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  • Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez speaks out after school board shakeup

    Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez speaks out after school board shakeup

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez spoke out for the first time Wednesday after all members of the Chicago Board of Education resigned and Mayor Brandon Johnson made his new appointments.

    Meanwhile, the Chicago City Council met Wednesday ahead of a now-canceled special meeting in the afternoon, where city leaders had planned to address the recent Board of Education shake up.

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    Martinez spoke to ABC7 Wednesday, responding to criticism that he has no CPS funding plan and is relying on proposed cuts. He was also asked if he thought the mayor’s picks for a new school board could end up firing him.

    “I don’t know. I really don’t. I’m being sincere,” Martinez said. “I will say what’s great right now is that, you know, it’s very transparent what my contract says.”

    Martinez told ABC7 there has been a plan in place for months that Mayor Johnson was well aware of. The plan included using the city’s TIF surplus dollars to help fund CPS. Martinez said there a formal ask on April 30 for $462 million dollars in TIF funding to pay for pensions and union contracts, including one for the teachers union that included 4% raises.

    “At that time, we didn’t get an answer. We continued to ask. Eventually what we were told over the summer was that instead they wanted us to take out a loan,” Martinez said. “I was making a case to really solidify more TIF funding. I was surprised. So was our board. The response was instead borrow, and of course everything since then.”

    The previous school board was not willing to fire CPS CEO Pedro Martinez or secure a short term, high interest loan to help pay for a new teachers’ contract, which led to their mass resignation last week.

    “I did not expect for this to escalate to the way it did,” Martinez said.

    Using TIF funds is the same idea the Chicago Teachers Union presented in plan Wednesday.

    The Chicago Teachers Union, community leaders and CPS parents gathered near City Hall earlier Wednesday to propose what they are calling the “Revenue Recovery Package.”

    CTU leaders said the plan provides more than $1 billion in immediate revenue for city schools by redirecting TIF funds from developers to CPS.

    First District Cook County Commissioner Tara Stamps said it’s the city’s collective responsibility to care for children across Chicago.

    “What’s happening within Chicago Public Schools isn’t the responsibility of the Chicago Teachers Union, or CPS or parents. It’s all of our responsibility,” Stamps said. “How our children get educated in this city because whether you want to believe it or not, they are all our children.”

    The mayor now says Martinez is taking a page from their playbook.

    “Whatever is there that we can surplus, I’ve made a commitment. Those are my values. That’s not something that anybody had to call for me to do,” Johnson said.

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    Meanwhile, multiple City Council members said Wednesday they have been working with the mayor’s office to have the outgoing and incoming board members appear at a hearing before the education committee to answer questions.

    City Council was supposed to hold special committee hearing Wednesday to hear from the mayor’s six new board picks.

    “We still have questions, process matter, how you do things matter and we need to make sure there is stability,” Ald. Maria Hadden said.

    The special meeting was canceled. It will be held later in the month as an Education Committee Hearing.

    At a future education meeting, City Council members want to question the mayor’s nominees appointed to be on the CPS board.

    “Right now we want to know about their biographies, we want to know about their mindsets, we want to know what they are bringing to the board as individuals and as a collective,” 15th Ward Alderman Ray Lopez said. “We know very little about these individuals and as a collective.”

    So, the agreement was to have the new appointed board members to come to a meeting and also we talk about the budget,” said 15th Ward Ald. Jeanette Taylor, Education Committee Chairman.

    The agreement was made with the mayor’s office, but before adjourning the regular City Council meeting Wednesday, Johnson made no guarantee the new school board members will show up.

    The mayor said the new school members are invited. He has no plans use his executive authority to make sure they attend. Alderpersons say they may subpoena the members, but the city’s law department insists the Education Committee has no subpoena power.

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    Christian Piekos

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  • Mayor Johnson announces new interim Chicago Board of Education nominees

    Mayor Johnson announces new interim Chicago Board of Education nominees

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Mayor Brandon Johnson announced six nominees to serve on the Chicago Board of Education Monday.

    All members of his previous hand-picked board resigned on Friday.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    “My vision is about building a system that works for everyone,” Johnson said. “Imagine our schools down a pathway of new discovery, where you don’t have to senseless cuts and real disruption and chaos. You can actually have a school district that doesn’t embrace mass layoffs, massive school closings, austerity.”

    The announcement was briefly interrupted by a small group of protesters for school choice.

    Protesters interrupt Mayor Brandon Johnson as he announces appointments tot he Chicago Board of Education.

    “I am confident that these individuals and their experience in education, community, faith, business and elsewhere will continue our work to transform Chicago Public Schools into a world class school district for students and families,” Johnson said. “As a CPS parent, I want the same thing for other CPS parents that I want for my own children, which is every class, every activity and every resource that will help build bright futures and bold leaders. I know these individuals will fight for our children to receive the investments they deserve, and will work with my administration and the district to put the needs of our students and families first.”

    The candidates are Olga Bautista, Michilla Blaise, Mary Gardner, Rev. Mitchell L. Ikenna Johnson, Deborah Pope and Frank Niles Thomas. Pope recently worked for the Chicago Teachers Union and served on the CTU contract negotiating team.

    “I, like my fellow board nominees have a record of community change and sat and steadfast in our commitment to Mayor’s Johnson’s vision to fully fund neighborhood schools,” said nominee Rev. Mitchell L. Ikenna Johnson.

    “You know, there is a lot of attention on this transition of this board right now, but I have to ask, where is the outrage about what is at stake if we don’t fully fund our schools?” said nominee Olga Bautista.

    Johnson described this as “a transition period to transform the school district.”

    Johnson wants Martinez out partly because he refused to take out a short-term, high interest loan to help pay for a new contract for the CTU.

    The mayor is appointing interim board members before a new board, partly-elected in November, takes office in January.

    Mayor Johnson announced his CPS Board appointments during a heating news conference Monday.

    The mayor over the weekend reiterated he was voted into office because he has a plan to build a better school district. Johnson said he’s honoring that campaign promise.

    “I’m leading; I’m in charge,” Johnson said. “They elected a parent…. We have schools on the West and South sides that don’t have librarians. That’s unconscionable.”

    The mayor would not allow the new nominees to answer any questions about on the loan, Martinez or their connections to the CTU.

    Mayor Brandon Johnson brushed aside concerns that this appeared to be a coup done in consorts with his allies at the Chicago Teachers Union.

    “No, you are not doing that. If you have a question for the mayor of Chicago, then ask me a question,” Johnson said.

    One City Hall ally addressed the Martinez issue.

    “And so I think that Pedro had long enough to fix this. What’s the Pedro plan? That’s all I’m asking. What is Plan B? Pedro doesn’t have that,” said 6th Ward Ald. William Hall.

    In a lengthy and combative press conference, the mayor berated reporters and attacked those who have been critical of allowing the previous board to resign so close to an elected school board election.

    “So you have a Black man who’s a parent, a teacher, and the mayor of Chicago with the authority that the state gave me, and now they have concerns of expressing those authority,” Johnson said. “The moment people begin to take those unnecessary for political shots at my administration, you have to questions the motives.”

    Forty-one members of the Chicago City Council, including many of Johnson’s allies, signed a letter denouncing the board resignations and calling a short-term high-interest pay-say loan not a smart decision.

    Johnson compared the argument to slavery and emancipation.

    “They said it would be fiscally irresponsible for this country to liberate Black people. Now, you have detractors making the argument of the confederacy when it comes to public education in this system,” Johnson said.

    Among the letter signees is Alderwoman Nicole Lee, who spoke outside City Hall on Monday afternoon.

    “We deserve more responsible leadership. I want to say also that I’m absolutely opposed to the $300 million payday loan scheme that’s been suggested. I think it’s irresponsible on the part of CPS to take on that type of that type of loan in,” Lee said.

    Other alderpersons also weighed in.

    “When we have an election in less than 30 days to decide who’s going to be the new participants of this board just reeks of this banana republic mentality that you know you can manipulate the Democratic process however you wish, so long as you get the desired result,” said 15th Ward Ald. Ray Lopez.

    “I think the bottom line for taxpayers, too, is they want to see the leadership, but they also want to see somebody be fiscally responsible ethically responsible and morally responsible, and we’re not saying that with Mayor Johnson,” said 32nd Ward Ald. Scott Waguespack.

    One of the legislative champions of the elected school board law expressing concerns about everything that’s played out since Friday.

    “What decisions were being made that led us to the place that we’re in now where we’re scrambling to put together a whole new board just two months before the first elected school board, that’s concerning,” said Illinois State Rep. Ann Williams.

    Parents, flanked by multiple members of City Council, also denounced the way all of this has come about.

    “The fact that all this politicking is happening and it’s effect on our kids, ultimately, and we are not having a seat at the table, or being a part of any discussion. It kind of makes me angry,” said Tierra Pearson, a single mother of three.

    Johnson brushed aside concerns that this appeared to be a coup done in consorts with his allies at CTU.

    “So every single mayor in the history of Chicago has had the authority to appoint board members to multiple boards. Guess who still has that authority? This mayor does,” Johnson said.

    The mayor also repeated demands that state lawmakers come up with more money for CPS, something seen as unlikely given previous statements from the governor and others.

    Some City Council members have called for a special meeting on Wednesday, right after the regular meeting to address the turmoil at CPS.

    The CTU released a statement Monday, saying:

    “In response to Mayor Brandon Johnson exercising his authority to appoint six new members of the Chicago Board of Education, President Stacy Davis Gates, issued the following statement:

    “‘Chicago elected a mayor who promised to transform our school district, to break with the failed cuts, closings and furloughs of the past. The Chicago Teachers Union looks forward to collaborating with the new board members to enact the transformation of our public schools that our students and educators need and deserve.’

    “Additionally, the CTU urges the public and our elected officials to ask and investigate these questions of the CPS CEO:

    “1. What is Pedro Martinez’s solution for overcrowded classrooms with 37 or more students?
    “2. What is his plan to provide libraries and librarians to the 80 % of CPS schools that don’t have them?
    “3. How will he get CPS into compliance with federal law and address the critical shortages of special education teachers, clinicians, social workers and nurses in school buildings?
    “4. What is his revenue plan to complete the CPS budget for this school year and next?

    “Mayor Johnson’s first school board accomplished important firsts and centered equity throughout its tenure, beginning the transformation the mayor envisioned. The task of the new CPS Board members is to collaborate with Chicago’s educators, parents and students to make that vision a reality.”

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    Stephanie Wade

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