Red for Ed Wednesdays

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Red for Ed Wednesdays

MTEA union educators will wear RED this Wednesday to celebrate Tuesday’s School Board victories and every Wednesday following until we see our students and our classrooms fully funded! We will wear red to show our collective solidarity and strength as we organize to win an the resources our students and classrooms need to be successful.

We will fight for the funding we know our students and classrooms deserve and every Wednesday our RED will act as a reminder of our commitment. We will take photos and post on social media explaining why we’re wearing red using the hashtags #WIRedForED and #FightForFunding.

Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) delegates vote unanimously to set date for strike authorization vote

https://bit.ly/2lxkk09

Chicago Teachers Union

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  SEPTEMBER 4, 2019

CONTACT:

CHRIS GEOVANIS | 312-329-6250 | CHRISGEOVANIS@CTULOCAL1.ORG | MOBILE: 312-446-4939

Despite over a billion dollars in annual new revenue, few improvements – and many cuts – hammer hundreds of schools on first day of school.

CHICAGO, September 4, 2019—While CPS is raking in more than $1 billion in new annual dollars this year, too many students returned to classrooms on Tuesday staffed by substitute teachers, while others returned to over-sized classes. CPS remains far short in hiring social workers, even for its anemic target. Students continue to have to time their illnesses with the one day a week a school nurse is present. Despite the state’s takeover of its special education program, the district is hundreds of special education teachers short of meeting the needs of our most vulnerable students. And despite claiming “record investments” and “supporting equity”, Mayor Lori Lightfoot and CPS leadership cut $100,000 or more from over 200 schools.

While CPS and Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot have publicly expressed support to remedy these ongoing needs, Lightfoot’s bargaining team has refused to put those commitments in writing in an enforceable contract.

The CTU’s rank and file-elected delegates responded this evening by unanimously approving a strike authorization vote to be tallied September 26. The earliest CTU members could strike is on or after October 7.

“Our members can’t be bought – they are clear that their schools need the same things that students across Howard Street, Austin Boulevard and Cicero Avenue have,” said CTU President Jesse Sharkey. “Our delegates voted unanimously today to send a clear signal to CPS and the Mayor that what’s been offered to date isn’t good enough.”

“Contrary to the mayor’s statement yesterday, our concerns are not rhetoric,” said Sharkey. “Our concerns – and our bargaining demands – are a civil rights issue built on our commitment to help transform the lives of students that depend on public education. Our students live in a city where it’s easier for them to get a gun than to get access to a social worker. That’s wrong. Our mayor and her administration at CPS can solve these issues. We’re fighting for the schools our students deserve – and our demands for the last decade are designed to truly transform our school communities. The funding is there – more than a billion dollars a year in new revenue – and we’ve documented extensively why CPS can afford our reasonable demands.”

Negotiations on a new contract between CPS and the CTU have dragged for months – and continue to show little progress on what our students deserve: adequate staffing, smaller class sizes that provide real equity, and educational justice for students and their families.

“By CPS’ own admission, we’re confronting serious shortages in staffing and resources, yet all we get are press release promises – and nothing enforceable in writing,” said Sharkey. “We know from years of bitter experience and broken promises that to win real transformation, we need enforceable language in a binding contract.”

Tonight’s unanimous vote by the CTU’s House of Delegates reaffirmed their commitment to fight for fair wages for teacher assistants and school clerks. For these paraprofessionals, over two-thirds earn wages so low their children are eligible for free or reduced school lunches under federal poverty guidelines. Yet CPS has balked at creating a better wage floor for these workers, or steps and lanes that reward paras – some of whom have masters degrees and PhDs – for the educational attainment for which teachers are afforded compensation.

“We cannot get the equity and educational justice that candidate Lightfoot promised unless those promises are enshrined in an enforceable contract by Mayor Lightfoot and CPS,” said Sharkey. “The only way to get the progressive transformation our students and families were promised is in writing. CPS has failed our school communities too many times for us to not ask for it in writing. We don’t want to strike, but if that’s what it takes to win real educational justice for our school communities and our students, so be it.”

The Chicago Teachers Union represents more than 25,000 teachers and educational support personnel working in Chicago Public Schools, and by extension, the nearly 400,000 students and families they serve. The CTU is an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers and the Illinois Federation of Teachers and is the third-largest teachers local in the United States. For more information please visit the CTU website at www.ctulocal1.org.

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Cuba Sends Doctors & Teachers to Hurricane Hit Bahamas

https://bit.ly/2lZEAHX

“As is always the case with Cuban cooperators in other parts of the world, in the face of these disasters, everyone will [also] contribute their efforts in the recovery stage.”

Cuba’s government confirmed on Wednesday that they have sent a number of doctors and teachers to areas of the Bahamas which have been hit by Hurricane Dorian. The Cuban workers will assist local authorities in emergency relief, though they will also stay afterwards to help rebuild the country’s medical and education services in the affected areas.

Cuba’s ambassador to the Bahamas Ismara Vargas spoke to Prensa Latina on Wednesday, confirming that over 60 Cuban workers have been sent to the Bahamas so far. They have been sent to Abaco and Grand Bahama, the areas of the country that have been hit hardest by Hurricane Dorian.

Vargas commented, “as is always the case with Cuban cooperators in other parts of the world, in the face of these disasters, everyone will [also] contribute their efforts in the recovery stage.”

Cuban Medical internationalism is a legacy of the revolution. Huge numbers of doctors are sent abroad to work across the global south, offering medical services to low income and isolated communities around the world.

Those doctors and teachers will face a tough challenge in the Bahamas. Hurricane Dorian has devastated the Caribbean, and is the worst storm the Bahamas has had to face. The death toll is currently at 7, with as many as 13,000 homes in the country now destroyed or severely damaged, according to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Dorian is expected to reach the U.S. where huge evacuation operations have begun.

Cuban doctors, celebrated internationally

Cuban doctors, celebrated internationally | Photo: Socialist Voice

Madison, September 9, 2019: TAA Welcome Back Social

TAA Welcome Back Social

Welcome to fall 2019, UW–Madison! Join the Teaching Assistants’ Association (TAA), your graduate worker labor union, for free snacks, drinks, and community on Monday, Sept. 9 from 5–7 p.m. in Memorial Union’s Great Hall (4th floor).

New to campus? Come meet graduate students from across the university. Curious about what a graduate labor union does? Come chat with current TAA members. Heard about the Sit-In last spring and ready to get involved in fighting for fair pay, fee relief, and quality policies for all graduate workers? Come share your ideas—we would love to hear from you.

The social is also a great opportunity to turn in membership cards or ask questions about what it means to be a member of the TAA. Partners and kids are welcome, and we’ll provide childcare. We’re excited to see you on the 9th!

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Bus Union Threatens Strike By Friday

https://bit.ly/2lESLSw

By  – Sep 5th, 2019 09:51 am

Leadership for the bus drivers union is threatening a strike as early as tomorrow.

The Amalgamated Transit Union 998 (ATU) votes today on the final contract offer made to them by the Milwaukee County Transit Service. Union President James Macon has repeatedly spoken against approval of the contract.

MCTS delivered the final contract offer in early August. In this contract they made concessions to the union, like dropping a co-insurance proposal and reducing the maximum out-of-pocket health care contributions they were asking for.

Still, the union isn’t happy with the contract and wants to restart negotiations. At a meeting of the Milwaukee County Transportation, Public Works and Transit Committee union leaders told the committee they didn’t think the contract would be approved in Thursday’s vote, and said that a strike will soon follow if negotiations do not resume.

Despite the concessions made on health care, bus operators are not satisfied with the contract offer. Wage increases in the contract, according to Macon and Donnell Shorter, a member of the ATU executive board, are not enough and outstanding issues, like safety, have dampened employee morale….

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Mr. Obama’s Legacy In Latin America: Militarization, Right-Wing Coups, & The Rule Of Wall St.

https://bit.ly/2jVgNIu

By Eric Draitser

NEW YORK —  (Opinion) It seems we have arrived at the witching hour of Obama’s presidency, when corporate media ghouls continue to breathe out the infectious contagion of liberal lies and half-truths about the Great Dissimulator and his accomplishments.

Whether it’s The New York Times’ opinion pages hailing Dr. Changelove as “The Most Successful Democrat Since F.D.R.,” or the noxious nostalgia for the present injected into the public discourse like so many palliatives into the bloodstream of a terminal patient, the true history of Obama’s presidency is being veiled behind a mask of delusion.

Maybe it’s the Orange-Headed Hydra assuming power in Washington that gives the outgoing administration that air of dignity and grace. Maybe it’s the desire to craft a narrative in which “Hope” and “Change” were something other than hollow campaign slogans deftly employed by a charlatan of the first order. Or maybe it’s just business as usual in the heart of the U.S. Empire. No matter the reason, Barack Obama’s media-induced sainthood is now all but complete in liberal America’s collective psyche.

But the United States is not the only “America.”

Indeed, crossing the southern border and entering into that mysterious place called “Latin America,” one encounters a very different Obama legacy, one that is defined by the same policies that Yankee imperialists have employed for more than a century: destabilization, militarization, and exploitation.

Yes We Can!…continue to pursue a neocolonial agenda in Central and South America….

Magnets for sale decorate a tourist shop, one showing an image of U.S. President Barack Obama smelling a cigar, at a market in Havana, Cuba, Monday, March 16, 2015. (AP/Ramon Espinosa)

Sheboygan, September 14, 2019: Come Together Sheboygan, A Festival Celebrating Unity In Our Community

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Come Together Sheboygan

In conjunction with SCIO’s Farmer’s Market, Come Together returns for its third year to Downtown Sheboygan. This event is FREE to the public, and open to all.

Non-profit organizations will have booths on site, as you enjoy live performances from local musicians and performers on Fountain Park’s band shell.

We are seeking non-profit organizations to have a booth at this event, free of charge. For more information, contact Patrick Ortlieb at 920.207.0833 or email at: Aloha11po@gmail.com