Search

Working for Illinois Caucus

House Downstate Democrats work for the good people of Illinois

Tag

25-Working

SIU Board could soon be among most student-dominated in higher education

http://bit.ly/2w9SU2z

CARBONDALE — The governing board of Southern Illinois University could soon become one of the most student-dominated in the country, as a long-debated issue nears resolution.

Legislation introduced by state Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, to give votes to both student members on the SIU Board of Trustees — one from the Carbondale campus, one from SIU Edwardsville — is on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk after clearing the House and Senate, Stuart announced Monday.

Under current law, the Illinois governor chooses one student representative to be the voting member each year, weighing in on many of the highest-level decisions at the university, from multimillion-dollar purchases and contracts to tuition hikes. The other student holds an advisory seat on the board.

Typically, the vote alternates between the two campuses each year, but the governor may use his or her authority to deny voting power to both student trustees, or to keep the vote at the same campus for consecutive years.

Giving both students a say, Stuart said in a news release, will ensure equal representation for both campuses and eliminate the the governor’s ability to meddle in student voting privileges to influence the board.

If approved, the measure will also make the student voice more than twice as influential at SIU as at most major Midwestern university systems, with students holding two out of nine board votes.

At University of Illinois, by comparison, there is one voting student out of 11 trustees, though two other students hold advisory seats on the board.

At the University of Missouri, there is one voting student out of 10 on its board of curators.

At Indiana University, there is one voting student out of nine. At the University of Tennessee, one out of 11. At the University of Kentucky, one out of 16.

“This legislation is important for establishing equity between the SIU institutions,” Stuart said, “Both the Edwardsville campus and the Carbondale campus deserve the opportunity for their student interests to be equally represented each year.”

From 2018 to 2019, the vote rested with SIUC student trustee Brione Lockett, who will relinquish it this summer.

“I love this,” Lockett said of the legislation. “I’d be remiss if I didn’t say it’s cool to have another year of a vote, but I think this makes nothing but sense. Right now you’re asking students to read all these documents and show up to meetings and not get a vote. The vote is the reward for that hard work.”

J. Phil Gilbert, chairman of the SIU board, has also endorsed the bill, HB 2239, as has SIU Interim President J. Kevin Dorsey.

“We’re looking forward to the governor signing this bill,” Dorsey said. “This gives both student trustees an equal place on the board and provides them with the full ability to represent their peers at their respective campuses.”

Continue reading your article with a digital subscription.

Thanks for being a subscriber.

Sorry, your subscription does not include this content.

Please call 866.735.5912 to upgrade your subscription.

However, former Gov. Bruce Rauner saw things differently.

In August of 2015, he vetoed a nearly identical piece of legislation, saying increasing students’ voting power would dilute “the insight gained from the other trustees’ years of professional experience.”

“Having two student voting members is not necessary or advisable,” read a statement explaining his decision. “The Board of Trustees must consider difficult budgetary issues, academic requirements, and student conduct and disciplinary issues. The long-term views of professionals must be given appropriate weight.”

Rauner did not award a vote to either student representative during the 2014-2015 school year, board records show.

For his part, Lockett said student trustees are often as prepared as their fellow trustees, and are capable of taking a “system approach” without bias toward their home campuses.

Each month, Lockett estimated, he spends between one and two weeks of his working hours on board matters: reviewing documents, doing research and holding meetings.

“At times has it affected my schoolwork? Oh definitely,” he said. “But that’s how much I cared about it.”

Since he took office last July, Lockett has hosted a series of “Campus Conversations,” providing a rare opportunity for students to speak directly with high-level university administrators.

Recently, Lockett and SIUE student trustee Molly Smith hosted one of Lockett’s signature conversations at Edwardsville, taking questions on controversial university issues like the ongoing fair funding allocation study.

“That was, ‘Let’s show we’re really about the system by the students getting together and sharing our perspective,’” Lockett said.

Lockett also acknowledged the change would place added responsibility on students to elect dedicated peer leaders.

“Often, these elections can be a popularity contest,” Lockett said. “Will there be someone who comes after me that feels as strongly as I do and is as open as I am? Probably. We’ll have to see.”

The Pritzker administration declined to take a public position on HB 2239, when asked Thursday.

“The administration is currently reviewing the bill,” confirmed Pritzker spokesperson Jordan Abudayyeh.

Subscribe to Daily Headlines

12-Coll,19-Legal,25-Working,26-Delivered,HE 2 Coalition,HE Blog,AllPolGA

Region: Southern,Local,City: Carbondale,Region: Carbondale

via thesouthern.com – RSS Results in news/local/siu of type article http://bit.ly/2Iw9JwI

May 22, 2019 at 07:41AM

The X Factor: Should Illinois Nix Algebra Requirment?

http://bit.ly/2EjnzPa

Pleasant Plains is a small but prosperous town about 15 minutes northwest of Springfield. Its schools are all rated “commendable,” and their test results outshine state averages in every subject.

And yet, in March, the high school principal, Luke Brooks, asked Illinois lawmakers to stop requiring algebra.

Speaking to a House education committee, Brooks said algebra “…is the number one failed course in my high school and most schools around; it’s the number one failed in community college.”

 

He said sure, 90 percent of his students would still opt for the traditional path of Algebra I, geometry, algebra II, pre-calculus. But what about the kid who just wanted to be a welder and got so frustrated he dropped out?

“We scream college and we whisper career,” Brooks told the committee. “And these kids who want to go into careers and have a skill set — we will give up financial literacy, statistics, construction math — and we basically, for lack of a better term, we just slide that away and say, ‘You must know this,’ even though most statistics will tell you less than maybe 7 percent of the working world uses algebra. I just think it’s disingenuous of a lot of adults to say ‘This is what human intelligence is.’ ”

State Rep. Katie Stuart (D-Edwardsville), who is on the committee, immediately asked to be listed as a chief co-sponsor of his bill. That might seem surprising considering her resume. She has a degree in mathematics from Rutgers University, a masters in mathematics from Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville, plus certification in mathematics education from Tulane University in New Orleans.

Stuart also taught math in grades six through 12. The Pleasant Plains principal’s plea to create a path for non-math kids really resonated with her.

“We need some other type of course,” Stuart says. “We need to offer our juniors and seniors more of these applied mathematics — financial mathematics, or a real in-depth look into probability issues, or anything like that — to give them an option, as opposed to what we think of as a traditional pre-calculus course.”

Stuart says although she personally “loves trigonometry,” she also understands that most people don’t.

“Trigonometry really puts the world together, if you understand what’s going on,” she says. “But you can understand the world without understanding trigonometry.”

In fact, at SIUE, Stuart helped create a course called Quantitative Reasoning, to replace the traditional math requirement that stymied so many students. Still, she’s not willing to grant Brooks’ wish to get rid of algebra altogether.

“I can’t see it being responsible in getting rid of any algebra requirement at all,” she says. “I think it’s important. So I’m not willing to just say three years of (any) math carte blanche.”

 

She negotiated an amendment that keeps the Algebra I requirement, but allows geometry to be taught as a component of an “integrated, applied, interdisciplinary or career and technical course,” such as carpentry.

Rep. Mike Murphy (R-Springfield) filed both the original bill and the amendment. Married to a school teacher who retired after 31 years in the classroom, Murphy obviously has empathy for his constituent, Principal Brooks.

“You know the number one reason kids drop out of college is they can’t pass math,” he says. “I saw this report online the other day: 27 percent [of dropouts] is because they fail, and math is the number one thing they fail.”

But Murphy also hopes to dig into the broader problem.

“One of my plans to do this summer is, I want to put together a little study group, task force, or whatever you want to call it, on why are we failing in math?” he says. “What are we doing as a country? What are we doing as a state? I don’t have that answer.”

Meanwhile, the amended bill won unanimous approval in the House, and is headed for a vote in the full Senate.

 

26-Delivered,25-Working,AllPolGA,AllSN

Schools,Politics,College

via Dusty Rhodes http://bit.ly/2VQNKnm

May 20, 2019 at 06:26AM

Bill suspending teacher basic skills test in Illinois heads to governor

http://bit.ly/2YFH6Bn

SPRINGFIELD — A test required for teacher licensing that many argue has contributed to the state’s teacher shortage might soon be suspended.

The Illinois Senate on Thursday passed and sent to Gov. J.B. Pritzker House Bill 423, which would put what is known as the “test of basic skills” on hold until July 1, 2025, while state officials try to determine whether that will help relieve the state’s teacher shortage.

The bill also calls on the Illinois State Board of Education to re-evaluate the method it uses to score another mandatory test that prospective teachers must pass, one that measures their mastery of the content area in which they want to teach.

Those tests are among three tests that applicants for teaching licenses in Illinois must pass. They also must pass a test covering their content area and a test covering teaching practices and standards, known as the edTPA.

A separate bill, House Bill 256, by Chicago Democratic state Rep. Will Guzzardi, would drastically overhaul that exam as well by removing a component requiring prospective Illinois teachers to video themselves in an actual classroom setting. That bill also passed the House in April, but has not yet been assigned to a Senate committee.

Those tests were the subject of extensive hearings in the Illinois House where state Rep. Sue Scherer, a Decatur Democrat and chief sponsor of the bill, questioned their value and effectiveness.

Scherer, a retired teacher, and others have also suggested that they deter many people from trying to enter the teaching profession and that they have a disproportionate impact on people of color, contributing to the state’s teacher shortage.

“We are at a crisis level in the teacher shortage,” Scherer said on the House floor during debate over the bill. “It’s affecting basically every region in every area across the state, which some people are unaware of. Many classrooms are sitting there without a qualified teacher. I know of a school district that right now has 50 open classrooms without a qualified teacher.”

The bill suspending the basic skills test until 2015 passed the House in April, 85-25. It passed the Senate on Thursday, 55-0.

25-Working,26-Delivered,AllPolGA,AllSN

State

via http://www.newsbug.info – RSS Results in news/national/illinois of type article http://bit.ly/2V4VWAc

May 17, 2019 at 06:12PM

Elder Abuse Task Force could come to IL

http://bit.ly/2LOUi5i

“The creation of the Elder Abuse Task force will ensure that we have a focused group seeking to strengthen the rights of our seniors,” Stuart said. “To continue to protect our seniors, we need to examine our current practices and look to other resources to guarantee that seniors have the best protections when it comes to elder abuse.”

25-Working,26-Delivered,01-All No Sub,02-Pol,24-ILGA,010-Inoreader Saves

via https://www.kfvs12.com

May 17, 2019 at 06:46AM

Ill. lawmaker introduces gun regulation legislation

http://bit.ly/2EdpPaG

“I’m sponsoring a commonsense, pro-gun bill to defend southern Illinois from the one-dimensional Chicago-assault on legal gun ownership. This proposal will protect our Second Amendment values by creating exceptions for law enforcement and military personnel,” Reitz said. “It also ensures the World Shooting Complex in Sparta is exempt from recently imposed gun regulations which negatively impact our vendors and small and locally owned businesses in the area.”

25-Working,26-Delivered,010-Inoreader Saves,AllPolGA

via https://www.kfvs12.com

May 15, 2019 at 08:42PM

Suburban double dippers hit taxpayers in the wallet

http://bit.ly/2VwWdjg

Several collar county board members are being paid salaries for their work at the same time they also are collecting pensions for the same county board work. Did you know that?

It’s true. And at the moment, it’s perfectly legal, though some Illinois lawmakers are trying to change that and fix what they see as other corruption problems in county governments.

OPINION

More than a dozen county board members in Lake, McHenry, Will and Kane County are being paid both salaries and pensions at the same time for their work as county commissioners. They’ve received as much as $82,124 in annual pension payouts from the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund for jobs in which they’re also still getting salaries of between $21,000 and $43,018, according to an analysis by the Daily Herald’s Jake Griffin.

This is happening because of a 2016 law that says county commissioners cannot continue to work toward a pension unless they provide documentation they’re working at least 19 hours a week at that job. Elected officials who did not provide that proof were kicked out of the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund but, because they had contributed previously to IMRF, they were able to start collecting their accumulated pensions even though they’re still working, and being paid, as commissioners.

Senate Bill 1236 aims to stop that, along with three other problems that have surfaced in county governments because of a lack of accountability and transparency. Sponsored by Democratic state Sen. Terry Link of Indian Creek, the bill passed the Senate 45-6 last month. It passed 13-3 out of a House committee last week and could get a full House vote soon.

“The pension is a retirement vehicle,” state Rep. Sam Yingling, a Round Lake Beach Democrat, said in an interview. “It’s not something for public officials to use to double dip at the taxpayer trough.”

If Link and Yingling succeed in getting their legislation enacted, elected local officials would be prohibited from receiving a salary or other compensation if they are collecting pension benefits from IMRF for the same job. An official’s salary would be zeroed out at the start of a new term if that official is collecting a pension for the same job.

Several Lake County board members, the Illinois Association of County Board Members, the Illinois State Association of Counties and the Illinois Municipal League all filed witness slips opposing passage of SB 1236 before last week’s committee hearing.

Some lawmakers questioned why the legislation didn’t cut off the pension rather than the salary for officials who are collecting both. Yingling noted people can defer their pension payments if they win re-election to a local office they once held.

Others wondered about scenarios in which a teacher could retire from full-time work, begin collecting a pension, but want to then work part-time or as a substitute.

State Rep. Daniel Didich, a Buffalo Grove Democrat, answered, noting those officials could begin collecting their pensions once they finally quit working at those jobs.

“I think the public is absolutely fed up with this type of behavior and practice in government,” Yingling added. “This is good government to install these protections and measures for taxpayers and I strongly believe in them.”

Other provisions in the legislation would allow for the removal of county board chairs, who are elected to that leadership role by their fellow commissioners by a four-fifths vote of the board. Yingling said that provision was needed after the revelation that former Lake County Board Chairman Aaron Lawlor had abused a county credit card and submitted fraudulent charges for reimbursement. Lawlor resigned after the abuses came to light and sought treatment for addiction.

SB 1236 also boosts transparency by requiring that vendors in line for a county contract of more than $30,000 must disclose any family relationships with county officials. Yingling said some vendors in Lake County have been awarded no-bid contracts and then it’s come to light they have relationships with officeholders.

Lastly, the legislation requires county boards to alert new countywide officials that they have the option to ask that a transitional audit be conducted at county expense when they take office.

Lake County Circuit Court Clerk Erin Cartwright Weinstein said she fought with a prior county administrator and board members for months after she took office to try to definitely determine what happened with contracts for an e-filing system that never was completed, even though $4.9 million had been spent on it over a five-year period by her predecessor. County officials since have agreed to pay for an assessment, a less formal form of a forensic audit.

“This bill is a huge step in the right direction to provide accountability and protections to the public against inappropriate spending of taxpayer funds,” she previously told state lawmakers.

Illinois leads the nation in numbers of governments, which makes it that much harder for taxpayers to hold them all accountable. SB 1236 should help if it becomes law.

The public, Yingling said, is “demanding that action be taken to stop rampant fraud and abuse.”

Madeleine Doubek is executive director of CHANGE Illinois, a nonpartisan nonprofit that advocates for political and government reforms.

 

 

16-Econ,25-Working,26-Delivered,AllPolGA

Feeds,Chi ST

via Chicago Sun-Times http://bit.ly/2xAxGgE

May 13, 2019 at 05:52PM

New State Representative Replaces Costello | Alton Daily News

http://bit.ly/2JA8e0n

 

Replacing Jerry Costello Jr., who resigned from state legislature last week to take a high ranking job at the state’s Department of Natural Resources, is state Rep. Nathan Reitz. Democratic party leaders made the selection and Reitz was sworn in on Thursday. Costello had publicly opposed a progressive income tax.

Ideas Illinois noted President Donald Trump carried that legislative district in 2016 and said Reitz must choose between siding with the progressive income tax or with “middle-class families.”

(Copyright WBGZ Radio / www.AltonDailyNews.com)

010-Inoreader Saves,26-Delivered,25-Working,AllPolGA

via Alton Daily News

May 12, 2019 at 07:27AM

Troy demonstrates solar panels to Bertino-Tarrant, Manley

http://bit.ly/2VYohvo

This month State Sen Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant and State Rep. Natalie Manley learned about Troy 30-C’s solar energy program from Troy Superintendent Todd Koehl, Troy School Board President Mark Griglione and Troy science teacher Barbara Will-Henn with science club students Trenton Marski and Tori Tverdek, along with representatives from Ameresco, Inc., Continental Electric and the Illinois Solar Energy Association.
This month State Sen Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant and State Rep. Natalie Manley learned about Troy 30-C’s solar energy program from Troy Superintendent Todd Koehl, Troy School Board President Mark Griglione and Troy science teacher Barbara Will-Henn with science club students Trenton Marski and Tori Tverdek, along with representatives from Ameresco, Inc., Continental Electric and the Illinois Solar Energy Association.

This month State Sen Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant and State Rep. Natalie Manley D-Joliet learned about Troy 30-C’s solar energy program from Troy Superintendent Todd Koehl, Troy School Board President Mark Griglione and Troy science teacher Barbara Will-Henn with science club students Trenton Marski and Tori Tverdek, along with representatives from Ameresco, Inc., Continental Electric and the Illinois Solar Energy Association.

010-Inoreader Saves,02-Pol,25-Working,26-Delivered,17-Energy,AllSN

via | The Herald-News

May 11, 2019 at 08:11AM

St. Rep. Yednock says extend deceased veterans’ property tax breaks to surviving spouses

http://bit.ly/2vOj1Mj

St. Rep. Lance Yednock says he’ll support legislation to extend a property tax credit to the surviving spouses of military members and veterans who qualified for it. It would apply in situations where the military member was killed in action and where a veteran’s death was determined to be service-connected.

Yednock says the most severely disabled veterans are eligible to pay no property taxes. The Ottawa Democrat says their spouses shouldn’t be forced out of their homes because of high property taxes.

The bill has already passed the Senate with unanimous support.

25-Working,24-ILGA,AllDel

Region: Northern,Feeds,News,Region: La Salle

via WCMY-AM http://www.1430wcmy.com

May 11, 2019 at 06:04AM

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑