Chicago Sun-Times

CPS teams are woefully underfunde­d, coaches say

- BY MITCH DUDEK AND NADER ISSA Staff Reporters

A group of Chicago Public Schools athletic coaches on Monday called for increased sports funding to be included in a final contract that would bring an end to the teachers strike.

Schools need more money to cover expenses for everything from uniforms to additional coaches, according to the group, which held a news conference outside Malcolm X College, where negotiatio­ns between the Chicago Teachers Union and CPS have been taking place.

Nora Wiltse, a teacher and cross country running coach at Coonley Elementary in the North Center neighborho­od, traced many of the issues to the district’s decision to enact a no-cut sports program known as SCORE for fifth-to-eighth-graders in 2017.

However, CPS didn’t increase funding to accommodat­e for the increased participat­ion, she said.

“So our schools have many more athletes and not enough funding or coaches,” she said.

Wiltse said she’s one of two coaches who are expected to provide instructio­n to 80 runners.

“A 40-1 athlete-to-coach ratio is not OK,” she said.

Funding for uniforms, equipment and transporta­tion isn’t covered by CPS, which creates a huge gap in schools that can afford to cover the costs through fundraisin­g and those that cannot, she said.

Wiltse called on CPS to increase pay for coaches to bring coaching ratios down at the elementary level and to “incentiviz­e and encourage” teachers to become coaches.

She also called for a stipend for volunteers who spend many hours registerin­g and organizing student participat­ion in SCORE.

Underfundi­ng is a problem from grade school through high school, coaches said, noting that many coaches regularly spend what little money their team is allotted on equipment.

Brad Dowling, who coaches boys basketball at Steinmetz College Prep in Belmont Cragin, said he’s had different assistant coaches for each of the last 17 years he’s helmed the team because newcomers realize they simply can’t give up so much of their lives for so little pay.

“A freshman coach after taxes makes maybe about $1,000,” he said.

He went on: “It’s just ridiculous. Something has to change.”

Other complaints boiled down to inequities between playing fields and facilities, as well as a lack of transporta­tion to and from games and practices.

“We don’t have an ice machine for kids who get hurt to have quick access to ice,” said Alison Eichhorn, a varsity softball coach at Lindblom Math and Science Academy.

CPS officials did not respond to a request to comment on the coaches’ claims.

 ?? NADER ISSA/SUN-TIMES ?? Brad Dowling, who coaches boys basketball at Steinmetz College Prep, says Monday, “A freshman coach after taxes makes maybe about $1,000” in CPS.
NADER ISSA/SUN-TIMES Brad Dowling, who coaches boys basketball at Steinmetz College Prep, says Monday, “A freshman coach after taxes makes maybe about $1,000” in CPS.

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