Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom In Chicago
With regards to the CTU crisis:
I guess I'm not sure I understand all the ins and outs of this problem. . . as a pedestrian who doesn't follow the details bear with me when I ask: why - if we've got a shrinking city population with school enrollment down - do I keep hearing a narrative that we've got a problem with class sizes being too large?
And another dumb question. . . why - if Chicago teachers are among the highest paid in the country - are they asking for more money?
And finally - if my ignorance hasn't already been made utterly apparent. . . where does the CTU think the money is going to come from?
Those are questions that seem to nag at me when the news cycle continues to give the CTU and the peace protesters so much airtime. . .
. . .
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I think it's the things that are unsaid in the contract that tell the real story.
--There's a charter school moratorium but not a school closure moratorium.
--Classroom sizes are capped at 28-32, but only a few North and Southwest side schools are actually overcrowded while South side schools are half-empty. In a school district with ranked choice.
--Nurses, ect. being added but only in limited numbers.
--On top of that, current birth rates show the eligible student population dropping by at least 30%.
In other words, the CTU union leaders have knowingly left the door wide open for school closures either by force or natural attrition when the financial squeeze really hits. But they've done so in a way that they can still protest CPS when the time comes.