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McCaleb: So much for putting children first

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"We applaud teachers in Prairie Grove District 46 for continuing to work during tough contract negotiations with the school board. Unlike the Chicago Teachers Union, which left students and parents stranded for the better part of two weeks earlier this month when its members went on strike, District 46 teachers are putting children first by staying on the job even though negotiations have stalled."

– Northwest Herald Editorial Board, Sept. 27, 2012


So much for putting children first.

In the wee hours of Friday morning, District 46 teachers decided to walk out on their students, 1,000 or so kindergartners through eighth-graders in Prairie Grove. Friday's classes were canceled, and parents who received automated phone calls about the time they hit "snooze" on their alarm clocks had little time to figure out what to do with their children.

Just like the Chicago teachers before them, it was a selfish decision motivated by their own self-interests and with no concern whatsoever for their students.

Later Friday, after a public bargaining session that lasted almost eight hours, the union and school board reached a tentative agreement on a new contract. The union's 74 members still have to ratify the deal, but teachers will, thankfully, be back to work Monday.

Did the strike force the hands of the school board's negotiating team into making a deal that's not so good for District 46 taxpayers? We won't know that until the details are released after the vote.

Regardless of whose side you were on during the contract talks, teachers should have continued to work.

What message are they sending students by going on strike, even if just for a day? I'm not getting my way, so I'll just take my ball and go home. That's a pretty lousy example to set.

And the District 46 strike might not be the only one that will affect area students this semester.

Teachers from Carpentersville-based District 300 are meeting today to vote on an intent-to-strike measure that could have them walking out on students in a few weeks. While today's vote is largely procedural and doesn't mean teachers will strike, I still urge them to vote against it. By rejecting it, they'd send a message that, in fact, their students come first.

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