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District 300 teachers go on strike

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CARPENTERSVILLE – District 300 and its teachers union vehemently disagreed on whether lower class sizes or higher compensation derailed a last-ditch bargaining session Monday that led to the first district labor strike since 1972. Regardless, the union’s decision cancels all classes and other school-sponsored activities during the strike.

District board member Joe Stevens said the district offered to hire 60 new teachers that met the union’s long-sought demand for lower and manageable class sizes at the elementary, middle and high school levels.

But the union, LEAD 300, scoffed at it, asking for higher salary increases in exchange for it, Stevens said.

Overall, he said the district’s latest three-year proposal is projected to cost $15.5 million and grant LEAD’s 1,300 members 8 percent in total salary increases.

“I think this strike was totally avoidable,” Stevens said. “I think they are playing a public relations game that says it’s all about class sizes. We met their class sizes. It’s all about money.”

LEAD 300 declared the strike early Monday evening after negotiating with the district board for nearly eight hours. Union President Kolleen Hanetho said she was “disappointed” in Stevens’ characterization of the meeting.

She said the district rejected the union’s final offer to cap class sizes at 24 students from kindergarten through second grade; 25 students from third through fifth grade; and 29 and 30 students at the middle and high school levels.

Her team then countered with a proposal that included higher elementary class caps at 26 and 27 students, and also higher compensation numbers.

The district, she said, agreed to the modified caps but balked at the compensation demand.

The counteroffer consequently was quashed.

“They are trying to turn it and make it about salary because they know it can get the public to turn against us,” Hanetho said. “We are fighting for the children. I don’t know why they aren’t.”

The Monday meeting capped a whirlwind of negotiating activity during the past few days. On Saturday, the two sides bargained over the phone and agreed on a lot of language issues, Stevens said.

On Sunday, union leaders took the district’s latest proposal to their members, who resoundingly rejected it by 95 percent, according to the union.

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