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Local School Topics

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Chicago Schools: First Strike in 25 Years

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Chicago Schools: First Strike in 25 Years
Negotiations have been halted, and the Chicago Teachers Union will began their strike September 10, marking the first teachers' strike in Chicago in 25 years. The children are sadly caught in the crossfire between CPS and the Union, and how will this strike impact the education of Chicago school students?

After a summer of intense negotiations, the Chicago Teachers Union and Chicago Public Schools have failed to reach an agreement, resulting in the first strike to hit the city in 25 years. This week, students who had just started into new classrooms for the school year have found themselves with nowhere to go 鈥 and parents are scrambling to find safe options for their children during the school day. With one day of the strike already gone, it appears teachers will be on the picket lines for at least another day, as school administrators, union representatives, and Mayor Rahm Emanuel continue to try to work toward a compromise everyone can accept.

The Anatomy of a Teachers鈥 Strike

The two sides of this conflict have been working for months to try to find a resolution. A fact-finder brought in over the summer in an effort at mediation called the relationship between the two 鈥渢oxic.鈥 At the crux of the controversy is a wide range of issues, from classroom sizes to school hiring policies. While some of these issues have reached an agreement, many more still appear to be miles away from any sort of compromise.

At the center of the controversy is Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Before Emanuel even took office, he ran on the campaign platform of reforming Chicago鈥檚 troubled school system. According to the , Emanuel worked quickly after moving into the Mayor鈥檚 office to allow principals autonomy in the

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Chicago Schools: Ontime Opening Despite Strike Threat

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Chicago Schools: Ontime Opening Despite Strike Threat
Although Chicago public schools opened for the start of the 2012 - 2013 school year, a possible teacher's strike may grind the entire district to a halt just a week later. Stay abreast of the negotiations and the backup plans the district has made to keep schools open, even without teachers on campus.

Despite heated negotiations that have taken up most of the summer months, Chicago schools did open on time with a full day of school. The teacher鈥檚 union failed to file a10-day intent-to-strike by the deadline that would initiate a strike prior to the first school day. However, the sigh of relief breathed by parents, politicians, and members of the school board did not last long. The intent-to-strike was filed a few days later, which puts a walk-out day for teachers on September 10 if a compromise is not found shortly. If CPS teachers pick up the pickets, kids in Chicago schools will get only about a week of education before the entire system grinds to a halt.

This video reports on the 2012 teachers' strike.

Points of Contention

The Chicago Teachers Union and Chicago Public Schools have met a total of 46 times in an effort to find a compromise both sides could swallow. A fact-finder was also brought in over the summer to find a solution to the conflict. The fact-finder told the Chicago Sun-Times that the relationship between the two sides was 鈥渢oxic.鈥 Some of the points of contention that have not been resolved include:

Teacher Recall: The reports that the union wants CPS to hire from a pool of teachers who have been laid off by the district, rather than allowing principals to hire

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Colorado Schools: How Aurora Schools Coped After Theatre Tragedy

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Colorado Schools: How Aurora Schools Coped After Theatre Tragedy
There are many support services being put into place for Aurora students this year to help them cope with the movie theatre tragedy as they head back to school.

Going back to school can be anxiety-provoking enough for some students and parents, but how do you handle the transition in the wake of a major community tragedy? That is exactly the question educators in Aurora, Colorado, have been forced to ask, as students in this community prepare for a new school year just two weeks after a deadly shooting in a local movie theatre left 12 people dead and 58 more injured. Some of the victims were students themselves, bringing this event too close to home for many students in the area. Administrators, teachers, and support personnel are preparing for a back-to-school event in Aurora this year that is sure to be bittersweet and even scary for some of the students they serve.

This video reports on the aftermath of the Aurora mass shooting.

The Impact of the Tragedy

According to a report at , the Aurora Public School District estimates that approximately 150 students, parents, and staff from Aurora schools were in one of the theatres during the shooting. Gateway High School, the High School closest to the theatre, had 50 current or former students in the theatre alone. One of the victims that were killed, AJ Boik, graduated from Gateway in May.

The suspected shooter, James Holmes, lived in an apartment building not far from the theatre and within close proximity to Paris Elementary School.

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Chicago Schools: Back to School Is A Struggle

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Chicago Schools: Back to School Is A Struggle
We report on the back to school campaign launched by CPS despite huge issues facing the district, including reports of school officials lying to get their children free lunches, conflicts between administrators and teachers鈥 union, and a lower bond rating.

The first day of school for Chicago Public Schools is just weeks away, but a myriad of problems continues to plague the district and even threaten the ability of schools to open on schedule. With ongoing conflict between school leaders and the teacher鈥檚 union, accusations of lying, and even a bond downgrade by Moodys鈥, CPS doesn鈥檛 look like a district getting ready to welcome students back to their schools. Will the problems be resolved by the looming August deadline?

Is a Strike Inevitable?

Disagreements between the teacher鈥檚 union and school administrators continue to heat up, and talks of a strike are concerning many in the Chicago school district. reports that a recent rejection of a fact finder鈥檚 recommendation fuels worries that teachers and school leaders will not be able to come to an agreement before the school year begins. The recommendation included a double-digit raise for district teachers, a move district officials have said they simply cannot afford.

The fact finder, Edwin Benn, made the recommendations after the two sides failed to come to an agreement on the proposed budget for the upcoming school year. The proposed $5.73 billion budget included a two-percent pay increase for teachers for the next school year, but the teacher鈥檚 union has said that amount is unacceptable. The Chicago Tribune reports that teachers booed the proposed budget when it was announced earlier this month.

The proposed budget also included a $665 million deficit, increased property taxes

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New York City Schools: Churches Allowed to Meet in Public Schools

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New York City Schools: Churches Allowed to Meet in Public Schools
Can religion and public schools mix? Possibly in New York, where a judge recently ruled to allow worship services to be held in public school buildings.

New York churches now have legal permission to meet on weekends in public schools in the city, thanks to a recent ruling by the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of New York. The ruling marks the next milestone in a long-running battle between the Bronx Household of Faith and New York City. The fight began in 1995 when the church sought legal action after being denied the use of a school for their Sunday morning services. The ruling provides access to public schools by churches throughout the city, a move that some celebrated and others promised to continue to fight.

About the Bronx Household of Faith and NYC

In 1995, the Bronx Household of Faith submitted an application to city officials, expressing their desire to hold Sunday worship services at Public School 15. The New York City Department of Education denied the application, which cited the First Amendment鈥檚 Establishment Clause as the primary reason for keeping church services out of public school buildings.

However, the church countered that the denial violated its First Amendment rights and sued the city of New York to overturn the decision. The Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) has been representing the Bronx Household of Faith in court ever since the case originated in 1995. According to the Christian Post, the ADF argued against claims by the city that if schools allowed churches to hold worship services at the schools, it would be seen as an endorsement of religion by the

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