Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Ariel/Starbucks

Why is Teachers Pension Fund Not Cutting Ties to Union-Busting Starbucks?

By Jim Vail


Trustee Phil Weiss questioned Ariel Fund and its
affiliation to union-busting Starbucks.

Trustee Phil Weiss raised an important issue at the April 21 Chicago Teachers Pension Fund Board meeting - why is the fund continuing to work with Ariel Management which is not only performing poorly, but also connected to union-busting Starbucks.

He questioned why the CTPF would continue to do business with Ariel Management and its director Melody Hobson who sits on the board of directors for Starbucks.

Starbucks is currently engaged in an ugly union-busting campaign after several of its stores voted to go union because of poor working conditions and low pay that has resulted in high worker turnover.

Chicago Teachers Union VP Stacy Davis Gates who just won the election to be president posted a statement in support of the workers organizing and fighting against the union busting tactics of Starbucks on Facebook just before the election.

Ariel is politically connected to the Chicago machine and is run by an African-American woman who is married to billionaire George Lucas of Star Wars fame. Lucas married Hobson then tried to get a museum connected to his Star Wars franchise built on the Chicago lakefront.

The Ariel Fund was put on the CTPF watchlist in August of 2020 due to high staff turnover and poor returns. Robert Lopez, an equity portfolio manager for the $2.5 billion fund, said Ariel has made strides to improve employee retention.

Weiss, the Investment Committee Chair, was not convinced.

"They are anti-union which is pretty disturbing and does not line up with our philosophy," Weiss said during the board meeting. 

Ariel's Valerie King said Melody Hobson is not anti-union because she is a union card holder and the negative press with Starbucks is unfortunate.

"We're aware of the negative press," she said. "There is no story here. It is distracting. Melody is very hurt by this."

Trustee Lois Nelson, who ran on the CORE ticket, defended Ariel and Melody Hobson.

"Ariel has been with us for so many years," Nelson said. "Hobson does not own Starbucks. She is beholden to them. This is being blindsided."

Ariel appears to be a minority front investment fund run to the benefit of corrupt city insiders. Former schools chief and President Obama's Education Secretary Arne Duncan sits on Ariel's board of directors. Duncan worked on behalf of Mayor Daley and the business class and closed many city public schools and replaced them with charters.

During the April CTPF board meeting, Trustee Dwayne Truss told Weiss to stick to the investment committee issues. Truss represents Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the Chicago Board of Education.

This is not the first time Ariel has been put on the CTPF watchlist when it comes to performance for the Chicago Teachers' Pension Fund. 

The CTPF investment consultant recommended terminating Ariel Capital Management due to poor performance at a Feb. board meeting in 2009 and a motion for termination was approved.

The trustees who abstained on the vote at that time included Lois Nelson, who was an active teacher trustee on the fund, John O'Brill, the president of the fund, Nancy Williams, teacher trustee, and Alberto Carrero, a trustee with the Chicago Board of Education.

Carrero said he abstained from the vote because he was in a position of conflict because of Ariel's involvement with and support of the Chicago Public Schools. 

Nelson said she abstained because Morgan Stanley was on the watchlist for two years and had not been removed.

Managers are put on the CTPF watchlist for poor performance or high turnover.

Trustee Maria Rodriguez was an active teacher trustee in 2009 and she made a motion to accept the pension fund's consultant Mercer's recommendation to terminate Ariel at the March 19, 2009 CTPF Board Meeting.

But then a curious thing happened. At that same meeting a motion was made to reconsider the earlier motion to sever ties with Ariel.

Apparently Ariel's magic worked and they continued to do business with the teacher's pension fund for the next two years. 

Then in 2011 another motion to put Ariel on the watchlist failed in a 7-4 vote. Those trustees who voted in favor of terminating Ariel included current Teacher Trustee Tina Padilla, former Teacher Trustee Ray Wohl, Principal Trustee Chris Kotis and former Pension Fund President Jay Rehak. The nays who voted to not terminate Ariel included former CORE Trustees Lois Ashford who ran on the ticket with Rehak to win CORE's first citywide election before defeating the UPC in the 2010 election, Jeanne Freed, and Mary Sharon Reilly, who at the time was a member of the UPC. Strangely, Reilly had seconded the motion to terminate Ariel, but then voted against the motion to terminate. The Chicago Board of Ed Trustee Rodrigo Sierra also voted against severing ties with Ariel.

The pension fund put Ariel on its manager watchlist in July, 2020 for "personnel turnover and underperformance." They have invested $79 million with the fund that has earned the highest watchlist score, according to the CTPF Asset Allocation report Sept. 30, 2021. Investments that were terminated after being placed on the watchlist included three BMO accounts that totaled $646 million. Funds on the watchlist but not yet terminated include Lazard ($675 million), Earnest Partners ($212 million) and DFA ($181 million), the asset allocation report stated.

According to the CTPF, over the past five years Ariel has returned 4.5 percent compared with the MSCI index of foreign stocks that returned 8.8 percent, costing the fund about $16 million.

Hobson manages more than $640 million in assets for Chicago-area pension funds, earning more than $3 million per year in fees. Many of those funds are connected to the city's unions, including SEIU that is seeking to organize Starbucks workers, according to writer David Sirota who covers pension funds.

Starbucks just fired 16 pro-union workers and Hobson said they will not stay neutral in union elections. 

According to CTPF protocol, recommendations to terminate or place investment managers on a watchlist is initiated by the CTPF consultant and then reviewed by the CTPF investment team. A motion is then made by the investment chair to vote on at the CTPF committee meeting and then voted on by the full board of trustees.

So why wasn't a motion made by someone on the investment committee to terminate Ariel and its ties to union-busting Starbucks? 

Thursday, May 19, 2022

CTU Election!

Chicago Teachers Union Election Looms Large

By Jim Vail


The CTU will elect a new union President. From left to right
MF Mary Esposito-Usterbowski, CORE Stacy Davis Gates
and REAL Darnell Dowd.

The Chicago public schools teachers will elect a president to lead a union that has battled the city and business class.

The Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) members will choose between the incumbents CORE who have led the union the past dozen years, Members First that is focused on teachers in the classroom and REAL, a group made up of many former CORE executive board members who are critical of CORE.

The CTU has led a courageous fight that included implementing school closing and charter school moratoriums, passing an elected school board, and restoring collective bargaining rights and the pension levy to protect teachers pensions.

The Members First opposition group has criticized the political focus of the union and has appealed to teachers classroom priorities such as increasing supplies reimbursements to $750, making all work pensionable and changing the residency requirements where most teachers have to live in the city.

The REAL caucus has vowed to fight on similar issues of CORE including making sure every school has a delegate, fully-staffed special education, nurses, clinicians and case managers on the first day of school and tackle bully administrators and toxic work environments.

In terms of media exposure, many believe that CORE and Members First will get the most votes.

Members First has been an opposition caucus for the past several years. They were the first caucus to build a strong online presence with a Facebook page with about 6,000 followers.  

CORE is the incumbent, and they have used their position as leaders of the union to also push their campaign. They filed several lawsuits against outside interference that MF and REAL believe were politically motivated.

Members First has put money where their mouth is. They led all caucuses in mailing out a whopping six slick large postcard flyers. 

Their first two mailers focused on President candidate Stacy Davis Gates with the headings: With a toxic relationship with city leaders How can we expect Stacy Davis Gates to deliver for us? and Is it personal or does she just want her job? Insiders say that these type of mailers were too toxic themselves against our current CTU VP who is already under fire from the Mayor and the opposition caucus decided to take a different direction. 

(I saw Stacy's picture and thought it was a mailer to vote for her and CORE if I did not read the fine print carefully.)

MF then focused on its next mailers with their 2 bread and butter issues - $750 for supplies for every teacher and bring back the 30 min. morning prep. Another mailer cut out Stacy's head and read: We can deliver so much more for all CTU members with fresh leadership. 

Their rhetoric toned down considerably.

CORE sent out 4 similar slick postcard mailers that focused on themselves, touting what they have won (elected school board, secured pensions and Covid sick days), while noting the other caucuses were funded by Mayor Lightfoot's suburban donor and undermined contract negotiations by posting sensitive information online.

CORE focused in the mailers on their bread & butter issues - confronting 'relentless challenges from privatizers and politicians who sought to destroy our communities' and that CORE is a 'diverse and experienced slate of proven leaders Founded by Karen Lewis. Endorsed by Jesse Sharkey.'

REAL mailed out one postcard that read: 'Is working in CPS easier now than 3, 6 or 10 yrs ago? Is is easier to deliver the rewarding experience your students deserve? Is your position more secure with Student Based Budgeting & Reach? If you said 'NO' to any of these, it's time to get REAL!

They also promised to bring back a large grievance department with a staffed hotline, defend members from crony contracts like Skyline, Aramark and Tech Co., and insure transparency by giving members easy access to all major expenditures including officer salaries and political donations.

MF would most likely cut back the union's political spending which they believe is too high and said they would not have agreed to stop work or strike when the Covid virus was raging in January. 

Will teachers agree to this? A majority voted to stop working because of the virus, but the mayor and the democratic party were adamant that teachers could not teach remote and forced teachers back to the classrooms.   

Will there be a runoff? Most likely there will be, and if so, then who will it be. I would predict that CORE will either win in the first round, or go to a runoff with Members First. The question would then be who would REAL support in the runoff? Their platform in many ways mirrors CORE but critical.

Happy CTU elections!

Saturday, May 14, 2022

Book Review

BOOK REVIEW

COMING UP FOR AIR by George Orwell

Oxford University Press, 2021, Oxford, Britain

Review by Stephen Wilson

 
'War! I started thinking about it again. It's coming soon, that's certain. But who's afraid of war? That's to say, who is afraid of the bombs and the machine-guns ? 'You are', you say. yes, I am, and so's anybody who's ever seen them. But it isn't the war that matters, it's the after-war. The World we are going into , the kind of hate-world ,slogan world. The colored shirts, the barbed wire, the rubber truncheons. The secret cells where the electric light burns night and day, and the detectives watching you while you sleep. And the processions and the posters and enormous faces, and the crowds of a million people all cheering for the leader till they deafen themselves into thinking they really worship him, and all the time, underneath, they hate him so that they want to puke.' {page 124 }laments the main character George Bowling of George Orwell's 'Coming Up For Air' , a novel set in pre-war England. The novel is a dark comedy where the disaffected , anguished and bored insurance agent George Bowling, decides to embark on a secret odyssey back into the England where he grew up in so as to relive some of the joy he once experienced as a child before the onslaught of the First World War. He hopes to forget about the imminent outbreak of war which seems so certain. But his hometown has  radically changed so much that he even gets lost.
 
This novel is highly underrated. It is worth ignoring literary critics who claim that while Orwell was a great essayist he was not such a good novelist. That is just bunk! This is difficult to square with the compelling images, scenes and convincing characters you find in 1984, Animal farm as well as 'Coming Up For Air'. The novel 'Coming Up for Air' bluntly captures the tense atmosphere being experienced just before the Second War World where people were genuinely afraid of air-raids and falling under Fascism. The pathetic attempts to escape this harsh reality by drinking, flirting or in Bowling's case  trying to take up fishing again seem understandable. I enjoyed the amusing dialogue between Bowling and his uptight wife Hilda who is permanently worried and anxious about the future, and the strange academic Porteous. Porteous is completely complacent concerning the threat of Hitler. He feels Hitler is irrelevant. He does not think of him at all. He is more interested in the siege of Troy than the impending war. He just goes on reciting old Latin and Greek poetry with a beautiful voice. Bowling thinks 'Funny those public school chaps. Schoolboys all their days. Whole life revolving round the old school and their bits of Latin and Greek and poetry. And suddenly I remembered that almost the first time I was here with Porteous he'd read me the very same poem. Read it in just the same way, and his voice quivered when he got to the same bit- the bit about magic casements, or something. And a curious thought struck me . He 's dead. He 's a ghost. All people like that are dead.'{pages 131-132} Bowling concludes that there are many people in England who are stuck in a mindset where they imagine England will never change and England is the World.  
 
Bowling is utterly bored with his job. He is frustrated with his dull domestic situation and yearns for a new adventure. But he now realizes that he is not the same man but has lost all his teeth and put on weight. In deed the novel begins with the first line -'The idea came to me the day I got my new false teeth.' Bowling wins some money on horse-racing which allows him to take a holiday back to his Lower Binfield in Oxfordshire. But he soon becomes disillusioned by what he finds. All the fields where mushrooms used to grow have been swallowed up by new houses and old pubs have had their old decor destroyed by new renovations.
 
One wonders why Bowling keeps his holiday secret. It is as if he is ashamed and embarrassed to admit to his wife his feelings of nostalgia. He even feels that the hobby of fishing might be frowned upon as a  childish hobby fit only for children and not middle-aged men. It reminds me of how some people in Britain still make fun of adults who keep model railways at their homes.  

It turns out that keeping the aim of his holiday a secret backfires on Bowling. His wife suspects he is having an affair when in reality he has been seeing no woman and has even had his advances rebuffed by a woman in a humiliating way.
 
Orwell makes some sharp comments on the state of England where everyone seems afraid of losing their jobs, poverty,  the threat of war, Communism and  Fascism. It is worth noting that the authoritarian trends which Orwell notices in Britain such as censorship, declining diversity and growing intolerance are what convinced him that Britain could one day turn into a dictatorship. Reading this book ought to help you better understand 1984. For the novel 1984 is not just based on the historical experience of Germany and Russia but also Britain. And if you look at the situation in Britain at present then it turns out Orwell has been spot on. Britain has the largest amount of surveillance cameras in the whole world. Everywhere you go a camera follows you. There is even more surveillance in Britain than Russia. Journalists are being persecuted in Britain for revealing the truth and even British citizens are being illegally deported because they can't find their documents on time to prove they are British. We are living in a 'hostile environment' not just for illegal migrants but practically anyone who expresses disagreeable views. What is disquieting is how timely Orwell's novel is. It is easy to forget this was written in 1939. It could have been written now. The current conflict in Ukraine has made people anxious about the threat of a Third World War. The demagogues which frightened Orwell have not faded away but over the past decade appeared to have mushroomed.
 
Bowling returns home with the sad words - 'One thing, I thought as I drove down the hill, I am finished with this notion of getting back into the past. What's the good of trying to revisit the scenes of your boyhood? They don't exist. Coming up for air! But there isn't any air. The dustbin we are in reaches up to the stratosphere. All the same I didn't particularly care. After all, I thought, I 've still got three days left. I'd have a bit of peace and quiet, and stop bothering about what they had done to Lower Binfield.{pages 149} Even the name Binfield suggests a bin of rubbish in a field!
 
Perhaps this novel appeals to me because I once tried to do what Bowling did. I returned to some of my childhood haunts in Scotland and also kept this secret. When I told my sister that I had returned to Scotland in order to write poetry she answered "Is that why you are staying for some time? To write poetry? You have gone mad! " Like Bowling I found my favorite pubs had been destroyed by new renovations and some churches had been transformed into pubs. The old fields we had once played football in had been replaced by huge supermarkets. Even the old bookshop has now closed down...
 
But I think that Bowling should not be ashamed of going fishing ! Reliving old pursuits from childhood isn't childish. On the contrary it might help you connect better with your own children. And we need to come up for some fresh air in those trying times !

Saturday, May 7, 2022

HOD May

CTU House of Delegates May Meeting

By George Milkowski

 

Note: This is NOT part of the House meeting but I am involved with this as a Union member, history buff, and former steel worker, so I thought you should be aware of this event. The Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees is hosting a commemoration of the Memorial Day Police Riot Massacre at Republic Steel in 1937.  The ceremony will be on Saturday, May 21, at 11731 S. Avenue “0”, just three blocks down the street from George Washington H.S..   (Avenue 0 is 3432 east).  Doors open at 1:00 p.m. and the ceremony will begin at 2:00 p.m..  Fred Redmond of the AFL-CIO will be the keynote speaker and Ald. Sue Garza, a CTU member, will also speak.  Not yet committed is CTU Vice-president Stacy Davis Gates.  I hope you can attend.   



Report on the meeting of the House of Delegates held on May 4, 2022


The meeting began at 4:35 p.m. and was a Zoom webinar.


I. Officers Reports

A.   Christel Williams- Hayes – Recording Secretary.  Christel said the CTU is fighting CPS plans to increase the privatization of Technology Coordinators as they had tried to do, unsuccessfully, with school clerks. 

Christel also reported that a delegation of PSRPs recently attended a PSRP convention sponsored by the AFT in St. Louis.

B.  Kathy Catalano – Financial Report.  Kathy reported that revenues for the year are right on track.  As of February 2, 2022, we are $1,315,432 in the red, but as more revenue comes in we expect to have a surplus of about $500,000 by the end of June.

As required by the CTU constitution, a proposed budget for the 2022-2023 fiscal year was presented.  Kathy described it as a “conservative” budget. There will be no expenses for a Union election next year so it is projected that we will have a surplus of about $750,000 by June, 2023.  Typically, a little over 50% of our revenue goes to the AFT and IFT as “pass throughs” although some is rebated to us and there are re-imbursements when we host or are involved in IFT or AFT programs or legal actions.

The current CTU staff is at 62.

C. Maria Moreno – Financial Secretary – Our membership is currently up to 28,261 and retiree membership has dropped by 3 to 1,652. 

The May print edition of the Chicago Union Teacher was mailed out this week.

D.  Chris Baehrend – Charter Division – Chris reported that plans to conduct negotiations as a group with all the charter school operators.  Also, he said that a new unit of art teachers has filed to become affiliated with the CTU charter division.

The Charter Division will conduct a rally at the CPS headquarters, 42 W. Washington, on May 17 starting at 4:30 p.m. and all CTU members are asked to join in.

E.  Stacy Davis Gates - Vice President – Stacy lauded Tara Stamps for her role in organizing the “We Care Mentoring” program for teachers with less than four years of experience.  The program currently has about 175 teachers but there are hopes to increase that to 300-500 next school year. Veteran teachers who would like to be mentors may apply for those positions and there will be a stipend provided.

Stacy also referred to a Tribune article that came out that day that dealt with educators demanding an end to standardized testing.  She said that we have been able to change the narrative on this issue so that the negative affects of too much testing is the main point.

Stacy provided a list of schools that are having mobile COVID vaccinations.  She said the CPS does not really push this information..

Lastly, Stacy referenced the news that it looks Like the U.S. Supreme Court is set to overturn Roe v. Wade.  She said that this may be used as a precedent to overturn other assumed rights that we have that are not specifically mentioned in the Constitution.

II. President’s Report

Pres. Sharkey also referenced the Roe v. Wade news.  He said that numerous assumed rights, like maternity leave and other issues specifically affecting women, are on the line.

Jesse said that action by CTU members are starting to have an effect on some school budgets.  Some schools are having budgets slashed dramatically yet the CPS is STILL sitting on $1.4 billion in federal COVID relief funds.  The total cuts the Board is planning on making is about $42 million, a small fraction of the funds that are available.

The Union has not yet taken any action on any of those members who went in to “work” those four days in January.  The CTU is still investigating and recognizes that individual situations vary widely.

Jesse said he testified at an Unfair Labor Practice hearing regarding the CPS’ unilateral decision to stop requiring masks in the schools..  He expects the hearing board to make a decision by June.  He thinks we will win on the point that the CPS violated a written agreement on the issue with the CTU.

The CTU will conduct its traditional debate between candidates for president and vice president on May 5.  This time it will be a hybrid event with some people being present in the Union main hall and others viewing it on-line.  If one wants to see it one must register in advance.    

III. Items for Action

A.  A resolution in Opposition to the New State Testing Regime was passed.  A growing body of evidence shows that too much standardized testing does little good and takes time away from actual learning in the classroom.  The resolution passed 97-2%.  I voted “yes”.

B.  Political endorsement of Lamont Wilson for the 16th State district was amended from the floor to include Sonja Harper in the 6th district.  It passes 92-8%

C. Resolution Against CPS Budget Cuts passed 98-2%


IV. Committee Reports

A.  Organizing – Linda Perales – To continue to fight the CPS budget cuts the Union is encouraging and supporting members and having meetings with parental and community groups and with alderpersons plus putting pressure on the Board at its meetings.  These actions appear to be having some affect.

The Union is planning its 12th annual CTO Organizing Institute.  It will take place over three weeks in the summer and a stipend and gas mileage allowance will be provided.

B. Grievance – Gervaise Clay – Gervaise went over the rules and procedures for the end of year assessment at each school.

The CPS is providing opportunities for members who lost income by staying out for four days In January to make up that loss.  Gervaise explained what members need to do to apply for this extra work and pay.

Gervaise also made it clear that teachers should be receiving their end of year preference sheets, the schedule for the REACH evaluations, and when to expect their tentative schedule for next year.

Lastly, she made it clear that those who were docked sick days for being out do to COVID are eligible by State law to have those days restored, but the need to be vaccinated and fill out the proper form by May 6.

C.  Subs of the Month – Georgia Waller – The two recognized subs (guest workers new political correct term) are Ray Weisman at Locke School and Patrice Thomas at Vicky Early childhood Center.

D. Political/Legislative – Kurt Hilgendorf – Kurt reported on bills that have passed but have not yet been signed into law by the governor.  They are a doubling of educator’s expense tax credit from $250 to $500, the bill to limit testing in grades K-2 and the bill to allow retirees to sub up to 140 days in the 2022-23 and 2023-24 school years with no reduction in their pension benefits,

Kurt reminded the assembly that the Primary election is unusually late, on June 28 this year, and if one would like to see the CTU’s endorsements, go to ctulocal1.org/vote.


V. New Business/Question and Answers

Margaret Taylor (Chappell) asked about five positions in the proposed budget that have no names specified.  Jesse said that those were lobbyist engaged by the CTU.

Jim McIntosh (Roosevelt) asked when will the House return to in-person meetings.  Jesse said that the House voted against doing that for the last three meetings of this school year, but he hopes we will return to in-person or perhaps hybrid meetings by September.

Scott Zwierzychowski  (Lincoln Park) asked if the Union would help members at individual schools to organize protests over the Roe v. Wade probably repeal.  Jesse said that the Union is planning on something in its committees.

Debby Pope (Retired) introduced a resolution requiring the CTU to take strong public action to defend Roe v. Wade, stressing the emergency nature of the issue.   Jesse ruled to submit it to a committee, but the House overruled him and the resolution was debated and passed, 95-5%.  Everyone who spoke argued in favor of it, including me.  I concluded my remarks buy saying that “any man who opposes Roe v. Wade should be required to get a vasectomy”.

There was a motion to extend the meeting but it failed.  As is usual, I vote d to continue going.


The meeting ended at 7:53 p.m..

Monday, May 2, 2022

Konkol Idiocy

Mark Konkol is a Complete Idiot

By Jim Vail


Anti-union corporate media hack Mark Konkol

First - Mark Konkol, a disgraced former Reader editor who constantly writes how much he hates the Chicago Teachers Union and Core, is an idiot.

Second - Core, who is blasting Members First for teaming up with the CTU-hating Chicago Tribune (Wishing for a Hurricane Katrina in Chicago), has benefited from a puff piece by the Chicago Magazine that lauded VP Stacy Gates as the heir to the CTU throne.

The Chicago Tribune owns the Chicago Magazine!

I have written about the corporate media who circle like sharks around the Chicago Teachers Union and the upcoming election May 20. Members First, the leading opposition caucus, has generated a lot of media attention from the Chicago Tribune, NBC News, WTTW TV and WGN. Core, who leads the Chicago Teachers Union, has cried foul about outside interference, but has also generated favorable media coverage from the Sun-Times, Wbez Radio and now the Chicago Magazine.

The latest story featured Stacy Gates like she was some fashion model ready to take over the city and lead us all to the promised land. It was a bit nauseating, especially the part about Gates being the heir apparent to be the next CTU President. Especially disgusting since Core has been lamenting about outside interference in this election.

"Heir apparent? I guess the votes of 25,000 members on May 20th is a forgone conclusion. Glad the media knows the pulse of our members," Joey McDermott, REAL Caucus candidate for CTU VP, wrote on fb.

Of course, Mr. Konkol beat me to the punch and called this all out in his April 25 article because anti-union writing is his thang, and pointing out any flaw in the CTU business is his modus operandi.

First, the title of his article in Patch was a joke: "Did Magazine Get Used By Davis Gates To Influence CTU Election?

Hello!, as my affable colleague says when I point out the latest absurd thing I heard. Everybody is playing somebody. The Chicago Tribune is presenting two sides of our ruling class: 

1- the cold hard conservative face of the business world that hates unions, especially vocal minority-led ones like the CTU who get results. 

2- the social/racial justice liberal face that needs to make concessions to black lives after massive protests exposed the ugliness of a country ruled by police brutality.

Konkol is a curious choice for the rulers to present as the face of anti-CTU and Stacy Davis Gates. This journalist was fired from the Chicago Reader back in 2018 for running an extremely racist picture of Gov. J.B. Pritzker with him seating on a black lawn jockey. 

Adeshina Emmanuel, who wrote the article that criticized the Gov for his subtle racism, strongly opposed the cover art and said Konkol initially suggested they include a full spelling of the N-word in the headline.

And this is the guy calling out Stacy Davis Gates? WTF??

But that's how it is - former disgraced criminals, bigots or racists who get fired after a public outroar slime their way back into a job because the criminal, racist bigot bosses always need them to put out their poison.

Mark Konkol won a Pulitzer Prize and I am not surprised. The ruling class always awards their lackeys for work on behalf of their crimes. The NY Times is Exhibit A - they have won how many Pulitzers and on the record lied to lead us into the disastrous Iraq War. That's who wins these top prizes.

Konkol more than that is just an ugly person. The Reader staff cheered after he was fired, tweeting out, "Ding Dong, the Wicked Witch is Dead."

Former music editor Philip Montoro said that Konkol, "shouted me down in meetings, berated me, insulted me, and disrespected and alienated longtime freelance contributors."

Boy, what a guy to be calling out the CTU and the follies of our Core VP Stacy Davis-Gates.

Almost makes you want to vote Core just to spite their racist hatred.

Still, the article in Chicago Magazine certainly had a number of teachers and union members scratching their heads. Core is a political beast that will use the corporate media as much as any powerful political machine hell bent on winning this election.