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Senate blocks measure to restrict Venezuela strikes after Trump flips two Republicans; PA coal mine reclamation funds at risk as bill seeks to repurpose $500M; U.S. political climate makes jobs tougher to find for trans folks; Proposed federal cuts could mean fewer nurses for MO patients.

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House Dems back an effort to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. The Senate GOP blocks an effort to limit executive war powers in Venezuela and a federal judge rejects a Republican plan to overturn California s new congressional maps.

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Rural Appalachia is being eyed for massive AI centers, but locals are pushing back, some farmers say government payments meant to ease tariff burdens won't cover their losses and rural communities explore novel ways to support home-based childcare.

Report touts Illinois' support for public schools

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author Terri Dee, Anchor/Producer

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Monday, March 11, 2024   

A report released this month by the Network for Public Education ranked Illinois an "A" grade for its overall support of public schools.

One organization gives credit to state legislators who worked to end the state's "Invest in Kids" voucher program. The findings in "Public Schooling in America" claimed there were 240 new private schools in 2022-2023, and 30 of them had enrolled 25 or fewer students. The study paints it as a burden on families and taxpayers.

Cassie Cresswell, executive director of Illinois Families for Public Schools, said vouchers have been a drain on public education.

"We have sent more than a quarter-billion dollars off to private schools that discriminate; that have really almost no oversight over how those dollars are being spent," Cresswell asserted. "It's really a relief, as a public school advocate, to know that this isn't going to be happening anymore."

High-poverty districts receive less funding than well-resourced districts, and the study ranks Illinois near the bottom in this category. The national report graded every state on privatization and home schooling laws, financial support for public schools, and whether students receive what it calls "honest instruction free of political intrusion." Backers of private schools said they give parents more choice in their kids' education.

The report gives higher marks to states rejecting book bans, corporal punishment, unqualified teachers and intolerance of LGBTQ+ students. It said the practices violate teachers' and students' rights.

Ann Courtier, education issue specialist for the League of Women Voters of Illinois, said the group backs maintaining democratically governed public schools welcoming all students.

"We have laws in Illinois that support culturally relevant teaching," Courtier pointed out. "They protect students from bullying, and they protect student rights. Illinois laws reject book bans explicitly, and promote physical and emotional safety for our students."

Courter believes legislators made the right choice to discontinue using public dollars for schools lacking transparency and accountability. She believes the desire for equity and racial justice among Illinois legislators and the league's membership will "rise to the surface," and funds will be equitably redistributed.


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