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Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
National
Alice Yin, Marie Fazio, Jessica Villagomez, Hannah Leone, Gregory Pratt, Robert McCoppin and John Byrne

Chicago teacher walkout continues as union delegates emerge without a deal

CHICAGO _ The Chicago teachers strike is headed into a 10th school day after union delegates emerged late Tuesday without any announcement of a contract deal, leading Chicago Public Schools officials to cancel classes again for Wednesday.

Chicago Teachers Union officials indicated there's a possibility of a tentative agreement to emerge as early as Wednesday morning. President Jesse Sharkey called that "possible" but added, "we haven't settled everything."

Union leaders also said they don't want to pass up an opportunity to lock in historic provisions for improving conditions in schools.

"You don't go on strike this many days to say, 'I wish I would have,' " said CTU Vice President Stacy Davis Gates.

Speaking of the union's demands for more restorative justice coordinators in the schools in struggling neighborhoods, Davis Gates said: "Because it is that important, because it is the moment, let's do it right."

The news came despite an apparent push by both sides Tuesday to reach an agreement that could end the walkout and put about 300,000 CPS students and 25,000 teachers back in school for the first time since Oct. 16.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot spent about three hours Tuesday afternoon meeting at City Hall with Sharkey and Davis Gates and presented an enhanced offer that met additional _ but not all _ union demands.

But following the meeting, Lightfoot said the union was holding out for things the city simply could not agree to, like paid teacher prep time that would reduce the amount of instructional time for children.

"What's prolonging the strike is the union's insistence on a shorter school day or school year and their insistence that I agree to support their political agenda," Lightfoot said.

And she complained that Davis Gates and Sharkey left without offering any commitments.

The union in turn blasted Lightfoot and CPS CEO Janice Jackson over a robocall that it said went out to parents indicating officials would wait until after a union House of Delegates meeting Tuesday evening to make a decision about whether classes would be canceled again Wednesday.

The union said Lightfoot and Jackson were "toying with" families by not giving them enough time to plan for Wednesday, by suggesting it was the union's decision and by hinting that the nearly two-week walkout could be coming to an end.

Speculation arose earlier that a tentative deal might be near when the teachers union called the meeting of its House of Delegates.

But the union quickly tamped that down, repeatedly saying throughout the evening that there was no deal in place.

That proved to be the case after the delegates emerged from the meeting that lasted about 2 { hours. The delegates could meet again Wednesday after seeking further feedback from rank-and-file members about where negotiations stand.

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