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Chicago teachers extend strike, mayor seeks injunction

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Teachers on strike in Chicago attend a rally at Union Park on Saturday. The strike extends to a sixth day on Monday. Photo: AFP

The confrontation between the Chicago Teachers Union and Mayor Rahm Emanuel escalated on Sunday when the union extended its strike until at least Tuesday and Emanuel responded by going to court for an injunction to declare the walkout illegal.

There will be no classes in Chicago public schools for a sixth day on Monday, and probably on Tuesday, affecting 350,000 kindergarten, elementary and high school students.

The showdown also left in doubt a deal on wages, benefits and education reforms for 29,000 unionised teachers that negotiators had hoped would end the biggest labour dispute in the United States in a year.

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Union president Karen Lewis said some 800 union delegates met on Sunday and decided to go back to consult with rank-and-file members before voting whether to end the walk out.

“There’s no trust [of the school district and mayor],” Lewis told a news conference. “So you have a population of people who are frightened of never being able to work for no fault of their own.”

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Union delegates will reconvene on Tuesday to discuss the feedback from rank-and-file members, Lewis said. Parents should plan for their children to be out of school until at least Wednesday, she said.

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