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Feds demand Chicago Teachers Union release audits


The Chicago Teachers Union’s secrecy and potential financial shenanigans have drawn the attention of the U.S. Congress. 

The U.S. House Education and Workforce Committee sent a letter Nov. 20 to Chicago Teachers Union President Stacy Davis Gates, requesting the union’s audits from 2019 through 2024.

For over 1,900 days, the CTU has been withholding information from members and not following its own internal rules mandating it provide an audit of its finances to members every year.

The pressure from Congress accompanies the efforts of a group of CTU members who filed suit on Oct. 8, 2024, demanding the union produce the audits. CTU tried to get the lawsuit tossed, but the judge rejected that request. The court noted the union didn’t even dispute that it failed to provide the audits as required.

The lack of transparency that plagues CTU could determine whether Congress considers new legislation requiring labor unions to better disclose financial information to members.

What has been revealed by the union through its filings with the U.S. Department of Labor lends credence to and increases members’ concerns about the union’s internal financials.

For example, the union admitted just 17.7% of its spending in fiscal year 2025 was on “representational activities,” according to the report it filed in September with the U.S. Department of Labor. It also, with little explanation, spent $173,000 on a New Mexico recording studio with a swimming pool.

The federal filing revealed CTU has paid accountants to conduct the missing audits, but has not released them.

By keeping members in the dark for over five years, CTU has made it clear their members are not a priority and transparency about member dues is not valued.

“When unions flout these obligations, they betray the trust of the very people they are meant to serve … Every dollar paid by workers should serve their interests, not those of a select few operating in the shadows,” the Congressional committee’s letter stated.

CTU has until Dec. 8 to produce the records for the committee.

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