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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (updated)

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* The Senate voted 37-20 to pass SB15, which would elect the Chicago school board

[From Rich: As Senate President Harmon explained today, ten elected members would represent the entire city for two years with ten members appointed. Then, after two years, those ten districts would be cut in half and all twenty members plus the chair would be elected. There’s more to it, but that’s the basic gist.]

* Press release…

The Illinois Senate Democratic Caucus today passed legislation to create an elected Chicago School Board, expanding representation and empowering communities with a greater say in how the state’s largest school system is run.

Under SB 15, 10 Board members will be elected in 2024 and 10 Board members and the Board Chair will be appointed by the mayor. Beginning in 2026, all 20 CPS Board members will be elected from subdistricts and the Board President will be elected citywide. These changes will give families and community members a direct say in the leadership of their schools, a right every other community in Illinois is already afforded.

“With today’s vote, we are bringing democracy to the people of Chicago,” said Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford, Chair of the Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board. “For the first time, leadership of Chicago Public Schools will be accountable to the voters, who will have the power to set a new course for our city’s education system.”

A map detailing electoral district boundaries, as well as demographic data and shape files, is available online at www.ilsenateredistricting.com. The map consists of 20 districts, including seven majority Black districts, six majority Latino districts, five majority White districts and two coalition districts. School board districts must be consistent with the Illinois Voting Rights Act, which ensures districts are crafted in a way that preserves clusters of minority voters if they are of size or cohesion to exert collective electoral power.

“At long last, families across Chicago will have a platform to make important decisions about their children’s education,” said Sen. Robert Martwick, Vice-Chair of the Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board and sponsor of the legislation creating an elected school board in Chicago. “Representation matters, and I’m proud we are finally giving parents in Chicago the same rights as those in every other community throughout Illinois.”

The legislation establishes ethics requirements for Board members that mirror those for other school boards across the state, as well as conflict of interest provisions in line with the state’s existing Public Officer Prohibited Activities Act. It also calls for the creation of the Black Student Achieve Committee within the Board, following feedback from education advocates, parents and community members about the need to focus on the disparity in academic performance among Black students.

“With a budget of nearly $10 billion a year, this change doesn’t just impact families enrolled in Chicago Public Schools but every person who lives in our city,” said Sen. Omar Aquino, Vice-Chair of the Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board. “Our communities will now have a direct say in deciding how public funds are spent, ensuring schools are better positioned to respond to the unique needs of each neighborhood.”

…Adding… Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) released the following statement in response to the Senate passage of SB15 that enacts gerrymandered maps for hybrid Chicago School Board elections:

“I have and will continue to vote NO on any legislative or school board map drawn by politicians, rather than the people they represent. We stand with the thousands of opponents, citizens, parents, students, and teachers who want to end the process of gerrymandering that suppresses choice and disenfranchises voters in Illinois.”

* The bill passed out of committee on a 9-4 partisan vote earlier today


* WTTW

[F]or Eileen O’Neill Burke, locked in a fierce fight for the Democratic nomination for Cook County state’s attorney against Clayton Harris III, her last name has turned out to be a double-edged sword.[…]

“For the record – no, I’m not related to THAT Burke,” she posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, confident that she didn’t have to spell out her reference to former Ald. Ed Burke, convicted Dec. 21 on 13 counts of racketeering, bribery and extortion. He is scheduled to be sentenced in June. […]

After six years as a Cook County judge, O’Neill Burke had her eye on an appellate court seat. In 2015, O’Neill Burke contributed $500 to Burke’s main campaign account, her only direct contribution to Burke’s war chest, which he would eventually use to fund his criminal defense, according to records filed with the Illinois State Board of Elections. […]

In 2017 and 2018, O’Neill Burke’s husband, John Burke, an attorney at the law firm of Ice Miller, made four contributions totaling $1,250 to two campaign committees controlled by Ed Burke, according to records filed with the Illinois State Board of Elections.

* Tahman Bradley



* Sun-Times

Lurie Children’s Hospital has restored its electronic medical records platform after being down for over a month because of a cybersecurity threat, the hospital announced Monday evening.

MyChart remains offline, the platform patients use to communicate with providers, access medical records and test results and make appointments, according to a statement on the hospital’s website.

The hospital took its phone, email and electronic systems offline Jan. 31 because of a “criminal threat” from a “known criminal threat actor,” Lurie said in February. It has not explained what the threat was and how it affected its systems. The hospital has remained open and providing care.

Emails to and from external addresses and most of the hospital’s phone lines were restored last month. But the hospital’s electronic medical record platform, Epic’s MyChart, remains down.

* Here’s the rest…

posted by Isabel Miller
Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 2:35 pm

Comments

  1. Senators in hearing this morning expressed deep misgivings for the hybrid board plan and suggested they may not vote for it on the Senate floor only to show up to session this afternoon, express the same sad sentiments, to practice helplessness about their power and vote Yes to pass it onto the House.

    So, we’ll have a hybrid school board in Chicago despite most wanting a fully elected board. Democracy, Martwick says!

    Comment by Chicago Voter Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 2:42 pm

  2. I’m worried sick for the employees at Rivian. I just read a report that indicated that they are losing mo ey on each and every vehicle they produce. how long can it last.

    Comment by Blue Dog Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 2:45 pm

  3. This is without a doubt the worst possible outcome on the elected school board. I hope to GOD CTU is out of money and the school reform folks put all the money into this thing.

    Comment by Big Mad Parent Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 4:07 pm

  4. - The truth is more like a vast industrial scheme to make the jalapeño more predictable—and less hot.-

    It’s the same scheme used by our fearful overlords.

    Comment by Dotnonymous x Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 4:20 pm

  5. Tame people prefer mild…over hot…leave the pepper alone…and leave the heat to those who like it hot.

    Comment by Dotnonymous x Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 4:25 pm

  6. I don’t think I’ve ever been more disgusted with the GA than this CPS bill. This is clearly and blatantly about politics; there is zero public policy reasoning here. I would expect this from Madigan and just knew that was how he operated; I thought Harmon was more serious.

    Comment by Just Me 2 Tuesday, Mar 5, 24 @ 9:52 pm

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