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CTU challenges latest Hit List of 129 schools... 'Hit List of 129 Potential School Closings Creates a 'Hunger Games' Scenario for Chicago Families and Teachers'

[Editor's Note: The following is the press release issued by the Chicago Teachers Union on February 14, 2013 in response to the latest iteration of the CPS list of schools that may be closed because of the CPS fraudulent "underutilization crisis."]

NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Stephanie Gadlin, February 14, 2013 , 312/329-6250, StephanieGadlin@ctulocal1.com. Chicago Public Schools

Above, Chicago Board of Education President David Vitale explains the new "underutilization" plan to a typical Chicago parent. CHICAGO-By releasing its preliminary hit list of 129 neighborhood schools that remain on the block for closure at the end of the 2012-2013 school year and proceeding with a second round of community meetings to garner feedback on how to best manage its manufactured utilization crisis, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) has told Chicagoans that if they want a school to stay open, they will have to fight for it. They will have to beg for resources that should be available to all, and in a sadistic game put forth by CPS where individuals and their lives are mere pawns, parents, children and teachers are pitted against one another in a battle for a basic citizen right-a neighborhood school.

It is, as one local activist put it, much like the post-apocalyptic scenario created in the 2008 novel "The Hunger Games" by author Suzanne Collins.

In the book, boys and girls between the ages of 12 and 18 are chosen by an annual lottery to participate in the Hunger Games, where the participants fight to the death until only one child remains. As the intensity and stakes grow higher in the quest for survival, and some children are seen as appealing for their prowess, it becomes easier for those in power to secure the money and supplies to help them live.

Our public school system creates a similar paradox, where it high stakes test scores that are designed to "prove" that children are worthy of resources, instead of viewing them as one of life's most precious resources.

The 129 neighborhood schools on the CPS hit list include schools that were subject to CPS actions just last year, like Herzl Elementary in North Lawndale, which was a turnaround school and is now in danger of being closed permanently. Herzl families-punished for another year-are forced to muster the energy for a new "Hunger Games" fight for survival, and as the March 31 deadline approaches, time is running out. The actions CPS is considering could have been part of a process that started in January, as mandated by law, which would have provided ample time for a transition, but this is just the latest incident in a decade of failed education reform policies in Chicago.

Chicago Teachers Union delegates have begun training on the new skills that will be required for defense of their schools and the rights of teachers and students. The Chicago Teachers Union again calls for a full moratorium on all school closings and asks that an impact study be created to show a plan for this mass upheaval. We also ask CPS to study the impact of school closings over the last decade and share with the community what the impact has been.

Releasing the number of schools still under consideration is not a plan -- what is CPS' plan for potentially closing more than 100 schools and sending children to receiving schools? Where are the specific safety protocols? Children are rambunctious, and as many of Chicago's elementary school teachers will tell you, violence does not start in high school. Students affected by school closings also lose 3-to-6 months of learning and there is no certainty they will be sent to a higher-performing school. We are concerned about the children impacted by these closings-some of whom have been through this process multiple times-and the subsequent effect on their communities.

Much like "The Hunger Games," CPS families have not been given a choice; they've only provided a chance. Our children, their families and teachers deserve better. They deserve a guarantee.

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The Chicago Teachers Union represents 30,000 teachers and educational support personnel working in the Chicago Public Schools and, by extension, the students and families they serve. CTU, an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers and the Illinois Federation of Teachers, is the third largest teachers local in the country and the largest local union in Illinois. For more information visit CTU's website at www.ctunet.com

SG:oteg-743-tr



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