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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Nader Issa

City Colleges faculty, staff union authorizes strike

City Colleges of Chicago faculty and staff picket Thursday outside Harold Washington College. (Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times)

Faculty and staff at the City Colleges of Chicago have nearly unanimously voted to authorize a strike as their union presses on with contract negotiations centered on pay and improved academic support.

An overwhelming 92% of 1,208 voting members approved a strike to pressure City Colleges leadership into meeting the union’s contract demands, the union announced Thursday.

“They’ve essentially rejected almost all of our proposals except for a few, which has put us into the position of bargaining against ourselves,” said Tony Johnston, president of the Cook County College Teachers Union, which represents City Colleges workers and is affiliated with the Chicago Teachers Union’s parent organization.

City Colleges of Chicago faculty and staff picket Thursday outside Harold Washington College. (Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times)

CCCTU members picketed outside of Harold Washington College in the Loop ahead of the City Colleges of Chicago board meeting.

The workers are asking for pay raises to offset inflation during the pandemic and subsequent economic downturn, Johnston said, and other benefits including smaller class sizes, laboratory assistants, broader partnerships with local high schools and the ability in some circumstances to work remotely.

Faculty and staff at City Colleges include professors, college advisers, tutors, note-takers, laboratory technicians, IT personnel and more. Their contract expired in July.

"City Colleges is committed to negotiating in good faith with each of our professionals and faculty unions to finalize their respective contracts," City Colleges spokeswoman Veronica Resa said in a statement.

Johnston said the two sides had their first mediation session this week and “things are opening up" more than they have in the past 11 months of negotiations

"There were some counterproposals that went back and forth, and that is a positive thing,” Johnston said. “But our members are insistent that what the City Colleges are offering so far, which is not a lot, is not acceptable.

“We don’t want to strike, and we know students don’t want to see us strike, but we’re willing to strike if we need to.”

Johnston said he believes the union will have public support, including that of elected officials and students, as it fights for its demands.

“I spoke with a student group this week that was very open and willing to hear about our concerns and saw them as their concerns, as well,” he said.

The union’s negotiating committee will set a strike date likely in late October, Johnston said. Until then, the two sides expect to continue negotiating a few times a week.

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