Chicago schools, union continue talks over virus safety plan
Negotiations between Chicago leaders and the teachers’ union over COVID-19 safety protocols have stretched into Wednesday evening, days after city officials threatened a lockout and teachers entertained a strike
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Negotiations between Chicago Public Schools and the teachers' union over COVID-19 safety protocols stretched into Wednesday evening, days after district officials threatened a lockout and teachers entertained a strike.
The fight to reopen city schools, which went remote last March, has brewed for months. The nation's third-largest district pitched a gradual return for pre-K to 8th grade with no definitive plans for high school. But the Chicago Teachers Union said the district's safety plan falls short.
Earlier in the week, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said teachers who didn't report for duty would be locked out of online teaching systems, as was the case for pre-K and special education teachers who defied orders last month. The 25,000-member union countered by saying it would picket if teachers were booted out. But district officials scrapped the threat and called “cooling off period," extending remote learning through Wednesday.
The status of Thursday classes, the end of the quarter, was unclear. Students have Friday off.
“Discussions continue between CPS and CTU. We will provide an update as quickly as possible," read a statement Wednesday from Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the district's CEO Janice Jackson.
Union spokeswoman Chris Geovanis declined comment, saying the union would have an update Thursday.
Among the issues are vaccinations, allowing educators to continue remote instruction if they have a valid excuse and different metrics to gauge infections.
Students in K-8 were supposed to return earlier this week for two days a week of in-person instruction. Thousands of pre-K and special education students started last month, but switched back amid the escalating fight with the union.
District officials argue remote learning isn't working well for all, particularly many Black and Latino students who are the majority of the roughly 340,000-student district.
The district has spent roughly $100 million on its safety plan, including purchasing air purifiers, deep cleaning schools and offering COVID-19 testing for teachers.
But the union, which last went on strike in 2019, says infections continue and the safest option is online learning. They also argue few students are interested in returning. Less than 20% of pre-K and special education students eligible to return to class last month, or about 3,200 of 17,000, attended.
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— Follow Sophia Tareen on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sophiatareen.
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