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Chicago teachers’ strike enters 10th school day

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CHICAGO: A teachers’ strike in Chicago moved into the 10th school day on Wednesday, as the teachers’ union and district worked to resolve a contract deadlock over class sizes, support staff levels and pay at the bargaining table.


The strike is the second-longest in a wave of teachers’ strikes that played out across West Virginia, Oklahoma, Arizona and California over the past few years, topped only by a three-week strike in June in Union City, California.


Classes will not be held as the teachers remain on strike, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) said late on Tuesday, hours after the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) met school officials to discuss negotiations, only to continue the stalemate.


“It’s not too late,” CTU president Emerita Karen Lewis said in a statement, imploring Mayor Lori Lightfoot to make a deal.


“Our members have resolve and will not relent when it comes to the families they serve,” she warned Lightfoot, for whom the strike represents the first major political test since election in April.


Neither Lightfoot nor the district issued a statement, apart from announcing that Wednesday’s classes were cancelled.


The third-largest school district in the United States has cancelled classes for its 300,000 students every school day since the union went on strike on Oct 17, after contract talks failed to yield agreement.


The union, which represents 25,000 teachers who have been without a contract since July 1, voted this month to go on strike if a deal was not reached.


The 825 members of the union’s House of Delegates met behind closed doors on Tuesday for the first time since walking off the job.


As in the earlier walkouts, Chicago teachers had pushed for more money to ease overcrowded classrooms and add nurses, social workers and teaching aides, besides seeking a wage increase. — Reuters


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