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Chicago Board of Education to Resign Amid Conflict With Mayor Johnson

Chicago Board of Education to Resign Amid Conflict With Mayor Johnson

Johnson wants a board that will oust Chicago Public School CEO Pedro Martinez because he won’t bend the knee to the mayor and Chicago Teachers Union.

The seven Chicago Board of Education members will resign, allowing Mayor Brandon Johnson to appoint people to do his bidding.

In short, Johnson wants the board to oust the school’s CEO, Pedro Martinez, because he won’t bend the knee to the mayor.

“Mayor Brandon Johnson and members of the Chicago Board of Education are enacting a transition plan which includes all current members transitioning from service on the Board later this month,” said Johnson’s office. “With the shift to a hybrid elected and appointed Board forthcoming, current Board members and Mayor Johnson understand that laying a strong foundation for the shift is necessary to serve the best interests of students and families in Chicago Public Schools.”

Sheesh. From The Chicago Sun-Times:

The entire Chicago Board of Education is resigning, a stunning development after months of acrimony that clears the way for Mayor Brandon Johnson to appoint a new board that will follow his orders — fire schools CEO Pedro Martinez, make a contract deal with the Chicago Teachers Union and take a loan to cover a city pension payment and the teachers’ contract this year.

Johnson confirmed Friday in an exclusive interview that the expected resignations of all seven board members will come later this month. This was followed by a joint statement from the School Board and the mayor. WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times first reported the possibility of resignations on Monday.

The motives behind the mass resignations appear to be complicated. The board has seemed to back Martinez in clashes with Johnson at times but has also had its own concerns with Martinez’s performance, WBEZ and the Sun-Times previously reported.

In the end, the departures seemed mutual, a source said — board members were upset with the mayor’s handling of the strife and the position they were being put in, and the mayor wanted a change since his appointed board wasn’t doing as he wanted.

The members include mostly activists:

  • Board President Jianan Shi, former head of the parent group Raise Your Hand
  • Vice President Elizabeth Todd-Breland, a University of Illinois Chicago history professor who was appointed by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the only member to stay on under Johnson
  • Special education parent-activist Mary Fahey Hughes
  • Westside Justice Center Executive Director Tanya Woods
  • United Way Community Engagement Director Mariela Estrada
  • Woods Fund President Michelle Morales
  • JPMorgan Chase philanthropy executive Rudy Lozano Jr

What a shock that most of them are activists. I’m seriously totes shocked!

Johnson appointed this board in July 2023.

Everything started falling apart this summer when the board members resisted Johnson’s “push to use a loan to fill a mid-year budget gap that will be created when the teachers contract is settled, even if the alternative means making cuts to the budget.”

The board disagreed with Johnson about the school board paying “a part of a municipal pension payment that covers non-teaching CPS staff.”

The board and Martinez did not include either in the CPS budget they passed in July.

Johnson wants to remove Martinez “amid stalled talks with the Chicago Teachers Union.”

Of course, the radical CTU aligns itself with Johnson, which has put even more pressure on the board to oust Martinez.

His last assessment demanded that he improve his “visionary leadership, community engagement, and management.” The members complained that Martinez has been too slow in implementing the “CPS’ five-year strategic plan.”

He could prove harder to remove thanks to his contract:

A clause in Martinez’s contract means firing him without cause would see him stay on for six months. That’s both an untenable political and practical prospect for Johnson, who would not want a lame duck CEO for half a year, especially after Martinez rejected his request to resign and his ideas for addressing the district’s financial problems. And critically, leaders of the teachers’ union, who are allies of Johnson and propelled him into office, have expressed doubt they could get a contract deal done under Martinez.

But because he has not been accused of anything egregious, such as corruption, firing him for “cause” could open up the board to a lawsuit. However, a source close to the board was highly critical of Martinez’s decision to publicly air his interactions with the mayor in a recent op-ed in the Chicago Tribune. Martinez said the mayor had asked him to resign and he declined. The source described that as a “brazen” move and “insubordination” — an accusation that could potentially be used in an effort to fire Martinez.

In December 2022, Martinez’s contract was amended. One change broadens the definition of firing “for cause” to include “any other conduct inconsistent with the CEO’s duties and obligations to CPS or the Board, or that may be reasonably perceived to have a material adverse impact on the good name and integrity of CPS or the Board in the sole judgment of the Board.”

The members will leave their posts in January.

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Comments

Their goal is to have eveyone be able to read and write by the year 2535.


 
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henrybowman | October 4, 2024 at 4:25 pm

It wasn’t like they were busy doing anything anyway.


 
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Peter Moss | October 4, 2024 at 4:35 pm

You know the old joke? If you think your job is futile, just remember there’s some dude over in Germany install turn signals on new BMWs?

Same applies here. There’s no learning going on here. What was once a treasure nationally, our public schools have become a very expensive, sick joke.

And nowhere is that fact more profoundly demonstrated than in our inner city public schools. The incestuous relationship between administration and public sector teachers unions is self-dealing on a level that would make a longshoreman blush.

So if you’re wondering why young black men murder one another at rates that approach that of a war zone you can correctly assume that they have no father (thanks Uncle Sam) they have no moral compass (thanks pedophile priests) and they are ignorant and illiterate at a third world level (thanks teachers unions) and therefore really see no opportunity or future for themselves outside of gangbanging.

Once again: job #1 of the second Trump Administration is to kill the Department of Education along with all of the red tape and mandates, etc.

Let the State of Illinois determine what is to be done for good or for ill. At least it will be an exercise in federalism.


     
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    gibbie in reply to Peter Moss. | October 4, 2024 at 7:16 pm

    “What was once a treasure nationally, our public schools have become a very expensive, sick joke.”

    Our government school system has always been an instrument of indoctrination by whoever controls it.

    “Let the State of Illinois determine what is to be done for good or for ill.”

    No. Let parents determine what is to be done for good or for ill on behalf of their children.

    I agree with the rest.


     
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    The Gentle Grizzly in reply to Peter Moss. | October 5, 2024 at 10:36 am

    I’d not blame the illiteracy on just the teacher unions. What about those holding doctorates in education inventing The Latest Fad for teaching? This was going on long before JFK let the feather merchants unionize. I know. My brother and I suffered whole-word look-say reading, and my brother is 80.

    Let’s also not forget “deh blak komm-YOO-ni-teh” equating being learned with acting white.


 
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Fred Idle | October 4, 2024 at 5:10 pm

Given that Mayor Johnson’s previous jobs were all with the Chicago Teachers Union, his new BOE appointees will no doubt all be dues-paying members of the union.


 
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Whitewall | October 4, 2024 at 5:20 pm

Chicago…isn’t that somewhere in Venezuela?


 
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diver64 | October 4, 2024 at 5:39 pm

They all deserve each other and the children bear the brunt of it.


 
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E Howard Hunt | October 4, 2024 at 5:56 pm

The Chicago Seven strikes again.

Loans to pay pensions – genius!


 
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healthguyfsu | October 4, 2024 at 9:17 pm

Nothing to see here just another day in perhaps the most corrupt big city in America.


 
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ghost dog | October 5, 2024 at 1:24 am

What do you call a company that can’t pay its debts that’s now borrowing money to pay off its debts? This is fraud. Chicago has decreasing population and revenue. It won’t have enough money next year to fund the pension and repay the debt.

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