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Who We Are »
Betsy Combier

Help Us to Continue to Help Others »
Email: betsy.combier@gmail.com

 
The E-Accountability Foundation announces the

'A for Accountability' Award

to those who are willing to whistleblow unjust, misleading, or false actions and claims of the politico-educational complex in order to bring about educational reform in favor of children of all races, intellectual ability and economic status. They ask questions that need to be asked, such as "where is the money?" and "Why does it have to be this way?" and they never give up. These people have withstood adversity and have held those who seem not to believe in honesty, integrity and compassion accountable for their actions. The winners of our "A" work to expose wrong-doing not for themselves, but for others - total strangers - for the "Greater Good"of the community and, by their actions, exemplify courage and self-less passion. They are parent advocates. We salute you.

Winners of the "A":

Johnnie Mae Allen
David Possner
Dee Alpert
Aaron Carr
Harris Lirtzman
Hipolito Colon
Larry Fisher
The Giraffe Project and Giraffe Heroes' Program
Jimmy Kilpatrick and George Scott
Zach Kopplin
Matthew LaClair
Wangari Maathai
Erich Martel
Steve Orel, in memoriam, Interversity, and The World of Opportunity
Marla Ruzicka, in Memoriam
Nancy Swan
Bob Witanek
Peyton Wolcott
[ More Details » ]
 
Cat Fight in Chicago Over Who is the Actual President of the Chicago Teachers' Union: A Look at Election Manipulation

Teachers union opponents dig in
BY KATE N. GROSSMAN AND ROSALIND ROSSI, Chicago Sun-Times, July 1, 2004

Two women walked into the office of the Chicago Teachers Union claiming to be its president today-- the election winner whose victory had been invalidated two days earlier and the incumbent president who had the office locks changed to keep others out.

Deborah Lynch was scheduled to hand over power to newly elected President Marilyn Stewart today, but late Tuesday, a union committee threw out the election results.

With no firm date for a re-election, both women say they're in charge. They met Wednesday evening but couldn't reach a resolution.

"President Lynch and the other officers in the CTU, as the last duly appointed officers of the union, will remain in office," Kathrin Koenig, the CTU general counsel, said at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Thursday morning, with supporters applauding, Stewart entered the office to take over leadership of the union. She got through the door but was turned away at the reception area. Lynch stayed inside the office.

"I would hope that she would honor the election results," Stewart said outside the office. "Our members have spoken. They have chosen someone else. And she needs to leave.

"There is absolutely no reason to hold another election."

Koenig had said she expected Stewart's team to stay home, but Stewart's spokeswoman said she was sorely mistaken. "We have every intention of taking office tomorrow at 9 a.m," Rose Maria Genova said about 9:15 p.m.

"We are the duly elected officers, and we will take office," Stewart said in a statement.

Stewart asked the American Federation of Teachers to investigate the election dispute and was considering requesting a court injunction.

AFT spokesman Alex Wohl said the national teachers union was looking into the situation but didn't expect a decision soon.

Stewart attorney Jennifer Poltrock said Stewart was awaiting a directive from the AFT and would consider suing if the directive was in Stewart's favor and Lynch still refused to leave office.

Lynch said the dispute wasn't personal but was about election fairness.

Earlier Wednesday, a building engineer changed the CTU office locks at Lynch's request. She said she did it because members of Stewart's caucus came in uninvited this week to hand out pink slips to as many as 15 employees.

There is only one way to summarize what has happened, explained Paul Green of Roosevelt University: "It's classic Chicago hard-nosed politics," the director of the school of policy studies said. CTU officials say they are working on a new election date but the summer vacation poses logistical problems. The uncertainty comes just days after Mayor Daley announced a plan to create 100 new schools, potentially displacing thousands of teachers and opening charter or contract schools that won't have to adhere to the union contract.

The brouhaha began late Tuesday when a CTU canvassing committee charged with resolving election disputes tossed out the results of the June 11 vote, citing "significant ballot discrepancies and evidence of fraud."

CTU officials say this includes about 600 ballots sent out but never returned and about 30 signatures on ballots that did not match signatures on record. There also were more than 100 teachers who were absent but voted -- not illegal but an indicator that raised a red flag.

Teachers also complained about having to sign an unofficial ballot sheet. One said she voted a day before the election, Koenig said. She said these facts -- some of which emerged during a review by the outside agency that oversaw the election -- concerned them so they were forwarded to the union's canvassing committee.

Three committee members voted to throw out the results, one abstained, and one voted against, said Judy Dever, an independent committee member appointed by Stewart. The committee includes two Lynch caucus members, three "independents" appointed by Lynch and two Stewart appointees, Koenig said. One Stewart appointee was absent, and the chair didn't vote, Koenig said.

Dever says the "fraud" amounts to next to nothing. To make her point, she quoted an official with the American Arbitration Association, the group that certified the election.

He told the committee the missing ballots wouldn't have tipped the balance in Lynch's favor because half would have likely gone to each candidate. The electorate was nearly evenly divided, with Stewart defeating Lynch by just 566 votes.

The fraud amounts to just 30 votes with questionable signatures, Dever said.

"I just feel these four people totally overreacted," Dever said. "I call it sour grapes and poor losers."

Lynch defended her actions.

"Our canvassing committee is the constitutional body charged with resolving discrepancies, and they're alleging very, very serious charges here, and our interest here, as it has always been, is union democracy and fair elections," Lynch said. "That's what this is about."

Her supporters quickly came to her defense.

"I think there probably was a lot of fraud there and a lot of hanky panky going on," said Sharonese Biles, a union delegate and teacher. She said ballots at her school weren't picked up in the primary election and that made her question the whole process. Stewart was later elected in a run-off election June 11.

"I'll feel better if it's fair and square with a new election."

In a statement, American Arbitration Association officials said the challenges to the election are not related to the elements they were responsible for. CTU officials oversaw registration, distribution of ballots and the sealing of ballot boxes. The association was responsible for receiving ballot boxes and tabulating results.

Union dissenter says Lynch 'shopped' for a new runoff

BY ROSALIND ROSSI Education Reporter



After losing a close runoff election for Chicago Teachers Union president, Deborah Lynch and her forces armed themselves for hardball.

They sent out e-mails asking for examples of voting irregularities and called in a handwriting expert who had helped knock a Milwaukee Democrat off a primary ballot for Wisconsin governor two years ago, insiders say.

Then they turned over their work to the union's canvassing committee.

After sitting around a 15-foot-long table for seven hours, committee members this week voted 3-1, with one abstention, to hold another election.

The lone dissenter on that vote, Judy Dever, told the Chicago Sun-Times on Wednesday that a June 21 e-mail to union members amounted to "shopping for complaints,'' although Lynch spokesman Jay Rehak said it was prompted by other complaints the union had received.

In addition, Dever said, Lynch forces had sampled 96 schools, or one-sixteenth of the system, and found that about 30 votes in 16 of those schools had been cast by people who were absent and whose voting-day signatures did not match others on record for them.

The signature evidence the committee considered was based on an affidavit by Bonnie Schwid, whose handwriting work helped knock Wisconsin state Sen. Gary George off the gubernatorial primary ballot in 2002. But committee members never got to see the signatures in question, Dever said.

She said Lynch forces conceded they never asked the absent teachers if they actually voted.

In about 13 schools in question, Dever said, only one ballot each was at issue. But Schwid's work, and what to do with it, consumed about five hours of Tuesday's seven-hour meeting, she said.

Also at issue were 616 "unaccounted for'' votes, which an American Arbitration Association expert dismissed by phone as an inconsequential number, and 569 "missing ballots'' from 115 schools, Dever said. The association expert said the missing ballots, if split in half, would not have turned the election, Dever said.

An arbitration association spokesman refused to confirm or deny Dever's account, and Lynch forces did not return calls for comment on it. Dever said the committee "overreacted" to 30 votes.

"Who are we to send thousands of members back to the polls on this kind of information?'' Dever said. "It's a disgusting situation.''


Bank freezes teachers union accounts
BY KATE N. GROSSMAN, Chicago Sun-Times, July 9, 2004

In the latest twist in the Chicago Teachers Union standoff, the union's bank froze its accounts Thursday.

The Amalgamated Bank of Chicago is expected in state court today to try to determine who should control the accounts, a CTU spokeswoman said. Direct deposit payroll will go through this week, the spokeswoman added. There are about 60 CTU employees, paid weekly.

Marilyn Stewart beat Deborah Lynch in an election that was invalidated by a union committee last week. Both say they should control the office while the election controversy is being resolved.

In other news, Stewart said her officers and up to approximately 150 delegates will be going to the union's national convention in Washington next week. She said they'll pay out of pocket but will expect to be reimbursed by the union. Lynch is not expected to send a delegation, though some officers may go.

 
© 2003 The E-Accountability Foundation