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McCaleb: Why are taxpayers always the last to know?

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Would you agree to pay for a service without fully understanding what exactly you were buying?

Say, for example, that you wanted to change from cable TV to satellite. You called up a satellite provider and told them you were thinking about switching.

They told you they would install your satellite and have your service activated in a couple of weeks. But they wouldn’t tell you what it was going to cost, or what channels you were going to receive, until it was up and running.

Would you hang up and never call that provider again?

Unfortunately, taxpayers in Carpentersville-based School District 300 can’t just hang up on the district.

They’re going to be paying for a new teachers’ contract, the details of which they won’t know until the ink already is dry.

After a one-day teachers’ strike last week, LEAD 300 and the district’s negotiating team agreed to terms on a new three-year deal. Taxpayers were told the terms of the district’s final offer before the strike – details that included hiring 60 additional teachers to reduce class sizes and salary increases of 3 percent, 2 percent and 3 percent over the three years. But they aren’t being told details of the tentative agreement and won’t be until after it’s ratified by both the union and the school board, likely by Dec. 18.

The new teacher hires and 8 percent in raises were going to cost the district – i.e., taxpayers – an additional $15.5 million over three years and lead to a deficit-spending situation. How much more – we all know it is not going to be less – is the negotiated deal going to cost?

Taxpayers are significant stakeholders in the school district, too. They should know the details of the contract before both the teachers and the school board vote on it.

They are paying for the contract. They should know now what they will be paying for and have an opportunity to voice their opinion before any votes are cast.

But in our upside-down world that is Illinois bureaucracy, those with so much at stake are the last to know.

That’s not right. The school district should release the contract terms immediately.

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