Wednesday, February 5, 2025

How much do Illinois school districts rely on federal funding?

WNIJ News

How much do Illinois school districts rely on federal funding?

Northern Public Radio | By Peter Medlin

Published February 4, 2025 at 2:21 PM CST

Listen • 0:54

DeKalb High School

Spencer Tritt

DeKalb High School

President Trump says he wants Congress to close the Department of Education.

Illinois school districts count on federal funds for 12% of their revenue. The majority of school revenue comes from local taxes and a smaller chunk comes from the state.

And that 12% is actually higher than usual due to pandemic relief funding over the past few years. Pre-COVID, it made up around 7 or 8% of school revenues.

But that percentage can vary a lot, depending on the district. The federal government’s Title I program sends out billions of dollars a year to low-income schools across the country.

Rockford Public Schools, for example, receives 22% of their revenue from the federal government, while a wealthier district like Oak Park-River Forest gets just 3% from the feds.

But the big question is, if the U.S. Department of Education gets axed, does all of this federal money disappear? Not necessarily. Certain programs can be cut, but the Title I program existed before the Department of Education and it would take a separate congressional act to end it.

Would that be a priority for Trump? Well, the conservative policy playbook Project 2025, co-authored by current and former Trump staffers, calls for Title 1 to be wound down and ended.

Federal funding doesn't just come to school districts through Title I either. Schools receive federal grants to help fund lots of initiatives including mental health services and career & technical education programming.

Even if federal funds make up a relatively small percentage of school district revenue, losing it would mean steep cuts at some of the poorest school districts.

Sunday, February 2, 2025

Trump 180 on Fed Rates Cuts

President Trump says the Fed was right to stop cutting interest rates

President Donald Trump stunned reporters on Sunday night when he praised the Federal Reserve’s decision to hit pause on its rate cuts. “I’m not surprised,” he said as he arrived in Washington aboard Air Force One. “Holding the rates at this point was the right thing to do.”

Now this is a complete 180 for a man who spent much of the past year relentlessly demanding that the Fed cut rates immediately. During his second day back in office, Trump flatout said he was gonna force chair Jerome Powell into cutting rates one way or another.

Read whole story at:  President Trump says the Fed was right to stop cutting interest rates

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Saturday, February 1, 2025

Catholic Bishops Call for Immigration Reform

Migrants run Jan. 28, 2025, after entering the United States undetected through a hole in a section of the U.S.-Mexico border wall at in Sunland Park, N.M. (OSV News photo/Jose Luis Gonzalez, Reuters)

Bishops across U.S. defend migrants, calling for immigration reform in ‘justice and mercy’

January 31, 2025
By Gina Christian
OSV NewsFiled Under: Catholic Social Teaching, Feature, Immigration and Migration, News, World NewsShare

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The United States is a “nation with a proud legacy of welcome to immigrants” that also “needs secure, safe, sturdy borders,” said Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York.

But in a video message released Jan. 28 through The Good Newsroom, the media platform of the Archdiocese of New York, the cardinal declared the Catholic Church “should not be blasted for simply obeying the Bible and caring for those immigrants” who have entered the country through its “clumsy, fractured” immigration system.

The cardinal — a successor to New York Archbishop “Dagger John” Hughes, the 19th-century defender of Irish Catholic immigrants who laid the cornerstone of today’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral — is among the many U.S. prelates to weigh in on sweeping changes newly inaugurated President Donald Trump has made in recent days to the nation’s immigration policies.

Migrants run Jan. 28, 2025, after entering the United States undetected through a hole in a section of the U.S.-Mexico border wall at Sunland Park, N.M. (OSV News photo/Jose Luis Gonzalez, Reuters)

Trump administration officials sparred with Catholic organizations after pushback on some of their immigration policies.

In her debut press briefing as White House press secretary Jan. 28, Karoline Leavitt suggested the Trump administration would strip federal funds from Catholic Charities. The comments came two days after Vice President JD Vance questioned the motives of the U.S. bishops’ criticism of the new immigration policies in a Jan. 26 interview — including raids on churches and schools — suggesting the bishops are actually concerned about receiving federal resettlement funding and “their bottom line.”

Fulfilling campaign pledges to tighten border security and ensure mass deportations of unauthorized migrants, Trump issued a slew of executive orders following his Jan. 20 inauguration. Refugee travel to the U.S. has been canceled; policies preventing immigration arrests at houses of worship, schools and other “sensitive locations” have been scrapped; and a program enabling private U.S. citizens to sponsor refugees has been halted. Some 1,600 U.S. troops have also been dispatched to the U.S.-Mexico border to assist with immigration enforcement.

Trump also ordered an end to the 14th Amendment’s provision for birthright citizenship, effective Feb. 19 — although that action has since been temporarily blocked by a federal judge in Seattle, who described the move as “blatantly unconstitutional.”

Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio of the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services, who is president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in a Jan. 22 statement that some of Trump’s executive orders “focused on the treatment of immigrants and refugees” are “deeply troubling and will have negative consequences.”

Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, Texas, chair of the USCCB’s Committee on Migration, issued multiple statements, warning some of the executive orders seek to “eviscerate humanitarian protections enshrined in federal law and undermine due process, subjecting vulnerable families and children to grave danger” and that immigration enforcement could only be carried out morally “in a targeted, proportional, and humane way.”

Catholic social teaching on immigration balances three interrelated principles — the right of persons to migrate in order to sustain their lives and those of their families, the right of a country to regulate its borders and control immigration, and a nation’s duty to regulate its borders with justice and mercy.

Referencing this teaching, the Colorado Catholic bishops issued a statement condemning an “open borders policy” while temporary or permanent legal immigration “takes years and is expensive.”

“This is not conducive for families who need to migrate quickly to sustain their lives or the lives of their families,” they said.

The bishops also stressed, “Mass deportation is not the solution to our present situation in the United States, especially when it may separate parents and children.”

A reference point for that teaching can be found in the Second Vatican Council’s teaching in “Gaudium et Spes” — reaffirmed verbatim in two encyclicals on truth and the dignity of human life by St. John Paul II — that names deportation (“deportatio”) along with abortion in a list of specific acts offensive to human life and dignity. The council teaches they “are a disgrace, and so long as they infect human civilization they contaminate those who inflict them more than those who suffer injustice, and they are a negation of the honor due to the Creator.”

Catholic bishops’ conferences from several states — among them Texas, Maryland and Michigan — have also issued statements on the immigration changes, assuring immigrants of their solidarity and pastoral concern. They called upon the new administration to address the immigration crisis with a focus on human dignity, root causes of migration and the need to fix the nation’s troubled immigration legal system.

The Texas bishops emphasized their support of the USCCB’s statements, and underscored the importance of the government respecting the life of the church.

“In exercising the basic human right of religious liberty, all Catholics, regardless of national origin or citizenship status, have a right to gather for the celebration of Mass and to receive the Sacraments without harassment or intimidation,” they said.

Maryland’s bishops committed to advocating for policies that protect migrants’ rights and dignity, while also declaring the church’s “parishes, schools, and ministries are here for you, offering spaces where you can find community and grow in faith.”

Michigan’s bishops pleaded with elected officials “to support policies that keep immigrant and undocumented families safe and united, and to protect those who arrived as children.”

Like Cardinal Dolan, other U.S. bishops have also spoken out individually as well, pledging the church’s firm solidarity with immigrants while also calling on the nation’s leaders to make a deal on immigration within moral parameters.

In a Jan. 21 statement, Archbishop John C. Wester of Santa Fe, N.M., said that he felt “a profound obligation to speak on behalf of immigrants,” particularly those whose countries of origins are in dire straits, and called for “a bipartisan effort to enact immigration reform that honors both citizens and immigrants, addressing the intricate issues at hand.”

Likewise, in a Jan. 24 letter to the faithful of northwest Iowa, Bishop R. Walker Nickless of Sioux City, said the Catholic Church stands “ready to work with our national leaders on responsible immigration reform, including smart border security, (and) pathways to lawfully being present in our country and towards citizenship.”

But he also said the church and the nation had a “duty” from Jesus Christ, defined in Scripture, to “value each and every person created by our loving God and give them the dignity they deserve as sons and daughters of God our Father.”

He said, “All of this must be done in justice and mercy.”

Above is from:  Bishops across U.S. defend migrants, calling for immigration reform in 'justice and mercy' - Catholic Review

ICE and Illinois Law Enforcement==the guide

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SEE Full document at:  ImmigrationLawGuidancetoLawEnforcement.pdf

This maybe an important to understanding Illinois news in the coming days.

Head Start is it open or not? And for how long?

WNIJ News

Now-rescinded Trump federal grant freeze causes chaos for childcare programs

Northern Public Radio | By Peter Medlin

Published January 29, 2025 at 4:52 PM CST

Kids at Taylor's Tots in Rockford

Peter Medlin

Kids at Taylor's Tots in Rockford

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On Tuesday, the Trump administration’s broad freeze on federal grants caused chaos for northern Illinois child care providers and families.

Two Rivers Head Start operates child care programs in Aurora, Elgin, and Sycamore. Executive director Kelly Neidel had to tell her staff they’d been laid off, and had to tell her 200-plus families that their services were shutting down.

“It's affecting so many people, it's literally just heartbreaking,” she said.

A few hours later, a federal judge stopped the freeze. Neidel then had to backtrack and tell everyone they were staying open. The administration has since rescinded the freeze.

She says the situation caused a lot of undue stress for their low-income families who had to spend the afternoon scrambling to find new childcare. And even though they’ve had some reassurances that they shouldn’t be impacted by the freeze, it’s difficult for staff to believe their jobs are totally safe.

Neidel says they’ve also briefly lost access to their Community Services Block Grant which helped fund food pantries, assisting families in crisis with rental assistance or car repairs, a senior food and clothing initiative and more. Now, they can draw down on those funds again.

She says they conduct federal audits every year, so she doesn’t buy that there’s any waste in the program.

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Peter Medlin

Peter joins WNIJ as a graduate of North Central College. He is a native of Sandwich, Illinois.

See stories by Peter Medlin