
School board picks Macquline King to lead CPS temporarily in face of deficit
The Chicago Board of Education on Wednesday approved Macquline King as interim schools chief, replacing outgoing CEO Pedro Martinez as the search for a permanent leader continues.
The board passed the resolution 11-8, with one abstention.
At Wednesday's meeting, Chicago Public Schools' parents and community members emphasized the urgency of the decision for the interim post, as the school district faces a $529 million deficit in fiscal year 2026, which begins on July 1.
King's appointment follows a nearly year-long power struggle between Martinez and Mayor Brandon Johnson over a borrowing plan to balance the budget for the school year that ends tomorrow. The parties disagreed over whether to take out a $300 million loan to cover expenses for a new teachers' contract and a payment to a pension fund for non-teaching CPS employees.
Martinez was fired in December. He's taken a new job as the new commissioner of elementary and secondary education in Massachusetts.
As Chicago's senior director of educational policy, King was the only candidate of the final three under consideration who currently works with the city. Last week, allegations of negligence from her time as principal of a school in Uptown surfaced in her background, according to documents obtained by the Tribune through the Freedom of Information Act.
The other candidates, Alfonso Carmona and Nicole Milberg, are both currently CPS chiefs.
Asked Wednesday about the possibility King would be the board's choice, Johnson declined to discuss particular candidates, but said whoever the board chose 'has to be someone that reflects the values that I've fought for my entire education career, that's the thing that's most important here.'
'My values are, we have to have a school district that works for every single child,' Johnson said at a City Hall news conference. And he said board members went through a 'very thorough process' to decide who to put into the interim post.
A day before King's appointment, the Chicago Westside branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People sent a letter to Harden, requesting board members 'hire a Black person who is a qualified Educator' for both the interim and permanent roles. The Tribune obtained a copy of the letter.
Karl Brinson, president of the branch, said the organization had come to its recommendation 'based on past harm to Black families caused by past CEOs' and the 'taking away of resources' that led to the displacement of Black communities in Chicago.
Neither the branch nor Harden responded to the Tribune's request for comment.
Next year's budgets for each of the district's more than 600 schools were released in mid-May with the assumption that CPS would receive $300 million in additional money from the city and state.
Without additional funding, school principals are still planning for hundreds of millions of dollars in cuts and are already making difficult decisions about which programs and positions to eliminate. District officials have stated that if the $300 million doesn't materialize, they will be forced to pursue even more drastic cost-saving measures.
The state did not allocate additional funding to the large, historically underfunded school district in early June. That means the relationships with the city will be important in upcoming budget talks.
Wednesday's meeting also provided board members the opportunity to discuss items that will be voted on at the board meeting later this month.
Board members talked about new contracts to be approved for youth mental health services, building and projects, as well as a green schools resolution being introduced by Anusha Thotakura, whose school board district encompasses neighborhoods downtown and just south of those commercial areas.
Multiple community members stepped forward to express their concerns about the challenging financial situation ahead in the coming weeks and months.
'In my neighborhood, many of our children, including my goddaughter, suffer from asthma,' said Robin Moore, president of the board of governors at Carver Military Academy High School on the far South Side. 'We in the community … have to choose between investing in our building or investing in programs.'

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American Press
42 minutes ago
- American Press
Lawmakers approve budget and teacher pay push as session wraps up
Lawmakers approve budget and teacher pay push as session wraps up Published 5:12 pm Thursday, June 12, 2025 By Anna Puleo | LSU Manship School News Service BATON ROUGE — The Louisiana House voted 98-1 Thursday to give final legislative approval to $53.5 billion budget package for the upcoming fiscal year without objecting to any of the major changes that the Senate had made earlier this week. With three hours to go in the session, lawmakers also agreed to ask voters to approve a constitutional amendment in a new attempt to fund permanent salary raises for K-12 public school teachers and support staff. Email newsletter signup Voters had rejected a long and complicated amendment in March that could have provided funding for permanent raises. Under the latest plan, voter approval could lead to salary increases of $2,250 for teachers and $1,225 for staff members. The proposed constitutional amendment would dissolve three state education trust funds and used $2 billion to pay down debt on teacher retirement plans. That would save parishes enough money to provide the raises. While waiting to see if voters approve the amendment, the state will pay stipends of $2,000 to teachers and $1,000 to support staff at K-12 schools for a third year in a row. The state budget and the new teacher pay plan both passed on the final day of a legislative session that also saw significant changes in car insurance regulation designed to lower some of the highest annual premiums in the nation. Other high-profile legislation stalled during the session. A bill to reinforce President Donald Trump's ban on diversity, equity and inclusion programs at public agencies and colleges failed after the Senate declined to take it up, even as similar bans gained traction in other Republican- led states. The bill had narrowly passed the House after a lengthy debate during which Black lawmakers called it 'racially oppressive.' Gov. Jeff Landry's push to more than double funding for his LA GATOR private school voucher program also failed. The House had approved the $93.5 million that Landry sought to sharply increase the number of families that could use public funds to send their children to private schools. During the session, the Senate limited funding on the vouchers to $43.5 million, and the House acquiesced. That funding will allow students already enrolled in private schools under the similar program to stay there, but there will not be any money for new families to join, as Landry had envisioned. Lawmakers approved another national conservative priority — the 'Make America Healthy Again' efforts led by Trump and health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The bill bans ultra-processed ingredients, such as artificial dyes and synthetic additives, in meals served in schools that receive state funding, starting in the 2027-28 school year. All bills that passed now go to Landry for his approval or veto. The budget bill would take effect on July 1. The governor has the power to veto individual items in it. As part of the budget, lawmakers agreed to spend $1.2 billion in one-time money from the state's Revenue Stabilization Trust Fund–which collects corporate and severance taxes — on transportation projects, economic development, water system upgrades, college maintenance and criminal justice infrastructure. They also approved using $1.1 billion in extra cash for short-term needs like infrastructure projects, debt payments and deposits into state savings accounts. That total includes last year's surplus, additional general fund dollars recognized by the state's revenue forecasting panel, and unspent agency money, either because fewer people used certain programs or agencies found other ways to cover costs. The stipends for the K-12 teachers and support workers will cost $199 million. The Senate also restored $30 million for high-dose tutoring programs that had been cut in the House's version. Legislative leaders were reluctant to expand spending in other areas, like for Landry's signature voucher plan to pay for more students to go to private schools. Some lawmakers are concerned that potential cuts in federal Medicaid spending and federal disaster-relief could force the state to absorb hundreds of millions in additional costs. The House approved a resolution on Thursday by Appropriations Chair Jack McFarland, R-Jonesboro, urging Congress not to cut Medicaid funding in a way that would hurt the state. Legislators from rural areas also expressed concern that expanding private school vouchers could eventually cut into support for public school district. Some lawmakers noted that the final level of spending on the LA GATOR program was not a cut but rather keeping funding flat. 'We always use the word cut,' Rep. Eric Tarver, R- Lake Charles, said. 'When really we mean it just isn't an increase.' The Legislature also passed a supplemental spending bill for the current fiscal year with about $130 million, mostly in lawmakers' earmarks for projects in their districts. Taking steps to try to bring down auto insurance rates was another major focus during the session. Landry signed a package aimed at lowering premiums by limiting certain lawsuits and increasing oversight of insurers. However, on Wednesday, he vetoed Senate Bill 111, which would have restricted when policyholders can sue insurers for bad faith. Landry said the bill risked making it easier for companies to deny claims, leaving policyholders with fewer options to challenge delays, especially after major disasters. Landry had said at the start of the session that he was seeking a balanced approach in trying to cut rates. He also persuaded lawmakers to give the insurance commissioner more power to block companies from charging auto insurance rates that appeared excessive. Featured Local Savings
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Tulane scientist resigns, citing ‘gag order' on environmental justice research
Environmental advocates are questioning the actions of a private university in Louisiana following the resignation of a scientist who researches the health and job disparities in a heavily industrialized part of Louisiana known as 'Cancer Alley.' Kimberly Terrell, who served as a director of community engagement and a staff scientist with Tulane University's Environmental Law Clinic, accused university leaders of trying to censor the work she's doing to spotlight the harms to local communities plagued by industrial pollution. Terrell said her research in collaboration with Floodlight highlighting job disparities in hiring at local petrochemical facilities triggered a backlash from state and university leaders. That led to her being put under an ''unprecedented gag order' by the dean of the university's law school, Terrell said in a prepared statement issued by a group calling itself the Louisiana Alliance to Defend Democracy. Terrell resigned from the New Orleans-based university on Wednesday, saying she would rather leave her position than have her work used as a pretext 'to dismantle' the law clinic. 'After being affiliated with Tulane for 25 years and leading groundbreaking research at (the law clinic) for seven years, I cannot remain silent as this university sacrifices academic integrity for political appeasement and pet projects,' Terrell wrote in a letter to her colleagues. On Thursday, a university spokesperson said Tulane is 'fully committed to academic freedom' and 'the strong pedagogical value of law clinics.' Tulane declined to comment on Terrell's resignation, calling it a personnel matter. 'Debates about how best to operate law clinics' teaching mission have occurred nationally and at Tulane for years — this is nothing new,' the university said. 'We have been working with the leadership of the law school for the past several years to better understand how the clinics can most effectively support the university's education mission.' Kate Kelly, spokesperson for Gov. Jeff Landry, said in an email that the governor never threatened to withhold state funding for the project. 'However,' she said, 'I applaud Tulane for their actions standing up for our Louisiana businesses and jobs.' Terrell's resignation is drawing outrage from grassroots environmental advocates in the state who credited her with providing data and scientific research substantiating the harm from the petrochemical industry suffered by the predominantly Black communities in southeast Louisiana. 'It's appalling,' said Jo Banner, who co-founded a nonprofit focused on community activism and cultural preservation in St. John the Baptist Parish. 'We are frustrated that a person who is just doing their job, and doing it well shouldn't be punished for it, she would be uplifted,' Banner said. Her twin sister and co-founder, Joy Banner, added: 'I cried at what is being done to someone who is so committed to just helping people, and doing right, and giving people access to objective information … that she is being penalized and censored so much. This is an attack on her freedom of speech.' An April 25 email provided to Floodlight from Tulane Law School Dean Marcilynn Burke states that 'effective immediately all external communications' from the law clinic that were not 'client based' would have to be approved by her. That communication included 'press releases, interviews, videos, social media postings, etc.' In another email, dated May 4, Burke noted that the job disparity research was impeding the university from gaining political and financial support for its $600 million downtown redevelopment project in New Orleans. The email said Tulane University President Michael Fitts was facing criticism from elected officials and potential donors of the public-private project unless the university's leadership curtailed the work of its environmental law clinic. 'At present, the president is focused upon the role of the staff scientist,' Burke wrote. 'He understands her role in supporting the clinic's representation of the clients. Thus, I need an explanation of how the study about racial disparities relates directly to client representation." The email goes on to say, 'He is concerned, however, that her work may go beyond supporting the clinic's legal representation and veer into lobbying.' Floodlight reported on the research Terrell led for the university in April 2024 while it was still undergoing peer review. Preliminary data showed that minorities were being 'systematically' underrepresented in the U.S. petrochemical workforce — despite promises that nearby communities would benefit from better job opportunities. Terrell said the pollution vs. jobs narrative was oversimplified because the tradeoff affected different groups unevenly, with petrochemical jobs mostly going to white workers who don't live in the predominantly Black and Hispanic neighborhoods that suffer most of the health impacts of that industry. That research and Floodlight's reporting was recently featured in a documentary produced by The YEARS Project. Nationally, Terrell's research found that higher paying jobs in the chemical manufacturing industry disproportionately went to more white people in Texas, Louisiana and Georgia where minorities represent 59%, 41% and 49% of their respective states' populations but held 38%, 21% and 28% of the better paid jobs within the industry. In the petroleum/coal industry, people of color were underrepresented in higher-paying jobs in at least 14 states — including Texas, California, Louisiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Illinois, the research found. Terrell, in her letter to colleagues, said the gag order came after the research had been peer reviewed and published online on April 9 in Ecological Economics. Terrell said the research on job disparities has already been cited in legal arguments for student attorneys in the law clinic on behalf of clients from industrialized communities. And she said her 2022 study highlighting the health impacts in Cancer Alley ranks in the top 1% for research impact, garnering 28 citations and 87 news mentions to date, according to Almetric, which tracks the reach of research. 'Such impact would be celebrated by most institutions,' Terrell wrote. 'Scholarly publications, not gag orders, are the currency of academia. There is always room for informed debate. But Tulane leaders have chosen to abandon the principles of knowledge, education, and the greater good in pursuit of their own narrow agenda.' The Banner sisters are concerned Terrell's departure and the university's focus on restricting the work of the law clinic will likely make collaborations harder going forward. 'They're following their responsibility, they're following the mission of the organization, and answering our call for help, and then now they're getting slammed for it,' Joy Banner said. 'The foundation the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic has already built, they can't tear that down. No one has questioned her findings. No one has questioned her assumptions. The only thing that they have said is: The truth is creating problems for us.' Floodlight is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates the powers stalling climate action.


Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
This isn't how to change minds
Instead, the first thing I saw was a keffiyeh — the traditional Arab headscarf that's recently been appropriated by many leftists as a badge of solidarity with Gaza. Advertisement And, apparently, any other progressive cause. At the center of a protest in Foley Square, just across the street from ICE's New York field office, a crowd of about 100 protesters dotted with keffiyehs and signs comparing ICE to Nazis formed a circle. It was a quieter affair than the protest the night before, when 86 protesters out of the 2,500 present were arrested by the New York Police Department. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up That the protest was quieter didn't mean it lacked revolutionary zeal. A young man passed out pamphlets from the Internationalist Communist Tendency calling not only to end deportations but to overthrow the 'system' to seize 'power for all workers.' At the center of the crowd, someone wearing a keffiyeh over their face led chants like 'one, two, three, four, deportation no more.' There were also chants that compared ICE to the Ku Klux Klan and called for justice from Gaza to Mexico. Advertisement But mostly Gaza. At the center of the square, standing on a statue, a young man waved a large Palestinian flag, much larger than the one or two Mexican flags I saw throughout the night. Nia, 23, a researcher from Brooklyn, wore a keffiyeh and told me that the immigration debate is related to the war in Gaza: 'I just believe in Black and brown people having equal rights and that means not being bombed and also not being forcibly removed from their homes.' For Irene Siegel, a professor and member of the anti-Zionist group Jewish Voice for Peace, it was a busy day of activism. Wearing an 'END THE SIEGE' T-shirt, she told me that she had just come from a Gaza-related protest. I asked why she felt compelled to protest ICE, too. 'They just both have to do with fascism, and extreme oppression of people that don't have a voice,' she said. The crowd was largely white and, many of the people I interviewed were from Brooklyn. But I encountered a few people directly touched by the deportations. Nydia MacDonald, a 20-year-old model from Brooklyn with phone numbers written on her arm in case of arrest, told me that her mother is a Mexican immigrant. 'What's happening around the country is unethical and inhumane, and the kidnapping of immigrants is just absurd,' she said. Ana, a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipient who works in finance and has family in Peru, told me, 'I am not only fighting for a chance for me, but I'm also fighting for a chance for my undocumented mom, for my siblings. … [If] Trump's agenda ends up in my family being deported, my US citizen sister will grow up alone.' Advertisement But most people were there for the 'resistance.' One protester told me that violent protests are the only effective protests. Another said violent protest merely reflects 'a failure from the state to address issues in a peaceful manner.' There was no middle ground when it came to deportations. I asked everyone I interviewed if deportations are ever justified, like when a migrant commits a violent crime. No one had a clear answer in the affirmative — and many were against deportations under any circumstance. But that's not how the Trump's But that still doesn't mean Americans are entirely against deportations. By playing to the extremes, activists risk alienating them. There are plenty of reasons for moderate Americans to be upset at ICE, but some of the activists I saw in New York weren't interested in appealing to them. If anything, linking ICE protests to Gaza or other lefty causes can repel would-be allies. It's hard to shake the feeling that they don't really want to find realistic political compromises that would make it possible for Ana's mom to find a path to citizenship in this country. They just want resistance. Advertisement Carine Hajjar is a Globe Opinion writer. She can be reached at