Rahm you left the 99% and joined the 1%. Welcome aboard!
John Canning, President of The Economic Club of Chicago,
welcoming Mayor Emanuel before his 12/12/11 speech
On December
12, 2011 Mayor Emanuel delivered a speech at a private meeting of The Economic
Club of Chicago (ECC). There was no press, he was among friends—very rich
friends. They told him so. In his introductory remarks, the new president of
the ECC, John Cunning, was generous:
“Rahm rose
to become the President’s Chief Political Advisor and he scored many victories
during his first White House Tour including securing the North American Treaty,
the North American Free Trade Agreement Passage. Rahm left the Clinton
Administration in 1998 to return to Chicago embarking on a successful three
year stent [sic] as an investment banker. As a result, Rahm you left the 99%
and joined the 1%. Welcome aboard! Good to have you.”
So Emanuel
spoke frankly. He delivered on a silver platter the City Colleges of Chicago
(CCC) to his business friends. In just a few minutes, the Mayor reversed many
months of denials by CCC Chancellor Cheryl Hyman regarding the conversion of
the CCC system into trade schools.
“We
are going to remake our community college system into a skills-based, vocational-based
educational system,”
said Emanuel to a crowd full of corporate heads. He was quite explicit about
his plans:
“Every year we will modernize two new schools and match them with
partners in the private sector, to train the workers for our factories, for our
offices, for our hospitals, for our hotel industry and for our infrastructure.”
Explicit, in
a way he and the CCC administration have not been with the media, nor the
faculty, staff, and students of the CCC.
As a matter
of fact, none of the press releases sent by the office of the mayor or the CCC
administration regarding this speech contain any reference to the conversion of
the CCC into a vocational school system. When Reader reporter Deanna Isaacs
blogged about this speech, she listed the press release as her source. On our
“Reinvention Mirrors” posting regarding this matter, we also used this
press release, which seemed to contain more of the usual recasting of programs
already in place. We were wrong. The announcements for Olive-Harvey and
Malcolm X Colleges, even if they did not contain much additional meat, really
described a sharp restructuring of the mission and curriculum of these
colleges.
The
Cat is Out of the Bag
Since our
initial posting we have been arguing that in line with the professed goals of
the Obama administration, the CCC administration was getting ready to transform
a significant part of the CCC into a job-training, vocational-schooling
direction. We emphasized that the most important (by far) Reinvention goal was
the first one, which emphasized the generation of degrees with economic
value. What we did not expect was that most
of the system would be transformed in this direction. Let’s hear Emanuel again:
“Cities
like Miami and Louisville have tried something similar — but in a single
industry, with a single school. Miami matched a community college to train
students in the healthcare sciences. Louisville has linked a community college
with UPS to be a leader in logistics.
But this is
Chicago. We need something bigger, more ambitious, and more comprehensive,
something to match the diversity and depth of our economy, which is one of our
strengths.
So tonight,
I
am announcing that we will tailor six of our community colleges to train
students in a specific sector, where we know we can dominate the future.”
In our
posting titled “Reinvention: Local Case of the National Scheme to Degrade Community Colleges” we had connected the Reinvention to Obama’s administration plan to transform
community colleges into workforce development institutions to faithfully serve
the needs of corporations, as part of his political agenda to convince the
public that he was addressing the abysmal unemployment rate. As in tandem,
Emanuel announces his vocationalization of the CCC in December, and a month
later in his State of the Union address, this is what Obama had to say:
“Join me in
a national commitment to train 2 million Americans with skills that will lead
directly to a job. My administration has already lined up more companies that
want to help. Model partnerships
between businesses like Siemens and community colleges in places like
Charlotte, and Orlando, and Louisville are up and running. Now you need to give more community
colleges the resources they need to become community career centers -– places
that teach people skills that businesses are looking for right now, from data
management to high-tech manufacturing.”
Emanuel’s
offer of the CCC to the corporations and businesses was made very attractive:
“In the
same way that you help Booth and Kellogg prepare their graduates for careers in
management and finance, we need you to partner with our community colleges — so
that their curriculums meet the needs of the sectors that power the Chicago
economy.
I’m not
talking about hiring one person or even a partnership. It’s more than that.
This is about ensuring that the curriculum taught at community colleges
provides the skills you need at your place of employment.
By making a
diploma from our community colleges into a ticket to the workforce, we will
make them a first option for job training and not a last resort.
I do not
expect you to do this alone. Our community college leaders will be right there
with you. And whatever you invest in our schools, you will get back many times
over in the skills of your employees and your ability to grow.”
Therefore it
will be the business barons’ employees who will be in charge of
rewriting the curriculum at the CCC.
Bluntly
Elitist
Emanuel minces
no words in making it clear that he is talking about a two-tier higher
education system. One for the children of the elite, plus a minority of working
class students made up of those lucky enough to sneak in, who will be able to
secure a bachelors degree or more. Then there is the rest of our children who
will be led down a cattle chute into the lower rungs of the work universe.
Again, we let him speak:
“Now don’t
get me wrong, Chicago and the state of Illinois have great institutions of
higher learning. We know them: Northwestern, University of Chicago, University
of Illinois, Depaul, Columbia College, Loyola, Roosevelt, UIC.
We have two
of the top five business schools in the country in Booth and Kellogg. We have
great law schools. In technology we have IIT, Fermi, Argonne labs, and U of I.
Chicago is
also the destination of choice for graduates from the Big Ten States, be they
from Madison, Columbus, Ann Arbor, Iowa City, East Lansing, Minneapolis / Saint
Paul, Indianapolis, or South Bend.
What we have
overlooked in the development of our workforce is the preparation of our own
children. We have not developed the educational system that helps our economy
grow.”
The gloomy
significance of this transformation was well spelled out by a participant of a discussion
regarding this matter at The Harold Lounge (Harold Washington College’s faculty
discussion webpage):
“So, how
will all of this effect our students? Well, the mayor and the chancellor are
basically saying that our students are not capable of pursuing higher
education, and should be satisfied with a vocational career. At least that way,
they will be contributing members of society. This denigrates our students to
the nth degree. Instead of providing access to higher education, which is the
foundation and mission of community colleges, we will be limiting our students
to low level jobs, with little to no opportunity for career growth. This is
social injustice at it’s finest.
I’m not
against partnering with businesses to provide smooth transitions into careers
for our students. I’m not against creating more vocational paths for our
students. What I am against is the City Colleges of Chicago telling the
students of Chicago that they can achieve no higher than that, that they should
settle, that they shouldn’t dream big, that they don’t need to be educated, but
trained with a specific set of skills – skills that limit their opportunities
for career advancement or career change.”
100,000
Unfilled Jobs?
This is not
the first time that the Mayor uses the argument of a skills mismatch between
inadequate level of skills of unemployed workers and an alleged 100,000
skilled-job vacancies in Illinois that go unfilled despite the high
unemployment rate. This same argument is raised nationally by the National
Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and the Obama administration, but with a
claim of more than half a million unfilled skilled job vacancies at the
national level. Bear in mind that this argument does not explain away the high
unemployment numbers. Even if the 500,000 figure is accurate, this is way short
of the over 13 million people looking for jobs, which excludes those who,
demoralized, have given up searching for work. These figures come from surveys
of manufacturers and other employers. However there is controversy around the
accuracy of this claim.
A 2005 report by
the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) says that “Employers do complain about the
skills of young worker and high-school-educated workers, but it is unclear
whether they are dissatisfied mainly with workers’ cognitive skills or rather
with their effort and attitude.” Furthermore, last September Heidi Shierholz reported in the EPI’s blog that the a comparison of unemployment rates across all skill sectors between
2007 and 2011 showed that “all education categories have seen their
unemployment rates roughly double over the last four years.” And that
“This
across-the-board deterioration in the demand for workers runs directly counter
to the notion that there has been some transformation of the workplace over the
last four years that has left millions of workers inadequately prepared for the
currently available jobs.”
John Schmitt,
senior economist with the Center for Economic and Policy Research, writes that
“If there
really is a shortage of skilled workers, though, we’d expect to see skilled
workers’ wages rising.
But,
workers with some college (including those with associates degrees) or a
bachelors degree or even a masters degree suffered average real wage declines
even steeper than those of high school graduates.
So, if we
have a shortage of skilled workers, it is a peculiar one.”
Finally
renown business journalist Doug Henwood and Philippa Dunne,
co-editor of the The Liscio Report on the Economy, debunked the analysis of Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota, who claimed
that the unemployment vs. vacancy rates data indicated a significant jobs
skills mismatch, by using vacancy rates data extending back to the 1960s and
showing that this is not the case.
So…if we do
not have that scary a mismatch between unfilled skilled jobs and the number of
unemployed, what really happens is that, as Heidi Shierholz says, “The U.S.
doesn’t lack the right workers, it lacks work.”
Then,
what is all this conversion of the CCC into vocational schools about?
It is about
the money—about shifting the economic burden of training workers from
businesses to students and tax payers. As MSNBC Senior Producer John Schoen explains,
“But there’s less agreement on where the money will come from to train those
jobless workers. Nobody, it seems, wants to pick up the tab.” Then he goes on
to quote Anthony Carnevale, director of the Georgetown University Center on
Education and the Workforce:
“The
commitment between employer and employee has gone down. And (employers) don’t
want to take five years to get you ready. They want you ready to start working
— and learning — the day you walk in the door.
But they
don’t want to do qualifying training.”
Businesses
and corporations have been plundering us for several decades now. First, they
began cutting our wages and benefits, then they began moving production from
the north of the U.S. to the south. That was not enough. They proceeded with a
major campaign to outsource production from the U.S. to other low-wage
countries. Simultaneously, they went, with the complicity of politicians, to
privatize public services. These last two trends continue to advance to this
day. But this is still not enough. Despite having their tax payments
drastically reduced over the past three decades—to the extent that plenty of
major corporations pay no taxes—now they want to transfer the cost of training
their own workers to the students and to the tax-paying working class.
Make no
mistake, when the Obama administration, business economists, and the likes of
Emanuel talk about the new trend of onshoring or insourcing jobs, they are
talking about the U.S. becoming the cheap labor center of the advanced
economies. The jobs that are currently being onshored are jobs coming at the
expense of Canadian workers. Yes, manufacturing is being outsourced from Canada
into the U.S., but only because our average wages have become so pitiful over
the past four decades. The dynamics are brilliantly described by Doug Henwood:
“American
workers are very productive but they earn a lot less. Caterpillar claims that
its workers in Illinois cost the firm less than half as much as their comrades
in Ontario. Over the last decade, unit labor costs—wages and benefits paid per
dollar of output—have fallen by 13% in the U.S. They rose by 2% in Germany, 15%
in Korea, and 18% in Canada. When you factor in transportation and other costs,
U.S. workers in some sectors are starting to become competitive with China,
where wages have been rising sharply for years and workers have developed a
habit of striking and ransacking the boss’s office. The trend towards bringing
factory work back to the U.S. even has a name: onshoring. A revival of
manufacturing would be good in many ways, but one based largely on low wages
and high levels of exploitation is not something to cheer.”
So many the
jobs for which Emanuel wants young people to train are meant to be jobs with
much lower wages and benefits than they would have been in the past. Jobs that
some other day may be outsourced again, leaving millions of workers with a
limited number of skills looking again from outside the window.
During his ECC
speech Emanuel conflated the role of community colleges after WWII with what he
is proposing as his new scheme.
“Community
colleges were the catapult for the World War II generation coming home from the
battlefield, the generation of Americans who became the most productive and
economically expansive in American history. They can serve that same function
in the 21st century.
Tonight, we
charge our community colleges with a new mission: to train the workforce of
today for the jobs of tomorrow; to give our students the ability to achieve a
middle class standard of living; to provide our companies with the skilled
workers they need.”
This is
misleading at the least, dishonest at its worst. After WWII, communities
colleges, under a President Truman directive, became the democratizing bridges
for working class students to secure bachelors degrees and join the ranks of
the many teachers, engineers, etc. required to build the U.S. economy through
the longest economic boom this country has ever had. Under Emanuel’s plan that
bridge is destroyed, and a diverging road is being built into a vocational
training cul-de-sac. In this highly racially segregated city, the neighborhoods
where the Olive-Harvey and Daley Colleges reside are overwhelmingly African
American and Latino, respectively. The turning of these two colleges into
strictly vocational schools severs the path for these students to go on to
obtain a bachelors degree or a profession. Even if not consciously intended,
the outcome will be a racist tracking of Black and Latino young men and women
away from a genuine higher education degree.
For the sake
of our community colleges, for the sake of our children and our communities, it
is time to stop Emanuel in his tracks.
PEARL
WOW I NEVER KNEW THIS WAS HAPPENING I AM EXTREMELY PISSED OVER THIS. I AM DEFINITELY SHARING THIS.
ReplyDeleteThe information that you provided was thorough and helpful. I will have to share your article with others.
ReplyDeletecomputer training schools
This administrator is tired and is going to try to get some sleep. You all work it ut.
ReplyDeletevocational college
Great post, thanks for sharing .. This informative blog is powerful enough to give accurate information on the Vocational Schools.career training school
ReplyDeleteThis is very helpful post. Thank you for this
ReplyDeleteLearn Event management institutes in mumbai. Classboat provides you best Event Management Institutes in Mumbai
Thank you for this post. Want career in french language. Classboat provides you certified french courses institute in pune
ReplyDeletecertified french courses in pune
Thanks for this awesome blog I really loved it and I really recommend you to look upon on this.
ReplyDeletePhotography Courses In Chennai
Fashion Designing Courses In Chennai
Graphic Design Courses In Chennai
Interior Design Courses In Chennai
To find courses near you and boost your career - Shutterupp is India’s largest platform offering one stop solution for all your
ReplyDeletelocal education lets Find Best Coaching Institute Near You
related searches vand also Discover best coaching institutes in india.
Explore the right path for your career.