It’s
a delicious irony for teachers unions that Rauner College Prep—a
Chicago charter school named after Bruce Rauner, Illinois’
virulently anti-union governor—may soon have a union.
On
March 3, the Chicago Association of Charter Teachers and Staff (ACTS)
announced an organizing drive at the Noble Network of Charter
Schools, which has 18 campuses across Chicago, including Rauner
College Prep. If the campaign is successful, Noble will become the
nation’s largest unionized charter network. The addition of Noble’s
800 teachers and staff to its ranks would also give ACTS, a local of
the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), an impressive density in
Chicago’s charter market—the union says it would represent as
many as 40 percent of charter teachers in Chicago. About 10 percent
of charter teachers nationwide are unionized, according to the
pro-charter Center for Education Reform.
The
Chicago Teachers Union, a sister local to ACTS, has been a bright
spot in a bleak labor landscape. But traditional public school
educators aren’t the only ones on the move. Chicago is also at the
epicenter of a nationwide push to unionize charter schools. The AFT
says it now has 7,000 members across charter schools in 15 states
such as New York and California, where large organizing drives are
also gaining stream. More than 1,000 of the union’s charter members
are in Chicago.
ACTS
hopes to increase charter teachers’ pay and benefits (according to
data obtained by Catalyst, a
Chicago education publication, full-time Noble teachers make about
$60,000 a year including bonuses and stipends; CPS teachers make
$74,000), increase teacher retention and wrest control away from
“unaccountable” charter management. In doing so, the union may
eliminate corporate reformers’ incentives for pushing charters in
the first place.
The
growth of charter schools during the past decade has gone
hand-in-hand with the dismantling of public education. In the 2015–16
school year, nearly 3 million students—up 250,000 from the prior
year—attended more than 6,800 charters across 42 states, according
to the pro-charter National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. In
Chicago, charters have spread rapidly at the same time traditional
public schools have been shuttered. The city infamously closed 49
schools in one fell swoop in 2013 and closed about 100 in the decade
before that. At the same time, new charter schools have continued to
open, totaling 130 today. The schools are privately run but operate
almost entirely on public dollars.
Charter
boosters say the model provides school administrators the freedom to
innovate. In a statement responding to the Noble union drive,
Superintendent Michael Milkie said that the charter network would
“respect the rights of individuals to organize or not organize.”
However, he warned that “a restrictive union contract could
eliminate the curriculum and flexibility we have to best serve our
students’ needs.”
Charter
critics, meanwhile, say that this so-called flexibility stems from
the absence of worker protections. Unionized teachers, like all union
workers, negotiate the terms of their employment; non-union teachers
work at the whim of their employers.” Likewise, while
“accountability” is a watchword for charter operators who say
that they aren’t beholden to anything other than student outcomes,
ACTS President Chris Baehrend says this couldn’t be further from
the truth.
“The
only accountability charters have is when we form unions in them,”
says Baehrend. Before then, “you find it was a whole bunch of crony
family members and friends” in leadership positions or receiving
contracts at charters.
A
prime example is Chicago’s large and influential UNO Charter School
Network, whose 16 schools serve more than 8,000 students. Before
opening its first charter in 1998, UNO’s roots were in Saul
Alinsky-style organizing in the city’s Latino neighborhoods, and
the organization quickly positioned itself as a power player in
Chicago politics. But a series of investigations by Chicago
Sun-Times reporter
Dan Mihalopoulos in February 2013 found that UNO had engaged in major
ethics violations, including handing out large contracts for services
to family members of the network’s higher-ups. After several
government investigations, millions in public funding were pulled
from the network, and UNO CEO Juan Rangel was forced to step down in
disgrace.
Up
against the ropes, UNO leadership proposed a neutrality agreement,
and teachers quickly unionized. Several other leaders were forced to
resign, and the school cleaned up some of its most egregious
practices.
Likewise,
teachers at the ASPIRA charter network, who joined Chicago ACTS in
2010, say that one of their biggest contentions with management was
basic budget transparency.
“ASPIRA
has been deteriorating for the last five years,” says Marines
Martinez, a teacher at ASPIRA and acting head of the union’s
council of educators, citing a lack of basic maintenance in
classrooms. “That left us to wonder: Where is the money going?”
Baehrend
says the union helps ensure that more charter resources go to
classrooms, rather than administration. Exact figures on just how
much administrators earn are difficult to come by. While the City of
Chicago releases names and salaries for all other city employees,
including teachers, it does not do so for charter teachers, and most
charter networks refuse to provide them.
To
achieve its aims, Chicago ACTS has not shied away from workplace
militancy. In the last six months, the union has threatened to strike
three times when contract negotiations reached a standstill. While
all three strikes were ultimately averted, that’s still quite a
change from 2012 when, days before the Chicago Teachers Union strike,
then-UNO CEO Juan Rangel bragged about his school staying open while
public schools shut down. The rapid turn in Rangel’s fortunes, just
four years later, probably provided a bit of schauden-freude for
teacher unionists. But more importantly, charter organizing and ACTS’
willingness to strike mean that charter teachers cannot be pitted
against their counterparts in traditional public schools.
“[We
want] a future in which every charter school in Chicago is
unionized,” says Baehrend. “That’s a win for both of our
locals. No longer will charters be used to undercut the labor of CTU
members.”
>> The article above was written by Micah Uetricht, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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