CHICAGO CITY HALL SIT-IN DAY ONE: Community, teachers begin sit-in outside Mayor Emanuel's City Hall office demanding an end to threatened school closings, turnarounds, phase outs and other attacks on public schools
More than 200 people ranging in age from infants to senior citizens in their 70s began a sit-in outside the fifth floor City Hall office of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel at noon on January 4, 2012. The sit-in, organized by KOCO (the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization) and a number of allied community groups, teachers, parent and religious leaders, promises to remain at City Hall until Emanuel rescinds the threat of school closings and turnarounds this school year.
KOCO education organizer Jitu Brown (above right, wearing KOCO shirt) spoke with reporters before helping lead the chants as the January 4, 2012 sit-in began outside Mayor Rahm Emanuel's office on the fifth floor of Chicago's City Hall. Substance photo by George N. Schmidt.The more than 200 people heard from a variety of teachers and parents from schools facing closing or "turnaround" under plans released early in December by Jean-Claude Brizard, Mayor Emanuel's hand-picked "Chief Executive Officer" of Chicago's Public Schools.By early afternoon Chicago Teachers Union editor Kenzo Shibata had posted the first lengthy report on the events and a video that is nearly 15 minutes long. The URL for the video is: http://www.ctunet.com/blog/parents-teachers-and-community-leaders-hold-sit-in-at-city-hall Although many expect that the closings and turnarounds are already a "Done Deal", Chicago-style, the protests against the plans have turned out the largest number of protesters and some of the most militant demonstrations in recent Chicago history. On the night of December 13, 2011, dozens of protesters slept out in the cold and rain in front of CPS headquarters at 125 S. Clark St., and on the morning of December 14 people halted the meeting of the Chicago Board of Education and held a two-hour "Peoples' Board" meeting after the Board members and the city's top education bureaucrats fled.
The January 4 event began at 11:00 a.m. with speeches and comments. First to explain the history and purpose of the event was Shannon Bennett of KOCO. Bennet told the crowd and the press who were attending that KOCO and leaders across the community had worked for two years to develop a plan for the schools of Bronzeville, and instead of adopting the plan, Chicago Schools CEO Brizard, after meeting with the community and being presented with the plan, release the 2012 Hit List to include more Bronzeville schools than schools from any other community. Dyett and Price are to be closed, and Fuller Elementary is slated to be turned around, despite the fact that the most recent turnaround in Bronzeville, the AUSL Phillips High School "turnaround" has been a failure.
A number of the protesters were young elementary and middle school students. Above, a group were wearing "Push Back Against Push Outs" tee shirts. Substance photo by George N. Schmidt. Bennett told the crowd, which grew during the press conference and speakers, that the event had the support of several community organizations including community leaders from North Kenwood, Oakland, and the Greater Bronzeville community and activists from the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization (KOCO). Additional support was coming from the Chicago Teachers Union, UNITE HERE, Action Now, the Albany Park Neighborhood Council, The Logan Square Neighborhood Association, and Stand Up Chicago. Bennett and other speakers told the crowd that some of the demonstrators had traveled to successful school districts around the country during a two-year period to meet with education leaders to develop the "Bronzeville Global Achievers Village School Improvement Plan." The plan is being ignored by CPS officials and Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
Among the speakers were Jitu Brown, of the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization (KOCO), which issued an explanation of the event and a fact sheet challenging CPS claims about schools on the city's South Side.
One of the more unusual notes made public during the event was the account, by Mayor Emanuel, of his family's recent vacation in South America, which the participants in the sit-in used to demonstrate just how out of touch Emanuel is with the real problems of the real people of the city he governs. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, ion a report by Fran Spielman, Emanuel advised every child to be a member of the Emanuel famile. The complete Sun-Times story is below:
Emanuel’s South American vacation ‘unbelievably good’
BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter/fspielman@suntimes.com January 3, 2012 2:04PM. Updated: January 4, 2012 2:13AM
A tanned Mayor Emanuel talked about his family's winter vacation to South America during a news conference on the city's recycling efforts. | Al Podgorski~Chicago Sun-Times
Some people go to Florida, Arizona or Mexico over Christmas break. Others go skiing. Most stay home and celebrate with family and friends.
Not Chicago’s new first family. Mayor Rahm Emanuel, his wife, Amy Rule, and their three children — Zach, Ilana and Leah — spent an exotic holiday exploring South America in a way that most people could not afford.
Tanned, rested, but no less driven, Emanuel returned to work on Tuesday and offered up an oral report: “What I did on my Winter Break.”
“The family went to Chile and Argentina. We went on a white-water rafting trip. Did about 70 miles of whitewater on the Futaleufu [River] down in Chile. Then, we went up in the Patagonian area and went fly fishing and hiking, then spent New Year’s Eve in Buenos Aries,” the mayor said.
“Every year, we try to take the kids to a different part of the world to see. When you … grow up again, you want to be an Emanuel child. It’s unbelievable.”
When a reporter asked the mayor to “tell us about your vacation,” Emanuel was initially tight-lipped.
“It was good,” he said.
Pressed to “tell us more,” he said, “It was really good.” Pushed further, he said, “It was unbelievably good.” He offered the more lengthy explanation, only after being asked, “Where’d you go? What did you do?”
Comments:
By: John Whitfield
Dylan's "The Times they are are a Changin"
Come gather 'round people
Wherever you roam Bob Dylan
And admit that the waters "The Times
Around you have grown they are a
And accept it that soon Changin"
You'll be drenched to the bone.
If your time to you
Is worth savin'
Then you better start swimmin'
Or you'll sink like a stone
For the times they are a-changin'.
Come writers and critics
Who prophesize with your pen
And keep your eyes wide
The chance won't come again
And don't speak too soon
For the wheel's still in spin
And there's no tellin' who
That it's namin'.
For the loser now
Will be later to win
For the times they are a-changin'.
Come senators, congressmen
Please heed the call
Don't stand in the doorway
Don't block up the hall
For he that gets hurt
Will be he who has stalled
There's a battle outside ragin'.
It'll soon shake your windows
And rattle your walls
For the times they are a-changin'.
Come mothers and fathers
Throughout the land
And don't criticize
What you can't understand
Your sons and your daughters
Are beyond your command
Your old road is
Rapidly agin'.
Please get out of the new one
If you can't lend your hand
For the times they are a-changin'.
The line it is drawn
The curse it is cast
The slow one now
Will later be fast
As the present now
Will later be past
The order is
Rapidly fadin'.
And the first one now
Will later be last
For the times they are a-changin'.
since the 1960's there has been a lot of changes in so many different ways. but it's true that the average americans are still struggling just to get by, and the wealthy and powerful are still just as greedy as ever. pretty soon there will be no middle class, it's just going to be upper and lower classes.. which if that happens, i wouldn't be surprised to see another revolutionary war.
the above comment I found after googling the song, it was posted below the lyrics, and thought you might like it, John w.
By: Clara Fitzpatrick
What is wrong with the two pictures you show
Does anyone notice anything from the two pictures that is indicative of whose schools are being closed and "turned-around" or corporately chartered?
By: David R Stone
The CPS "Hit List"
Below is a list of the elementary and high schools the Board of Ed is proposing to close or "turn around" in the coming school year. (In case you want to comment on these proposed actions, a separate article posted on Substance lists the times of official Board hearings for each of these schools.)
CPS “Hit List” 2011-12
Six elementary schools slated for CLOSING in June 2012:
1. Doolittle East Elementary
2. Guggenheim Elementary
3. Lathrop Elementary
4. Nash Elementary
5. Price Elementary
6. Reed Elementary
Four high schools slated for closing in June 2012:
1. Austin HS
2. Best Practice HS
3. Crane HS
4. Dyett HS
Eight elementary schools scheduled for TURNAROUND (all staff fired, but schools will remain open next year):
1. Casals Elementary
2. Fuller Elementary
3. Herzl Elementary
4. Marquette Elementary
5. Piccolo Elementary
6. W. Smith Elementary
7. Stagg Elementary
8. Woodson South Elementary
Two high schools scheduled for TURNAROUND (all staff fired, but schools will remain open next year):
1. Chicago Vocational Career Academy (CVCA) HS
2.Tilden HS
By: Susan Ohanian
Sit-in at City Hall
Those kids in the green "Push Back Against Push Outs" t-shirts at City Hall are getting a much more important education that Emanuel's kids got rafting in Chile.