We're at the fourth of five hearings of a new IL State Senate Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board and will try to live tweet as the spirit moves us & the wifi & battery life allow...ilga.gov/senate/committ…#ERSB
This series of hearings is about creating a map of districts for the board seats, eventually 21 will be elected, but in Nov 2024, 10 members will be elected, remaining 11 to be appointed by the mayor. More background here: ilfps.org/ersb_hearings_…
If you're tuning in from home, the hearing hasn't started yet. About 25 people here incl Senator Hunter (on the committee) and Senator Cervantes (not on the committee)
@robertmartwick@ElgieSims@LLCoolK_4@senvillivalam@SenPacioneZayas Some background from Sen Lightford: HB290 passed bill to create ERSB in spring 2021. First election of 10 members will be in Nov 2024 to four year terms; 11 members appointed to two-year term. Then in Nov 2026, remaining 11 members elected to four year term.
@robertmartwick@ElgieSims@LLCoolK_4@senvillivalam@SenPacioneZayas Enriquez: We opposed HB2908 because it disenfranchised our community. We don't think Sen Villanueva's bill to allow non-citizens will pass. We should have had same voting methods as LSCs and not "put politics in it"
Enriquez: Give our community equal racial representation or kill this process and replace it with LSC-style voting system
Klein, staff attorney for MALDEF (Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund) which has been involved in voting district maps since the 1980s
Klein: Latinos are 29.8% of Chi pop, 27.2% of Chi voting pop, 46% of CPS student population. It's a civil right to have Latino community to have sufficient representation
Klein: Schedule of this hearing isn't sufficient--only one virtual hearing and 4 in-person were on weekdays
Klein: Please provide interpretation for some of the future meetings (i.e. for non-English speakers). Please make data public that is being used for the hearings.
Klein: Hold more hearings with sufficient advance notice. Please release draft map and then have another hearing for more input.
Next speaker is from Educators for Excellence (ed reform group that submitted statement with KidsFirst, etc: ilga.gov/senate/committ…)
She wants a smaller board -- CPS board with 21 members would be much larger than most boards in US [Ed note: read our explanation of why the board is this size here: ilfps.org/ersb_hearings_…]
Also says board members should be compensated and should be campaign finance rules to make it possible for working class candidates to run
Also says: non-citizen Chicagoans should also be allowed to vote
Next up Kurt Hilgendorf, @CTULocal1: Map should meet all state and federal voting rights requirements, should be equitable and representative of city
Next up speaker from Stand for Children (also supports reducing size of board to 9 members along with KidsFirst, etc)
Stand for Children rep: Size of board is problematic because it will make it "messier" and filled with "political factions"
This will distract from focus of superintendent for running school district. School board members should be paid, but we need fewer if we are going to pay them.
Next up: CPS alum from Benito Juarez HS and (maybe?) was a student rep on the LSC. Principal would refuse to show the LSC the budget. Couldn't count on LSC to get hold of the budget. Northside schools & students given a fairer chance because they have more resources
That was the final speaker. Chair Lightford closes things out.
Or not! One last speaker from the audience: Chris Bridges from CLCCR asks if there's any comments or reflections on what the committee has heard
Lightford: we are just doing listening for these sessions and will discuss things after all the hearings.
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🚨Hearings on districting for Chicago’s elected representative school board! In Nov 2024, Chicago’s first (ever) election for the Board of Education will be held. 10 of 21 seats will be elected; the remaining 11 appointed by the Mayor. The board will be fully elected in Nov '26🧵
The IL Sen has established a special cmte for the elected board & is holding subject matter hearings on districting. The 1st in-person hearings were held last week. There’s 2 more in-person tomorrow (4/12) & Thurs (4/13) & a final virtual hearing on 4/17. ilsenateredistricting.com
You can give testimony, oral or written (contact ChicagoERSBCommittee@senatedem.ilga.gov), or submit a map or community of interest. survey123.arcgis.com/share/0479d313…
Tomorrow is Election Day in Chicago, and while we don't endorse candidates, we do take note of their education platforms, and the impact they could have on the future of privatization in our city. 🧵
If protecting and strengthening public ed is important to you, consider the mayoral candidates' positions on extending IL's Invest in Kids voucher program which is set to end after the 2023-2024 school year. These vouchers directy, negatively impact Chicago Public Schools.
Here's a refresher of where candidates told @chalkbeatCHI they stand on IL vouchers: Brandon Johnson & Rod Sawyer—clearly opposed to vouchers, Vallas and Wilson—clearly support. King, Lightfoot, Green—non-answer. Chuy & Kam—avoid question w/ more skill than King, Lightfoot, Green
@louise_q10 Even worse actually—state regs say IL voucher schools *should* comply with "applicable federal & State laws prohibiting discrimination" isbe.net/Documents/425A… so it's possible they shouldn't be violating Title IX, IDEA, ADA, etc ("applicable" wording though makes it unclear! 🫤)
@louise_q10 It is clear that IL Human Rights Act applies to any non-religious schools, so secular schools taking voucher $$ shouldn't be discriminating—but religious schools aren't public accommodations, so ILHRA isn't applicable? (even tho they are taking public $$!) ilga.gov/legislation/il…
@louise_q10 From ISBE: "When you choose to place your child with a disability in a private school, your child does not have a right to receive any of the special education or related services he or she would receive if enrolled in the public school." isbe.net/Documents/nc_p…
Want your child—as Betsy DeVos' lobbyist says—to "attend a quality school that’s religiously-affiliated" in IL using Invest in Kids $? Do they have a disability? Identify as LGBTQ+? Belong to one of dozens of religions without a school? Well, too bad! #VouchersFundDiscrimination
Are you not religious at all? in 2010, largest share of IL pop. didn't belong to any religious group at all; 46% non-adherents acc to Assoc of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (data mapped here from 2020) thearda.com/us-religion/ce…
But 95% of private schools taking Invest in Kids vouchers are religious. Non-religious families aren't welcome at all at many of these schools or have to follow beliefs they disagree with or have their child instructed within a religious environment/system they aren't part of...
Here's an example of how religious beliefs result in discrimination on the basis of LGBTQ+ status. The Diocese of Springfield's policy statement on Gender Identity instructs schools to create discriminatory policies on the basis of gender identity dio.org/wp-content/upl…
These policies are a direct offshoot of the Diocese position on gender identity "A person cannot change his or her gender. A person should accept and seek to live in conformity with his or her sexual identity as determined at birth." dio.org/wp-content/upl…
And they are in direct contradiction to ISBE's non-regulatory guidance, e.g. "Students have the right to be addressed at school by their affirmed name and pronouns and to update their school records to reflect their identity." isbe.net/Documents/ISBE…
IL public schools can't discriminate on the basis of religion, but via the Invest in Kids voucher program, public $$ are funding religious schools. Public funds should be for public schools that serve all children & families no matter their religion. #SunsetInvestInKids