Showing posts with label Chicago Teachers Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Teachers Union. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Illinois GOP Rep.: Let Chicago Public Schools Go Bankrupt

A member of the Illinois General Assembly has proposed a bill that would allow Chicago’s deeply troubled public school system to solve its massive projected budget deficit of $1.1 billion by declaring bankruptcy.
The House member is Ron Sandack, a Republican from the pleasant Chicago suburb of Downers Grove, according to WLS-TV.
“This knee jerk reaction to always say ‘let’s just raise taxes,” Sandack told the ABC affiliate. “That’s where a bankruptcy can actually be helpful.”
Sandack’s matter-of-fact recommendation comes as Chicago Public Schools, the third-largest taxpayer-funded school system in the nation, faces a grave and immediate financial crisis.
The bulk of the $1.1 billion deficit is a mammoth $634 million pension payment which will come due on June 30.
Chicago Public Schools doesn’t have enough money to make the payment. It also has no reserve fund.
Sandack’s legislation would allow Chicago Public Schools and other cash-strapped school districts across Illinois to seek Chapter Nine bankruptcy protection. Federal bankruptcy judges could then order debt restructuring, which could include partial or full release from pension obligations.
“We can’t tax our way out of this problem,” Sandack told WLS. “We need additional, broader relief.”
“Some restructuring of that obligation I believe can occur at the federal level under a Chapter Nine construct,” the GOP state congressman added.
Chicago’s powerful teachers union opposes Sandack’s bill.

Monday, September 17, 2012

VIDEO: Teachers’ Unions in Their Own Words


You may have heard: Chicago teachers are on strike.
Some facts you may not have seen (unless, of course, you’ve been reading the Foundry): the average Chicago teacher makes $71,000 a year before benefits. That’s $24,000 more than the average Chicago resident, and second only to New York City in teachers’ salaries.
Yet unions are demanding a hefty raise – though they’ve backed down from their initial demand for a 30 percent pay hike. And this is in a city where only 15 percent of fourth graders are proficient in reading, and only 56 percent actually graduate from high school.
So what is the teachers’ strike about, exactly? In a new Heritage video, we present some statements from the Chicago Teachers Union and other teachers’ unions about what exactly their goals are. Are they on strike for the students? For the schools? For themselves? You might be surprised.
Via: The Foundry

Popular Posts