CPS CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett May Have Met Her Match in Chicago
Chicago is now in a good position to fight back. The school closings hearings were packed with engaged, motivated citizens, and the teachers union is more organized than its been in three decades. During the its popular and successful strike, the union’s approval rating climbed while the mayor’s fell—public opinion polls showed that taxpayers blamed Emanuel for the ugliness that took place during negotiations. The CTU’s current leadership has built relationships with community leaders and organizations, forming a coalition to fight the slash-and-burn privatization pushed by the Board of Education and its corporate sponsors, and has even hosted civil disobedience trainings open to the public.
http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/14786/why_cps_ceo_barbara_byrd_bennett_just_doesnt_get_it
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