Chicago teachers authorize their leaders to call a strike
Chicago teachers have voted to authorize their union leaders to call a strike, setting the stage for a possible work stoppage next month in the nation’s third-largest school district, officials announced Thursday.
Chicago Teachers Union delegates are set to meet next week to set a deadline for a strike, though the earliest one could happen is Oct. 7.
The union and the school district have been negotiating for months over the issues including pay, benefits and staffing shortages. The union argues that years of budget cuts have short-changed schools, resulting in overcrowded classrooms and far fewer nurses and librarians.
After three days of voting, union leaders announced that 94 per cent of the votes counted backed giving leaders the authority to call a strike.