CHICAGO (Reuters) - The Chicago Teachers Union said on Thursday a deal was near to end a four-day strike in the nation's third-largest school district over education reforms sought by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, but a deal will not be reached in time to reopen schools on Friday.
"We are optimistic, but we are still hammering things out. Schools will not open Friday," union president Karen Lewis said in a statement on Thursday.
Lewis said the union House of Delegates will meet at 2 p.m. local time Friday (3 p.m. EDT) to provide an update on the talks. Lewis has said she would need the approval of that body to seal a deal.
The strike by 29,000 public school teachers and support staff, affecting 350,000 elementary and high school students, is the biggest strike in the United States this year.
Lewis, who called Emanuel a "bully" and "liar" before leading teachers on their first strike in 25 years, struck a conciliatory tone after late-night talks on Wednesday.
Barbara Byrd-Bennett, chief education adviser for Chicago Public Schools, told reporters on Thursday: "Given what happened last night, and the progress last night and early this morning with our team ... there's no way - unless we get, like, really nutsy - that we could not have an agreement."
As for schools reopening on Monday, Lewis said: "I'm praying, praying, praying - I'm on my knees - for that, please, yes, I'm hoping for Monday."
COMPROMISE ON TESTING
Lewis said there was progress on the two most vexing issues - using student test scores to evaluate teachers and giving more authority to local principals to hire teachers.
The union is concerned that more than a quarter of its membership could be fired because the teachers work in poor neighborhoods where students perform badly on standardized tests, which Emanuel wants to use to evaluate teachers.
Emanuel's negotiators released a copy of their latest compromise offer teacher evaluations. The mayor's proposal would phase in the new teacher evaluation system over five years and give no more than 20 percent weight to standardized tests. Classroom observations and a survey of students would also be used to evaluate teachers.
Other unresolved issues include the role of principals in hiring teachers and what happens when a school closes and teachers face layoffs.
The union fears Emanuel plans to close scores of schools, putting unionized teachers out of work. In recent years, about 100 public schools have been closed, with officials usually citing low enrollment. At the same time, a similar number of publicly funded, non-union charter schools have opened.
About 52,000 students enrolled at those schools have not been affected by the strike this week.
The strike in Barack Obama's home city has put the U.S. president in a tough spot. Emanuel is a former top aide to Obama and the president is counting on labor unions to drum up support for his re-election on November 6.
Obama's own Education Department has championed some of the reforms Emanuel is seeking, and a win for the ambitious Chicago mayor would add momentum to the national school reform movement.
Both sides agree Chicago schools need fixing. Chicago students consistently perform poorly on standardized math and reading tests. About 60 percent of high school students graduate, compared with 75 percent nationwide and more than 90 percent in some affluent Chicago suburban schools.
The fight does not appear to center on wages, with the school district offering an average 16 percent increase over four years and some benefit improvements. Chicago schools already have a projected $665 million budget gap for the year that began in July, a key factor driving Emanuel's reforms.
More than 80 percent of Chicago public school students qualify for free school lunches because they come from low-income households.
"Teachers feel beaten down throughout the country," said Randi Weingarten, national president of the union including the Chicago teachers. "They feel beaten down because of austerity, because of test- rather than teacher-driven policies, because of a spike in poverty, because of the demand on them to do more with less - and then blame them when that doesn't work out."
"That's what's created all the frustration that you hear on the picket line," she said.
(Additional reporting by James Kelleher, Nick Carey and Greg McCune; Writing by Peter Bohan; Editing by Xavier Briand and Stacey Joyce)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/both-sides-dug-chicago-teachers-strike-drags-011829083.html
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