project’s participants gathered.

 

The participants will be pared down into two task forces to work on

advancing the project’s strategies in various ways.

 

For instance, they will need to develop a conceptual paper that details

what the future faculty should look like and how it could be adopted by

all types of institutions. And eventually, the project will need some

grant money to make pieces of both strategies a reality—such as setting

up models at individual institutions or university systems of how to

best support non-tenure-track faculty.

 

Ms. Kezar says she expects to post the document at the project’s Web

site [http://tinyurl.com/cw9ec9p] later this week. Other documents

related to the project’s current efforts will be posted over the next

six months.

Arbitrator: Give Chicago teachers 35.7% raise over four years

Story Image

L-R are: Library Commissioner Brian Bannon and Mayor Emanuel at the Northtown Branch Library. Al Podgorski~Chicago Sun-Times

Updated: July 17, 2012 7:53AM



The independent fact finder’s recommendation that Chicago Public Schools officials have been pinning their hopes on to resolve a contentious teachers contract dispute is finally in — but Mayor Rahm Emanuel may wish it wasn’t.

The report essentially gives Emanuel’s school board a tough choice: dole out double-digit teacher raises in the first year of a four-year contract, or roll back the mayor’s signature longer school day and year effort.

Fact finder Edwin Benn found that CPS “caused this problem by lengthening the school day and year to the extent it did when it was having serious budget problems,’’ according to a copy of Benn’s long-awaited report reviewed by the Chicago Sun-Times.

“The board cannot realistically expect that it should not have to compensate employees for the problem it caused by an almost 20 percent increase for the employees’ work time.

“Because the Board has the authority to set the length of the school day and year, as an alternative, the Board can reduce its costs by correspondingly reducing the length of the school day and/or year.’’

Benn described the talks between CPS and the union as “toxic.”

It’s questionable whether his recommendations will improve the situation. Since either side can reject his non-binding conclusions, the negotiations could go back to square one.

CPS spokeswoman Becky Carroll estimated the total cost of the 18.26 average teacher pay hike Benn is recommending in year one of a new contract at $331 million. The recommendation comes after CPS officials announced they plan to deplete their rainy day reserves to plug a $665 million deficit, a move that prompted a swift downturn in their credit rating.

“It is clearly not a price tag that taxpayers can afford, given the state of the financial crisis that we are in today,’’ Carroll said of the proposed 18.26 percent raise.

On the other hand, Carroll said, “Eliminating the longer day is not an option.” Chicago’s 5 ¾ hour elementary school day is so short, Carroll said, “Regardless of whether we have a surplus or a deficit, [students] need the additional time.’’

Carroll contended that Benn went outside the authority granted him under a new law pushed by Emanuel when Benn ruled that CPS teachers should be paid more for working a longer work day.

Benn tied the longer day to a 12.6 percent raise in year one and combined it with a 2.25 percent cost-of-living hike and another 3.41 for extra years of experience. Over four years, the raises he recommended would total 35.7 percent.

CTU attorney Robert Bloch noted that CPS built up a huge expectation around the fact-finder’s report for months.

CPS officials, Emanuel, and some school reform groups ripped into the union for not waiting for the Benn’s report before taking a June strike authorization vote. In a letter to teachers on the eve of that vote, Schools CEO Jean-Claude Brizard insisted that teachers deserved a raise, but “how much that raise should be is in the hands of an independent fact finder.’’

“How long have they been running ads blasting the union for not waiting for the fact-finder’s report?’’ Bloch said. “Now that it’s here, they can’t run away from it fast enough.”

“Now that they are unhappy with the award, now they want to criticize him and denigrate the fact-finding process.’’

Chicago Teachers Union officials are taking Benn’s recommendation to their House of Delegates for reaction on Wednesday. CTU President Karen Lewis refused Monday to say if leaders would recommend it be accepted or rejected.

That same day, Chicago School Board members are meeting in special session to vote on it.

Benn also found that the “union’s rage is understandable’’ after being denied a promised 4 percent raise this past school year. He recommended that the upcoming contract not include an escape clause allowing CPS to cancel raises they cannot afford, and that if CPS were to cancel raises, “the union should be permitted to strike for failure to pay.’’

Benn’s final salary recommendation of 14.85 percent for cost of living and the longer school day in the first year, followed by 2.25 percent, 2.5 percent and 2.5 percent was far closer to the union’s final offer of 25 percent over two years than the board’s final offer of 8 percent over four years. On top of cost of living and extra pay for extra work, Benn recommended an extra 3.4 percent extra per year for added years of experience—something CPS wanted to dump.

“We do agree with this initial recommendation that our members deserve significant pay raises,’’ Lewis said Monday. “We commend arbitor Benn for his careful consideration of the data.’’

What Might Have Been: One Report from Madison, Wisconsin

http://coreyrobin.com/2012/06/20/what-might-have-been-one-report-from-madison-wisconsin/

In all the post-mortems about what went down in Wisconsin, this comment on my blog from a union activist in Madison got lost in the shuffle.  I have no idea who this person is or if s/he is correct in his/her assessment. But it seemed worth posting here in full.

… … .

I’m a member of the Teaching Assistants’ Association. I was heavily involved during the actual occupation of the Capitol, and then gradually less so after we were kicked out. I was at the meeting of the Wisconsin South-Central Federation of Labor when it voted to endorse a general strike if the bill went through. It should be noted that the final version of the bill involved endorsing an “international” general strike, whatever the hell that would be.

Although, to be fair, since the leadership knew they didn’t have a strike fund or any advance work with any unions, they were only endorsing a strike in principle, I still thought I was on the set of a movie. Since, you know, the last general strike in the United States was in Minneapolis in 1934. I talked to a still-wet-behind-the-ears paid organizer for SCFL, and he told me that, indeed, there was serious talk about a general strike.

When things actually hit the fan, of course, it was only the directly-affected public-sector unions that had any real strike talk. In my own, undoubtedly the most radical, there was a hard core of activists who had been working around the clock on the occupation who favored going on strike. I was willing to be one of them, but it became pretty clear that we had no chance in hell of winning a strike vote. The primary problem was not our ”fat-cat” union bureaucrats (our officers actually don’t draw a union salary) but the bulk of our membership. Even among the people who showed up to our large and contentious general membership meetings there were many who strongly opposed our “teachouts,” in which we didn’t teach our classes on campus but sometimes made alternative arrangements to teach near the State Capitol. I imagine that among the much larger number who didn’t come to the meetings and didn’t participate in the teachouts, such opposition was even greater. Certainly, those members would never have voted for a formal walkout.

Even some of our progressive faculty were getting antsy about the continued teachouts, and, of course, there was a considerable public backlash against the wildcat sickouts that many teachers participated in, most notably members of MTI, the Madison teachers union.

Without knowing all the decision-making details within the big public-sector unions, I am still confident that there is no way that a grassroots groundswell for a strike was squelched by union bureaucrats and Democratic politicians. They might have tried (and likely failed) to squelch such a surge had it existed, but it was clear to the vast majority of those involved that we had already done pretty much all we could do and that there was not going to be any strike, let alone the fabled general strike, the chimera of the left.

It might be interesting to imagine what would have happened had there been some organized campaign to stop doing any other activism and start preparing for a mass public-sector strike. For those who think the recall was an overreach, you shouldn’t try to imagine what the backlash would have been against that.

Update (6/21, 8:30 am)

One commenter reminds us that the last general strike in the United States was in Oakland in 1946, not Minneapolis in 1934.

How Can the Chicago Teachers Union Win?

Chicago teachers rally and march through the loop in May (Photo: Bartosz Brzezinski/Socialist Worker)

Big strike authorization votes by unions in tough contract battles aren’t unusual. But the recent 90 percent vote by members of the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) to back a possible walkout was different—and it sets the stage for a contract showdown that will shape the battle to defend public education across the U.S.

Nearly 90 percent of the members voted to empower union leaders to call a strike—of teachers who cast a ballot, an incredible 98 percent marked “yes.” Just 482 teachers—1.82 percent of the membership—voted against a strike authorization, but because of an anti-union law, union members who failed to cast ballots were counted as voting against a strike. Of 26,502 members eligible to vote, 23,780 voted “yes.”

Facing a 20 percent increase in their workday and a proposed 2 percent pay raise, teachers, office staff and other CTU members sent the clearest possible message of resolve in their fight for what they deserve. The overwhelming vote gives CTU negotiators leverage at the bargaining table by allowing union officials to call a strike if necessary.

The early June vote followed an electric mass rally on May 23 rally where more than 4,000 teachers jammed a downtown auditorium and 2,000 more union members and supporters rallied in a nearby park.

CTU members—who include not just teachers, but office staff and aides—are acutely aware that they’re taking a stand in President Barack Obama’s hometown on the eve of a close election. But rather than being intimidated, they’re determined—and the rally gave expression to the same feelings of anger and defiance seen in last year’s labor uprising in Wisconsin and the height of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

“It was excellent, very inspiring,” Mayra Almarez, a history teacher at Taft High School on the city’s North Side, said of the rally. “Sometimes its really hard to continue when, in the media, you hear that we’re aggressive, we’re this, we’re that, we’re not in it for the right reasons—when in reality, we are. It was great to see we are supported by other people, by parents.”

Asked if teachers at Taft are prepared to walk a picket line if necessary, she replied, “Absolutely. We’re ready.”

The rally and strike authorization vote were the capstone of two years of effort by the CTU leadership to revitalize what had been a dysfunctional and declining union.

The new leadership’s first act upon taking office in 2010 was to cut the union officers’ pay and devote the money to internal organizing—getting organizers into the schools and strengthening organization at the school site. By late 2010, when Rahm Emanuel, until recently Obama’s chief of staff, launched his mayoral election campaign in Chicago by bashing teachers, the union was already in motion.

The Chicago teachers’ fight for justice also has national significance because the city has been a testing ground for “school reform” since 1995, when the state legislature handed then-Mayor Richard M. Daley direct control of the schools and stripped the CTU of its right to strike for 18 months.

Daley’s second schools CEO, Arne Duncan, oversaw the closure of low-performing schools and the proliferation of charters, which propelled him to the post of Obama’s Education Secretary. In that role, he worked closely with Emanuel to take the Chicago agenda across the U.S. Their tool was the Race to the Top initiative, a $4.3 billion pool of federal grants doled out to states if they passed laws that open the door to charter schools and undermine teachers’ job security by limiting tenure and imposing merit pay.

That was CTU President Karen Lewis’ first point in her speech at the raucous May 23 union rally:

Some people don’t believe me, but this is a national fight. All across this country, teachers, clinicians and paraprofessionals are fighting failed status quo reforms. School districts have become emboldened—and what have they done? They’ve become emboldened, because rich people are now writing the laws. Rich people, who never send their children to public schools, are making the policy. And nationwide, everyone— everyone—is facing the loss of their collective bargaining rights. Look at Wisconsin. Look at Indiana. We are surrounded by that, brothers and sisters. So why are we here?

A man in the audience answered with a shout: “Str-i-i-i-ke!” Teachers took up the chant, “Strike! Strike! Strike!” as someone sounded a vuvuzela, the noisemaker made famous during the World Cup soccer tournament in South Africa in 2010.

If Rahm Emanuel wants to pick a fight, the CTU is ready. In an interview following the rally, Lewis said that teachers and other CTU members aren’t intimidated by Emanuel, and alluded to the national effort to raise awareness of threatening behavior in the schools: “See a bully, stop a bully. It’s a campaign, right?”

Clearly Emanuel sees his confrontation with the CTU as critical to his political ambitions. He made schools a signature part of his mayoral campaign, and it’s been central to his national political profile before that.

Thus, Emanuel’s allies have responded to the teacher’s strike authorization with radio ads that try to depict the vote as an example of greedy teachers versus needy kids. In reality, the opposite is the case. The CTU has linked its demands for fair compensation for teachers to the fight for fully funded and enriched public education—by fighting school closures and budget cuts in close collaboration with neighborhood organizations and parents’ groups. This has put the union at the center of an emerging social movement to save Chicago schools and stop the proliferation of nonunion charter schools.

Along with the CTU, that movement for public education must now contend with the anti-teacher backlash orchestrated by Emanuel, the Democratic Party machine, the city’s business establishment and the anti-union “school reform” groups.

Emanuel and Co. are well aware of the potential power of an alliance between the CTU and the community, and fear that it could rally wider working-class support against the mayor’s agenda of slashing social services, privatizing city functions and handing out tax breaks for big business. That’s why, even before taking office, Emanuel sat down with a key Illinois legislator to insist on passage of a law, known as SB 7, that severely restricted the CTU’s right to strike.

Under SB 7—which applies only to Chicago—at least 75 percent of all CTU members must cast a “yes” vote to legally authorize a strike. As the corporate-driven school “reform” hit man, Jonah Edelman of Stand for Children, boasted on video, the law was designed to effectively bar a Chicago teachers’ strike. “In effect, they wouldn’t have the ability to strike, even though the right was maintained,” Edelman declared. “The unions cannot strike in Chicago. They will never be able to muster the 75 percent.”

For their part, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) officials were apparently so confident a teachers’ strike was impossible that they agreed to the CTU’s negotiations timeline that makes a strike possible in September, rather than using other provisions in SB7 that could have postponed a legal walkout. They were smug because they believed the new CTU leadership—classroom teachers propelled into office in the May 2010 election on the militant Caucus of Rank-and-File Educators (CORE) slate—wouldn’t be able to unite the union behind it.

As Chicago television anchor Walter Jacobson wrote on the eve of the CTU elections, “The bosses downtown are rooting for the rookies to get them to a bargaining table and eat them alive.”

It sure didn’t turn out that way. Emanuel and his hand-picked school board, which includes business executives and political hacks, among them billionaire Penny Pritzker, antagonized teachers by rescinding a previously negotiated 4 percent raise. As a follow-up, Emanuel and Chicago Schools CEO Jean-Claude Brizard violated the union contract by bribing teachers at a handful of schools to adopt a longer school day in exchange for bonuses and extra cash for school programs. Next, Brizard announced a hit list of 17 schools to be closed or “turned around”—and despite protests, school occupations and heartfelt appeals from parents, students and teachers, the school board rubber-stamped Brizard’s decision.

Even so, the effort to keep the schools open linked the CTU more closely with activist networks like Teachers for Social Justice and community groups like the Kenwood-Oakland Community Organization and Occupy Chicago. Together, KOCO and Occupy activists organized a “mic check” that succeeded in shutting down a Board of Education meeting. The school closures, which had been a routine story given perfunctory media attention, became a major issue.

Meanwhile, by pushing to lengthen Chicago’s 5-hour, 45-minute school day to seven and a half hours, Emanuel alienated middle-class parent groups like Raise Your Hand that he’d tried to play off against the CTU. The mayor’s partial retreat—the elementary school day increase to seven hours—didn’t go over well, either, since it’s accompanied by budget cuts aimed at closing what CPS claims is a $700 million deficit.

The combination of a longer school day and a smaller budget led to the creation of a new alliance of parent and community groups, Chicago Parents for Quality Education. Despite having various positions on the longer school day, the organizations are united behind a demand for increased funding for schools.

One group in the alliance, Parents 4 Teachers (P4T), was formed with the explicit aim of supporting the CTU. As P4T states on its website, blaming teachers “diverts attention from the real problems in education, like under-resourced schools, large class size and high-stakes testing.”

However, under the 1995 state law governing Chicago schools, the CTU can’t negotiate about anything other than pay and benefits. That means the union can’t bargain over critical issues like class size and the need for improved social services for kids unless CPS agrees to make those issues part of negotiations.

That’s why CTU has focused on demands for a pay increase—the replacement of last year’s 4 percent raise canceled by CPS and an additional increase to compensate teachers for the longer school day. CPS and Emanuel responded by attacking the CTU for asking for more money at a time when many workers are enduring pay cuts. Yet it is only by asking for just compensation that the CTU can defend union members and force CPS and Emanuel to widen the scope of bargaining.

Though the CTU is barred from bringing up key classroom and social issues in negotiations, the union has championed increased school funding and progressive policies in its document, “The Schools Our Students Deserve.”

Where the union old guard was mostly silent on such topics, the CTU’s publication substantiated the new leadership’s calls for smaller class sizes; an enriched curriculum with art and music at all schools, rather than just magnet and selective enrollment schools; and improved social services. The publication bluntly describes segregation in Chicago schools as “educational apartheid”—a term taken up by Rev. Jesse Jackson.

Thus, the CTU is showing its commitment to organizing over such issues as part of a wider working-class movement. For example, the CTU is backing a revived effort to fight for an elected school board.

In making this defense of public education, the CTU got little support from even the traditional liberals on the Chicago City Council.

When Emanuel proposed his slash-and-burn budget, all 50 aldermen voted “yes” in a show of legislative fear and favor-seeking that would have made Hosni Mubarak blush. Since then, a handful of aldermen and state legislators have backed CTU on some issues, but if it comes to a strike, even the most liberal figures among Chicago’s Democratic Party are likely to demand that the union back down. In fact, it was an alderman the CTU had endorsed who put forward a City Council resolution calling for early adoption of the longer school day.

With politicians lining up behind Emanuel, the CTU will have to expand its growing ties with parents and community groups to build wider solidarity efforts. However, building labor solidarity during a potential strike may prove more complicated, both at the local and national levels. If there’s going to be a push to support the CTU, much of the initiative will have to come from rank-and-file union members.

That’s because two other unions with contracts with CPS—UNITE HERE Local 1 and Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 73—have already settled contracts rather than bargain in parallel with the CTU. As a result, members of those unions, including food service workers, custodians and school aides, are contractually obligated to cross CTU picket lines in the event of a strike.

Those separate deals were surprising to many Chicago labor activists, since both unions have progressive reputations and had collaborated with the CTU. CTU members had turned out to support UNITE HERE workers at brief strikes at the city’s Hyatt Hotels as part of a contract campaign last year.

But when CPS pulled back on plans to replace cooked meals with pre-plated frozen ones, the president of UNITE HERE Local 1, Henry Tamarin, jumped at the five-year deal offered by the city, rather than wait to negotiate alongside the CTU.

The decision by SEIU Local 73 leaders to settle early with CPS was more contentious. Local 73 President Christine Boardman sought to ensure that ratification would go through at a membership meeting by withholding details of the tentative agreement until the vote June 9.

Rank-and-file activists were angry both about the information blackout and the fact that by settling separately from the CTU, they were undercutting the teachers. Union leaders countered that job security clauses in the contract warranted the early agreement. The final vote: 163 to 108 for a contract that covers more than 5,000 workers.

Besides peeling off these two locals from the CTU, Emanuel has also sought to consolidate ties with the unions that are the mainstays of the Chicago Federation of Labor (CFL).

In campaigning for mayor, Emanuel got the Teamsters’ backing by promising to make sure that privatized sanitation jobs would go to Teamster-organized companies. More recently, he got the unions’ backing for the Chicago Infrastructure Trust, a proposed $7 billion fund that will pay for public works projects while putting city taxpayers on the hook to banks at unspecified rates of interest.

City Hall will use jobs on upcoming infrastructure projects to try to buy the loyalty of union leaders and keep them out of the CTU’s camp. Notably, Emanuel announced a series of projects to be funded by the trust at a Laborers’ apprentice school.

Ullico, the union-run insurance and finance company, was an early backer of the infrastructure plan. And when Emanuel named a union official to the Infrastructure Trust’s board, CFL President Jorge Ramirez declared, “It’s smart, and it’s a call to collaboration that we’ve been looking for.”

Collaboration with City Hall hasn’t been on offer for the public-sector unions that Emanuel has targeted for concessions, however.

Some have tried to avoid confrontation and simply taken the hit. Others, like the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, have waged a series of different protests around particular budget cuts—in the libraries, for example.

Two unions stand out for their level of activism. One is Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) Local 241, which represents city bus drivers. Last fall, Local 241 allied with Occupy Chicago to fight attacks on their union.

The other is National Nurses United/National Nurses Organizing Committee (NNU), which represents nurses at Stroger Hospital, the main public health care facility in Cook County, which has also allied with Occupy. When NNU members volunteered to provide medical assistance to Occupy Chicago, Emanuel made an example of them by having them arrested and jailed longer than other activists. Significantly, activists from the ATU, NNU and CTU unions held a solidarity dinner to forge closer ties for the battles ahead.

Another key public-sector union notable for its activism is the Chicago branch of the National Association of Letter Carriers, which has developed ties with Occupy and labor activists in the fight against mass postal facility closures and job losses. A key labor-community coalition, Stand Up Chicago, initiated by the SEIU, has worked closely with the CTU and Occupy, too—as has Chicago Jobs with Justice, the longstanding coalition that’s played a pivotal role in local labor solidarity efforts. ARISE Chicago, a religious coalition committed to workers’ rights, will be key in reaching out to churches.

All this sets the stage for labor solidarity efforts with the CTU. The potential for such an effort was on display in January, when the Occupy Chicago Labor Working Group hosted a “Workers’ Power” labor solidarity conference that drew 250 leaders and rank-and-file activists from a range of unions. It was already clear then that the CTU was heading toward a collision with Emanuel, and support for the teachers’ union was a major theme of the event.

So it’s clear that if Chicago’s major union leaders are hesitant to take on the mayor on behalf of the CTU, activists are prepared to take the initiative themselves.

Solidarity will also be needed from the CTU’s parent union, the American Federation of Teachers (AFT). Union President Randi Weingarten was on hand to address the CTU’s May 23 solidarity rally, and she backed the CTU’s key messages. “If the 1 percent can get the help, if all those with silver spoons in their mouths can get help, what about the children of this city and the people that teach them?” Weingarten said to wild cheers.

Yet the AFT leader also made it clear that she preferred partnership to confrontation, noting that she’d come to the rally from Cincinnati where she was attending the U.S. Department of Education Labor-Management Collaboration conference. At that meeting, Weingarten said, “there are over 100 districts talking about working together, and here in the second [sic] city in the United States of America, we have to rally just to be heard.”

In fact, the face-off in Chicago is an example of the failure of Weingarten’s strategy of collaboration. At the 2010 AFT convention in Seattle, Weingarten brought out Microsoft Chair Bill Gates, who bankrolls a wide range of reform efforts, as a guest speaker. The AFT, she said, must “lead and propose” on school reform issues.

The prime example of school reform according to the AFT is the contract settled in New Haven, Conn. in 2010, which Weingarten called a “model or a template” for future AFT collective bargaining agreements. That deal sharply limits teachers’ traditional job protections and gives administrators more leeway to close schools.

For its part, the larger National Education Association (NEA), while formally more critical of the school reform agenda, differs little in practice from the AFT.

However, school reform groups have only taken the unions’ willingness to collaborate as a sign of weakness, as the notorious Edelman video about the CTU shows.

For example, in Detroit—where the AFT’s next convention will be held in July—unelected school authorities are carrying out huge budget cuts, sweeping school closures and a privatization agenda. The Detroit Federation of Teachers has seen its membership plummet, and the schools’ emergency financial manager imposed a 10 percent pay cut last year.

In Philadelphia, authorities are going even further, breaking up the public school system into “networks” to be run by nonprofit groups, charter management organizations and universities, effectively destroying the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers bargaining unit.

Weingarten’s home local, the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) in New York City, is also on the defensive. The collaboration that once saw Weingarten settle a contract with billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg at a Yankees game has given way to an all-out war on teachers. These days, Bloomberg is trying to get rid of displaced teachers still on the payroll, close “underperforming” schools and unilaterally imposed a punitive evaluation system that could lead to the firing of teachers after two years of unsatisfactory ratings.

Public-sector strikes are illegal under New York state’s anti-union Taylor laws. When Weingarten ran the UFT, the union sent out mail ballots to authorize a strike, but reached a deal before the votes were counted. These days, Michael Mulgrew, the UFT’s tough-talking president, won’t even allow delegates to bring discussion of a strike to the floor of the meeting, lest the union run afoul of the law.

Despite her defensive approach, Weingarten did issue a statement supporting the CTU after its strike authorization vote was announced. “It represents not just anger and frustration, but also a real commitment to Chicago’s students and a desire to be active participants in building strong public schools that help all Chicago children thrive,” she said. This statement opens the way for organizing solidarity resolutions and financial support from every AFT local in the country.

However, Weingarten subsequently made it clear that she’s far more comfortable in making deals with school districts and Democratic politicians than confronting them—even when teachers take a hit.

When members of United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) voted to accept the latest in a series of concessions that cut pay in order to save jobs, Weingarten issued another statement hailing their decision. “This agreement demonstrates how to address budget challenges without making the kinds of cuts that hurt kids, silence the voices of teachers and other school staff, and undermine our public schools,” she said of UTLA, which is affiliated with both the AFT and NEA.

Still, while official support for the CTU from the labor movement may be uneven, a groundswell of backing for teachers is evident across the city.

A recent poll in the Chicago Tribune showed that more than twice as many more people trusted the CTU on school issues than Emanuel. The task now is to turn that favorable sentiment into active support.

“Everyone’s been talking about the teachers at work,” said Don Schraffenberger, a member of Teamsters Local 705, who works at the huge UPS facility just outside Chicago. Frustrated by their own union’s slowness in dealing with workplace safety issues, the workers were excited by the CTU’s high-profile rally and strike vote, he said. “They are seeing a union that’s actually fighting back,” Schraffenberger said. “I think they see it the way people saw the 1997 Teamsters strike at UPS.”

For unions, steps to back the CTU can start with resolutions of support, pledges of financial assistance, and commitments to walk picket lines. In Chicago, CTU members are available to speak at union meetings, and could call or Skype into meetings elsewhere.

Such labor backing for the CTU has far more than symbolic importance. In the event of a strike, it’s possible or even likely that a judge would issue a temporary restraining order, sending teachers back to work and threatening them with fines and jail time if they don’t. That’s what happened when the UTLA planned a one-day strike in 2009 and when bus and subway workers in New York City’s Transport Workers Union Local 100 struck for three days in 2005. If the CTU’s assets are seized or heavy fines are imposed, union members and supporters everywhere must be prepared to send funds to keep the union operational and defend teachers’ right to strike.

At the same time, parent and community groups aligned with the CTU have a critical role to play—not only by offering political support to the teachers, but by being prepared to operate freedom schools that give students a safe place to go during a strike. Such efforts were key to successful CTU strikes in the past and will be critical in countering teacher-bashing from Emanuel and a network of paid preachers and “community groups” that are really appendages of the local Democratic machine.

But where Emanuel will try to line up his forces by spreading money around, the CTU and its allies can count on organizations and individuals who are prepared to do the one-on-one organizing that’s needed, from leafleting in neighborhoods and summer festivals to visiting churches and community groups.

Such organizing efforts are already well underway among CTU members and their allies. The union will use the teachers’ summer break to send them into the communities to organize, as well as gear up union operations for an all-out fight.

For their part, supporters of the teachers aim to have connections in every neighborhood in the city, with activists prepared to answer City Hall’s lies and distortions with a clear and principled defense of public education against the budget-cutters, business elites and charter school operators.

The battle lines over public education are being drawn in Chicago. But it’s a fight with nationwide implications—and everyone who supports fully funded public education and teachers’ rights should stand with the Chicago Teachers Union.

This article was originally published by Socialist Worker.

Change.org Promotes Corporate Education Agenda, Undermines Teachers

Change.org, a petition based social advocacy site, promotes organizations focused on corporate education at the expense of progressive values. The company recently ran a petition by Stand for Children – Illinois, an innocuous and misleading name, demanding the Chicago Board of Education and teacher’s union go back to the bargaining table. Harmless enough but the text of the petition reveals the organization’s for-profit and anti-teacher agenda, forcing a Chicago teacher to create a petition against Change.org on Moveon’s Signon petition site.

The letter sent to the board of education and the Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis reads:

400,000 Chicago students could be locked out of Chicago classrooms because contract negotiations are starting to break down, causing a premature strike-authorization vote to occur before anyone knows what is in the contract proposal. We strongly call for all parties to bargain in good faith to reach a new agreement. Don’t hold our students hostage in a negotiation where they have no voice!

These words are the same talking points used by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, calling the vote premature and saying the students are being held hostage. Advocates of so-called “education reform” like to claim neither side looks out for the students’ interests. Meanwhile, CTU’s demands include lowering the student to teacher ratio, programs to educate the whole child, and improving the conditions of schools.

Change.org’s promotion of Stand for Children-Illinois runs counter to the company’s state mission.

We accept sponsored campaigns from organizations fighting for the public good and the common values we hold dear – fairness, equality, and justice. We do not accept sponsored campaigns from organizations that consistently violate these values, support discriminatory policies, or seek private corporate benefit that undermines the common good.

Chicago Public Schools teacher, Jennifer Johnson decided to demand Change.org’s founder and CEO, Ben Rattray, stop promoting anti-labor groups.

I’m a public school teacher who has taught high school History for 9 years in Chicago. I am one of many teachers who are tired of being blamed for everything that is wrong with public schools when our system is underfunded and our efforts under supported. I and other teachers have been trying to honestly negotiate with the school district, but they refuse to negotiate over the actual conditions in our schools. The district refuses to negotiate with teachers to fully provide and staff schools so that students receive basic art and music instruction or a reasonable number school nurses and counselors, playground and libraries. Forty percent of our schools do not have full time art and music programs. Ninety-eight of our schools don’t have playgrounds and 160 schools don’t have libraries at all.

The state of public schools in Chicago is not a result of teachers getting rich. Who goes into teaching expecting to retire a millionaire? The lack of music and art programs comes from state and city budget cuts. The City of Chicago has diverted hundreds of millions of dollars from property taxes into a corporate slush fund for the Mayor. Tax Incremental Financing districts (TIFs) were supposed to help blighted areas but now serve to give millions to profitable companies. But it is the teachers union who is somehow at fault?

Sponsored campaigns (read paid campaigns) provide a great way for organizations to grow and spread their message. Sadly, Stand for Children does not uphold to common values stated by Change.org. Fairness, equality, and justice do not exist in the organization run by Jonah Edelman, who gave a very blunt speech last year.

So our analysis was he’s still going to be in power, and as such the raw politics were that we should tilt toward him, and so we interviewed 36 candidates in targeted races. … I’m being quite blunt here. The individual candidates were essentially a vehicle to execute a political objective, which was to tilt toward Madigan. The press never picked up on it. We endorsed nine individuals – and six of them were Democrats, three Republicans – and tilted our money toward Madigan, who was expecting because of Bruce Rauner’s leadership … that all our money was going to go to Republicans. That was really an show of – indication to him that we could be a new partner to take the place of the Illinois Federation of Teachers. That was the point. Luckily, it never got covered that way. That wouldn’t have worked well in Illinois – Madigan is not particularly well liked. And it did work.

After the election we went back to Madigan, and I confirmed – reviewed the proposal that we had already discussed and I confirmed the support. He said he was supportive. The next day he created an Education Reform Commission and his political director called to ask for our suggestions who should be on it. And so in Aurora, Ill., in December, out of nowhere, there were hearings on our proposal. In addition, we hired 11 lobbyists, including four of the absolute best insiders, and seven of the best minority lobbyists – preventing the unions from hiring them. We enlisted a state public affairs firm. We had tens of thousands of supporters. … We raised $3 million for our political action committee. That’s more money than either of the unions have in their political action committees.

Edelman readily admits to buying off legislators in order to get a venture capitalist’s (Bruce Rauner) ideas enacted in Illinois. Edelman continues:

So in the intervening time, Rahm Emanuel was elected mayor … and he strongly supports our proposal. Jim [apparently Crown] … talked about the talking point that we made up and he [Emanuel] repeated about a thousand times, probably, on the campaign trail about the Houston kids going to school four years more than the Chicago kids.

Dividing schools and taking away the rights of teachers only disenfranchises students. It takes away the person they interact with the most outside of their own parents! The steady increase in charter schools (who can pick their students) has further depleted resources in deteriorating public school buildings. Politicians want to listen to campaign contributors and lobbyists, instead of investing and trying to improve upon what is already in existence.

Change.org says they do not take any official position and only asks that the organizations are ethical in their practices and policies. Edelman’s blunt admissions show that Stand for Children is anything but ethical.

Stand and other organizations want to promote an education agenda that follows the same ideals of Michelle Rhee and her tenure in D.C. Her success though, falls short of her claims. The achievement gaps she left in D.C. point to failures of her leadership and ideology, not successful reforms.

For Change.org to promote and accept money from organizations like Stand for Children and StudentsFirst flies in the face of it’s own mission statement. The mere presence of these petitions deceives progressives and should be taken down. Sign the petition to stop these kinds of petitions! Yes, a little meta but it does make a difference.

*Full disclosure – I write as a freelancer for Care2.com’s Causes & News site. I have petitioned for the company to drop StudentsFirst and engaged internally my frustrations with their promotion of Rhee’s organization as well.