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New half-hour Labor Beat video exposes hypocrisy and lies behind the CPS 2012 Hit List

A new video has been released by Chicago’s Labor Beat showing the massive protests against what critics are calling the “2012 Hit List” of schools facing closing, phase out, co-location, or “turnaround.” The lengthy film discusses the entire process taking place during the 2011 – 2012 school year. The URL for the video is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=od0hO0Ai9ww

Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis speaking to the crowd protesting against the turnaround proposed for Marquette Elementary School during the march and rally on the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday (January 16, 2012). Substance photo by Sharon Schmidt.The video, which features Substance News reporter George N. Schmidt narrating the background of the struggle and Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis addressing a march and rally, includes interviews with teachers and students and dramatic footage from the hearings and protests against what people are calling the "2012 Hit List."

Shown among the video footage are interviews with the "Rent A Protesters" who showed up at most of the hearings after having been paid through churches subsidized, in the opinion of critics, by Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

The video pivots back and forth from the Martin Luther King holiday march at Marquette Elementary School to descriptions of the history and context of how the current situation developed. A lengthy description by one Marquette teacher goes over how the Chicago Board of Education, under four “Chief Executive Officers” since mayoral control began in 1995, has sabotaged Marquette Elementary. But as the video shows, the sabotage of Marquette was taking place at all of the schools on the 2012 Hit List during the same time, and the slander against the teachers and people of Marquette and the other nine schools continues, as CPS and Chicago's mayor try to label the schools as "failing schools" — rather than the society as a failing society which leaves millions of children in dire poverty (and in many cases serious danger).

One of the aspects of the hypocrisy of Chicago's latest attack on the city's public schools comes out as parents, students and teachers from the schools constantly remind the hearing officers and the public of the danger the students will face when the schools face changes. For the schools that are slated to "close" (in one form or another) that danger will be in forcing those children to cross communities to get to their new schools. For the schools facing "turnaround", the danger comes because by replacing teachers and other staff who know the communities with outsiders (supposedly trained in superior methods of teaching), the schools are left vulnerable to the kinds of drug gang problems that were often kept at bay by the flimsiest protections.

Although many people speak about the dangers facing the children, the citywide summary is provided by Substance reporter George Schmidt, who served as Director of Security and Safety at the Chicago Teachers Union from 2002 through 2004. Schmidt's job was to develop programs to keep the city's drug gangs at bay around the city's public schools. He discusses how the city covers up the fact that it has one of the most serious drug gang problems in the USA, noting that parts of the real Chicago are like scenes out of the fictional HBO movie "The Wire."

Among the many witnesses warning against the closing of the schools and the implementation of the 2012 Hit List are Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis and a number of prominent political leaders. In fact, one of the signal facts of the current debate is that not one political leader — from local aldermen to Congressmen — had spoken in support of the 2012 Hit List, while dozens have spoken out against Mayor Rahm Emanuel's plans.

The protests that are featured are against all of the schools on the 2012 Hit List, those slated for closing and those facing "turnaround."

The Labor Beat introduction to the video states:

“During January and February of 2012 the Chicago Public Schools, pressured by recent state law to do so, held open hearings on the question of whether to close or turnaround targeted schools in minority and low-income areas of the city. But, as George Schmidt (Substancenews.net) points out, 'the hearings are basically show trials...in a way [they] are a cruel joke played upon the people from the community.'

“Adding to the fact that CPS has already secretly made their decisions before the 'hearings', another underhanded scheme has been exposed. Paid 'protesters' were bussed in to support the school board's view that the schools should be closed or turned around.

“The rent-a-protester ploy was originally unearthed by Substancenews.net in September of 2011, and then in January, 2012 it was picked up by Chicago's corporate media, as the scandal could no longer be ignored. We present dramatic footage exposing the rent-a-protesters, along with scenes from the hearings and demonstrations defending public education.

"Interviews and speeches include: George Schmidt, reporter for Substancenews.net; Karen Lewis, President of Chicago Teachers Union; Marcy Hardaloupas, teacher at Marquette School; Chris Beauford, Generation Y/Southwest Youth Collaborative Center for Change; Katrina Richard, teacher at Dyett H.S.; Rico Gutstein, Prof. in Curriculum and Instruction at University of Illinois-Chicago; Martin Ritter, organizer, Chicago Teachers Union; Mark Carter, community activist. "

[Length - 26:15. Produced by Labor Beat. Labor Beat is a CAN TV Community Partner. Labor Beat is a non-profit 501(c)(3) member of IBEW 1220. Views are those of the producer Labor Beat. For info: mail@laborbeat.org, www.laborbeat.org. 312-226-3330. For other Labor Beat videos, visit YouTube and search "Labor Beat". On Chicago CAN TV Channel 19, Thursdays 9:30 pm; Fridays 4:30 pm. Labor Beat has regular cable slots in Chicago, Evanston, Rockford, Urbana, IL; Philadelphia, PA; Princeton, NJ; and Rochester, NY. For more detailed information, send us a request at mail@laborbeat.org…”]



Comments:

February 6, 2012 at 11:40 AM

By: Bob Busch

Today I am 65 years old...

Senior

I am officially an old man today because it’s my 65th birthday — 41 and ½ years of which I spent teaching on the South side of Chicago. CVS, Bowen, Simeon and finally Bogan, after student teaching at Harper. Allow me to trip down memory lane for a minute.

CVS was a man's playhouse in 1969 the Navy left so much there it was amazing just wandering in the shops or through the hangers but I got bumped and sent to Bowen. That school was where I first saw the realChicago a mixture of rich poor black white and brown students. But I was an FTB and was assigned to my home for 25 years Simeon.

The "Warehouse" was such an amazing place that I hope somebody makes a movie about it. Sometimes I look at the pictures I took there in 1972 and 1976. They still get me enraged — how we ever made a school in that dump is hard to explain. It was the people who taught there that created the miracle on 83rd St.

We all paid the price. So many teachers died of cancer that many of us refused to go into the counseling office where they worked. It was a thumping place loud strong loving and tough. The late Ben Wilson said it best just before he died: “The staff here don’t let things get out of hand.” When he got murdered outside of school by the parking lot gate, we all felt we let him down. That day was the hardest I ever spent as a teacher. Somehow we saved a school that day.

In 1995 I was still trying to get over the horrible death of another counselor from breast cancer when. A position opened up at Bogan. Leaving Simeon, I actually cried as I pulled out of Simeon for the last time but nobody saw me.

Bogan was just a job, some of the clouted faculty had not run yet when I arrived. But the principal was the best I ever worked for, and I worked for sixteen. The school still ran smoothly and I was introduced to another group of kids — the Spanish. Bogan was a real rainbow. At first it was like starting over. For 26 years, I never saw a White, Asian, or Spanish kid. It was the way it should be.

In short order, several teachers from the Ghetto dispelled any notion of The Clouted that when "They" came the school would go to hell. Far from hell, we were in educational heaven. I won’t comment on how Bogan has changed. In the last five years, but I actually wonder if it isn’t being set up for failure.

Finally I wonder if I should have followed old Gus and become a carpender.

February 7, 2012 at 2:32 PM

By: Matt Walsh

Bob Busch

Bob, its great to see you still active. I miss our talks on the loading docks at Bogan during your late and my early years. Happy belated 65th birthday, I hope I can make it as long as you did and care as much about my students as I remember you caring about the students at Bogan. Take care.

February 7, 2012 at 6:44 PM

By: Bob Busch

Greeting old friends

Hi Mat... I miss you and Sue and Trent and Rich and the other smokers.

Bob

February 15, 2012 at 3:03 PM

By: ken budz

Bob Busch's fault...

It's all your fault, Bob. i became a librarian because of you. Now i'm back in the classroom as an English teacher. It's rough and rewarding at Gage Park. I hope u keep plugging on for a long while. I just got double bypass in September and am doing ok.

February 15, 2012 at 9:58 PM

By: Bob Busch

Smoking

Actually I quit smoking and never really was a drinker but thank you for the kind words.

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