School closures show people, not corporations, must control society

Latest

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
One of the many, ongoing protests against the closing of up to 49 Chicago public schools. Photo/Sarah Jane Rhee
One of the many, ongoing protests against the closing of up to 49 Chicago public schools.
Photo/Sarah Jane Rhee

The sledgehammer came down on the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) on May 22:  the school board voted to close 49 schools, “turn around” another five, and “co-locate” 11 more schools.  This largest school massacre in the country followed six months of  mind-numbing hearings across the city, in which those threatened by potential school closures begged officials to stop them.  Finally, from May 18-20 parents, teachers and students marched across the city, circled many of the schools to be closed, and converged on May 20 at city hall.  Laying the blame at the feet of Mayor Emanuel, 26 protestors were arrested as they sat down, blocked elevators and refused to leave.
This phase is over, but the war goes on.  The Chicago Teachers Union and its allied community organizations are beginning a legislative push to overturn Mayoral control and institute an elected school board.  They have also started a voter registration drive to unseat legislators unfriendly to their education program.
What is the strategy of the enemy?
Throughout the fall and winter, the city argued that closing schools would allow CPS to concentrate more money and resources in a smaller number of schools.   Now CPS has released school-by-school budgets for next year.  Sources with access to budget information have already reported substantial cutbacks (e.g. Foreman High School will lose $1.7 million).
At the same time, Barbara Byrd-Bennett released a report June 10 calling for a “five-year plan” to improve Chicago education, filled with ambitious goals and plans, requiring non-existent funding, backed up by platitudes.  We’ve seen this smokescreen before, with previous school administrations.
When school opens in August, parents will be told to accept the school closings.  The city is counting on the summer respite, rosy promises and more limited “school actions” (like charter schools and turnarounds) next year to blunt the opposition.
Meanwhile, the cost cutting is likely to include massive teacher and support staff layoffs (note that Philadelphia just announced closing 23 schools and laying off 3,000 teachers).  The two main tactics of the city continue to be isolating the teachers and their union; and splitting the growing unity among different communities and ethnic groups.
Civil disobedience may greet returning students in the fall.  Legal and legislative challenges will also wind their way through the appropriate channels. These efforts to retard the attacks on our rights must continue. But the persistent actions of the Mayor and his political and corporate cronies show us that the arena of trade union bargains, appeals to politicians and school-by-school fights cannot resolve the issue.
Our tactic must be to fight for the ever-growing union of the class in its fight for its immediate needs.  Education “reform” aims to destroy public education, the only form of education for the poorest section of our society, regardless of ethnicity.  It is the end of the social safety net for those who are the most expendable in our midst.
This is a political fight for whether the people or the corporations will control society, and thus provide a world-class education for all of our children.

+ Articles by this author

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

The Distortion of Campus Protests over Gaza

Helen Benedict, a Columbia University journalism professor, describes how the right wing has used accusations of anti-semitism against campus protests to distract attention from the death toll in Gaza.

Shawn Fain: May Day 2028 Could Transform the Labor Movement—and the World

UAW Shawn Fain discusses a general strike in 2028 and the collective power and unity needed to win the demands of the working class.

Strawberry Workers May Day March

Photos by David Bacon of Strawberry workers parading through Santa Maria on a May Day march, demanding a living wage.  Most are indigenous Mixtec migrants from Oaxaca and southern Mexico. 

Professor’s Violent Arrest Spotlights Brutality of Police Crackdown on Campus Protests

The violent arrest of Emory University Prof. Caroline Fohlin April 25 in Atlanta shows the degree to which democracy is being trampled as resistance to the Gaza genocide grows.

Youth in the Era of Climate Change

Earth Day is a reminder that Mother Earth pleads with us to care for her. The youth are listening, holding a global climate strike April 19. Although we are still far from reaching net zero emissions by 2050, it's time to be assertive with our world leaders for change will give our grandchildren a healthy Mother Earth and create a world of peace.

More from the People's Tribune