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Ron Huberman
Quick Hit
by Micah Maidenberg
4:27pm
Thu Mar 17, 2011

School Districts Cut Teachers, Art, And Other Programs To Make Ends Meet

The way the federal government measures unemployment means that when jobless people stop looking for work they are no longer counted as unemployed, sending the official unemployment rate artificially lower at times.

A situation the Sun-Times highlights today is sort of like that. The paper reports that while the number of school districts on the Illinois State Board of Education's "financial watchlist" dropped from 39 to 32 between the previous school year and the current one, the decline came at a steep cost. In all, more than 2,600 teaching jobs in Illinois were cut as of last September, an increase over the 1,438 slashed by September 2009. Programs that parents demand went on the chopping block too. "There’s been a lot of reductions in force across the state. Districts have cut programs, They’ve cut music and art and lots of extras, like reading coaches," an education board spokeswoman told the paper. A full 66 percent of school districts reported teacher layoffs at the start of the current school year, the state education board says.

The Reader's Ben Joravsky, meanwhile, notes in a new piece that under ex-CEO Ron Huberman, Chicago Public Schools sent 1,289 teachers packing last summer, a move the Chicago Teachers Union is battling in federal court. The district has hired all but 554 of the teachers back, a group that includes instructors who had "national board certification, one of the most prestigious designations in education, and had been honored by Mayor Daley and the [education board]." Of the nearly 1,300 teachers Huberman fired, "only 40 of the 1,300 or so teachers fired in the purge had less than a satisfactory rating, according to CPS records," Joravsky writes.

PI Original
by Micah Maidenberg
3:06pm
Fri Nov 5, 2010

CTU: An Educator, Not An Executive, Needed Atop CPS

CPS chief Ron Huberman is leaving. So is Chicago Mayor Richard Daley. A new administration is aggressively positioning the teachers' union. What does it all mean for the next leader of the nation's third-largest school district?

Quick Hit
by Adam Doster
2:36pm
Wed Oct 20, 2010

Congressmen Enter CTU Layoff Dispute

The dispute between the Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union over teacher firings took another turn yesterday. The saga began in June when the Chicago Board of Education unanimously adopted a resolution giving CPS Schools Chief Ron Huberman emergency powers to raise class sizes and lay-off teachers he deemed unnecessary, thereby sidestepping CTU's collective bargaining agreement. Huberman followed through on his mandate, administering hundreds of pink slips this summer. (Some of those jobs had been creatively "redefined," as the Reader has reported.) Two weeks ago, a federal judge ordered the district to "rescind" the firings of 700 educators who has earned tenure. CPS immediately appealed the decision. Yesterday, another judge ruled that Schools Chief Ron Huberman did not have to comply with the injunction immediately, arguing that CPS shouldn't be forced to rehire any teachers until the appeal had run its course.

CTU President Karen Lewis says her union members want to see action soon. Yesterday, she told Catalyst that says she plans to ask the appeals court to expedite the process. And at a press conference today, Lewis was joined by U.S. Reps. Luis Gutierrez, Danny Davis, and Bobby Rush, all of whom urged the board to use some of the education aid Chicago received from the federal government to rehire teachers this school year. Watch:

Huberman earmarked most the congressional cash to restore the average high school classroom size to 31 students. CTU says $30 million has not yet been appropriated.