CPS, CTU meet at bargaining table for new contract

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CHICAGO — Negotiators for the Chicago Teachers Union and Chicago Public Schools met Monday to hammer out a new contract for thousands of teachers and staff.

Thad Goodchild, deputy general counsel with the Chicago Teacher’s Union, says they’re looking for transformational change and a more inclusive way to bargain.

“We are looking to start these negotiations from places of agreement,” Goodchild said.

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“And our classroom teachers (and) instructional leaders, they’ll all be inside of bargaining [Tuesday] making presentations,” added CTU president Stacey Davis-Gates.

During their mayoral tenures, Lori Lightfoot and predecessor Rahm Emanuel famously clashed with CTU in bitterly fought negotiations.

“We’re getting things together,” Davis-Gates said.

The first formal bargaining session ended after a two-hour meeting. CTU says a new contract for about 25,000 teachers and staffers lays the foundation for the most ambitious contract proposal ever, with what union president Stacey Gates-Davis calls ‘open bargaining.’

“One of the proposals that we’ve made for open bargaining is green spaces and sustainability in our school communities,” Stacey-Gates said.

CTU pointed to the urgent need to replace lead pipes in older schools, but critics criticized the new arrangement.

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“Johnson should recuse himself from these negotiations,” said Mailee Smith, with the right-leaning Illinois Police Institute, who suggests that Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson can’t be impartial given CTU’s financial support for his campaign.

Smith focused on the nearly $400 million budget deficit projected for the 2024-25 school year.

“These demands show that CTU is completely out of touch with what Chicagoans can afford,” Smith said.

Chicago Public Schools said in a written statement Monday:

“Contract talks between CPS and the Chicago teachers union have been initiated. The district looks forward to productive conversations with our union partners.”

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WGN reached out to Johnson and City Hall for comment and has yet to hear back.

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