
Gov. JB Pritzker signs laws aimed at improving college accessibility and affordability
One law signed by the governor creates the Public University Direct Admissions Program, meaning students with a high grade point average will be able to automatically qualify for admission into some universities. The program will begin in the 2027-28 school year, with nine of the state's 11 public universities participating:
University of Illinois Springfield
Southern Illinois University
Chicago State University
Eastern Illinois University
Governors State University
Illinois State University
Northeastern Illinois University
Northern Illinois University
Western Illinois University
Another bill requires community colleges to work with high schools to make sure the college-credit classes they offer meet state standards.
The other two bills focus on student loans; one bill ensures every high school has a financial aid point of contact to support students and families, the other requires schools to offer financial aid assistance options during school hours to help them fill out their student loan forms. The new requirements go into effect in the 2025-26 school year.
"In order to ensure that every student of every background in every corner of our state gets the education that they deserve, we need to leave no stone unturned and no barrier unbroken," Pritzker said.
Pritzker had said college admissions and access to higher education are top priorities of his during this year's legislative session.
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Chicago Tribune
11 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Stacy Davis Gates: Chicago families deserve to go back to fully funded schools
For the first time in years, when parents drop off their children to school this year, they will be in smaller class sizes. Elementary students will have access to the state-mandated recess Chicago Public Schools previously didn't provide. Libraries are reopening. Our homegrown national model for public education, sustainable community schools, is expanding to 16 more campuses this year. Black students will be taught in classrooms where the right to learn their history is enshrined in our contract and all students will have greater access to sports, arts, music and a nurse and counselor. School will be one of the safest places immigrant students can be due to our expanded sanctuary protections. Students with disabilities will be supported by 215 new case managers. LGBTQ+ students will arrive at schools with staff support, access to all-gender restrooms and protocols against bullying. All of these improvements to the school day are a result of the contract educators fought hard for over the past year and ratified in April. And they all require the governor and Democratic majority in Springfield to pay our district what is owed. While parents were fulfilling back-to-school shopping and educators were equipping classrooms with supplies out of their own pockets, the state that withholds money from CPS was holding a hearing to find out why the district is in financial trouble. The answer is obvious. It's a choice. It is not a math problem. The difference between a cost and an investment is one's values. The difference between a deficit and a robbery is one's tax bracket. At a time when Illinois' wealthiest 5% are getting handed $8 billion in tax cuts from President Donald Trump, Gov. JB Pritzker's budget provided $10 billion in tax breaks and other incentives at the state level to tech corporations and the ultra-rich. 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Chicago Tribune
a day ago
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Letters: Don't ask Chicago firefighters to live with a worsening pension system
Gov. JB Pritzker just signed the pension benefits bill, HB 3657, into law. Since then, editorials have used it to attack the men and women of the Chicago Fire Department. They focus on price tags and pension costs, but they rarely talk about the people who do the work. Being a firefighter isn't just a paycheck. It's missing your kid's first steps because someone else's family needed you more in that moment. It is a job that takes a toll on your body and your mind. It is dangerous — dangerous enough that we have lost six members in the last four years. Not one of these editorials has mentioned that. Just last week, we responded to a mayday — the call no firefighter ever wants to hear — when a firefighter went down in a fire. They pulled him out and the fire was extinguished. No press conference. No photo op. Just another day at work. Yes, we knew the job when we took it. The danger was part of the contract. Missing life events was part of that contract. 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So the next time you see someone throw around big numbers about our pensions and warn that the future is bleak, remember this: When business folks or politicians say they've been 'putting out fires all day,' it's just a figure of speech. For us, it's Tuesday.I read with interest 'Trump's grand plan to lose friends and squander influence,' by Steve Chapman, on Aug. 6. He is absolutely correct. Our president does not seem to understand that our position in this world depends not simply on bluster and bullying but on the careful use of strength by 'soft power' and the ability to work alongside other nations to achieve common goals. He is presently ordering the National Guard to occupy Washington D.C. and thereby to distract people from his Jeffrey Epstein problem. I used to think that Canada and many other nations were our friends, but the president has managed to turn them against us and to severely damage if not destroy that relationship. 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Stopping the use of this vaccine would prematurely undermine that hard-won progress because the issue is not the efficacy of the polio vaccine but the difficulties in getting the vaccine to every child. Polio is only a plane ride away. Until we achieve a polio-free world, generations of children, including here in the U.S., are at risk.


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