Huck/Konopacki Labor Cartoons |
The Chicago Teachers
Union (CTU) House of Delegates voted Sunday to reject the latest contract
proposal and continue their strike, in a challenge to both the leadership of
the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and the leadership of their own union, who had
negotiated the tentative agreement.
The
leadership of CTU is seen by many as a progressive, fighting leadership,
willing to go toe to toe with their powerful parent organization, the American
Federation of Teachers (AFT), led by Randi Weingarten, as well as powerful
Democratic Party leaders like Rahm Emanuel and even President Obama. Indeed,
the CTU leadership challenged all of these individuals with their initial
rejection of the use of student test scores to evaluate teachers.
Yet their
most recent compromise tentative contract agreement with CPS sold their members
out by permitting student test data to account for as much as 30% of teachers’
evaluations, the WSWS reported today. Any use of student
test data is unacceptable, even as little as 1%, because student test data is
an unreliable and inconsistent proxy for teacher ability. It can lead to false
positives and false negatives, and result in good teachers getting bad reviews
and possibly even laid off as a result.
The
tentative agreement also gives principals considerable discretion over hiring,
eviscerating recall rights for recently laid off teachers, while also slashing
layoff benefits in half. (The details of agreement were released Sunday
evening).
Bargaining
teams and unions often justify compromises with bosses or legislators that harm
former or future employees, arguing that their role is to protect the interests
of their existing dues-paying members. Not only does this strategy lack
compassion, it is also stupid since it undermines the union’s own power. Thousands
more Chicago teachers will be laid off in the next five years under the city’s
plan to shut down up to 120 schools, resulting in fewer union members. Of those
who get rehired by one of the 60 new privately-run charter schools slated to
open in that time, most, if not all, will lose union representation.
In an
indication of just how far the CTU leadership is willing to go to end the
strike and make peace with the bosses, CTU President Karen Lewis plans to force
through another vote on the same tentative agreement this Tuesday, without
engaging in any further negotiations with CPS. This implies that she intends to
ignore the delegates’ concerns and criticisms of the tentative agreement and
pressure them to vote against their members’ own interests. She is counting on
mounting criticism by the press and the threat of fines and jail to coerce
delegates into accepting a bad deal.
Mayor Emanuel
responded to the rejection vote by threatening court action against the teachers.
According to the WSWS, he said he would “not stand by
while the children of Chicago are played as pawns in an internal dispute within
a union,” implying that both CPS and the union leadership are the only
reasonable parties in the dispute, while the House of Delegates and general
membership are crazy for rejecting the tentative agreement. His threat to
obtain a court injunction against the teachers suggests that he has lost faith
in CTU President Karen Lewis’ ability to keep her members in line.
Emanuel has
called the strike illegal (teachers in Illinois can strike on wage issues, but
not evaluations) and a threat to the safety of children. This latter argument
is particularly cynical considering the district has done little to repair
dilapidated facilities and broken air conditioning or to reduce class sizes to
a safe and healthy level. He has overseen and encouraged school closures that
have only exacerbated staffing and class size problems, thus jeopardizing the
safety of children.
His argument
that the strike is illegal is only partly true. They are striking over wages, and they happen to be unwilling to make
any compromises on that issue as long as the district plays hardball on other
working conditions and safety matters.
The issue of
the strike’s legality has much broader significance. The ruling class can take
away workers’ rights any time they think they can get away with it, as they did
in Wisconsin and continue to attempt throughout the nation. Workers’ power lies
entirely in their ability to withhold their labor, not in making alliances and
compromises with politicians, particularly considering that the politicians are
members of the ruling class and have far more in common with other wealthy
members of the ruling elite than they do with workers.
Not long
ago, unions had no legal standing and any strike could be declared illegal.
Workers were often imprisoned, beaten or killed for participating in strikes,
yet they continued to use this tactic and win improvements in working
conditions. Workers today have the choice to disobey unjust laws and resist
oppressive demands by their bosses or continue to see their wages and working
conditions deteriorate.
Unions today,
however, have a great distaste for strikes and the risks they entail. There
have been very few large teacher strikes in the last few decades. The CTU
strike is unique in this respect. Still, the CTU leadership has an interest in
ending the strike quickly. The leaders do not want to spend time in jail or
receive fines or lose their status and influence. They do not want to challenge
unjust laws or corporate giveaways or the district’s “right” to shut down
schools and give them away to private charter school operators, even if these
undermine the union’s power in the long term. Furthermore, they do not want to
burn their bridges with their allies in the Democratic Party or their parent
organization, the AFT, even if that means accepting less power as a result of
privatization and layoffs.
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