Most Chicago Teachers Would Strike, Vote Indicates
CHICAGO (STMW) -- If a strike vote was held tomorrow, the Chicago Teachers Union would overwhelmingly walk off the job, the union reported Monday in preliminary results of a practice strike vote taken late last week.
Some 97 percent of members voting — with 95 percent participation among the 27,000 CTU members casting ballots in the mock vote last Thursday — said to strike, the Chicago-Sun Times is reporting.
"We are very pleased and not at all surprised by what we've learned," CTU spokeswoman Stephanie Gadlin said in an email Monday. She added that final analysis was still being prepared.
State law was changed in recent years to require a 75 percent threshold to authorize a strike. That same law also requires the parties to go through several more steps before the union could walk out, which could still take months.
In 2012, about 90 percent of members voted to walk off the job in the city's first strike in a generation, led by Karen Lewis who was one of Mayor Rahm Emanuel's fiercest adversaries. Should the ongoing negotiations break down, teachers could hand Emanuel his second strike in four years.
CPS is still begging Springfield for help to close a $480 million gap in its operating budget stemming from years of unpaid pension obligations. That help has not been forthcoming. CEO Forrest Claypool has called on parents to rally their legislators and warned of devastating layoffs by February if the money doesn't come.
CPS did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment. The district has in the past asked the CTU also to join them in Springfield.
The CTU's contract expired on June 30. Negotiations have been ongoing with the assistance of a mediator.
(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2015. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)