Teachers will re-vote for president
June 30, 2004
BY KATE N. GROSSMAN,
ANA MENDIETA AND ROSALIND ROSSI Staff Reporters
The closest Chicago Teachers Union election in 30 years was declared
null and void Tuesday after a union committee found "evidence of fraud"
including 600 missing ballots, according to union officials.
Most union officials contacted late Tuesday could not recall such an
action being taken in union history.
The decision to toss out the June 11 election results that tossed
president Deborah Lynch from power and replaced her with special
education teacher Marilyn Stewart came after an eight-hour meeting of
the CTU Canvassing Committee.
"The Canvassing Committee has determined the election is invalid and
Stewart and her group have not been properly elected," said Kathrin
Koenig, a CTU lawyer. "The question is when and how to hold a new
election so a fair vote can be determined."
The CTU's executive committee will hold a special meeting today to
decide on the process for a new election.
Word of the call for a new runoff election came as Lynch supporters
were cleaning out their desks after getting their formal pink slips
from Stewart's regime.
Stewart beat Lynch 11,566 to 11,006 votes.
Jackie Gallagher, a former CTU official, who dates back to the days of
CTU President Jacqueline Vaughn, said she was surprised the decision
from the canvassing committee came so long after the June 11 election.
Vaughn ran the union from 1984-1994.
"Why has it taken so long?" Gallagher said. "I am absolutely stunned."
She also noted that the decision comes as 13 union officials were fired
by Stewart's regime.
"What a crazy, crazy situation," she said. "If Debbie pulls it off, it
will be a miracle."
Jay Rehak, Lynch's press secretary, said the news came as a surprise,
although the Lynch camp had asked for a review after the American
Arbitration Association issued a report on unused and spoiled ballots.
It is the first time in 30 years that the CTU has brought in an outside
agency to monitor the election.
Koenig, an attorney for the CTU, said that 600 ballots were unaccounted
for.
Rehak said there had also been suspicions about irregularities during
balloting, he said.
"There was a whiff of problems from the start," Rehak said late
Tuesday.
The probe centered around unused and spoiled ballots and a larger
number of voters in the runoff than in the first election, Rehak said.
He said that a number of teachers who were absent also voted -- not
illegal but an indicator that can seen a red flag for vote watchers.
Koenig said that a CTU review showed that 112 teachers from 95 schools
appeared on the list as being absent, but nevertheless their names
appeared on the voting signature list.
One teacher said she saw her name on the official voting list, although
she never signed it herself, Koenig said.
Lynch could not be reached for comment.
Reached at her home in Matteson late Tuesday, Stewart declined to
comment and referred calls to her spokeswoman, Rose Maria Genova.
"We are in contact with our legal department and we are waiting their
analysis of the situation," Genova said. "We will continue to take the
necessary steps for our transition, that will take place July 1."
|