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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

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* Subscribers know more. Politico

Jake Butcher, the chief of staff to Senate President Don Harmon, is stepping down to practice law. Moving up is Ashley Jenkins-Jordan, who’s been deputy chief of staff. She’ll be the first African American woman chief to hold the position in Illinois.

* The truth comes out!

* A feel-good story for your Friday via Block Club

Monique Cauley knows the life stories of more than 500 Logan Square neighbors, down to their dogs and children’s names.

As a beloved postal carrier who serves homes between Talman and Artesian avenues starting at Logan Boulevard, Cauley receives high praise from her customers — including the four-legged ones who have grown up seeing her every day. […]

The Bronzeville resident, who has worked in Logan Square with the United States Postal Service for 16 years, isn’t just popular for her kind attitude, big smile and impeccable memory. She’s also known for sharing mail tips, changes to deliveries and other important information for 60647 residents.

Cauley is active on the community Facebook page, which she started using during the pandemic as a way to keep in touch with her customers and share information, she said. She shares periodic mail advice, including a detailed annual Christmas post with useful tips to make sure everyone gets their holiday cards and gifts as postal workers prepare for a stressful season.

* Tribune

Signaling a paradigm shift in a school system largely shaped by choice, the Chicago Board of Education passed a resolution Thursday to prioritize neighborhood schools in Chicago Public Schools’ forthcoming five-year strategic plan — a document that will guide investments in the district through 2029 and is slated to be released in June.

Among a range of goals aimed at “disrupting cycles of inequity,” the resolution commits to “transition away from privatization and admissions/enrollment policies and approaches that further stratification and inequity in CPS and drive student enrollment away from neighborhood schools.” […]

The eventual impact could be seismic, with more than 75% of high school students and about 44% of elementary students attending schools outside of their neighborhood boundaries as of last school year. White and Asian students disproportionately attend CPS’ selective enrollment schools. Meanwhile, Black students face persistent opportunity gaps, disproportionately attending neighborhood schools long starved of investments, officials and community organizers said.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

posted by Isabel Miller
Friday, Dec 15, 23 @ 2:14 pm

Comments

  1. Isabel, your Block Club link actually goes to Politico. Correct link: https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/12/15/logan-squares-popular-postal-worker-has-all-your-holiday-mail-tips/

    Comment by JoanP Friday, Dec 15, 23 @ 2:29 pm

  2. Thanks!

    Comment by Isabel Miller Friday, Dec 15, 23 @ 2:39 pm

  3. while I appreciate truth, and grass roots efforts, sometimes so called grass roots are astro turfed and it seems to violate the spirit of things.

    Comment by Amalia Friday, Dec 15, 23 @ 4:07 pm

  4. If CPS schools move away from selective enrollment schools to improve neighborhood schools, this change will help no one least of all the students.

    A first step should be to close charter schools so that these students would return to their neighborhood schools. Then, provide reading and math labs in neighborhood schools so that students in need of remediation would have the opportunity to read and to calculate at level to improve academic skills.

    Comment by Rudy’s teeth Friday, Dec 15, 23 @ 4:23 pm

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