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Brandon Johnson Gives Away the Store to the Chicago Teachers Union
Posted on 10/8/24 at 11:57 am
Posted on 10/8/24 at 11:57 am
wow
Brandon Johnson Gives Away the Store to the Chicago Teachers Union
The city of Chicago’s public-school system has been in a state of educational collapse for decades now; it’s accumulating debts outstripped only by the increasing amounts of money poured into the system and the plummeting test scores of its students. The responsibility for this disaster can be spread around but primarily lies — far more so than with any elected politicians in the city — with the Chicago Teachers Union, America’s most infamously powerful and radical public-sector union, “Local #1” for Randi Weingarten’s national American Federation of Teachers. And on Friday afternoon, it became grimly clear what happens when a union as powerful as the CTU manages to get one of its own lobbyists elected mayor.
The CTU has been preparing for years to renegotiate its contract with the city, and as part of the preparations, last year it funded the mayoral campaign of one of its own paid lobbyists and organizers, Cook County commissioner Brandon Johnson. Johnson won the narrowest victory in Chicago history and has proceeded to govern strictly for the union’s benefit. The CTU’s demands contemplate, among other things, Chicago Public Schools assuming $150 million of pension-debt obligations for non-teachers in the CPS system — at a time when the system already has an unprecedented half-billion-dollar budget shortfall. When Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez refused to sign off on a $300 million high-interest loan that the CTU (and Mayor Johnson) wanted him to take out to fund these new demands, Johnson began publicly pressuring his own school-board members to fire him.
Instead, the entire seven-person membership of the city’s Board of Education — personally selected by Johnson when he began his term in office — resigned as a group rather than accede to the unacceptable pressure. Johnson announced a replacement slate of school-board appointees on Monday morning, seven people presumably selected for their greater responsiveness to the mayor’s demands. The new board is almost certain to vote to fire Martinez, allowing Johnson to replace him with an appointee who will rubber-stamp the union’s demands. The Chicago Teachers Union looks likely to win everything it is asking for, which is precisely why its members elected one of their own as mayor.
LINK
Brandon Johnson Gives Away the Store to the Chicago Teachers Union
The city of Chicago’s public-school system has been in a state of educational collapse for decades now; it’s accumulating debts outstripped only by the increasing amounts of money poured into the system and the plummeting test scores of its students. The responsibility for this disaster can be spread around but primarily lies — far more so than with any elected politicians in the city — with the Chicago Teachers Union, America’s most infamously powerful and radical public-sector union, “Local #1” for Randi Weingarten’s national American Federation of Teachers. And on Friday afternoon, it became grimly clear what happens when a union as powerful as the CTU manages to get one of its own lobbyists elected mayor.
The CTU has been preparing for years to renegotiate its contract with the city, and as part of the preparations, last year it funded the mayoral campaign of one of its own paid lobbyists and organizers, Cook County commissioner Brandon Johnson. Johnson won the narrowest victory in Chicago history and has proceeded to govern strictly for the union’s benefit. The CTU’s demands contemplate, among other things, Chicago Public Schools assuming $150 million of pension-debt obligations for non-teachers in the CPS system — at a time when the system already has an unprecedented half-billion-dollar budget shortfall. When Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez refused to sign off on a $300 million high-interest loan that the CTU (and Mayor Johnson) wanted him to take out to fund these new demands, Johnson began publicly pressuring his own school-board members to fire him.
Instead, the entire seven-person membership of the city’s Board of Education — personally selected by Johnson when he began his term in office — resigned as a group rather than accede to the unacceptable pressure. Johnson announced a replacement slate of school-board appointees on Monday morning, seven people presumably selected for their greater responsiveness to the mayor’s demands. The new board is almost certain to vote to fire Martinez, allowing Johnson to replace him with an appointee who will rubber-stamp the union’s demands. The Chicago Teachers Union looks likely to win everything it is asking for, which is precisely why its members elected one of their own as mayor.
LINK
Posted on 10/8/24 at 11:58 am to djmed
Good. Chicago city schools are a shining beacon on the hill of education. Let’s reward these folks who continue to guide and churn out successful graduates. Well done, Mayor.
Posted on 10/8/24 at 11:59 am to djmed
It will eventually get bailed-out by Federal money. Book it.
Posted on 10/8/24 at 12:03 pm to Tantal
quote:FIFY
It will eventually get bailed-out by American taxpayers money. Book it.
Posted on 10/8/24 at 12:51 pm to TJack
GF is an elementary art teacher with a few years left before retirement
The union is essentially worthless.
I have not seen their union perform any valuable service, And, to a Point, Their health benefits have gone down over the recent years which was about the only reason to become a teacher
The union is essentially worthless.
I have not seen their union perform any valuable service, And, to a Point, Their health benefits have gone down over the recent years which was about the only reason to become a teacher
Posted on 10/8/24 at 1:38 pm to dafif
quote:
is an elementary art teacher with a few years left before retirement
The union is essentially worthless.
In the Northeast and Midwest they are super strong. I assume west coast as well.
Elementary art....not knocking but do we really need these types of positions?
Posted on 10/8/24 at 1:53 pm to djmed
Democrats NEVER learn. No matter how bad Democratic administration after Democratic administration is, they still keep pulling the lever (D).
Posted on 10/8/24 at 2:10 pm to OWLFAN86
quote:
Houston and the fireman same
Not exactly.
Houston mayor has received payment from the firefighters' union over the years to lobby for them, but he's never been a firefighter or in the union himself.
He's never really been anything except a politician since he was elected to a State Rep position at 23 while he was still in college and just... never left. Which is it's own separate issue. For more than 50 years, his entire adult life, the man has only ever been a politician.
Posted on 10/8/24 at 2:38 pm to BHTiger
quote:
Elementary art....not knocking but do we really need these types of positions?
Yes. What we don’t need is one school counselor per every 100 students. Or three assistant principals and an athletic director.
Actual instructors are very needed.
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