CRRNH_FrontPageStory_011922

‘These bruises won’t heal’

Spread the love

CPS kids back in school, but bitterness remains

By Tim Hadac

Teachers who walked off the job in the new year returned last week after the Chicago Teachers Union rank and file voted to accept Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s offer of increased safety measures at schools.

CRRNH FrontPageStory 011922

Before a settlement was announced last week, a number of parents of children who attend Byrne School placed signs at the school’s perimeter, urging teachers to get back in the classroom. –Supplied photo

But it was a divided vote, with just 55.5% in favor, out of 18,620 votes cast—meaning there was a considerable amount of grumbling on the part of teachers returning to public schools in Clearing and Garfield Ridge, as well as across the city.

“This has been a bitter, bruising experience,” said a woman who teaches at a school in the area and who requested that her name be withheld. “The mayor and her team acted disgracefully toward us and did all they could to make us out to be the villains, when all we do, we do for the children. These bruises won’t heal. The bitterness remains.”

The agreement hammered out between CPS and the CTU calls for expanding COVID-19 testing and giving school communities increased control over both. Educators also now have a metric for reverting to remote learning, as well as incentives for increased substitute teachers to address staffing concerns.

The agreement also provides both students and staff with N95 masks, which are recommended as a standard of protection against the highly infectious COVID-19 Omicron variant.

Even before the vote was finalized, school communities had already begun to organize around tracking and protecting against COVID-19 infection in their schools, with a growing number of schools poised to go on pause because of infection rates among staff and students.

“This vote is a clear show of dissatisfaction with the boss,” CTU President Jesse Sharkey said in a statement to his members. “It’s outrageous that teachers, school nurses, counselors and more had to endure a week of being locked out by the mayor just to get a commitment from her bargaining team to provide every student with an N95 mask in a pandemic.

“This agreement covers only a portion of the safety guarantees that every one of our school communities deserve,” he continued. “Put bluntly, we have a boss who does not know how to negotiate, does not know how to hear real concerns and is not willing to respect our rank and file enough to listen to us when we tell her we need more protection.”

Sharkey said the vote to return to classrooms “represents a union’s, and a city’s, frustration with a mayor that has simmered since the beginning of this pandemic. We’ve been fortunate that Governor Pritzker has led responsibly, including an offer of hundreds of thousands of SHIELD tests to the district, that the mayor rejected for weeks. But you deserve more, and the families you serve deserve more, and we will continue fighting for that.”

The mayor and her CPS team said little, except to reiterate their assertion that while the latest data shows the Omicron variant surging among young people, hospitalizations among the young are infrequent. Most kids seem to handle Omicron infection as well as they deal with influenza or the common cold.

Clearing and Garfield Ridge residents had a few thoughts to add.

“Things are bad enough [in CPS] without more learning loss,” said Ali Hussein. “I hear what the union is saying about COVID safety, but they didn’t have to walk off the job like that. Once again, they disrupted the lives of children and families across the city.”

Angie Grasso said her granddaughter “was in tears when she learned she couldn’t return from the break and tell her classmates all about her Christmas adventures. The union broke her heart. That’s all I know.”

Heidi Kormann said she ignored the back to school order and kept her son out of school until Tuesday, Jan. 18—as did several thousand parents participating in the CPS Sick-Out coalition.

“I give our teachers and the union all the credit in the world,” she said. “It took a lot of guts to stand up against the mayor, to stand up for what’s right. As always, they care for our children more than anyone at City Hall does.”

Local News

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Clear-Ridge Reporter and NewsHound February 15, 2023

Spread the love

Spread the love

Curie's Aaliyah Grandberry, shown on the podium after a meet in 2022, is gunning for a state championship this season. Curie High School photo

Area Sports Roundup: Curie’s Grandberry eyes wrestling state title

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer The inaugural IHSA state girls wrestling meet took place last year, with Curie heavyweight Aaliyah Grandberry finishing second at the historic event. She would like to do a just a little bit better this year. Gradberry will shoot for a state championship beginning Friday at Grossinger Motors Arena…

Oak Lawn's girls basketball team won its third straight conference title. Oak Lawn Community High School photo

Hoops Wrap | Oak Lawn girls win third straight conference championship

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer It couldn’t have been scripted much better than this. Two neighborhood rivals, both with 8-4 records in the South Suburban Red, went to battle on Feb. 7 with the girls basketball conference title on the line, and the Spartans earned their third straight Red title by knocking off…

Asael Rubalcava is the first Evergreen Park wrestler to win a sectional championship, which he did Feb. 11 at the IHSA Class 2A Hinsdale South Sectional. Photo by Mike Walsh

Boys Wrestling | Brother Rice and St. Rita each sending four to Champaign

Spread the love

Spread the loveEvergreen Park, Richards and Kennedy grapplers also headed to state By Mike Walsh Correspondent Call it purpose or focus or determination. Whichever word you choose, Brother Rice’s Bobby Conway had it in abundance entering the final match at 126 pounds at the IHSA Class 2A Hinsdale South Sectional on Feb. 11. The sophomore…

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Girls Bowling | Roll-off win sends Stagg to state

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Randy Whalen Correspondent A saying in bowling is that every pin counts. The bowlers from Richards and Stagg would agree with that statement. After six games and more than 1,000 frames bowled over six hours at the Oswego East Sectional, the Bulldogs and Chargers were tied at 5202 pins apiece. In the…

Northwestern wrestler Yahya Thomas, a Mount Carmel alum, won the Midlands title at 149 pounds. Photo courtesy of Northwestern University Athletics

College Notebook | Northwestern’s Yahya Thomas wins Midlands title

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Mike Walsh Correspondent Mount Carmel graduate and Northwestern wrestler Yahya Thomas was chosen the Big Ten’s Wrestler of the Week for January 3. At the 58th Annual Ken Kraft Midlands Championships held at the NOW Arena in Hoffman Estates, Thomas defeated a pair of top-10 opponents, including a 4-3 victory over Kyle…

CRLLlogo_020118

Sign up now, play ball later

Spread the love

Spread the love. . By Joan Hadac Your correspondent in Clearing and Garfield Ridge (708) 496-0265 • joan.hadac@gmail.com . Looking to get your son or daughter off their cellphone screen and into the sunshine? The time is now to sign them up to play baseball or softball with Clear Ridge Little League, one of the best…

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Clear-Ridge Reporter and NewsHound February 8, 2023

Spread the love

Spread the love

Sandburg's competitive cheerleaders perform Saturday in the IHSA finals in Bloomington. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Cheerleading State Finals: Sandburg takes fourth behind conference rivals

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer BLOOMINGTON — Sandburg’s competitive cheerleaders finished fourth in a state finals competition that looked a lot like a SouthWest Suburban Conference meet. At least it did for the Large Team division competition, in which the top five finishers hail from the SWSC. The 2023 state finals were held…

Nazareth's quest for a state championship starts on Tuesday. Nazareth photo

Area Sports Roundup | Nazareth girls clinch conference crown with win over Carmel

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer Nazareth’s girls basketball team is eyeing a Class 3A state championship after finishing second to Carmel a season ago. The Roadrunners whipped the Corsairs, 48-24, Feb. 4 to win the East Suburban Catholic Conference for the second straight year. It marked coach Ed Stritzel’s 400th career victory. Nazareth…

Neighbors

Senate Democrats send $53.1B spending plan to House

Senate Democrats send $53.1B spending plan to House

By JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com Two days after the General Assembly was scheduled to adjourn its spring session, Democrats in the Illinois Senate advanced a $53.1 billion budget to the House Sunday night, where leaders expect it to pass without changes. The fiscal year 2025 spending plan, which came together over a stretch…

Prairie Band Potawatomi land deal clears Senate, will head back to House

Prairie Band Potawatomi land deal clears Senate, will head back to House

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – The Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation is a step closer to acquiring a 1,500-acre state park in DeKalb County, much of which was once part of a reservation that was illegally seized from the tribe in the mid-19 th century. As the Senate worked through its last…

Budget negotiations will extend into next week as House leaves Springfield

Budget negotiations will extend into next week as House leaves Springfield

By JERRY NOWICKI & HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Democrats in the General Assembly will go at least three more days past their self-imposed adjournment deadline after failing to pass a budget bill Saturday, although the spending and revenue framework were made public for the first time. “The House and Senate are…

Maternal health, abortion protection measures advance as session nears end

Maternal health, abortion protection measures advance as session nears end

By ALEX ABBEDUTO Capitol News Illinois abbeduto@capitolnewsillinois.com In the final days of their spring legislative session, Democrats in the General Assembly advanced measures aimed at expanding and protecting aspects of maternal and women’s health care. If signed into law, the measures would expand insurance coverage of pregnancy and postpartum services, maintain abortion as a viable…

Health insurance changes targeting ‘utilization management,’ more will head to governor

Health insurance changes targeting ‘utilization management,’ more will head to governor

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – A package of health insurance reform measures that Gov. JB Pritzker called for at the beginning of the legislative session will soon be headed to his desk for his signature. The Illinois House gave final approval Saturday to a pair of bills that limit the ability…

Capitol Briefs: Republicans sue over law banning legislative candidate slating

Capitol Briefs: Republicans sue over law banning legislative candidate slating

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com One week after Gov. JB Pritzker signed an elections-related measure that his fellow Democrats quickly muscled through the General Assembly, Republicans sued over the new law, alleging the majority party is blocking ballot access to would-be legislative candidates. The law , passed early this month as the legislature’s…

Illinois Supreme Court considers expectation of privacy in hospitals

Illinois Supreme Court considers expectation of privacy in hospitals

By DILPREET RAJU  & ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – While Cortez Turner was in a hospital room being treated for a gunshot wound to his leg in 2016, police took his clothes. Now, the Illinois Supreme Court is weighing whether that action violated Turner’s expectation of privacy under the Fourth Amendment. The…

Capitol Briefs: Measure targets ‘legacy’ admission at public universities

Capitol Briefs: Measure targets ‘legacy’ admission at public universities

By DILPREET RAJU, COLE LONGCOR & ALEX ABBEDUTO Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com Illinois lawmakers missed a self-imposed Friday deadline for passing a budget, but they had approved more than 250 bills this week as of Friday afternoon. Amid the flurry of legislation was a measure prohibiting state universities from admitting students based on familial and…

Illinois could be 19th state to phase out subminimum wage for disabled workers

Illinois could be 19th state to phase out subminimum wage for disabled workers

By ALEX ABBEDUTO Capitol News Illinois abbeduto@capitolnewsillinois.com After years of negotiations and continued opposition from service providers, Illinois appears poised to prohibit employers from using a federal exemption that allows them to pay individuals with disabilities less than the minimum wage. The federal Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 established minimum wage law, but created…

Capitol Briefs: Measure blocks interstate probes of abortion services

Capitol Briefs: Measure blocks interstate probes of abortion services

By PETER HANCOCK & COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Authorities in Illinois would not be allowed to aid another state’s investigation of people coming to Illinois to seek abortions or other reproductive health care under a bill that cleared the General Assembly Thursday. House Bill 5239, which needs only a signature from…